if it's a public safety feature, just go to alabama or joplin, missouri or washington, d.c., and recognize that the first thing to get jammed, and, again, there's never going to be enough spectrum to handle a crisis via broadband. the one constant is broadcasting, and an fm chip and a cell phone provides life saving information in a time of natural or human caused emergencies like a terrorist attack, and so it is -- it is approaching because of all of these of the american people, it ought to be considered. we hope that as spectrum is shorter instead of streaming music that more and more of the manufacturers of cell phones and the cell phone carriers will permit the lighting up of the radio chips that are currently in most models of cell phones. they are there. they are there already, but they want to bill them by the bit, by streaming music, and not have the consumer to have the ability to get music for free. >> guest: in november, the fcc and dhs along with stake holders held the first national test of the emergency system. there's issues with some cable systems. can you give us a sense