I think so. I've worked with a number of universities.
As I mentioned, I'm just signing a licence agreement for some technologies out of Canadian universities, and I've contracted Canadian universities to do R and D for me in areas where I thought there was a viable product to commercialize. I've also worked with AUTO21 since its inception, supporting them in any way I could, because I think it's a good initiative to get industry and academia working together.
For example, when I first saw AUTO21 when it started many years ago, I asked for a list of the sponsored projects in automotive electronics. I know pretty well everybody in automotive electronics and I was interested to know what was being funded. There was a complete mismatch for all the programs that had been funded, which had great technical merit; there wasn't one company in Canada that was in that industry or space or product area.
Aligning, at least, spending money in areas where there are companies that can even potentially pick up the technology and commercialize it within their venue, makes an awful lot of sense, rather than developing technologies that are really being commercialized by companies in other places.