 Paul, we just got out of my session today at the ITU World here in Bangkok. I invited Oscar Varaneze for Internet IQ, Robbie Hils from Google, and Benedict Evans from Anderson, Lysus here in London, and we had a very, very fantastic session actually. We talked about, you know, basically what's going on in the mobile industry compared to all these social and mobile apps we're seeing these days. We first took a perspective of the past 15 years and how much it has changed since basically 1999. You remember 1999 was a big era for the ITU telecom where in Geneva there was this massive conference in Geneva and back then you had players like BlackBerry who had just released their first pager for email. Of course the big players were Motorola and Nokia and Google was nascent and you look 15 years down the line you look at today and you see that all these players have changed and that you know Nokia basically was bought up by Microsoft. You have BlackBerry is basically in a very dire situation and you have new players have come up. Of course you have the Google, the Facebook that everybody talks about and you have the mobile first players, the WhatsApp, the Line here in Asia or WeChat in China and all these players are kind of reshaping completely the landscape of the mobile world. One of the highlights we had, we talked about in the session was that basically at the end of the 90s the Internet world, the desktop world was actually pretty much settled. We knew how to actually interact with the Internet. It was you had a computer, you opened a browser and you would go through the web. It was basically and it remained that interaction remained in the past 15 years. With mobile it's not really settled yet. We don't really know where it's going. I mean you have all these new players that I just mentioned that are coming out. New players are basically are very small players. I mean you have WhatsApp for instance. They only have 30 people to think a company. They don't need as much overhead that these big companies used to have and they're actually disrupting the market by themselves. Just imagine they actually have 30, I think 30, 350 million users as sorry pictures shared daily which is actually more than Facebook already. They have 14 billion, 14 billion messages exchanged daily. It's almost reaching to the level of SMS and that's a 30 people company based in the US. It's a very small company so you see all these changes are going on very quickly and we don't really know where it's going. The telcos, the telephone companies have also the same issue about understanding how they should adapt to this new world. We highlighted some of these strategies that they could do whether it's content, what type of role could they take in this new world. This is really what we had and I really joined you to actually look at the session again if you can online and I will write a blog post about it as well for the ITU to have all the basic points we mentioned. I think it was a very good session and I thank the ITU for inviting us.