 Well, we started with the community stations. First, we created a radio directory, which was a paper directory, with all the stations in France. We know in France we have more than a thousand operators, like companies, doing radio, which is a very, very big landscape compared to other countries. With those actors we wanted to add all the people that are giving services or products to those radio stations. So we had the directory with the professionals that are giving products and services, and the radio stations themselves, so we had contacts. And we said one day with my father, we said, let's gather them into an event. And we started with community stations, they all came to talk about radio, and slowly and slowly, with time, we moved to bigger and bigger, and the biggest radio started to come and to be interested. And now, last year, as we moved to here, Grand Hall de la Villette, which is a very, very beautiful venue, to create the first really with booth, first exhibition, linked to also content and free for professional visitors. So it has been, I think, you know, evolution, slow evolution, but first with community stations, you know, the core of radio. I mean, you ask any presenter where he started, whether he's from TV or from radio, he will tell, well, I started in a small community radio station, and that's where comes the passion of radio. Well, I think first we made a step forward going European. Last year, we were Salon de la Radio only, French talking only. We had 7% visitors from foreign countries, but they didn't have any content in English. So it was not very interesting for them. Okay, they came for the exhibitors, but no real content. This year, we decided to go a little further and to say, we're going to have a name only for foreign visitors. It's going to be European radio show. So the French talking people, it's still called Salon de la Radio. We don't want to call it Salon européen de la Radio, because for them, it's not accurate. It's their show, the Salon de la Radio. But for foreign visitors, European radio show is something that is new. So, and it attracts a lot of new foreign people. We have now, we have 20% of foreign visitors, of those 6,000 visitors. So which is an improvement of 13% compared to last year. So I think it's just a start. Our goal is to really make a free to access for professional radio event that gathers not only technicians, but also program people. Also people that take care of sales houses. All the crafts within the radio industry want to gather them because they have the same passion. More and more, program people are talking and working with technicians. So that's really our goal, to try to help them gather them and so radio go further and what is the future of radio? We know what is the future of radio. Radio, the future of radio, it's like, it's not technology that really is a problem. It's not the way you broadcast that is important. What is important is your voice and how you ask me questions and I answer those questions so that I concern the person that is listening to me. And radio people are very good in that. I have kids. My kids, I don't want them to listen to anything anyhow. So the regulation is really something that is very important and in terms of Hertzian broadcasting. Then regarding the web, is there really, really regulations? I mean that's a good question because in France for instance, everyone can do his own web radio. I can talk about extreme politics on the web and my kid can listen to that. So I'm very grateful that regulation exists in Hertzian because I know that if my kid is listening to FM or if my kid is listening to DAB+, which comes in France and which develops everywhere in Europe, I am secured that I have authority and regulation that makes all those presenters and all those people behind the content obliged to respect some rules for my kids. I don't want them to listen to things when they're too young. So I think regulation has a lot of, at least in France, I don't know how it is internationally, but has to do a lot of work on the IP side because everyone can broadcast anything, anyhow, anywhere. How is it possible to regulate that? That's still an issue.