Ilse may know about that fund, but I'll just make a comment on the CFI that I've been involved with.
There's been this belief not just in Canada, but in the rest of the world as well that you invest in research, either philanthropically or in the public sector, because you want to help patients at the other end. The belief is that if you invest in research, you get those outputs.
The Canada Foundation for Innovation is very much along those lines. It got great researchers and it got significant infrastructure created and so on, but none of that money funded the path between that invention and the actual market. It's not used to allow hospitals, for example, to go out and buy PET scanners for new uses. It's purely on that side. But around the world and in Canada we've recognized that just doing that is not enough and we need to spread our investments not only here, but also in those other areas. Ilse mentioned a bunch of them, as did I. I think that's changing, and going forward we're going to be investing, public sector and private sector, in a more balanced way between basic and applied research, and then the commercialization pieces.
With respect to that fund that you mentioned, I really have no knowledge of it. If I knew the name of it, that might ring a bell, but just by itself, it doesn't ring a bell. I'm sorry.