Fibre is a fantastic technology for delivering high-input connectivity. The problem with fibre is, first, it's expensive to trench, deploy and maintain. Second, it tends to be single thread. You can run multiple fibres but now you've doubled your cost. You can close an economic case so long as you have enough population density, because you take the expense of running one or two fibres and you amortize it across all of these users. That starts to break down when you move to communities that are more sparsely populated. It breaks down when the fibre runs have to become very long, and it breaks down further when you have to get into territories that are just challenging to deploy fibre.
Yes, we've mapped out the country. We've done our own kind of total adjustable market, really drilling down and understanding where LEO is going to be the best economic solution, where fibre is going to be the best economic solution, and microwave. It's going to be this kind of horses for courses approach to bridging the digital divide; but LEO is going to take on a bunch of that. Yes, it's going to improve the economics, particularly in those communities.
Thank you.