We first had mainframes and we had a coax cable from Derring on to Burruss. And back then, the computing center was on the back hallway of Burruss. Dean worked there. Randy worked there, Randy Marchany. And I think user services was down the side hallway. Susan, John Worrell, Judy Watson, a bunch of them worked there back then, but I remember Randy and Dean [laughs] and probably some of the other ladies there that worked with them. So they've been here a long time. I can remember in the biology, we got the first PCs; they looked like suitcases. And they took a floppy disc. Yeah, they weighed a ton. And then we got our first Macs, which were like the little square thing. [laughs] And eventually we got some that had 3.5 inch, but this is back before they had hard drives in them. There we went from having those old black push button phones to having, I think, the ROLM phones. Back then we had we had to print something, we had to go to Burruss. We started out with a Waterloo script, and then we went to GML, which is a precursor to HTML. I ended up doing a lot of like the math equations for Dr. Tyson. He was a mathematical biologist and he had a lot of formulas. And I had and learned how to do that in GML So it's back before you had WYSIWYG [laughs]. But that was interesting. And then when we first got our first printers, we had one that was called a Diablo. And it was like a line printer where you had to log into it with your password and give it DOS commands to get it to print stuff. And then we got a NEC printer and we got these cases to put them in because they was so loud. And those kinds of printers held the rolls of paper, so that was getting away from printing things at Burruss and to getting to have their own printer there in the, because we'd have to make trips to our box in Burruss, go pick it up, go back. [laughs]