Absolutely. As you know, before I retired from the military I was the architect of the army ISTAR program technically and programmatically. It's a bit of a passion for me.
Beyond our platforms, of which I have a rotorcraft and a fixed-wing, I have a set of technology thrusts that we call “glass to glass”. It's from that lens to the iPad, in my case, and the farmer with the PayPal button.
It's the same for the oil industry. I push that information as they want it straight into pipeline integrity monitoring systems. We pushed live feeds directly into the various Caribbean nations down in South America. We have that ability to do that now.
On the fusion piece, there are increasing tools that allow you to do that. Some of the mapping pieces you saw, those were using some analytics that allow us to very rapidly create 2-D or 3-D maps from imagery we're collecting in real time, and then in near real time creating better products down the road.
Those are all geo-referenced. Everything's geo-referenced, so from a National Defence point of view, I can push directly into any of the command and control systems today.