pat buskovich, the practice and challenge of practicing since the 1970s is that you have seen it all and i was here when the bloom came out and there's a misunderstanding of -- a scary misunderstanding -- you may want to give me my three minutes. the bloom map which is basically the city and two bridges and a big circle, it's huge, about 40% of the city, that was the state of technology in the 1970s. it wasn't that great. but when everyone looked at the blue map they'd understand that there are dots on the map and when you have made copy after copy after copy, the dots disappear through the copy fax problems. so no one knows that the blue map has dots on it. and that the dots represent 100 landslides. and there's an accompanying book which i have and i have given to the building department because they didn't know that there was an accompanying book that shows the map on a city block within the accuracy of a foot. so we know where the slides are down to a foot using this book. and then when frank -- or upgraded it by seismic hazard map act he took this book of 100 maps, thres a big c