I just spent a fascinating hour listening to Ray Laflamme as he received a top prize from the Canadian Association of Physicists at their conference in Quebec City earlier this week. So I understand exactly what you mean about this particular individual.
I think the sort of thing that attracts that type of person to the country, who will work at the frontiers of basic science, is the ability to offer them the sorts of facilities that we're talking about in certain niche areas, as you put it, that have been selected appropriately by peer review teams as being the things that Canada can be excelling in. What you mentioned in terms of quantum computing is one of them, I think, personally and self-serving, but the ones that are being discussed here at the table are others. I think our ability to push the forefront in a wide variety of areas at the very basic level is going to be important for our competitiveness, as it is in this particular example that we're dealing with of quantum computing.