 So we hear the Huawei Matebook launch. This is the first time Huawei is launching an Intel device. So who are you? Hi, I'm Kirk Scalgan. I'm senior vice president and general manager of the client computing group at Intel responsible for the core level processors. So you have this tight mark partnership on this product with Huawei. So how does it work for Intel and Huawei to work together and launching something like this? Well, we've had over a decade of working together with Huawei and data center and the server business and communications infrastructure and now we're extending that really due to the amazing performance and battery life we're seeing to extend to a new PC entrant with the Matebook today. So the two-in-one has been on the market for a while and now this is the next level of two-in-one? Yeah, so I think what we're seeing now is really some of the most beautiful devices we've ever seen in the two-in-one category. We're seeing about 40% of the users that are buying two-in-ones now actually saying that they would have purchased a premium tablet had they not bought a two-in-one. We're also seeing a refresh of about 8 to 12 months for someone who's out there refreshing a traditional PC. So we're basically able to deliver with Core M now a completely fanless design with something that's almost three times the web productivity of something that's in the installed base of a PC say about five years ago. And the USB Type-C is really useful for that. You want to have a very thin form factor and have a dock for all the different ports. Yeah, I mean as we're getting down and you saw today the Matebook's under 7 millimeters and under 700 grams and with that we're actually getting the connectors being the bottleneck to the z-height. So that's part of the challenges we had and we're super excited that both Thunderbolt and USB-C now are in a single connector. And as a result we're going to see a ton of new designs on the six-generation Core around Thunderbolt as well. So it's a very small nanometer, it's a very long battery life. This is the latest Core M. Yeah, so with the six-generation Core we announced levels to the Core family. M3 for entry, M5, and then M7. So you can have a whole range now just like you have been traditionally used to. Obviously last MWC we launched that on the Atom family as well, X3, X5, X7 to differentiate our Sophie and our Cherry Trail product. So I think people are used to this 357-cell-up methodology. And so again, ten hours of battery life, you know, half the weight and half the thinness of a traditional five-year-old PC. And now there's about, I don't know, 600 million PCs out there that are four years or older that these products can target. And to have very good productivity is very important for the device maker to make a very nice keyboard and mousepad experience, right? So I guess there's a lot of effort into that area as well of getting a good keyboard on the 2-in-1. Yeah, I mean the whole concept of a 2-in-1 it was a no-compromise device. So we think to be a 2-in-1 you have to have the best of a tablet, kind of instant on capability. We saw that today with the fingerprint reader. But you also have to have a keyboard and a full Windows experience because we're giving people access to millions and millions of legacy applications that has been why Intel architecture has succeeded so well in business. So you get the, you know, battery life of a tablet, you get the weight and the thinness of a tablet. But you're getting in here, you know, an amazing keyboard with amazing travel so you can not compromise on productivity. And Intel, our view is people consume and they create human beings by their nature, right? And so certainly a lot more consumption is being done on a phone and a tablet, but we still need to create. And people don't want to necessarily have to carry around both a tablet and a PC. And with these kind of devices, we think you can create, you know, I think they said today 30,000 types a day for an average business user. You want to have a great keyboard, but not compromise when you want to take it apart and put a tablet together. And on the slide show, you were saying 1.4X increase in the market growth. That's 2014 to 2015. So did you announce how many that is? No, we didn't, but we basically said it's the second fastest growing category of mobility now after the phablet. So while traditional clamshells have shrunk a bit, we're seeing the total market for two-in-ones growing over 40 percent, 14 to 15. And we're expecting another really strong year here as we get people like Huawei and you saw the Samsung Galaxy announcement at the PC side of Samsung, with the Galaxy side, also launching a core product with Windows 10 full as well. So you're starting to see some of those people who traditionally have viewed as phone or tablet vendors entering the PC market. What I think is really awesome is this Microsoft device that has a dock and you output the continuum. This is a really big deal also, right? Are you working in the continuum? Well, I think the continuum for us will be interesting. I think when you can take a CoreM class processor and you can dock it and get full capability and full application compatibility. So I think especially in business, for continuum to be successful, you're going to want the full compatibility that comes from Windows 10 full.