Yes, there are. The chief of force development is a two-star admiral named Rear-Admiral Ron Lloyd. He has a team that continually develops recommendations for the armed forces after studying future, potential battlefields and arenas that we may fight in. They have 18 they work through right now. They base their observations on the conflicts that we've recently come out of. They make an assessment of new technology in defence business, and they continually upgrade recommendations. We assess this from the Capability Development Board. We then go over to our chief of programs, Major-General Ian Poulter, who then says, “Yes, but we now have a line under which we need to live.” That's a yin and yang that every Chief of Defence Staff has worked with from time immemorial—with growing budgets and decreasing budgets.
The area that will show greatest profit as we move ahead with interoperability is this connective tissue we talk about: intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance. That could come in the form of satellites, unmanned aerial vehicles, downlinks and data links, and things that allow us a better idea of the approaches inside our own nation and on the continent when we deploy the battlefield around us. We're very excited about the potential of that area for great advances in the coming years.