That's a very difficult question to answer in the sense that it will really be up to the researchers and the companies to determine how far they can go in terms of these new innovations.
I would say that one of the things that we're trying to do through this strategy is to work smarter to better connect what we already have in the country that's funded through a fairly strong base of basic research funding to better enable our centres of quantum expertise to work together, to better connect what our start-up companies are doing to capabilities that are resident in institutions across the country, and to be more deliberate in how we pursue international collaboration.
It's really hard for me to say how far we can go. Over time, it's clear that we'll need more investment in this space, both [Technical difficulty—Editor] private sector and government investment.
One of the advantages we have as a country when we go internationally and talk about quantum research and quantum R and D is that we tend to appreciate collaboration across disciplines more than other countries sometimes do. We're small enough that we can have a very strong collaborative relationship between companies and the basic research sector, and that can take you pretty far in a space like this.
I can't speak to the specific technology outcomes, but I can certainly say that we're trying to incent more of the kind of collaboration that can catalyze some of these innovations here at home.