I can add another one.
We have, as Kent mentioned, invested quite a lot in university research capacity. We're pleasantly surprised to start seeing a lot of spinoffs from that, and newer companies starting. Kent mentioned the importance of supporting the entrepreneurial ecosystem, and UNB has a leading program called the technology management and entrepreneurship program. It works with some of those technology innovators and pairs them with people who have the business management skills, and in some cases, trains them to have those business management skills. As a result, we're starting to see more successful companies come out. Often what you see is that the technical innovator is not always the business person. They can, in some cases, become that, but that partnering, along with the mentoring and the training and pathfinding into the rest of the ecosystem, is having an important impact.
An example would be Smart Skin Technologies. They are actually a spinoff from the University of New Brunswick's biomedical research facility. This is a group that really leads in innovation around prosthetics. They originally developed a coding for prosthetics that they realized could have applications in other areas—in this case, in industrial packaging.
This is a company that's now spun off and has received international recognition in that field. It's a surprising turn.