 Welcome back. Jeff Rick here with John Furrier. We're on the field at AT&T Park. It's a beautiful day game, a getaway game for the Giants. So we've been out here talking to Giants executives, getting the latest on some of their innovation and some of the technology. So John, what do you think so far? Jeff, I love it here because one, we love AT&T Park. We've done CUBE interviews here on the field with NetApp and other companies like VMware and it's just an amazing baseball and Apple Pie and the CUBE all go together. To me, this is what innovation is all about. Sports meets technology. It's our fan base. We love it. What I learned today is that this organization is unbelievably technical. Their innovation strategy is embedded into the DNA of every employee from the CEO down. Every person we interviewed at the Giants organization has a DNA mindset in everything that they do. We talked about tickets, dynamic pricing, how they're innovating there. We talked about the fat pipe of Wi-Fi, the requirement for all the fans that have great uploading speeds. We talked about the Kale Garden, which we call, they don't call it the Kale Garden. That's what it's known for, a Kale at the home run. It's just overall, Jeff, just the CIO here, Bill, he's got a great team and again, it's a tech-driven, data-driven experience for the fans and more importantly, the business of the Giants of sports is going to be completely real-time, completely data-driven, so they are doing some great stuff. I would say they're in the top tier of ball clubs. Some of the things I learned I thought was, Bill said they actually had their mobile app before MLB did and MLB Enterprises is one of the most progressive technology companies out there and they had to actually give it up to go back to the MLB app, so they're out ahead of the curve. The other interesting thing I thought Bill said was a reminder that this park is 14 years old or 15 years old and it's one thing, we're excited to be going down to Levi's, the latest and greatest in outdoor entertainment arenas, but he's like, okay, that's great. They just spent 1.3 billion, but keeping it fresh year after year after year for now going on the second half of the second decade, it's pretty impressive. Yeah, and the thing that we're going to go and learn more about, we're going to dig into cubes, we're going to go to all the key major wired cities and find out what the stadiums they have. For instance, I would be shocked if the Red Sox have a better technology experience than the Giants. I think these guys have a tough draw. One, the environment here in San Francisco and Silicon Valley is Uber Tech. I mean, you're talking, the tech audience here is like, they have high standards, so I'd be very surprised if Boston Fenway Park is more technical than here. Seattle, you don't think about Seattle, but then very tech population in Seattle. What about Chicago? What about New York? These are markets, and I want to know which cities do the best tech. Right now, the Giants are trumping everyone, in my opinion. Yeah, it's good. And like you said, it's all about the culture of innovation. Every time I keep asking anybody, how does they foster the innovation, they say it comes right from the top. And I don't mean the CEO Larry Bair, even above that, the ownership group that took possession of the team a few decades ago when they were actually at risk of moving out of the state. So it continues to happen, and basically they said, we'll try anything. I don't know if you noticed at the Kale Garden or the garden, excuse me, they've already cut holes through the fence so you can get a center fielder's point of view out there. Try it out. They've got one set. It feels like, well, we'll try. We'll see how it works. If it doesn't work, we'll try something else. So they continue to innovate. The Wi-Fi is a game changer for me, because every fan that's been out there and friend of mine, everyone has a mobile phone, has had this experience. They've gone to a game and it's packed house. They've got four bars on their Wi-Fi or LTE and they can't upload a picture. They can't do the selfie. They can't send the Instagram. They can't upload the video. It's basically the pipes are clogged. So what's happening here is they've actually fixed that. They have massive connectivity. They have the fat pipe, as we say, for uploading it to the cloud. And I tell you, that, to me, is like running water in the bathroom. You need to have that utility with the Wi-Fi. Hands down. The mobile experience is awesome. So those are the two game changers I see with the San Francisco Giants here. And the rest is just infrastructure. They're certainly best in breed there. But Wi-Fi and the app is killer jet. So we're going to keep going out. We're going to keep finding more great stories of people using technology and innovation to change the game for their industry, change the game for their customers, their fan experience, and really keep ahead of the curve, because that's what it's all about. It's like having 81 home games of three-hour baseball games to force you to be creative and think of ways to keep coming back. But how many consecutive sell-outs should the ticket guys take? All the games are sold out. They wait to the end of the end. And I think that's exciting. And for the fans out there and all the CUBE fans, if your team has a great technology stadium, email me or tweet me. I'm at Furrier, at theCUBE, tell us on Twitter, contact us. We want to know what your team's stadium is like. Are they savvy? Are they in the stone ages? Are they on the bleeding edge? Are they adding value? We want to know. So send us the notes, and we'll be happy to go explore that. Awesome. So John Furrier and Jeff Rick here at AT&T, thanks for watching.