That's a great question. It's a real challenge. My alma mater is the University of Waterloo. I'm a graduate of the co-op program. One possibility that we're working on is extending that program to the graduate level to try to connect the students here with internships with local start-ups or start-ups in the Toronto area.
I think that's a major step forward, but it's also having institutions like PIQuIL. We literally have scientists from local quantum start-ups sitting at desks side by side with the graduate students, post-docs and researchers we have here at Perimeter. They are sharing opportunities and co-supervising students. I think it really opens the eyes of the graduate students to what the possibilities are.
That's been an effort that we've started here more broadly at Perimeter with a program called “career trajectories”. It's really just to open the eyes of the highly qualified young talent that we have here to the possibilities that are beyond the academic career path and out into the private sector. We have been seeing a number of successes there, where students have started their careers in start-ups or with major firms in the Toronto area, or they've launched their own start-ups.
It's something we are working toward. It's a really important question that you asked there.