Unfortunately, your example is very real, and that's something that we as equipment dealers want to fix. We do not benefit from our customers being down. We do not benefit from our customers having to wait hours or days on end, especially in seeding or harvest. We want to get the customer up and running as quickly as possible.
Part of the reason we're in the situation we're in I guess starts with workforce development. We can't find enough mechanics to service the equipment that's being sold in the marketplace. We do have remote diagnostic capabilities on pretty much anything that's been manufactured in the last five years, so at least there's light at the end of the tunnel here. We can diagnose equipment even before a failure takes place. That ultimately saves the customer a little bit of money. We don't want our technicians running out to the farmer to see something that they have to go back to the dealership to pick up the part for and go back. That costs the farmer money and that costs the dealer's reputation.
The only way we see a solution to that is to have more mechanics and better rural broadband.