I believe that it is. In the example I noted, the U.S. government is planning to buy three new heavy icebreakers. There are five industry teams that are going to bid on that. They've been told that their proposal—technical, price, qualifications—has to be 200 pages maximum. They say that they expect that to be about a $3-billion procurement.
We also recently were successful in winning another contract for the U.S. Coast Guard where they're building 27 essentially light frigates. We had the same thing there. There was a page limit for that one. I think it was 400 pages in total. That's 27 ships, each at a unit cost of about $350 million. It's the single largest procurement in the U.S. Coast Guard's history. It can be done. As I said, other countries that we deal with do this all the time as well.
My wife used to sit on the committee that awarded Fulbright scholarships. There, the key gate was a two-pager. They had two pages to describe what they were going to do, which was quite complicated. I read one, and so did she, about string theory. It was just amazing. For 10 minutes I understood string theory. It's gone now, but it was a very, very impressive proposal.
Even quite complex concepts can be reduced to their essence in a fairly small amount of material.