Yes, the Internet of things. There are definitely benefits there to be had.
You know, at the end of the day, if you're in an urban riding like yours, basically all of the products that the people in your riding have came from rural Canada or rural somewhere because the food had to be produced somewhere. The products used to build their homes didn't just come from the hardware store; they, obviously, came from out in the forest somewhere. It's about enabling industry outside of the city to do what needs to be done to allow those products to flow into the city, into the urban areas. That way consumers and users have products. They have choice. They have innovation that can be utilized. Again, it's not always going to be combines and headers. It might be your phone and the way it airplays to your TV, the way that it connects to your Chromecast. It might be different things like that.
Again, this bill is just about driving innovation. It's making sure that if you want to have a product that's on here that's going to work on a completely different brand name.... It might help and aid with that because that's interoperability. It let's you get the information you need from that product to make your product work with that product.