 When you think about it, all societies have really expanded their overall standard of living when they've been able to connect with other societies, essentially reach out. And if you go back to the 18th and 19th century, it was steamships and railroads that enabled those connections. And the connections, you know, they facilitated not only the transit of goods and services, but the transit of ideas. Well today, that same facility is really subsumed by broadband and internet connectivity. And although you still have problems of, you know, infrastructure, food production, irrigation, disease, health care, broadband alone is not going to solve those problems, but it can be a really substantial ticket to improving access to the information needed to solve those problems. It's lowering costs of some of the solutions and expanding the capability for people in those situations to actually learn and have a more productive life going forward.