We're lagging behind, especially compared to where we were.
If you're in a big urban centre in Canada, you have access to high-speed Internet. You need to be able to push that out so that everybody has access to high-speed data lines.
We're not lagging behind in innovation by the young people who are coming out of our school system. Whenever I get a bit worried about the country, I spend 10 minutes with some high school students, who have a ton of ideas about where to take us. I think we're lagging behind in that we have to enable education systems to let them develop new ideas.
As an example, if you go to any high school or any elementary school, they'll all have SMART Boards in their rooms. If they get money, they can buy a SMART Board, which is an interactive whiteboard that they can do cool things on. Although the school boards will buy them for them, the teachers don't get trained on how to use them and there's no content to put on them, but at least we're trying to get them out there. Where we're lagging behind is in allowing that education system to catch up to the students.
I don't know if that makes sense, but Canadian young people are very eager to make new things and new content and to tell their stories and tell their parents' stories; we just have to enable that. In terms of technology, we're there. Where we're lagging behind, I think, is in education, and I think we're lagging behind in rolling out the high-speed Internet. We really need high speed.