Paul called me into his office one day and he said, "Listen, I got raked over the coals by Senator X down in south side and he said, 'Virginia Tech's just totally disengaged. We're in a depressed economy down here. We don't have an, it's not an agricultural economy anymore It's becoming a digital economy. We've got to learn how to play in that arena.'" So Paul asked me to basically meet with those folks down there and to try to come up with some sort of program idea that would lend idea that we were paying attention to the digital technology side of it. We first called it "e58", you know, from Suffolk, Virginia all the way to it goes all the way across the state. All the towns and cities across 58 were the richest communities in Virginia in 1950. And now, they're the poorest. I actually gave a presentation called it e58. And then someone said, "Well, what about so-and-so off 460?" And we changed it to the eCorridors. And we did a major study for the Tobacco Commission of all the counties and the tobacco growing region. And we proposed they basically create a company that would create fiber, a sort of a middle mile fiber infrastructure that would make it possible for any, any community in those areas that wanted access to the Internet to ride over that middle mile piece. They actually executed that. They created a company called Mid Atlantic Broadband. And it's probably been the most successful of all the Tobacco Commission projects. And then later we actually had people up in, Jean Plymale went into counties all over the state working with them on the politics of it, understanding the politics of getting support and funding for interest and projects it might wanna do that would improve infrastructure to support a digital economy.