 And we all don't know you. So yes, again, a very short introduction down to World War II evangelists, which is kind of a weird job title and record of three of us worldwide. One is in North America, Michael Thiemann, the president who was technically invented open source in the business and commercial open source. And then we have Harish Badi doing the same thing in Asia Pacific. And I'm responsible for the Emilia region. Now the good thing is, I don't have to do whatever vendor presentation. That's what Oracle already did for me. Thanks for that. Oracle Enterprise Linux, as everybody knows, is based on Reddit Enterprise Linux, so you get all the goodies directly from us. So I'm not here to talk about products or stuff. I'm more to give the official Be Very Afraid presentation of today. Normally this is done by a lawyer. Today I'm taking that position so I can go to the next slide. The numbers are clear. We don't have to discuss them anymore. Why cloud is so important, et cetera. It's just a different set of factors. One is cost, the other one is innovation. Innovation does not happen on the application level at the moment that much anymore. It happens on a new delivery model called apps. Everybody's talking about app stores and getting money from apps, et cetera. The classical desktop with a full-blown set of applications will go away in the next few years, period. So Steve Jobs is absolutely right when he talks about the post-PC era. In my opinion, we're moving into a world where data follows people. And I want to interact with the data in the context I am. Now, my typical context will be my smartphone. My typical context will be my iPad, my Android tablet, or at home, my television, whatever. And I don't want to be interrupted by, do I have the right programs everywhere? Can these interchange? I take that as a given, and it simply has to work. The only way it works is open standards. And on the business level, you know these numbers, I hope. 50% of the CIOs say they're understaffed. One important number that I figured out a few months ago, if you take the IT costs in an organization and compare it to economy growth of a country, then there is a slight problem there. The costs of IT are growing faster as a GDP of a given country. Right now, it's double the size. So this indicates two things. On the one hand, IT is growing bigger into more areas as it did before. And on the other hand, it's becoming more and more of a cost problem and not so much of a value solution provider. So how can we fix that? And that's why everybody's not talking about cloud. Now, I'm totally honest to you people. I am not the biggest fan of the term cloud computing. You can call it outsourcing to zero. It's a deployment model. It's one of the newer deployment models, the fundamental technology underneath is not really that different. Next slide, please. So, you know, what we want to do here and then I'll stop with all this business stuff, provide new service despite budget and etc. It's all about saving costs and giving more value. Next slide. So those endones in that regard, now there's stuff to learn here. And I think the most important one are the next two slides. So in my opinion, the typical market looks like this. You have big players. You have small players. They are interoperable in whatever ways. So you have, let's talk about cloud here. You have Amazon, it has the cloud and you have IBM development cloud and then you have a lot of small cloud providers. And the biggest problem for you as a user is if you go into this direction, how can I make sure that I can survive the migration between cloud providers? Now, in my opinion, after quite a few years in the business, migration is the biggest obstacle ever. And this is unfortunate because migration should be the cheapest option ever. This should be a normal thing that you're free to change your solution. In this world, it's getting really complicated.