I hate all the computer images that I’ve been confronted with, from the beginning until today. However, since I’ve gotten involved with buildings that have shape to them, that are very difficult to describe to a contractor, to a builder, I’ve made a relationship by some circuitous route, through IBM, to the people in France that make the Mirage airplane, Dassault. And they have a software, or a program, CATIA, for making airplanes, that allowed us to describe steel structures and curved structures in a way that demystified them for the builder, so that they weren’t afraid and didn’t superimpose fear costs on the project. We’ve been very successful in that, and I think it’s turned the tide. In other words, most architects and contractors are in mortal battle from the day they start. The contractor is scared of the costs and losing money, and the architect is pushing to get his or her dream to fruition, and they’re in conflict. And I found, through this funny gadget, that the architect can become the master builder, can become the leader, can direct the project, and the contractor likes it. They would rather be the child in the equation than the parent. They’d rather have the conceiver take a parental role. So it’s through this technology that I’ve found, in the few projects now, that it’s been very possible to change that relationship, in a positive way, for everybody.