Sure. One of the difficulties in a modern factory is that different products are produced at different times of the day or in batches, and it's important that the pieces of machinery in the factory be able to communicate with each other to say that we have a model A coming down the line now versus a model B. Factories become very information system intensive places.
In times past, every time a new information system was installed in a factory, there would be a huge amount of wiring put in. If you go into a modern factory that's been around for even five or eight years, you'll see layer upon layer of information cabling throughout the factory. This becomes just a mess. It's very difficult to maintain, and it's very difficult to troubleshoot. If something goes wrong, if a connection is broken, it can take hours or days to fix it.
We have a researcher working with an automation company in Oldcastle, Ontario, who has developed wireless communications between machines at low cost. It's very effective and very secure, so you can't hack into it. Somebody couldn't sit in the parking lot and mess up your metal-forming press, if you like. That same company is also developing vision systems that have the capability of recognizing facial features, again at very low cost and very quickly. For instance, they can mount a camera in a rear-view mirror of a car and they can tell if the correct person is sitting in the driver's seat. If the correct person isn't, they could disable the car.
There are all kinds of examples. We have many others where a company had a technology need, there was a market need for it, we were able to find a researcher who had that capability, and the researcher and the company came together and developed a new product that is now on the market.