 Hi, this is Stu Miniman with wikibond.org, SiliconANGLE TV, goes out to the show, strikes a signal from the noise. We're here at the St. Regis Hotel for the open SDX event, a small event about 200 people coming to hear Janet Napolitano, Hilary Clinton, just business leaders from around the industry and joining me for this segment is Dr. Tom Bradich with HP's part of the moonshot team. On the Cube, we've chronicled moonshot since the original inception and the launch. The concept came out about three years ago, two years ago, physical product and Tom, if you could give us, what's the update on moonshot? Great. First of all, let me say I'm very happy to be here at this open SDX event and Nexenta who's sponsoring it is a great company with great leadership and very happy to give you an update on what's happening with this moonshot platform. We've had some keen interest in end-users, customers and partners. Very interesting is what we call the web-in-the-box concept where we're moving many tiers of web serving into a single part number to manage, meaning only one skew to manage. It really lowers the cost of management, which you may know is a very big cost in that as well. The future is looking really bright as well. In addition to some cool things coming up, I'll tell you about we have on the market today a hosted physical desktop or remote desktop or as it's now being called a workplace as a service product. So highly integrated with a built-in GPU graphics processor to give a very rich experience as well. Yeah, it's been interesting. As I go around to the shows, I've been seeing moonshot pop-up lots of places. I was in San Francisco a few months back at the Cloud Foundry Summit. It looked like, you know, cloud and big data and paths all in a box. It was pretty fascinating. New architectures give us new opportunity to sometime change things. I guess you've got some new provocative things that you wanted to share and update on the project. Well, we do and I can tell you something about it. Not out on the market yet, but in my laboratories we're developing some very cool stuff. The moonshot platform is very flexible. We have a plurality of processors, architectures, and we do have coming this year, shortly, a ARM server. That's a 64-bit enterprise hardened enterprise ready battle hardened ARM server and that will enter the market and we're very excited to see how the ecosystem gets built around that. In addition, we have a product that employs Intel's Xeon E3 with Iris Pro graphics. They have Xeon cores combined with a GPU, a graphics processor, and it gives tremendous rich experiences, for example, with Adobe Photoshop and applications that require graphics intensity. And the whole idea of taking that desktop experience or the workplace and making it as a service back in the cloud or an on-premise data center, one of the two, is very, very powerful today because of the management and control aspects of it, all the way from security, piracy, and giving the end user a better experience. All right, that's great. Lots of enhancements coming. Customers are looking for a choice. ARM 64-bit, lots of things they're looking at. Want to give you the last word on this. We've got about 200, you know, CIOs and C levels here. What's the biggest opportunity you see out there in the IT market space that CIO should be looking for? Well, the newest opportunity is the old saying, really. It is lowering power, that is electricity bills, and also lowering the space required and simplifying as well. And providing a compute model that does that, and HP today is a matter of fact, talking about our Gen 9, Generation 9 server line, that does all that. It focuses on the compute and gives simplicity, lower power, as well as higher compute value for the dollar as well. All right, well, I appreciate you taking some time. Looking forward to seeing all the speakers here at this show. We will be back with lots more interviews with SiliconANGLE's coverage of all the hottest shows in the Valley and beyond.