Yeah, but it’s very interesting, ’cause I was talking to Mike Stoskopf, who’s a professor up at North Carolina, and we talked about these CDs that you hand out like that. He said “Only 5% of ’em are ever used.” Now somebody’s done a study. So that really kind of just I went … And I’ve handed out, you know, several 100, and to realize that only 5%, I mean like in Thailand I handed out quite a few, and they showed me a case of a, I think it was a fox that had some lung lesions. And I pointed out, I said, “Well, what do you think that is?” “Oh, I don’t know, I’ve never seen anything like that.” And then I mentioned, you know what I thought the diagnosis was, “Oh no, gosh, you’ve never heard of that.” I said, “It’s the first case on my CD is exactly like that.” So it tells me one thing, you guys haven’t looked at the CD that I spent three years looking at, and you’ve had it for a couple of years looking at it. So, you know, I don’t know, it’s … I think it’s just a disease that, or the new things, they just don’t go back and look, and it’s, if they haven’t done it, it doesn’t exist. And I’ve had a lot of my, I had all my x-rays that I had taken at the National Zoo thrown away, so I’m glad I did put ’em on on CD, and I was, they about threw away all the handwritten medical records that Clint and I and my interns and all wrote before Andy Tier got us up on Med Arts.