That's an interesting question.
I have the good fortune to be able to look at the worldwide environment with my colleagues in similar roles. It's interesting to see how some other nations have solved some of the tough challenges of reaching out to disadvantaged regions.
I point to an example in India, where they essentially used off-the-shelf Wi-Fi—those wireless access points with specialized antennas that cost $30 from Radio Shack—and were able to project the Wi-Fi signal 30 miles and were therefore able to support five eye clinics in order to do cataract surgery. There, in an inexpensive way, they were able to connect up a community using wireless across a broadly distributed region, with one connection to a central hub.
As we look towards that kind of disadvantaged region, are there some similarities here in Canada that we can look at and say there may be a school or a library or a hospital that is an anchor institution, and that we could broadcast from that facility to reach some in the community, perhaps reaching out the 20 or 30 kilometres for businesses in Sudbury? We could do so, looking not at a gold-plated solution but one that provides meaningful access, and does so inexpensively.
It has the follow-on advantage of being able then to project that experience of reaching out to a widely distributed community, when we look at serving regions like those in India or to build out the infrastructure in Africa as that continent emerges and requires that foundation—or even in China. So it's about leveraging the experience that we have in reaching the community and seizing business opportunities elsewhere in the world.