Sure.
The best way to think about the stalking horse process is that it's a baseline created by the first bidder, and then other bidders have to build on top of that without changing it. And that's the critical piece: without changing it.
Unfortunately, the stalking horse bid was structured in such a way that it critically reduced the value of the LTE assets to us and to other companies. When we realized that had happened and decided to enter the bidding process, the same process caused a standstill, so that if you entered the bidding process by signing the NDA, you had to enter a standstill and could not bid on more than one asset at a time. Of course, the whole value to us was the LTE assets, including the workforce, the research technology, and the patents. If we had signed that agreement, we would not have been able to purchase both at the same time.