 In theme 6 in GRISP, we're all about what contributions we can provide as researchers to support the economic development of the rice sector as a whole. The extension, the outreach activities, the dissemination of new technologies and knowledge to farmers. And I think in 2011 we have particularly seen very rapid developments in the whole area of concepts and tools for using what we might call modern information communication technologies to bring those kind of knowledge solutions to the farmers at a much larger scale than we were able to do before. So one of the things that we are particularly excited about is first mobile phone applications for farmers. There are various ways of doing this as a farmer being able to call a toll-free number and by answering a set of 12 or 13 questions about their field and their management, obtaining a precise recommendation for fertilizer to apply or nutrient management in general. But we're also thinking now about these types of things for smartphones, so extension workers who could have applications on their smartphones, phones that would allow making direct decisions or decisions of poor farmers in the field, helping them to solve local problems, make more precise prescriptions to their own management in the field. And there are many other applications in the pipeline, also linking this to financial services and crop insurance. So we will see more of this coming but 2011 I think has been a groundbreaking year in that sense that we released the first of these applications in the Philippines in January and have since then seen a rapid evolution in this whole new area and one could call it a whole new way of doing agricultural extension.