It seems like computers caused us to specialize more in certain areas, like because a lot of it caused more decentralization, as the registrar put registration off on the departments to do, the same thing with purchasing. You know it all got decentralized to where a lot of the work went more to the departments to do, where it was in the registrar's office to do. Where we did paper registration, it went to the OpScans and then we went to registering people online during the course add drop period. I think in biology I had several different roles, but one of them at, towards the end, I was like doing the course catalog timetable, doing teaching load reports, helping with registering students for courses, because I was in that area of the office. When I left there, they actually turned my position because professors were starting to get their own computers and starting to do their own typing on a lot of stuff. The newer ones coming in, you still had some older ones that brought stuff, but there wasn't like a typing pool anymore, like it was. It was, we centralized, we specialize more in different areas, like you had your bookkeepers, you had your people who typed and people who might have specialized. And I sort of worked in the part of the office that did student support, so I ended up helping there where a lot of people, you know, that ended up in that area have ended up becoming academic advisors. Now that's another area people specialize in. You know, computers, you think it makes everything easier, but not always because sometimes it gives you more work to do because other things get handed down to you because of the decentralization.