 I think one of the discussions at this conference has been pretty relevant with the idea of making intellectual property more affordable and one that can make it easy to understand so that younger startup-oriented publishers could look at it as an opportunity as well as a strengthening tool rather than something complex that you have to go down to lawyers for. I think that's a very, very relevant discussion and it's not got an easy solution because as we move forward in the digital content space we will definitely need to protect original content. So I think one piece of the conference has clearly focused on that. And on the other hand I think just a whole vibrant discussion about how digital is changing the way we all consume information, consume news and reach out. I think that itself is a cue for where journalism is headed because it's truly going to change the way we read, consume, interact with news. And that is somewhat in for a flux because traditional organizations will realize that they have to go the startup way, they have to go the mobile way, they have to go the local, hyper-local way. So some interesting trends clearly emerging there and on the backdrop of it being intellectual property, I think a lot of that has opened up ideas for us to go back with. There is a new color in the idea of what journalism is and what it will be driven by gadgets, driven by the size of the news that we want to read, consume or watch and also just the whole sheer social media revolution. So good times ahead.