Sure, I spent last week in a Estonia, one of the most fascinating places I've ever visited a real blank spot on my map during a youth spent, I guess, early early adulthood spent going to Russia and studying in St. Petersburg, and, and Central Asia, in fact, had several journeys across former Soviet Eastern Europe and I just had never been to the Baltics. But when finally because of nuclear, and the Estonian nuclear program, getting going, I made a made an excuse to go see it, I was stunned by what I saw, which is basically a hyper efficient little city state enclave by the sea, a city with a very proud history tolerant as one of the great trading capitals of Europe, the sort of gateway to the howling Eastern wilderness of Siberia, and the trade goods that came out of that vast land, but also the gateway to the west, the early factories, early mechanized cloth industries in the low countries and the wool networks in Britain. So Thailand has been this cosmopolitan trading hub of the North for 1000 years, kind of, and it's fascinating to think of that as being the place that may bring truly bring small nuclear, to the forefront. And the reason why I like small nuclear for Estonia is because it's literally a small country, they've got just over a million people, about half in the talent capital area. So if they say SM Rs, I'm listening, what I don't get as much enthusiasm for is claims about SMRs from giant countries that should be capable of programs of arbitrary size, and, and scope. But in Estonia, you get the feeling that getting 300 megawatt SMRs there would be a Goldilocks situation just right. So I was there for the Fermi or an inorganic conference, always a great thrill. I don't I don't work for or even with Fermi, I'm just a big fan of their effort and their audacity to try to start up private development of a nuclear program that could be key to the flourishing or even survival of them of the Estonian nation.