I don't want to repeat myself, but one thing we get into in bitcoin mining is the fact that we have residual heat. We have this cool climate, which makes it very efficient and a great place to operate bitcoin mining. You asked where some of the industry is going; it's in the technology to try to reclaim that heat or take advantage of that heat so that you get a double cycle. While we're cooling our machines and operating at high performance, we capture that residual heat and then apply it to industry, such as greenhouses. There's a big initiative in Quebec to grow vegetables and the like there. We could push this heat into greenhouses. In other areas, lumber is very big, as is forestry in Quebec.
There are also drying operations. If it could be done co-operatively, we could push that heat into the drying operations and save them considerable BTUs in natural gas or electricity wherever heat is necessary. We could push it into a district heating and cooling type of system as well. There are lots of additional things. We talked with one city that's looking to set up a fish farm. We could push our heat into their pools of water on an aquaculture basis in the wintertime when they need to warm the water.
There are lots of different applications that, if we were given a chance to talk and think outside the box and be in the right places, we could do more for.