 The pace and the penetration of a core enabler, wireless broadband, and smarter devices, are happening at an unprecedented rate. With more than five billion mobile connections, we foresee smartphone prices falling well below $100, and with it, global mass adoption of smartphones. Mobile tablets will predominate forcing PCs to become niche products. We see this coupled with near universal access to the wireless internet and digital social media. This new digital combination of wireless internet and digital social media is occurring at an unprecedented speed and with a scale that opens up new economies, new business models, new opportunities, and new ways to overcome traditional barriers, especially in the emerging markets. The new digital combination will discard old cost models, create new applications, and enable the ability to tap at the touch of a finger new reservoirs of wisdom and the resources of others. Let me know two areas where traditional approaches will be upended. Education and employment. For education, teachers become virtual, books become digital, and rented at a fraction of their old digital selves. Rather than dogged, warned, and out of date, the new digital books are consistently refreshed at a very little cost. A new world of the self-taught, or maybe more correctly, the group-taught will emerge, spread again by wireless connections and digital social engagement. For the other part, the employment. New ideas and business models can flourish on the web for again a fraction of the cost of the traditional approaches. The cost of digital tools are plummeting. And again, wireless broadband access becoming more available and affordable. Marketing and distribution is as easy as using your digital social crowd. Mobile entrepreneurs can flourish with traditional jobs and drive up. A compelling mobile application can be created in days and become virtual within hours as the new digital combination pushes down traditional barriers to job creation. It opens up tremendous opportunities for the young in the world today to turn their restless energy into creating their own employment and for social entrepreneurs to tackle pressing social problems. Competitive innovation will be done, I think, through three main building blocks. The first building block is the open platforms. The open platforms will give us more innovation, lower cost as we talked about a couple of times, and as a result of that, a greater value. The second building block is really the affordability and the widespread access to broadband data. And the third building block, which is a logical extension of the two first, is all the things happening in the cloud today. I think the cloud-based capabilities, which again will give more and higher scale of economies and also through its nature, ease up the use. Those three elements I think will help innovation a lot going forward. The telecom industry is first and foremost a fundamental enabler of the new digital combination as wireless is the essential digital platform. Our industry will continue to work, I hope, with others in the value chain and with governments to enable new digital uses and models. For example, in areas like financial services, healthcare and education, we will continue to press for open platforms, which are without question the most efficient and compelling for everyone in the value chain.