 So I'm Gard Leonhard, futurist from Basel, Switzerland. And I deal with trends and try to figure out where to take my clients in the next three to five years. I'm the author of five books and I run a company called the Futures Agency. I think what we're seeing is that a lot of things that we discussed in the 90s, that was the first part of the internet, is now actually happening. So we talked about convergence, we talked about digital media, we talked about digital music and the cloud. And this is all becoming real now. So to me, innovation is all about disrupting something that really isn't working and making it better. And we're also seeing, of course, a global trend where we have five billion people connected to the internet very soon. So that part of it will also cause a huge amount of innovation. And I think most of the innovation will in the future not necessarily come from where it used to come from, which is America, but will come more from Asia, the developing countries and hopefully Europe. Because now there's more means of distribution. The model of systematic and general in France is very interesting, I think, as a blueprint. What we have in Europe is that we don't have the same culture of risk that we have in America. So we need more support for people to create new things and more sort of a societal approach. So I think that is a very good thing. It's also quite clear that technology is a global business. And this is also starting to happen in France. This is also very much like this and the same is happening in Germany as well. And some of the problems in the past that we've had is that we were always concentrating on local markets, which is good, but they're very small. While Americans have 300 million people and Chinese have a billion people and Indians have 900 million. So we have to create global models. So I think that systematic would probably be good if it could branch out into a global system of bringing companies out.