 Clearly, I believe technology has a huge role to play in helping disadvantaged people in all forms. There are several kinds of assistive technologies we can think about. Those helping with sensory skills, you know, how we see. Those helping with motor skills, you know, anything to do with my lens hands motion. And then, you know, those with our mental skills and how we interact with people. In each of those areas, I see technology having immense potential and I see in particular of that. You know, we've seen lots of examples in the sensory case. Okay, where if you have, you know, you can't see properly. I just saw some great projects at Carnegie Mellon. You know, on the bread machine and things, how you teach and how you can make progress greatly. You're rather sharing and how can you automatically get sign language for any document to do. So clearly, there are technologies there in the areas of motor skills. Again, tremendous, you know, advances are taking place from prosthetics. You know, that can make people feel essentially natural and how they walk and take actions. You know, long term, you know, things can be connected to your brain and those signals directly. You know, so that people can function more appropriately. And, you know, similarly, you know, on the kind of mental skills perspective. I'm getting older. I always say, oh, I forget, you know, the person's name. And you can imagine there, you know, in all of those situations, you know, whether you're helping people remember things in case of Alzheimer's, you can help people live longer, more productive, healthier lives. Now, what are the challenges, you know, and what needs to get done to get these things out? The first, I think, is about awareness. That there is a lot of technology and capabilities that exist in how we get it out. You know, certainly as Microsoft and as a company, you know, it is high priority for us as our, you know, mainstream products of use worldwide that we make assistive capabilities in that as a foundational part of it. But making the awareness to the people who need it, okay, is fundamental. I think the second aspect is, you know, the investments that the governments themselves make in helping these technologies reach the people who need them. Okay, whether it be in schools and work environments, because unless we do that, the productive capability of these millions or hundreds of millions of people is not getting there. And finally, I think what is critical is about innovation. Okay, there is so much scope for innovation that is still possible on what we can do. You know, the professor who heard that I was talking to at MIT, you know, where he has these prosthetics that will allow people to walk. Very normally, you know, today the price might be $1,000. Tomorrow we can bring down the price to $100. You know, a few years later, you know, with scale, it might be tens of $20. So imagine the number of people that can be impacted. You know, one of the beauties of ICT, you know, with a phone device that I can continuously carry that can give a blind man direction. I think we can bring back, both address new capabilities and bring down the cost so that it can be affordable for each and every person. So those are the three things that come to mind and are very important. Thank you so much for your time. Thank you so much.