Yes.
Definitely, the ones that I've seen so far in B.C. and Nova Scotia are excellent projects. Really leading-edge research will continue in those institutions in the announced provinces.
One of the things I want to emphasize, though, is how important it is to continue with the basic research, of course, but also with a view to commercializing the research. This is where Canada has fallen down in the past. The most recent STIC report that came out today, the Science and Technology Innovation Council report, said we do a great job on basic research, well supported by public funds, excellent, world-class, but we still have that gap between getting the research from the basic research page to a product that is marketable in Canada and around the world.
Some of what we do is excellent. Look at RIM. Obviously, that's a wonderful example of basic research that has translated into a worldwide product. So it can be done by Canadians, in Canada, and we've got to do a better job of that. That's what the science and technology strategy that we announced in 2007 is all about, and that's why these funding envelopes that we're announcing are so important as well.