I would just respond as well that this will entail a major culture shift, because the model in place now is a traditional model for the most part. I should mention as well that there is lots of research and development and knowledge transfer that does not involve technology. This is equally important, and it's more in the space that we work in. So, that's important to recognize.
In the case of the Montreal Neurological Institute, they decided amongst themselves, however many dozen researchers there, that they were going to enter into an open innovation model. That meant publishing and posting all of their findings on a daily basis to the Internet for everybody's access—companies and non-companies. It was the same thing with the Structural Genomics Consortium in Toronto. That was a radical move. They themselves voted to do that. How that experiment will play out, I don't know. To get to the point of something like that requires a cultural shift and agreement that it, in fact, is the direction to go.