 Well, there's a lot of extremely valuable data that's published in this report. Let me deal with only three general tendencies amongst the richness of the detail that is contained in the report. First of all, we see extremely strong demand for intellectual property worldwide. Consistently, over the past several years, intellectual property growth rates far out perform the growth rates that we see for the world economy in general and for individual economies in particular. So why is this occurring? Well, obviously it's an expression of the knowledge economy. It's an expression of the fact that knowledge is a much more important component in all forms of production and distribution than used to be the case. Secondly, we see an extraordinary performance once again. This is something we've noticed over the past five years, in particular extraordinary performance on the part of China. China experienced double digit growth rates in patents, trademarks, utility models and industrial designs. It has the largest office in the world now in terms of the receipt of numbers of applications for patents, trademarks, industrial designs. Then we see that Chinese residents, residents of China for the first time, filed the greatest number of patent applications all around the world. So the first statistic I gave you, which is being the biggest office that concerns where applications are filed, the second statistic, Chinese residents, that concerns who's filing the applications. So Chinese residents, the largest number of patent applications, filed worldwide. Thirdly, I think that we can say now that we see a trend towards a much greater participation in and use of the intellectual property system on the part of the middle income countries. Traditionally, the domain of the high income countries, we now see intellectual property is pursued vigorously and embraced by the middle income countries and we see some extremely important growth rates, not just from China, but also from Russian Federation, Turkey, to name several others.