 Well, thanks, Graham and Paul, for inviting me here for Open Forum Europe. I'm particularly pleased to be here as a member of the old generation of Internet companies and hope that we still have, despite being so long in the tooth at 12 years old as a company that we might have something worthwhile to say, I was also going to make a comment about, Graham, your observation about the open Wi-Fi network here at the conference, but I'm going to refrain from that joke. So really I wanted to talk a little bit about openness, and the last few weeks have taught us that economic confidence is a long way from being re-established out there in the markets, and it's clear that we're going to need attention to the present crisis, but also a pretty compelling long-term vision that requires a serious commitment to change. The Commission's recent Europe 2020 communication put it, the crisis is a wake-up call. It's time to be bold and ambitious. So it was pretty fascinating for me to hear Commissioner Cruz outline the digital agenda that she has, which is clearly part of that long-term vision about competitiveness and about economic growth. She paints a pretty exciting picture in my view and shows that the Commission's got a pretty clear understanding of the dynamics of the knowledge economy, and so let's hope that the Commission and all of us can execute on some of that. So I'd like to talk again about openness and about how it's important for realizing this vision that Commissioner Cruz talked about. So let me start by highlighting some of the big trends out there in the internet. I think these are not going to be news to many of you, but it's worth going through them quickly. The last 15 years of the web have seen, as you all know, unprecedented opportunity for the economy, for business, for entrepreneurship, and for civil society at large. And at Google, we actually believe this is just the beginning. We've only sort of started down the path of what the network can do for the world. The internet is really on the verge of its next major phase of growth and indeed sophistication. You know, yesterday's internet was about using your computer, you go to a website, you read something. Tomorrow's internet is really about some much more powerful applications, much more powerful services. And there are a bunch of trends going on here, and let me mention four of them. First, the cloud. Cloud computing, frankly, it kind of gave rise to the Googles of the world in its earliest incarnations. You're going to see a massive shift from the desktop-centric mode to where everything's on your PC to the cloud model, where the data, your content, the things you care about are in the cloud, and you can access it from any device that you choose. But the cloud's not just about taking what we did on PCs and putting it online.