Basically, if you take a look at the R and D expenditures in Canada, the vast majority of them are by either the government sector or universities. That would be research and development in chemistry departments or physics departments, or that kind of exercise. Quite honestly, that research is valuable. It delivers movements going forward. But if what we're looking for is immediate return in productive capacity and the production of products that are then saleable in the global marketplace, the universities themselves say routinely that is one of their biggest challenges to actually take all that research that's been funded and financed and find a way to turn it into commercial products.
Every now and again—for example with RIM—they have a huge success, and that's great, but they have already identified to themselves that doing so is a challenge. That is why they've gone out looking for people like Maritime Steel to work with them, because they don't have the entrepreneurial mindset. They think creatively, but they need to have someone else to help them make that into a product that is then going to be of value to you and me when we're sitting in our living rooms. That's the focus there.