 I'm gonna talk about, you mentioned integration. And you guys have put a lot of effort in integration. You've made it a priority. As VMware does a much, much better job over the last two years getting out the APIs, particularly around storage and backup. Does that, people talk about storage becoming invisible. Does that limit differentiation from a competitive standpoint? And how do you deal with that? Well, I sort of view it as, I spent my first 30 years of my career being invisible behind the Windows and the Microsoft operating systems. And Intel happened to make a pretty good business out of innovating underneath those APIs and those driver interfaces, et cetera. And I see our job very similarly right forward. And things like VAI or tremendous demonstrations thereof. You could say, hey, it's just virtual storage. It's just SRM, what's going on? They're doing all the HA and DR. The fact of the matter is, a lot of that is just better done in the storage infrastructure. So what do we do? We find ways to enable it. We have APIs to do it and then we innovate behind those APIs and the race is on. And we're finding ways to be better integrated. We're finding ways to embrace flash. We're finding ways to do long distance of emotion. We're finding ways to get storage transparency and virtualization in those environments. It has opened up a new plateau for innovation. And yes, if in fact we would stand still, we would just disappear behind the virtualization layer. But we're far from that. So that Intel inside metaphor, when you think about the big data and we had a number of guests on yesterday talking about the storage as the big problem with big data. But of course it's all commodity devices. Can you take that kind of mindset into the storage world and start solving those problems and make money? I mean, you made the Green Plum acquisition, you're trying a lot of different things there, doing some stuff with MapR. What do you see as the opportunity there and is it big enough to warrant a lot of attention? Oh yeah, we certainly think so. And if we think about it at the highest level, compute is now really pretty simple in a VM environment. And I'm not trying to trivialize what Intel is doing and what the compute guys are doing, but hey, it's pretty easy to V motion around a few gigabytes of VMs. And with that, we really see that, okay, it really can be moved around. But the storage infrastructure is getting bigger and heavier and that sedimentation of these enormous storage environments is just becoming overwhelming. So today in my keynote, we show this ability to move the VM into the storage fabric and that's powerful because now we're moving compute, which is fairly easy to move around and moving it into the storage array for the first time. And that just changes the game entirely. And we think those types of innovations both take the storage environment and say, yes, they're storage, but they can do all these other things as well. They can do Hadoop natively. They can do analytics natively. All those things that are storage-centric with these big, heavy, multi-pedabyte data environments all of a sudden become enabled with virtualization. And that really is a game changer for more.