Absolutely, the scale of what you can do with technology is becoming important. One of the things that I talk about when I go to conferences or gives talk on the topic is that, we have a population bump here coming up with the Baby Boomer generation that need more medical care, that are going to need more medical supervision and attention. We don't have enough doctors, we don't have enough nurses. So, we need to leverage technology. And instead of my dad having to go to the doctor's office to get his blood pressure taken, to give his blood sugars, to do all of those things, if he can do it over the Internet and not have to drive. And not have to go in and sit in a waiting room, and expose themselves maybe to other germs, to the flu, to whatever the other things that we know are in doctors' offices. That quality of life is going to go up and it's going to make things a lot better, and less expensive for our system as a whole. So there's many advantages to start to use these medical devices. The other impact of using this technology is internationally. In some countries, they have very good cellular networks that transfer data around, but they don't have doctors, they don't have clean water. But, by using medical technology and being able to use the Internet to bring that data back, we can have doctors doing examinations on patients anywhere in the world. And that's a really powerful thing and something that can't be overlook.