 Consumers are driving themselves towards the cloud, accelerated by mobile in many ways. And campuses in a sense can be the ones to be the rocks, the stable place. We're re-architecting our network right now, and we're largely administrative staff. But we've run out of IP addresses on our wireless network. And so we looked at that and we said, wow, we're going to have to literally readdress the entire network, because mobile devices have come in and they've sucked up the bulk of the IP addresses. And so people on Dr. Laptop, they bring it to a meeting and they can't get on the network and they're going, what happened? Back before the 2010 holiday season, I said to my team, these kids are going to go home and they're going to get, a lot of them are going to get iPads or new iPhones or whatever it is. So we better make sure that the Wi-Fi network is really robust. And sure enough, our wireless traffic went up more than it ever had been when the students came back. If we move to a virtual desktop infrastructure, maybe we don't care what kind of device you have. Maybe it's not such a support issue as, you know, the support issues may get simpler in fact. And so I think that that's an area that we're going to look into further. We've done, again, some cost modeling on this, and it's not inexpensive to get into this virtual desktop infrastructure. But when you consider all the labor savings and other things that might be there, it really might make sense. So one of the other main changes that we made is we're now taking all of our web traffic and we're pushing it directly out to the internet outside our firewall. And for users that have a legitimate reason to be in, which is staff, they're actually VPNing back in to our internal network. So we are working with, you know, our primary vendors on further broadening and strengthening our Wi-Fi network. But old and beautiful buildings are the hardest ones to do wireless in. So we're gradually making our way through the journey of getting, you know, Wi-Fi ubiquitous throughout the campus, I call it, domed wireless. We're gradually making our way to domed wireless. Taking the IT point of view, the support angle has just become many, many orders of magnitude more difficult. It used to be that we could assume a simple universe of, say, Windows and PC plus Mac. And that was it. With mobile devices, now we get, on the one hand, many, many instances of hardware, categories of hardware, families of hardware, that add on top of the artfully replacing laptops and desktops. So we have smartphones, we have feature phones, we have tablets of different kinds. We have, of course, the clicker. We have mobile game players. We have DVD players. We have old school tablets.