 Thank you. I'm lucky because I had my first computer in 1977 and I could be an actor. I've been also a programmer. I've been observing the evolution of technology, but I'm not going to talk about technology, all the buzzwords, but I will talk about what are the influence of technology on the way we live, we communicate, and we operate on a daily basis. The first thing, and I say this on this stage, which is more important than ever, the big revolution that technology has brought to us is the instant access to knowledge. Knowledge has been an asset discriminating the poor and the rich during centuries. And at the end of the beginning of 2000 through blogs through Wikipedia, it became an asset share. And all the students on an estate basis, everything was shared through blogs and through some website. So what does it mean for the people? When you keep information for you during ages and you share it, it creates new reflex. You share your car, you share your home, you share your apartment, you share your office, you share information. And what does it mean for the business? If you share your car, you know your business like blah, blah car popping up. If you share your experience, you take pictures, you share with your friends on the various social networks what you do. Then you can rent also your apartment through Airbnb. I have a team right now looking for an office in Paris. There are 10, and the three offers they got was not traditional office, but co-location. So what does it mean for business people? It totally changed the way they have to operate. Carlos really explained very well yesterday. During many years car makers were producing cars. Now they are going to produce a service to go from A to B. Another thing which has a big impact on our life. This morning you should have all received the statistic on how you've been using your iPhones. Because we're reasonable people, we have had maybe 100 interactions during the week. But some kids in the US, they have 500 connections per day. So what does it mean for the brain? Instead of delivering a thought process during four hours. That's what we used to do reading a book or whatever. Every 7, 10 seconds the brain is attacked. What does it mean then? It means the neuronal topology of the brain is being reconfigured. It creates addictions. It creates also a new form of depression. And it creates also some avatars. I organized a board three weeks ago with 14 people. And I told them no iPhone during four hours and no tablets. And it was funny to see the reaction of the people. Because after 10, 20 minutes some of them were really in an addiction mode. Like cigarettes or alcohol or whatever. So little by little this interaction with the brain becomes an addiction. Another impact also is we all communicate on a daily basis, on an asynchronous basis. We have friends who are overseas or families or whatever and we share experience. So the more we communicate like that, the more we need to be together. So a new set of business are exploding. Music concert, sports, sports bar. And now in Paris, as an example, you can see in London, after work, hundreds of young people hanging around the bar. One thing also which I've changed, technology has changed in our habit, is the way we shop. We have all eShop. But what are the impacts on the network of shops? All the corner stores now are doing very well. Because it's convenient. All the big shops are big more like Apple store is an experience. So you go there and hang around. But the in-between shops is not convenient, it's not fun and it's not an experience. So except the Apple store where you go there to hang around, as an example in London, 35% of the commercial services between 400 meters, square meters and 8,000 weekers have no future. Another example is entertainment. We, in our younger age, we were buying LPs, CDs, cassette DVDs and whatever. And now nobody buys cassette. You go on the net, you have Netflix. And not only that, but now all the young generation do not look at TV, on the linear TV, but are looking at Netflix and things like that. So my point here, and I'm not going to describe everything, is that little by little, not only the technology change the way we operate, but change also our relationship with things the way we operate. That means because the change is very fast, the impact on the traditional business of Capex and Aopex, you know, create a huge parody, which is very difficult to anticipate. And Carlos Ghosn yesterday really in phase of facts. So just to finish, what is next? In the next 18 months, there will be three main revolutions that will even change more in our life. First of all, the speed of communication will be multiplied by 10. So the 5G or the 5G+, will move our communication from 100 meg to 1 gigabit or 10 gigabit. Second, the next generation of sensor, IoT, quantum computing, will make the things much faster, much smaller. And in a few years from now, you will have a chip in your body, like a plane, will reset all the data and say, you can work, you can sleep, you can drive, and whatever. And last, the next generation of algorithm will take in the cloud all the programs, aggregate it on a real-time basis at the speed of light, and then will provide on a real-time basis all the algorithms to make the things faster and cheaper and whatever. And here, we're not going to talk about artificial intelligence. All this change, the day it will be faster than our human reflex, then we can talk about IA. Just data, the speed of Internet is about 300,000 km per second is the light, you know, the speed of light. In the brain, the speed of data, you know, is 100 m per second. So there is a competition right now between the brain and between the process of watching things and operating things as a reflex. So is the future bright or not? I don't know. But we need to be very careful about how do we use technology because it impacts our life, the way we communicate, and we need to be very careful with our kids to make sure they still have a normal life and play with toys like we've done when we were younger.