So now we know, pretty much, what BBC director general Mark Thompson's six year cost savings plan looks like.
Mr Thompson is outlining his proposals to BBC staff this morning. But from the BBC Trust statement yesterday and leaks from the briefings given to senior executives and programme makers over the past two days, we already know most of the detail.
Some headlines:
Net reduction of 1,800 from BBC headcount, with 2,500 posts to close, but redeployment and creation of around 1,000 new jobs - mostly in digital media - to account for the difference.
BBC News and London factual to be hard hit, as expected. Around 500 posts to go in news, and 600 from factual.
CBBC, BBC Scotland, and BBC English regions also to be hit by job cuts.
£100m reduction in BBC annual content budget - a cut of 10%. More repeats on BBC2 and digital channels, including BBC3 and BBC4 - but not in BBC1 peaktime.
Many of the cuts have been heavily trailed/leaked, so in some ways it comes as little surprise. However, the scale of the cost cutting is still pretty breath taking.
Is Thompson right to go for "salami slicing" - seeking savings and cutting jobs across the BBC - rather closing down particular departments or services and focusing resources on other areas?
Oh, and if you're a BBC insider, let us know what Thompson says today.