 Thank you very much, I will try to open my slides. Okay, so good morning. I have a common point with the previous speaker, is that I'm also economist by training, so I'm not an open source, I'm not an IT professional, so I was thinking what am I going to do today, since I'm not an IT professional, I'm sure I will bring many news to you. So I decided to orient my speech more about the broad framework conditions surrounding IT, openness and innovation. And I looked at the title, which is Openness, Open Innovation and Drivers for Gross, which is the title of this morning session. And before I start my speech, I was yesterday having dinner with Professor Brown-Winold from Berkeley, UC Berkeley. And well, before she became professor, she was a 90-entrepreneur, software entrepreneur, and she knows a bit about that. And she is currently visiting in Merritt, in the Netherlands. And in Merritt, there is not a young... Well, he's young, he's very young, because I like a lot the end of the speech, he's very young, he decided not to finish his studies, he's a programmer, expert, geek, I mean, he has a very insightful vision of various types of business. He's part of a research program in Merritt, so with no PhD and even no academic diploma. And he starts a business. And for his business, by the way, he's Indian, he's an Indian in Belgium, and starts a business where? In New York. According to him, now, two places where you start your business in IT, in Web 2.0, it's New York or San Francisco. And he chose New York because it's faster from Belgium. He commutes every day. And that's a bit what I'm looking at today in my speech. It's not really an IT user.