Thank you very much for the excellent question.
I'll start with the second part of the question, which is the supply chain, because supply chain is what keeps me awake at night, and I mean it in a literal manner. These days, our [Inaudible—Editor] chips are 52 weeks back-ordered, so this is very serious.
Right now in the United States they're looking very hard at the supply chain of quantum computing. This was one of the reasons that Anyon, back in 2016, decided that they were going to make every component of a superconducting quantum computer internally. For example, there are only two companies that are making commercial-grade cryogenics systems. One is in Finland and the other one is in the UK. They can easily be bought by other competitors, and that's very detrimental to the future of our industry.
What I recommend that the government do is the same exercise that our partners in the U.S. are doing. First, choose what priority technologies you want to invest in, try to secure them, and bring them to Canada. What the pandemic showed us is that even having masks and PPEs could be strategic; in times of need, we couldn't get them, even from our friends.
I would look at the supply chain very carefully.
I would highly recommend that we consider other chip fabrication as the Achilles heel of this, both on the classical side, on CMOS, and also on the quantum side, which I think could be our niche in the global market. Right now, we are as competitive as any other country in building superconducting...or other types of quantum devices. This is the part I would recommend that the government take a very good look at and think about making a priority.