Hi Bob. I'm still hoping to visit your digs some day, and see some of Ed's work too, though a bit of it has been shown in this area. But I have to be careful. There might still be an arrest warrant related to my family along the border. It seems some relatives of mine decided to remain loyal to King George and sneaked across into Canada. I don't know how long the statute of limitations is, but a couple centuries might not be enough to clear up the problem yet. You seem to have a lot of misinformed stereotypes about us. We even have a local ice hockey team. No, I never watch them - jes sayin'. The ice is of course, manufactured; that is what technology is really for - basically useless diversions, like cell phones, icy surface in temperate climates, figuring out way make ink dots smaller and smaller, even though people making real money with dots, like Damien Hirst, tend to make them bigger and bigger. Hmm, meanwhile I'm sitting here on another cold rainy day with some framed Cibachromes against the wall that were hung in indirect mountain sunlight for thirty years, and still look like they were made yesterday. Note that I stated, "indirect". That was the whole secret - sunlight bounced off walls so that most of the UV is already absorbed, or else ordinary tungsten lighting. Halogens, low-voltage track lighting, direct sunlight, fluorescents, or any of this new e-lighting loaded with UV... no, no, no. Let's hope that LED architectural lighting comes to maturity with that issue mitigated. UV will get to inkjet prints too. Just read the patents of what's in those inks. It's just a matter of time. But given the fact that really big prints are the current fad, and that those are almost inevitably going to get wall displayed under either sunlight or some kind of abusive halogen system, the long-term odds aren't good. The old adage still applies as a selling point : "Heck, your sofa and curtains are going to fade too, so why not replace your print when you replace those?" Maybe when you do turn 166, you won't be as irritated with us Westerners, and I'll get invited to your birthday party?