If American customers are demanding that wireless operators offer it, I'm sure somebody eventually will, but that doesn't mean it's going to be us.
We believe in priority access, but we want to do it in a way that offers us maximum flexibility to accomplish the endgame. We are working with the government, including the White House, for a short-term solution, and expect to have a system up in Washington within 60 days.
Building a great wireless network is what we do. It has not been a core competency for municipalities.
If you are one of these companies that are stealing people's identities, you better sleep with one eye open.
We have no immediate plans to run that service. What runs on our network are our services.
You want to get an idea of how they thought they would use the phone versus how they actually use it.
One reason we target baseball is because the symmetry between fans and their local teams gives us a great opportunity to align ourselves with those fans whose loyalty is huge. Baseball stadiums are a great place to show off some of our technology.
Our training program makes sure that our customer representatives have in front of them what the tradeoff is, and they're told they need to provide that information.
We're in a place where it's an important battleground for the hearts and minds of younger cell phone users.
Once the ratings are in place, the market will dictate whether gradations are in order.