01:34 Okay. Well, historically, I, was a software engineer, so I went to I went to college. I moved to California when I was about 26. My wife was about 7 months pregnant with our first daughter, so she wasn't so happy about that. But we moved to California because I wanted to be in the industry where there was software.
37:01 So all the industries are going to, I think, have this bottom up cannibalization where, like, you lose the the less experienced and less skilled people. And I think it's also gonna make it more difficult for people out of college to get to get that experience that they need to be in the top of the pyramid. So I think it's it's both a pruning of the current workforce, but also I think it's a barrier for the future workforce, which is probably a bigger concern for me.
38:04 So you have to find a mentor that you can work in the same office at and learn from them. But that's difficult because that time is something which those mentors only have so much of. So they're gonna try and pick the best and the brightest to to work with. So it's difficult. You know, it used to be kind of like, you know, you go to to any college in the United States, you get your 4 year degree in computer science and you're guaranteed a, you know, a near 6 figure salary, you know, graduating.