Nothing's worse, I would say, certainly from a service level perspective. We introduced the online birth certificate program, for instance. It's a fairly convoluted application where we had infrastructure running in two separate places for an application. To have done that, where two cluster infrastructure groups were trying to coordinate that, as opposed to what we have now, where Service Ontario is our key client-facing organization, by having done that consolidation I know for a fact that we could certainly deliver it a lot quicker. For both birth and death certificate programs, for sure I know they improved.
Another good example would be OSAP. We recently went mobile with our OSAP app, for instance, and we could never have done that. If we'd had infrastructure spread, we could not have done that in the speed we did it.