 So far, well, it's still early days, but so far it has been fantastic, because we had as our keynote speaker Nobel Prize Laureate, Professor Diem Teckmann from the University of Chicago, and he knows everything worth knowing about the relationship between early childhoods, the work with children at a very early stage, and how their life changes are, and what's the investment, how they'll pay off in the long run. And he worked together with a young Danish scholar from Copenhagen, the Aspen-Lannister, and the two of them together provided a very good introduction, so far I'm very happy. That's been great. I've talked to the Crown Princess about some of the issues of early childhood. I've had some great interactions with first grade colleagues, and we had good seminars yesterday, and so far the match points has been quite good in talks, but that's a little biased since I gave some of the talks. I'm here at the Match Point seminar because I work together with the head of the daycare department and the head of the family department, so this is a nice opportunity for us to experience, to discuss several topics about the welfare stage. I'm here at the Match Point seminar because I'd like to hear about the trends in the development of the welfare stage. I work in the core of the welfare stage in the Department for Elderly Care in Oskar Munu, and I'd like to hear what trends there are that we could use to come about the problem that there will be more and more elderly people, and we have less and less money. It is very important to debate the welfare stage because it's very central to everything we do. For us it's very important to also discuss how families can solve some problems. We're trying to bring together many researchers and people who work in various ways with these issues to let them meet and talk and maybe agree on what the solutions are. Maybe we can't find solutions because these are complicated questions, but we hope to at least take a few steps forward so that politicians and others can know where they should be aiming.