Chris Quilty: Great. And final question, solar cycle, I guess, is real. I mean, you but several other companies in the industry, saw some older satellites go to an early demise. I mean, you probably got some good data out of that event. And was it, at this point, looking back, was it kind of an event that happened? I haven’t seen anything pointing to that yet, but clearly higher on the solar cycle. And do you have good enough data to say, yes, if we see higher solar activity level, which I think is what they’re predicting for the next couple years, we still feel really good about where the satellites are operating?
Will Marshall: Look, as I mentioned earlier, the solar cycle has been affecting us. It isn’t, from an anomaly standpoint, it is anomalously high. There’s an 11 year cycle that is normal. This went significantly higher in the high part of the normal phase than was normal. But we have adapted, our teams have been really great at adapting our capabilities. Generally, our fleet has survived very well. The redundancy in our fleet has inherently helped us in this situation. But then we have seen a little bit of accelerated decrease of life for a few SkySats. I’m pleased to say that, the final ones in the low orbit that we had are now done with this present increase in the depreciation and that’s done for now. So, going forward, we will be, I think there’ll be a lot of scientists trying to figure out how to not make that mistake again, and be able to predict this.
And there are already papers out there that show how to predict this going forward. But it was certainly, it caught the scientific community off guard in this case. But largely, our satellite fleet and redundancy has enabled us to do very well despite it and the agility of our operations to raise some of the satellites and so on has meant that our services have continued to improve and we’ve learned a lot.
Chris Quilty: Great. Here’s to better weather.
Ashley Johnson: Thank you. Thanks, Chris.
Operator: Thank you for your question. There are no additional questions waiting at this time. I would now like to pass the conference back to Will Marshall, CEO, for any closing remarks.
Will Marshall: Yes, I would just like to end by saying that I feel we’re in a really strong position for the year ahead with the big deals that we’re pursuing in particular. Obviously, you see that we’ve had significant growth in the government sector last year and their demand continues to grow. We’re selling increasingly the solutions enabled and in particular, enabled by the revolution happening in AI. And we’ve seen some early adoption of that turning into real partnerships. Also, I’m very proud of our teams on the product side that have been executing on the Pelican satellite through to the Earthdata platform. And as I mentioned, there’s a platform milestone announcement on the 11th of April if you want to tune in. But we overall are really heads down and focused on executing on the big deals in front of us and I look forward to updating you on the next call.
Operator: That concludes today’s call. Thank you for your participation and enjoy the rest of your day.