 Hello from ITU Headquarters in Geneva, where I'm very pleased to be joined by Eddie Motor, the CTO of fixed access at Huawei, and we are here at the workshop on the future of TV for Europe, and we're here to talk about Huawei's relations with TV. Eddie, thanks for joining us. Glad to be here. Thank you. What is Huawei's relationship to TV? It's the biggest driver for our network innovation. TV, alongside with data, of course, like Internet, that's the biggest driver for network innovation, network capacity build, network functionalities, new service tiers from the operators kind of view, so that's the stuff that we focus on. So from our point of view, TV is one of the major services that drives us along. They speak about 80% of Internet traffic being video by 2020. Yes. It's the major application you have to serve. What is the innovation in the network required to serve that huge demand for video? That's a good question. Thank you. Because we see that the drivers for network innovation, they are migrating also. Normally, as an operator, as a fixed network operator, you would focus and tend to focus a lot on capacity to serve your highest service tier that you sell as an operator to your customers. But now, because of the new service, like VR, AR, mixed reality, we see that shifting along towards latency and the high quality of networks, so high availability. And again, latency, those are the drivers that push us forward to do network innovation, which actually ends up with a high standard of new type of networks. And what are the new types of networks that you're working on? Actually, for myself, I'm focusing on two. So it's Fiber, but then Fiber on PON infrastructure and then with new technology inside PON, which provide us with low latency networks that make VR, for instance, as a video service able. And on cable, we are also trying to do our innovation. There is the latency, there is a big challenge because of the network topology by itself. But we're trying to solve that also. What are the services on the horizon that consumers in Europe and also globally could look forward to? What's next? VR AR. Very simple. It is predicted, and we had a nice chat about predictions earlier today. It's predicted that around 2025, there will be like 400 million people on the world that would be enjoying VR AR or mixed reality. And those are the type of service that would actually provide operators with a big upsell, not only based on capacity and subscriptions, but also on new types of network services, something like VR AR with low latency services, which is needed, actually. So those are the kinds of services as a network service. On top of that, from a business point of view, you can see that like using VR and AR, it's like in a medical world, it will be applied, it will be used for education, it will be used for tourism also. So that's the big picture there. And what are the new partnerships required to make these new services happen? There's a huge variety of services. I imagine it's much more dynamic business. Yeah, you can split that in two, actually, because there is a divided business based upon network typology, network technology. So we are trying, as a wire, we are trying to set up as many partnerships as we can. For that, we just built in 2017 already. We built like a partnership in our headquarters in Shenzhen to invite other partners on technology level to come over and have sharing thoughts with us about VR applications, how to build business cases, how to build business and to build networks. And there is another part, of course, it's a business dam itself, because you would need partners to actually make it able for customers to buy the service that they want, fitting the need that they have by maybe using VR or AR and then based upon that, having the right choice for the service tier as well as a network choice. What has been your experience at this workshop? We have a number of voices represented, regulators, business, a variety of people. What has been your experience of our talks today? I had two experience today, which actually explained a lot more to me about markets, explorations, market data analysis, when it comes to OTT deployment. And there was another one that struck my attention also about deployment in Spain with over-the-top services and IP services. And I actually struck my mind also, there was a part about DVBI, which also sounds very interesting to me. So that's the reason for me to come back, yeah, definitely. Well, we hope to see you soon. And thank you very much. You're welcome. Thank you.