 Coming to you from San Jose, California, it's the queue. Here is your host, Jeff Crick. At the Launcher Ram or the Primary Data Launch Party, we're kind of in the back lot behind the San Jose Convention Center. Joined here with co-host John Furrier, the founder of SiliconANGLE, who a long time ago with Dave Vellante said, we got to go out after dark, so we're out after dark. There's a lot of action going on. So John, we're here, the motorcycles are flying, the boys that got the band back together is the buzz. What's going on with Primary Data? Why is it supported? Well, that's the big thing. This is the best launch party I've ever seen in terms of unique style because they get the style point because it's not your typical launch party. There are actually things launching in the air, human bodies, motorcycles, doing flips. And the thing about Primary Data and why I'm excited about these guys is I've been following David Flynn and Rick White since Fusion IO was a private company where no one even knew what they were doing. They went on to have a great company, build great value, go public. Now they have this new little company called Primary Data, which is doing something what VMware did for virtualization for servers. They're doing data and storage. And storage is the biggest problem in our evolution towards a modern infrastructure. No matter who you talk to, OpenStack, Cisco, EMC, storage is the biggest pain in the butt in the world right now, mainly because it's only siloed architectures. So that's got to be free. So what Primary Data is doing at a technical level behind the genius of David Flynn is taking a unique approach to data, data virtualization for lack of better description. So I'm really looking forward to what they do, Jeff. Well, it's interesting because everybody keeps saying that this was part of their original vision, but they got sidetracked by those pesky customers that took some of their earlier stuff and you got to support your customer. That's Clayton Christensen. But now, Fusion IO success, IPO, obviously, but now they're going to redo it again. They got the same group of guys together, and they're going to execute a vision that they had before. Well, I'm going to talk to David Flynn shortly, but my guess is that Fusion IO had lighting in a bottle, and I don't think they knew what they had in their hands. Fusion IO is a hardware card that became a big critical piece of infrastructure. And I think you go public on that and you get stuck in the big Sarbanes-Oscly Reboarder Director meetings, and it's like it became too big and is a bigger vision. So I think that Primary Data is a genesis of David Flynn's original vision around what the future could look like for programmers, DevOps, and cloud storage. So I think that Fusion IO just kind of went public, and the innovation is very hard with the public company. We all know. I mean, look at Joe Tucci. Joe Tucci, one of the best CEOs on the planet, is under-seized from hedge funds for selling VMware. It's ridiculous. Yeah. I mean, these guys are doing great work. Being public is not that great of a deal. So I think Fusion might have been like it's now sold to Sanders. So I think this is more of an entrepreneurial greatness. Well, Peter Thiel was just speaking at the demo show, which was going on before the launch party and really talking about the very special magical time of when you start a company. You get to do things. You get to write the rules. You get to write the culture. You get to pick the people and what you want to go after that you can't necessarily do down the road. So it's an exciting time. We've got a bunch of guests lined up, so we're going to cut out, get to our next guest again, John Furrier, Jeff Rick. You're watching theCUBE. We're at the primary data launch or ram a party in the back lot in San Jose Convention Center. We'll be right back.