In the market we're active in nationally as Allstream, which tracks back over 130 years in Canada, back to the Montreal & Toronto Electromagnetic Telegraph Company, we've been a competitor for all that time. In the small and medium-sized business market in Canada, we have one, typically, provider in each area. There's one network. I suppose it builds on what Mr. Bibic was saying about the cost of building the wireline infrastructure that's going to facilitate new technology adoption by small and medium-sized business. We don't have seven or eight carriers. We had 14 in the year 2000. They all went bankrupt.
So on the wireless side we've achieved a new level of competition, I would say thanks to the wireless auction, and you have new investment going on by incumbents and new entrants alike. So that's a good thing. But that's one piece of the market. In terms of our small and medium-sized business community across Canada, competition is absent from large swaths of Canada. And that's not seven or eight; typically the incumbent is the only one that has network infrastructure there. New entrants are the ones that can invest in the risk-based investment to try to compete with those companies in those places.