The eighth place I was referring to with respect to connectivity has some relation to the availability...but it's also the usefulness. We've said “useful connectivity”, meaning who is actually making the best and highest use of the available networks?
I take your point. Yes, there are some challenges, certainly in the northern and remote communities, with access to Internet. In the opening of my presentation, the example is that Canada has a very dispersed population and the market forces aren't necessarily there to warrant the investment of networks.
That being said, with the cost 15 years ago, the market wasn't there for even some of the urban areas to have the networks that we have in place now. What we are espousing at this point is that over time those costs will drop and the availability of those networks, through private-public partnerships, will evolve.