I'm going to turn to my colleague, who will give you a little hint of the quality of Canadian participation as evidenced by an international research competition.
Before I do that, let me say a word in response to your interesting question. I guess the thrust of what I'm saying is let's take for granted that technological changes in terms of speed, of capacity, and so on are going to continue. So let's just take that as a given, that the technology will be able to enable faster, more intense communications.
Then the question becomes, okay, what do Canadians want to do with this? What are some of the directions? And how can we enable and help Canadians do it in ways that fit the kind of values we have around the just society, around an inclusive society, around the kind of being Canadian that I think we embrace? So that's the digital literacy side.
My sense is the technology is going to keep changing, with always something new, but it's all going to be in the direction of speed and capacity. Then the question becomes about use and the ability to use it in ways that suit us as Canadians.
Gisèle, perhaps you could speak to the quality of this.