Practical difficulties may also be cited as arguments against out-of-country voting. They are of two kinds: organisational difficulties, for example in drawing up electoral rolls, providing election equipment or counting votes; and difficulties in guaranteeing that the election process is conducted in the proper way when methods of remote voting are used (postal vote, proxy voting, e-voting). Both types of difficulty can be avoided by restricting the voting procedure to embassies or consulates (or possibly to a number of specially designated polling stations). It should be borne in mind, however, that, if this is the case, the universality of suffrage will not be fully guaranteed because few voters will be able to vote in practice.