Well, I think it’s improved it obviously, especially from the standpoint of, of how we are able to monitor species or observe the species behavior. When you design the exhibit, the amenities that we put in for management, the technology has gotten really great. It used to be, you know, you had a camera with a VH tape and it’d get corrupted somehow down the road. But you know, the advancements that are there, you can archive now behavioral information that you can go back and retrieve for years to see if you can do depict patterns of behavior and things like that. The technology and veterinary medicine has just been phenomenal, you know, with zoos now getting, getting CAT scans and trying to bring in MRIs and their ability to diagnose and provide more information for the health and welfare of a species, I think has been a big boom. And God, I wish every zoo could put in a CAT scan and an MRI, you know, that’d be fantastic. But it’s the information capability now in storing and gathering data and, and also technology, you know, we talked about quality, quality of the exhibit instead of the size of the exhibit, the things you can do in exhibit now to control air temperatures, ground temperatures, give the animal choices of environments to go to based upon, you know, climate issues and things. I think that’s advanced to the point where it’s easy to do now.