It's a very good question. One of the difficulties, when you look at international studies of how fast these things are, is that the OECD, for example, looks at advertised speed. That's not a good way of figuring out who is the fastest. People lie a lot in their advertisements about how fast their networks are.
At Rogers, and I believe most of the cable companies in Canada are the same, we engineer our network so that we give you the speed advertised most of the time. It's not a guaranteed service. We engineer our networks so that in peak periods 80% of our customers get the speed that is advertised. Customers can measure this themselves using speed-test sites. That is really the acid test: what are people actually getting in their homes?