Okay, sure. So the book to bill for the complete company was 0.92. And in a way, this is the third consecutive quarter which we have reported below 1. We have to take into account that the first quarter of this year and prior quarter, we featured record high revenues. So in absolute book to bill, this does not imply a drastic reduction in the overall trend. If I drill down to the different product lines, I have to say that starting with the FTP that - and maybe moving to the micro measurements product line, all in all, the micro-measurement business is running quite well. We had, from a book to bill standpoint, an anomaly this quarter due to the fact that we have projected significant multimillion orders to be placed for AMS, for Pacific Instruments, which you know is an end market cyclical business. Those order has not - has been pushed out to the second quarter. Therefore, the book to bill for Pacific Instruments was fairly soft. If I would exclude, and the orders will be placed before this quarter, if I would exclude this effect, micro measurements would be running at 1.03 book to bill, which continues in a very solid environment. On the foil resistors side, I think that the biggest impact, as I did indicate before, is really the macroeconomic condition of wafer fab equipment capacity and the drop in memory. So this was, to an extent, softening some of our demand on the precision resistors side, the indication from a macro standpoint that this business has a high likelihood to recover in the second half of the year. Regarding Force Sensors, I already provided some color following John's questions. And when we are moving to WCS, I think that we see that the steel business, as I did indicate before, is still running in a very solid environment. The fact that we had, I would say, record revenues in the last two quarters for steel only indicate - and the fact that the book to bill is still okay, only indicate that we - that the expectation is that for steel business, we should expect to see a very solid environment, where we may have seen, and this could be a second order effect, some softening is on our onboard weighing business, which is mostly for forestry in North America which relates to the construction business in the United States. So all in all, from a macro level, AMS, I think, is solid. On the energy, oil and gas, still running quite good. I did indicate that the wafer fab or the semi camp, some of our onboard weighing forestry and the general industrial is a little bit spiky, but we don't see any overall major trends that could - or major impact that could already indicate a change in the moving up or down from a demand standpoint. So overall, for us, it's considered as a solid business environment.