“Right. That's a good point. At Motorola Semiconductor, I think that was one of the best schools. You get the principles and the methods, the deep engineering kind of thinking. Previously, in the army, you get to improvise, how to improvise, how to solve. You are alone in the sea, and you are sailing to some unknown location, and you have some technician problem; you need to solve it. You glue it. You walk around it. You take one machine, open it, and use another machine. It gives you the ability to solve the thing because you're on your own.”