and i remember knocking on the door of a friend, tom downey, one of my best friends in the congress, and he'd -- we'd have dinner together in summers when congress was in and so one time i got one of these early mobile phones that looked like a big brick, you remember? and i thought it was so cool. i look back at those pictures and i think "that looks so stupid." but i had one of those deals and i said "what about dinner tonight?" and he said "come on over. when are you going to get here?" right on that time i knocked on the door and he opened the door and it was like the old "saturday night live" wild and crazy guys. whoa! but that's the way we thought about them at that time. at that time there were market projections of how quickly that technology would spread throughout the world. those projections were not only wrong, they were way, way wrong. why? because the quality continued to improve as the price continued to go down and the decisions to purchase were not in the hands of a utility or a gatekeeper guarding a bottleneck. individuals and individual business people could do it.