Well, if there's one message that I think should get out, that's it.
I still have a couple of minutes. We have a really good little garage in Edmonton called TEC Edmonton. I don't know if you're familiar with it, but it's a great collaboration of the University of Alberta, and there are about 100 different companies being incubated there. It's not just medical technology; it's broad-based technology. I'm there quite often doing funding announcements, because we do invest in those things.
One of the things they've found is that the biggest challenge is not necessarily the technology; it's getting it to market, as we've talked about.
There's a lot of cross-talk between and among those 100 or so companies not just about their individual technology—they all work in a big area, and they have their individual offices, but they also have a lot of common areas—but collaborating on best business practices.
I'm going to pose an obvious question. How important is it to not just stay within the medical technology field, but in technology generally, with business practices that would benefit everybody?