Yes. Generally we project that there are probably about 1,000 to 1,500 jobs available right now in the technology sector in the Waterloo region. These are the small start-up companies. A lot of them are three guys who knew each other back at the University of Waterloo five years ago; they had an idea in school and now they have a product that's on the market. So you have them. Then there are the larger companies like OpenText that only two days ago mounted a major acquisition of a company down in Maryland. We have an ecosystem now in Waterloo Region where we hope a lot of those people who will be exiting or transitioning from BlackBerry will be picked up by other companies.
In fact, we like to consider that BlackBerry came out of the ecosystem in Waterloo region. BlackBerry didn't create the ecosystem; the ecosystem was there. A lot of it is based on the unique relationship that we have in Waterloo region between the universities and business.
Governor General David Johnson mentions this quite frequently. Essentially, the University of Waterloo came about because the business community—the manufacturers—wanted engineers, and the life insurance companies wanted actuaries. So we had one of the first truly technical universities in Canada. The first president of the University of Waterloo was a gentleman named Gerald Hagey, who was a senior executive of one of the tire companies. He wasn't an academic. So we've always had that unique relationship between academia and business that I think has built that ecosystem that's produced a company like BlackBerry.