Absolutely, I would echo what has already been said.
On the talent side, we've experienced a bit of a different situation. We've been incredibly lucky that we've been able to bring over 60% of our workforce through programs like the global talent stream. In fact, between the quality of life in Canada and the relatively open immigration policy, we've been able to out-compete a lot of our peers in the United States for talent.
On the funding side, I want to add a comment about the scale of funding that we're talking about. To date, we've been incredibly lucky and we've been able to raise over $175 million Canadian for the goal of building a fault-tolerant universal quantum computer. That's probably about 20% of what is needed to deliver this truly transformative machine. There becomes a really big security and strategic question. There was a question earlier around how we keep this IP within Canada. Probably one of the biggest threats is that once companies get large enough and successful enough, they'll need that outside equity, that outside money, in order to come in and bring them over the goal line.
I'm not sure what the solution is, but definitely one problem we need to solve is how we move past the early stages, the academic side, to the true commercialization side, to be able to reap the benefits of all the investment that has already been put into quantum technologies.