Yes. Well, primarily on the single domain side, obviously, we launched our OmnidAb technology, about a year ago. And it has been a really significant portion of one of the things that's attracting new partners. And it opens up new possibilities, across a range of therapeutic areas. I mentioned growth in the CNS space. That's a big one, as well as radiotherapy. There's a big interest there and that's attracting, a lot of new partners. There's also interest in infectious diseases, as well. And that's something that we've had some partnerships in the past, but that has definitely accelerated as well. A lot of different things are driving this one, the range of routes of administration that single-domain antibodies open the opportunity for whether that's injectable, inhalable or oral, the ability to penetrate the blood-brain barrier and have fast or tunable clearance. That's another element that is attracting new partners. And then an area, I'm excited about is, just this opening up of new areas. As I said, the diagnostics, the theranostics, radiotherapy. So, yes, it's created more diversity in our pipeline of programs, which we're excited about.
Q – Conor McNamara: Okay. Great. And then Kurt just on the ATM, the amount of money you raised, you raised a little over $11 million. And if I just think about that coinciding with kind of a call it a pushout and what you're expecting from license and milestone revenue. Should we be thinking that that kind of $11 million, is kind of stuff that might have come before the end of 2025, that now maybe you're saying maybe it's going to be pushed out a little bit, just because of program timing? Or is there any way to kind of separate, how much of that is just safety debt versus what you see as potential push out in the later than planned revenue from those sources?