That's a great question. So let me talk about that product in particular, and then maybe also just put it within context of all the product offerings that we have in the laptop space right now. We're shipping today audio codecs, amplifiers, haptics drivers, and now in this quarter we began shipping power conversion chips as well. So those four different product categories, which we're really excited about. I think on a previous call, I highlighted when one of our customers launched a product with seven Cirrus Logic chips in it, which included haptics drivers, amplifiers, and a codec. It did not include power chips. So now I'm talking about eight, which includes codec, amplifiers, and power chips, but no haptics. So hopefully one day we will be here talking to you about a laptop that contains all of these, but of course, we are very excited about the range of opportunities that having all these products represents. The power chip itself has its origins in some of the IP that we acquired as part of the Lion semiconductor transaction a few years ago. It's a switch-cap DC-DC converter with very, very high efficiency, compared to [Technical Difficulty] legacy products and architectures for DC-DC conversion. What that really translates into is less power being lost through heat and less heat being generated within the laptop and needing to be dissipated. So very attractive, both from the user perspective and the industrial design perspective. And that's really a big part of what got it on the Luna Lake reference design. And that's driving some of these initial design ends that we've seen. It's not always necessarily a one-to-one attach rate. We've seen in that case that I talked about with the OEM that launched a product with eight chips in it, there were three of our power conversion chips in there. That represents a significant quantity of revenue and ASP for us. As to whether or not that kind of chip finds its way into smartphones, we do sell power-related products in smartphones today, both some, one custom chip as you know, it's not a classic power conversion chip like this one, and in the general market. We are by and large focused on, I don't think we'll see quite this chip coming to smartphones, by and large in the smartphone space we're focused on a couple of things really, really high precision stuff either side of the battery and then in the general market we're typically focused on selling products that we have today given that the R&D dollars that we're deploying in the power space, we feel a better deployed targeting the laptop market as we see that as being a larger overall opportunity for us.