Thank you, Madam Chair.
I'm really interested in the discussion, especially where you're rendering...because that's where I wanted to go. In my house, where's the cable for my TV? I don't think it's there anymore. Where's the land line? No, I don't think it's there anymore. My grandkids—because we still have an old land line phone sitting there—think that belongs in a museum. We're changing as rapidly as the younger generation has.
I've heard your suggestions. The 50 to 70 has come up and I think everybody has talked about that and the hardware issue. Defining hardware... as you say, things are changing rapidly and writing legislation is often behind what's happening out there in the world. That's the challenge we have with this one, because you're not dealing with concrete things, you're dealing in the aesthetic world. How do you write legislation and recommendations? I know the 50 to 70, that's a simple one, but what else would we put in there? For the future—if you're talking future—it's easy to say, “Hey, it's rapidly changing”. We know it's all going to be dead tomorrow, and this hand-held thing is going to be gone.