 So, can you tell us about the most important message that you want to convey today in the panel discussion? I want to convey the message that so-called disability does not apply to just one sector of the community. We are all equally abled and disabled by technology and our relationship to it, and therefore our relationship to the social world and to education, so that when we talk about making better and more assistive technology tools, we're not only speaking about people with disabilities, though they're an incredibly important group, but we're talking about all of us in the world in which we all live longer, we all have various things happen to us which require us to have new, better, different kinds of interfaces to technology so that we can speak and express ourselves, learn and relearn as necessary. So, one of my points is that disability is not a marginal issue. These assistive technology tools are for us all. The most important thing about them is that they should be made available from birth for free to everyone who needs them, and until we get to that point, I think we're doing a huge disservice to all of us as a human race. Most people with disabilities are not in a position to pay extortionate amounts of money for a bit of hardware and some software which might be outdated and may not work and may need to be customized. Really what we need to do is work together across disciplines and across countries and in an open source model to create tools, hardware and software and customize ways of working with people in community settings to make sure that everyone who has a communication or education or mobility need has that need met in a very specific way. So my basic pitch is that we should work together to create and provide free accessible and assistive technology tools. And when I say I use this phrase almost too late technologies, which is something that I discuss in the context of a partial rejection of the notion that there are just in time technologies, just before it's too late for someone to learn just before. Often that just before is really in some sense almost too late. And for people who have never had a physical voice, who have lost their ability to move for whatever reason, disability or cancer or stroke, almost too late is almost too late. We should be making tools available right from the outset of each person's life. And my real point is it's possible to do that. Most of the tools that our center use exist out there. We're finding ways to reverse technologies that are used for selling products to make them communication tools for people who need them. Most of what we need to do is collaborate better and more deeply across community and across the sectors. And my last point would be as an example of how we could do this very easily, one of the tools that we use most with collaborators is an eye gaze technology which has four infrared cameras that will follow the eye movement of anyone, which is particularly useful for someone who can't move any other part of their body. So that as you stare at the screen, as your eyes remain focused on a letter or an image of a sound in music or whatever it is, a picture of an object or a picture of a person, as you gaze at that, that object sound is heard out loud and or is written on screen so that your eyes become your mouse or your interface to everything for education and creative expression. Those tools could easily be used to activate gaming environments as well as learning environments which all the companies could make accessible on all the various gaming platforms. And just like the Nintendo Wii made movement interface accessible and very cheap for all because as soon as everyone buys a Nintendo Wii game suddenly the cost has come right down. If we've made some games for our gaze technology, all of us, and made them customized in local dialects with local content encourage the large companies to support cross-platform development for our gaze control then everybody who needs our gaze control would have it. And this would apply to any other interface for disability or for recovery in a rehabilitative state that we can come up with. So basically we can do it, we need to do it and we need to do it now. Thank you so much for your time.