 I think we'll see a continued trend in the rollout of the Internet in particular. You have incumbent industries, in particular telecom and cable television, that have been in charge of rollout of the Internet. But these industries have a strategic interest in preventing that rollout because it's going to disintegrate their existing cash cows. I think what you want to take a look at in terms of innovation is ways to circumvent these particular industries. And I'd also like to give a shout out at Google Glass and how ubiquitous recording might change social values for the better or worse is a matter of perspective, but we'll all have to relate to it. I think anyone daft enough to answer that question is just a lot braver than me. The one thing is certain is whatever I said would be wrong and rather than actually cause a large audience to be laughing at me, I think I'll duck that if you don't mind. Today we are working very closely with the automobile industry in terms of looking at the transport vehicle of the future. I believe there are a lot of innovations that will come from that in terms of not only saving drivers' lives or passengers, but also in making the car much more intelligent to a point of optimizing the transport system, but also increasing the whole safety. I think the next big innovation is mass collaboration and the European Internet Foundation, which is a collection of forward-looking MEPs of identifying this really as the dominant paradigm for the next 10 or 15 years, and I very much agree with them.