 Well, translation is important, you know, taking into account the global nature of the international community and looking at the multiplicity of languages, it's almost insane that we have all the tons of languages in the world. I mean, we don't have what I normally call, in my terminology, bridge builders. We're going to come to a point where communication can very easily come to a standstill because we're going to end up with this biblical tower of Babel and we won't be able to communicate. So I think that translators do a very wonderful job of bridging this thing with the gaps. Looking at the function of Altai, the first thing that strikes me as being very positive about Altai is the fact that our annual meetings, our annual conferences serve as a wonderful forum for people to congregate and exchange very fruitful ideas, not only from the theoretical point of view but from the practical point of view. Most of us who are here, we are practicing translators, we encounter challenges on a day-to-day basis and of course these challenges are not common, they are not unique. Sorry, they are not universal. So every translator encounters a set of problems that are unique to his or her circumstance of practice and I think that when we congregate here, it's a very good avenue for us to exchange these ideas and kind of benefit from the experiences of one another and so that's the thing. Of course, another thing that I find very useful with Altai is the publications, especially the journal, our review, the translation review. I think that the exchange of ideas in the translation review is very, very useful from the point of view of, again, people coming from different perspectives and sharing ideas that relate to the same trigger we're practicing.