 Hi everyone, we're back, this is Dave Vellante, I'm with Wikibon.org, I hope you enjoyed the live streaming keynotes from the Tableau Customer Conference. Kristen Shabo gave what I thought was a phenomenal keynote, one of the better keynotes I've seen at events like this, we go to a lot of events like this, you know, typically you get a lot of big, you know, strong vendor messages talking about their products and their new innovations and so forth. This CEO chose to talk about, in my view, why they launched Tableau and why they started the company, what their philosophy is, what their mission is, it was very, very powerful. We're going to talk to Kristen Shabo tomorrow and I encourage you to tune into that. One of the more dynamic speakers that I've seen in a long, long time. But right now we're going to take a quick break in the action and we're going to talk to Burt Latimore. Burt Latimore's here, he's a writer for Silicon Angle Wikibon, spends a lot of time with our user and he writes the peer insight newsletters and Burt has been roaming the floor at the Tableau user conference, talking to customers, talking to people at the event. So Burt, welcome to the Cube. Thank you Dave. So what have you seen at the show? What's exciting you? Well, first of all, the feeling of the show is so, people are excited. I mean, in the general session, people were cheering all the time. Chris Schulte was cheering for product features that were being announced. Yeah, cheering for product features. I mean, Chris Schulte said, well, we've added box plots and people started cheering. I mean, these are people who are excited about this. And there's almost 4,000 of them here. So there's a pretty good turnout for a, for what is really not a gigantic company. Right, yeah, $200 million in revenue and 4,000 people, pretty good user conference. Yeah, comparable in size and enthusiasm to the Service Now conference. Oh yeah. So what have you seen? Give us a quick rundown. We only have about two minutes. Well, the exciting things, of course, happened in the, or exciting announcements, happened in the general session that's just getting out. And the first thing was that Schulte promised an accelerated pace of development in general with version 8.1 coming out in the fourth quarter, version 8.2 in early 2014, and then version 9.0, a major version in 2014. And then he introduced a series of people who talked about specific things that they're doing. And there's too many to go through here. But they are going, they are working for seamless access to data in 8.1 and 8.2. Basically get any data from any source into Tableau with simple visual operations. They've announced, I think one of the really exciting ones is they've announced integration with R, full integration with R in version 8.1. Of course, R is used a lot for doing advanced analytical predictive analysis. And instead of having to have R open and Tableau open, you simply select the elements in your data plot that you want to put into R, select external analysis and it happens in an instant. They were doing it up there with records of data flows from Rock Creek Park, which goes through Washington, D.C. and it happened instantly. It was amazing. Hi, I'm sorry, I got to cut you off. Dan Jewett is here. He is the head of product management for Tableau. We got to go. But the other thing I'll add is they announced support for Macintosh, Tableau for Mac. Yes, they announced Tableau for Mac. Thanks for coming on. We'll maybe have you on later and run it down. Keep it right there everybody. We'll be right back with Dan Jewett right after this.