The most fun project ever was when we broke into the research computing game back in around 2000. You know research computers cost a hundred, two hundred, three hundred million dollars and there was no way we're gonna do that. And so we had some faculty and computer science that came to me and said, If you could come up with the funding for it, you could come up with about $10 million. We believe we can build a parallel computer system that will have national and international prominence in terms of its power. And basically it was a great...the computer science people. They, they really delivered on that, but there was major facilities work that had to be done too. We had to triple the amount of power into the computer center. We had to substantially increase the cooling capability and then we had to provide labor to actually build this computer. But I remember, by then Paul Torgersen was President and he had his little cabinet meeting over in the boardroom. Dave Braine was the athletic director. So he goes around the room. And Dave said, "we really believe we're going to have a top-ranked football team this coming year." "We have a chance to break into the top five." I'd been trying to figure out how am I going to lay this project that on the table, because I'm gonna be asking to be able to spend 10 million plus. So when it got to me and I said, "Well, Dave has an admirable project, but my project for 2003 is to build a research computing system. That will be higher ranked than the football team." And you know, it was a joke. They laughed. We talked about it and started the project and the computers we wanted, they were built by IBM, but IBM did not sell them directly to anybody. So the only way we can get the processors, what IBM told us was Apple computer will have access to this processor that you need. So you need to go to Apple. So we went to Apple and they said, "Yeah we're going to introduce those computers. You can place an order." They made the announcement. And literally within an hour, we placed an order for a thousand of these servers. Apple went ballistic. What, what's going on? They wouldn't let one university buy all of these servers. So we had to send two people out there, one person that reported to me and the computer scientist that designed this project, Dr. Srinidhi. They flew out to Apple and they told them what we wanted to do and they said, no way because we've gotten millions of dollars in this advertising campaign that's going to show these computers blowing away the competition. We had to convince them, one that we'd keep it quiet and two, that it wouldn't fail and they,they bought into it. I had to deal directly with Tim Cook. They bought into the project and delivered the processors. In the timeframe we needed.