I'm going to take a slightly contrary position. I know e-commerce can have a very broad umbrella, but I think we do the issues a bit of a disservice if we're focused to a large degree on buying equipment as if doing so is going to fuel e-commerce. I frankly don't think that's the case. In fact, if anything, what we're seeing right now in the marketplace is a shift in the other direction, such that small or medium-sized businesses use cloud-based services, whether for software, infrastructure, or any of a range of other things, thereby actually removing the need for many of those SMEs to make some of that big ICT investment.
So rather than focusing on how we get people to buy more boxes, by and large, of stuff that isn't manufactured in this country and from which the profits don't hit here, perhaps we ought to be thinking a bit more about how we attract large cloud-based services, for which there is a strong movement right now. I think Canada has the opportunity to actually be a global leader when it comes to cloud-based services and establishing large server farms that are more energy efficient. These actually take care of some of the concerns with putting a lot of your personal data in the cloud, because you know it's being protected by some of Canada's privacy rules. There's actually a global opportunity, and countries are beginning to compete as a location or host for these cloud-based services.
So let's not think that getting people to buy boxes is actually going to solve some of the sorts of issues we're hearing about. I don't think it is.