We have a stable financial model for our school. We have an endowment that helps support the school, and the tuition carries the remainder of the burden. Our tuition is probably too high. Interestingly, it's regarded as a reasonable price or a good price by Americans, Europeans, and Asians; Canadians think it's way too expensive. They're used to paying 30 or 40 cents on the dollar for their education, and they kind of choke on the full price. But that's the nature of our program. We're not eligible for NSERC scholarships and things like that.
But I'm quite excited—apart from the topic of video games—to be running a graduate program that supports itself, that breaks even every year. I think that's a remarkable model for education in Canada, and I anticipate...and seek to move forward. It gives us some independence. It gives us the ability to move in new directions; we don't have to wait for the funding to appear. So I'm not too worried about the funding. Of course, it's always exciting to have more, but I think that the better issue is how we keep ahead of a very dynamic and fast-changing industry.
You'd be surprised actually, you were making reference to the—