Right. To be very clear, there is no product other than timing that we are going to be bringing into this. So you mentioned memory somewhat. You know, onto the side. We have no influence on that. We have no connection with that. Only working on one thing and one thing only, which is a timing product division, which used to belong to IDT before that to ICS. So it's a timing business that we are acquiring and our influence is in timing. But the point that you made, Jim, is a very good one, which is that today, we have products that are oscillators and resonators on one side, and clocks on the other. With their 160 engineers, with our almost double that number of engineers, I think we would be able to address you know, the issues of density, power, resilience, higher throughput, by delivering solutions, by delivering products that are somehow integrated not just physically integrated, but somehow integrated to deliver vastly superior solutions because the need for performance, for jitter, for high speed, for throughput, for lower latencies, for lower power, those remain undiminished not just in AI and data centers where they're extreme, but in all other areas including consumer, including military, aerospace, defense. In terms of the one part of AI where clock is not being used right now, and we'll have to see whether the place for it is in the whole optical networking in the cabling, in the smart cables, in the retimers. Typically, those are not using clocks. Those are oscillators. But either way, there's enormous opportunity because, as you know, the market is $11 billion for all timing. And SiTime Corporation's only a very small portion of it. And Renesas, large as it is, the timing business, it's still also a very small portion of it. There's a significant amount of competitors out there, and it gives us an ability to influence at the highest level the highest differentiated, most performance-centric customers. Allows us to influence that.