Exactly. We set the target back in 2011 that by the end of 2015 everybody would have 5 megabits down and 1 megabit up. It was an aspirational target. We didn't put any funds towards that, and we figured government and private sector would achieve that. With the infrastructure that's out there and the wireless capabilities, we pretty well got to the high nineties for that capability.
With regard to our last review, which culminated in the decision in December, there really was a very explosive growth on broadband in both fixed and mobile requirements. The commission set an aspirational target of 50 megabits per second down. The upload is very important as well for businesses and other applications, so we said 10 megabits per second up, whereas before it was 5 megabits down and 1 up. That is where we're at right now. We're at around 82% right now. You could equate that, essentially, to wherever you have cable or a DSL/fibre connection into the household.
Outside of those regions, where you're basically relying on satellite or fixed wireless connections, or slower-speed DSLs—digital subscriber line technologies—you don't have the 50 megabit per second service offering. That's where the 82% kicks in. That's really in the main urban centres across the country. Anything outside of the main urban downtown core or suburbia area does not have the 50/10, and that's where the gaps are. It's not far from—