That's a great question. AI is a very hot topic, and three of our centres specialize in AI.
As I mentioned, there are 70 centres across the country supporting the sector of importance to their region, and a lot of them support something vertically, such as an aerospace technology access centre supporting the aerospace industry. Some other centres are more of a platform technology, like digital integration systems and centres, and their expertise is applicable across industry verticals. AI is one of those.
We're seeing tremendous demand from companies, mainly from analog industries—agriculture, forestry and fishing—that would like to apply large language models and artificial intelligence to improve their bottom line. Whether that's increasing their revenue or decreasing their costs, they're ready, willing and able to adopt it. They just need somebody who can be completely objective to shepherd them through it, and one thing we do, as part of that “public good” role, is squash techno lust. When companies go to a trade show and are seized with something very novel and innovative, maybe they don't need the Lamborghini solution when something much more modest, like a bicycle, would work for them and their operating reality, and we can tell them what the right fit is for their use case. AI is one of those things we're seeing tremendous growth in, and we're fortunate to have the capability and capacity to assist with that.