I would make two comments. One would be that there was a previous program of, I would say, more modest scale that focused on backbone technology. This wasn't like last-mile technology where you're connecting the house. It was basically designed to build the major pipes that reach the community but don't actually connect up to the individual house or the individual streets.
As I noted in my opening remarks, the scale of the universal broadband fund is quite a bit bigger than previous initiatives of governments past, under all stripes, I guess. There was a program in the, I'm going to say, late nineties or early 2000s, which was a modest program to connect to speeds of 5/1, so one megabit upload and five megabits of download. The current program is 50/10, so it's much faster.
However, the previous programs were really modest. On the UBF, as I mentioned, the scale of the funding is a factor of 10 versus all previous programs combined. If you add up all the previous programs and multiply that by 10, that's the size of the UBF. The UBF is actually the only really significant large-scale broadband program that's been launched in the last 20 years.