 Soundcheck? So when 3 billion people come online for the first time in the next few years, this will be unprecedented in human history. This has never been seen before. To have that big of an influx into a global economy. It's not just a regional like, oh, this sub-saharan village is now connected. They're now connected to the world. They could consume products and services. They can take online courses and degrees. They can compete globally for programming jobs and intellectual pursuits, which will be the highest-paying jobs. So the good is, it's remarkably democratizing. It will raise the bottom of the pyramid for all and make the standard of living better for all. But it has one sinister, and I think inevitable, side effect is that it will transform what we may think of as the pyramid with the top one percenters into a pure vertical spike with winner-take-all dynamics on a global scale. Because when the regional basis of competition is shed and you compete on a global scale, you will have the same power laws, I mean the same exponential distribution of wealth, opportunity, and resources that you see in every information economy. That can be a dark effect in the current systems as they exist today, where unhappiness may correlate with income disparity, but it doesn't have to be that way. And that's one of the things I get excited about is to think, how can we get to a future where it's better for all and we're all happy versus it's better for all, but you have one or two winners and billions of losers. That's not a good scenario.