She did. My kids wanted me home, though.
There is no question that access to technology, especially wireless technology, increases your productivity.
When I was running the high-speed Internet business for Rogers, a friend of mine had this great analogy. We had both grown up on the poor side of town. He said, “When we grew up, the difference between a rich kid and a poor kid was the poor kid only had one hockey stick, and the rich kid had one hockey stick for ice hockey and one for street hockey.” It's changed now: if you don't have access to the Internet, if you don't have wireless access, it has an impact on where you end up.