There are two major points to that. One is that the location matters a great deal, the space close to Florida, where you can put them into a particular trajectory into orbit, where you need them, or at Vandenberg, for example, on the west coast. Finding those locations is difficult, so location really matters for those satellites and where they're going to go into orbit to be useful.
The second part, of course, is that all the other ones internationally, especially in the United States, are government ranges. Government ranges have priority. They will kick everybody else out. For SpaceX and so on, most of what they're doing is launching other people's government missions along the way and then, in their case, flying their own satellites along the way.
So the bottleneck is space. When you build satellites on the ground, there's only one way to get them into orbit and that's to launch them. They're launching two or three times a week out of Florida and they can't keep up that tempo. All of these new launch companies are coming online and new satellites are coming online, so how are we going to get them all up there to provide service? That's where I think that opportunity is.