The innovation gap you asked about is a big issue. We recognize, and I think many recognize, that there are the two solitudes of university research and industry needs, and yes, there is a gap between them. We're trying to resolve it in some ways.
One is, we declared from the very onset: as a new university, let's not just value the typical university output—publish a paper; it gets put on a shelf; no one ever reads it again, except one other person in the world. Rather, let's do things that will be adopted by industry, adopted by the market, and let's work closely together. We've entrenched this as part of our value system at our university, and it's somewhat different from what you would see at others.
Then we're actually implementing it through partnerships with industry. The centre we talked about, the automotive centre of excellence, is owned by us but is going to be used by industry 70% of the time. The academics are going to be there doing work, and they're going to be tripping over each other. You will not be able to avoid hearing what industry needs, and industry won't be able to avoid hearing what ideas an academic might have who just never had the gumption to go and actually tell someone what they're capable of doing for them.
There will be no gap. We have offices in there to bring in world-class people, to bring in industrial visitors who need to spend time, to make sure that interaction goes on. It's a bit of an experiment for us that we think will address the innovation gap in a unique way.