I think your questions form the basis of the committee meeting, but they also form the basis of my everyday job, to try to look at where we're going to be in five or ten years--that's what I have to worry about--although I think we've got a pretty good service today.
First of all, the Internet only gives you information; it doesn't give you intelligence. You can get lots of information, but you need people out there who can get out, dig the information out, find the opportunities. So yes, it will be more knowledge-based, but that's what our service will become. It will be much more knowledge-based in five years than it is today.
The second part of that is that when we look to the future, it's clear the composition of the Canadian economy is changing. Mr. Julian mentioned some of the shifts from commodities. When I joined 30 years ago, my first posting was Jamaica, and I worried about fish and commodities to Jamaica. By the time I got to a place like Indonesia, it was infrastructure projects and everything else. My postings have been Jamaica, Yugoslavia, United States, Korea, China, and Indonesia. While I've changed, it's clear that Canadian companies and the demands have changed even faster. Twenty years ago, they wanted much more handholding; today they want value-added real results more quickly, because these are expensive.
But business is still done by people getting into the marketplace. You cannot do business long-distance in most of Asia. You can make the connections, but you still have to go face to face at some point. I think this is overlooked in an electronic age. Many of my young officers are really good behind a computer, but still you need that interaction with the buyers, the joint-venture partners, the innovative people in a community.
So the change for the trade commissioner service, the change for international trade in general, is toward knowledge-based. It's toward a playing field that becomes more level, because whether it's WTO or free trade agreements or whatever, it will be more and more of a level playing field and it's going to be how you get into that market, how you get access to it. Many of the access questions these days concern regulations rather than barriers.
Your question had 15 sub-questions, every one of them key to where we'll be in five years' time if we don't address them.