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Okay, thanks for that report. I didn't know if I needed to adjust it or not. So, my name is Craig and my interest in astronomy probably goes back to when I was in college and I had this habit of looking up at the sky. Like a business and engineering degree, like a software engineer, what would they call it? I think they called it management information. Yeah, that's what it was. M.I.S. I couldn't remember. Half engineering, half business. So I said, I'm going to take an elective about astronomy. So I get in there and this is back in the days when you had, I don't think you had those anymore. This was like big college room. Up in the front was a picture of the electromagnetic spectrum. And that day I learned that radio and light and the things that make radio work and the things that make our eyeballs work and our cars are made of the same thing are about to fall out of my desk. Okay, I couldn't believe that. That the electromagnetic spectrum is all the same phenomenon. And today I'm still a man. So, I got a nice little pair of binoculars. And I'm about to buy my first telescope. It's a, it's a, a Datsonian. Somebody made it and I'm going to buy it. And the next thing that I want to do after I get a visual scope is I want to do something with electronically assisted astronomy, EAA. It has to be Linux, it has to be a course. But I've got an RV, we travel all around and I want to bring, I'll have to get another scope to understand that and I realize how expensive it is. But tying in something like K-Stars with image stacking and that kind of thing seems to be right up my alley. That's where I want to go. So, anyway, I hope you like that little story. Back to you.

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