I think that at the very beginning, in the early part of January, people had the sense to wear masks to protect themselves. As I have always said, we did it at the very early stage. There's a lot of debate on that, as I said, even in this country. Our customs and our culture helped us to convince people to wear masks. Certainly that helped us to be well prepared.
The one challenge that people didn't really touch upon is, how could you possibly provide that many masks? In particular, we're talking about the health care workers, the front-line workers, and even police and firefighters. They are in the public space. They urgently need face masks. For people who stay eight hours at home, they probably don't need face masks that urgently. I think the government in Taiwan, in the early stages, on a daily basis only produced two million masks. Certainly, we have a population of 24 million, and we were far short in our supply—