In terms of the context of the socio-economic environment, one of the things I find most fascinating about our industry is that Canadians, whom we poll on an annual basis to understand their attitudes and approaches to our technology and their understanding of it, are overwhelmingly embracing and engaging the technology. They have very high expectations that they will benefit from the technology in their lifetimes. So when we talk about a socio-economic fabric for the technology, we need regulatory processes that are modernized to allow the technology into the marketplace in a quicker way; and we need a social and an economic engagement from all of our public policy partners at the provincial and federal level, an engagement that understands the nature of innovation taking place and how quickly it's taking place, so we can find our way into the marketplace more easily.
Canadians, oddly enough, are leading the expectations about the technology a little bit more than maybe our public policy framework is.