We don't have much competition. The field is just defining itself and rolling out. As I was saying, about 15 years ago, Canada had the foresight early on to invest in new businesses similar to ours, saying that this was going to become an area of interest. So we don't have a lot of competition.
However, going back to my first point, we see that the competitors who do exist have access to inordinate amounts of capital. There are several examples in the United States. They have been fairly inactive for a while, but recently we've seen a number of transactions. Some competitors that are far less advanced in their innovation process than we are, or have technologies with very little innovative intellectual property, have access to hundreds of millions of dollars of capital. That may not mean that the best one will win. It will be the one with the most money.
That's why we need to develop a strategy at home to attract capital and partners, but also to provide access to networks that can penetrate those sources of capital, to give Canadian technology companies the means to achieve their ambitions.