 One of the reactions we've got at the State Department is, are you sure this invitation is for me and not my communications minister colleague? But the point is that we're trying to, you know, surprise them that the Internet is here, it should be a national priority for them. What is your advice to us and from the NGO community on how we can make the most of tomorrow's meeting? Well, I was immensely impressed with the conversations I heard today, and you can correct me if I heard them incorrectly. But I saw a tremendous amount of skill and enthusiasm coming together in this room throughout the day that I would love to see infused into the conversations with the banks, the ministers, and beyond as this goes forward. And what I found fascinating was with all of the tremendous skill here, there seemed to be almost a unanimous feeling that this was much bigger than just technology, just infrastructure. It was really about all the externalities, societal externalities, the global externalities people have been talking about all day, that this needs a holistic approach. This needs the key financiers of development to focus on in a much different way. And I would really want to bring this conversation somehow into that room and beyond because what I do is advocacy. And what I heard today was fabulous advocacy for pilot projects for targeted investments that can explode into much bigger projects and economic and social development opportunities. There's just a tremendous amount of knowledge and skill here that needs to be at the table. So what I would hope that we can somehow find a way to convey going forward and maybe continue this process is to do this again and make it more targeted focused and strategic. But let me also bring up one element that I think is critical to consider and not to take away from what we've done today. There are a lot of people who are not in this room, who couldn't be here. But there are a lot of people in civil society who will look at this and see powerful governments, powerful institutions like the banks, powerful corporate players and be suspicious. And for obvious reasons, we have worked with other NGOs, I see from access on a letter to the ministers to engage and support this process but also to indicate that there are important issues that have been talked about here. Rule of law, appropriate norms and behaviors, the good use of taxation, the inappropriate use of taxation on and on. A set of parameters and norms that are critical so that you're not just building to build, you're building to actually serve the economic and social needs you're talking about. And so I think we need to be sensitive and we need to not just galvanize what we've had here today.