 I'm very happy to be talking to Dr. Jara La Saleh Al-Gamdi. He's the Chief Information Officer for the National Centre for Education Information in the Ministry of Education in Saudi Arabia. Now, you've just won a WSIS project prize. Could you tell us about that? You're connecting schools. Yes, actually we won the C2 category WSIS prize, which is about the infrastructure. And the project is the school connectivity, where we connected over 33,000 schools in Saudi Arabia that covers the whole area, 2.2 million kilometres of Saudi Arabia. Some of these schools are in the metropolitan area, but some of them are in very remote areas. Some of them even deep in the desert and some of them in very high mountains. And what technology are you using to get into these really remote areas? Different technologies actually. According to what is available. We connect about 15,000 schools through DSL from one provider. We connect another 15,000 schools through broadband, 9,000 from a provider and 6,000 from another provider. And we connected the last 2,700 schools through VSAT, because there is no connectivity in other approach other than the VSAT. And we have to reach to all schools. And how are these being used? Is it used by the school administration or is it used by the students? This level of connectivity? Both. By everybody in the school, whether they are the teachers or the administration or the kids at the school. It is K-12 education. We have the education management system, which has 2700 services that are provided to schools, to school supervisors and to kids and parents. That is fed by data in the school itself. And of course, people at home can even get access to these services. Now, when we normally think of Saudi as being a very developed country, but you do have remote areas where access is difficult, tell me some of the geographical challenges that you have that have prevented you rolling out this infrastructure up until now? It is a very large country, area-wise. It is 2.2 million kilometres in the area. And part of it, about one quarter of that area is desert. And in some of these mountains, there are very small towns. Also, it is very costly to bring fibre or cover wires to these areas. So we use V-SAT for this. But at the bottom line, schools have to reach everywhere. Connectivity has to reach to each school. That's fascinating. Thank you very much. Thank you.