On the first question, we take the product at a point where it has been invented but not yet commercialized. They haven't monetized it, they haven't figured out how to sell it, but they need to assess whether it's a useful product.
That's essentially the contract that the federal government is offering: you have a product that you think is worth something, that can do something, and we have many government departments with many interests. Hopefully we can find somebody who's actually interested in that product and will take it, test it, and give you feedback on whether it works, how it works—all those things. Then you can go back and do the work on it.
We won't do the commercialization side. There are other agencies—the Business Development Bank, other kinds of programs—that can help commercialize, that deal with taking the product from an idea.
We're at the point where the idea has been had, they've developed a prototype, and we're assessing the prototype. Then, if that prototype with our feedback can be made better, they can move to commercialization.
As to the notion of five to ten years, and I'll have Shereen correct me if I'm wrong, the experience in the United States, which has a kind of program like this—it's a bit apples and oranges, but they have an innovation program like this—is that it takes, from the time the idea comes out to testing and to getting it as a commercial product, five to ten years. That's how long it takes to get an innovation to market. We're just one step along that way.