Mr. Lenihan, my next questions are for you.
We are heading for a communications era where people will have mini computers on their wrists, where they will have everything they need to surf the Internet and access open data at any time. People will know the subway schedules, the weather, etc. That is first-level information for a lot of people. However, if we see something flying by in the sky, we may wonder what is going on and what that is. So now we are talking about space or aerospace. So then that may involve the planets and so on. All of this is unfolding very quickly.
The ordinary citizen may access highly specialized data as well as specific municipal data. For instance, he or she may want to know what day the recycling truck will come by; that is important for people. This will lead them very quickly to provincial data on health and federal data on filing income tax, or geomatics. People will have access to all of this data easily and immediately.
Earlier you talked about forums you had set up that allow people to communicate interactively. How do you assess the data, and the effectiveness of the systems that have been put in place? How is that dialogue with the population carried out?