No, I don't think so. Part of the Australian experience is showing that people are choosing to take high-speed connections that are provided to them on the national broadband network. At the moment, the rollout has not served a huge number of Australians yet, but those who are using the fixed broadband network are doing what was said by Mr. Lord. They are connecting lots of wireless devices in their own homes and they're finding the real value of having a 100-megabit-per-second connection that allows them the capacity to connect iPad tablets, smart phones, laptops, everything.
The two are understood as being very complementary. So while the government here has chosen not to focus on wireless, the provision of a fixed broadband network is really facilitating the use of wireless devices in the home, and also over time, if people perhaps share their wireless networks, it will make it easier to use wireless networks away from home.