When you have the very federated structure that you have today, a symptom of this federated structure being relatively inefficient from a service delivery perspective, setting aside cost, is the presence of over 300 data centres and over a thousand points of presence, potentially. This means that underneath all of that, the service delivery is disjointed. It's not standardized.
As I mentioned earlier in regard to server and mainframe infrastructure and services being commoditized in the marketplace, I'm sure you've heard of service offerings like cloud. We very much see the evolution of these infrastructure services into a utility very similar to the hydro business in the 20th century. In the 20th century, some of the organizations used to have their own hydro departments. I think that over time you will see that these types of infrastructure services will become a ubiquitous utility. That means standardization, a high quality of service, and not having such a disjointed delivery model.
That's happening in the private sector. Through case studies and other examples, we see that in the public sector as well. That kind of standardization will enhance service delivery and quality of service, we believe, to your clients, who are the people of Canada.