 My view is that it's a wonderful initiative. It really is. And I'm so proud of the ITU because I see the ITU pushing further and further forward with gender equality and gender inclusion. I think it's an excellent initiative because it will recognize the good work that so many women are doing that would otherwise go unnoticed and not understood. But it's also a way of creating role models for other women and particularly younger women. So I congratulate the ITU on that and UN women on that as well. Well, my experience is that there weren't many women in technology, information, communications, technology. Not for a very long time. I was very lucky because I got into the field at a time when there were a few organizations that were just beginning to recognize that maybe women or a woman had a role. And it certainly opened up since then. But I must say, when we're looking back 20 years, for example, even at the ITU or back further than that, but 20 years if we use the Beijing Women's Congress as a guide, we've made progress in some areas. But it hasn't been nearly as fast as it needs to be and we've got a lot of work to do. We need to figure out how to use the ICT which has an enormous magnifying capability to speed up and expand the process of gender inclusion through ICT and in the ICT field. The issue of role models is very interesting. When I started in the ICT field, you were lucky if you had a boss or a colleague who could be a role model or maybe in rare instances a mother. But now with the global reach and capability of ICT, it's possible to look to someone who you don't even know where they're located as your role model. And so for those young women in particular who cannot look around them in their own country or in their own community to find another woman to inspire them, all they need to do is go on the Internet and they will find someone. I see this as part of the organic opportunities that we have to inspire more and more women to come into the field.