Rogers-Shaw is more about the Internet than the cable business. They spin off the wireless business and we acquire it. The cable and Internet access will be more competitive in the future. As you know, Telus is the telecom operator on the western side. Will they force more competition? I don't know. We'll find out.
Will this factor also be a deterrent to combining wireless and wireline? It's not impossible. Certainly, what we have right now in B.C. and Alberta is a single wireless network. There is also a new technology that will come in the future, and in fact, referring to the spectrum, we will continue to need more. It's what we call fixed wireless access. Instead of having wireline Internet access, you will have towers able to deliver Internet into your home, on your computer, or for watching television. This is certainly something that technology will bring. Again, it will help Canadians to get better proposals and better innovation, and we look forward to it.
A matter that we think also needs to be fixed is what we referred to earlier, and that's to be able to have decent, regulated prices for access to the Internet or the wireline network of the incumbents Telus, Rogers and Bell, especially the fibre one, which has been under under review, for which Bell is in front of the government, to be able to say, you know, the CRTC does not have the competence to do this. Well, again, it's a matter of what we've been seeing forever, so many times.