Eventually, it’ll be productionized. I like Once we are successful with artificial wombs, our vision is using biobanking, using synthetic biology, using automation and robotic process automation with assistance from AI and computer vision and artificial wombs, we could productionize species development. And so, when you have genetic bottleneck around a certain species or you have long gestations like with the northern Everyone knows about the northern white rhino, right? Two females left, they’re functionally extinct. There’s low diversity in them, there’s a bottleneck because they’re related. There are 18 embryos are related. But, if you can engineer in genetic diversity from that, both synthetically and from from lost specimens, and then productionize it through artificial wombs, the $25 million that people are spending a year keeping two animals alive, you could use a piece of that to productionize it, and then the rest of that could go to, you know, water, education, other things for the country, right? So, I really do think that productionizing uh indigenous species and uh also helping species adapt at the same curve of which we are changing environments is also something
[00:01:00] that’s going to be needed in the future because evolution is not uh fast unless it’s directed.