 Hikibon.org, I'm with John Furrier. This is SiliconANGLE's continuous coverage of Oracle OpenWorld 2011. John, another great day here. We had tons of traffic on the Cube. Yeah, we're over 200,000 views today. No, 300,000 views yesterday and today. Big response to Oracle OpenWorld. The tech industry's watching this interest in Larry Ellison, the billionaire yacht racer. You know, I got to say Larry Ellison is great to see him kicking around, and still kicking in the keynote, doing great. Larry Ellison brought, not people don't know this, but he brought the America's Cup to San Francisco. Big advocate to bring the America's Cup, which is the global sailing race here to San Francisco. And what no better place, San Francisco, is an amazing location for sailing. Can San Francisco handle the kind of volume I see of the people? We've seen them shut down the streets here, so I guess it's a dry run for the America's Cup. But Larry is a great billionaire. He's got a swagger. He's got a cockiness to him. He comes out, he's a competitive person, and clear that DNA is all through Oracle. And what we're seeing, Mark Hurd, who's this lieutenant executing, it's all about the collaboration message, which is all, that's what they have to say. They sell ERP, CRM software. Obviously on the code base, they want exa everything. One code base, that's what they're pushing, performance, and bringing sun as a performance indicator there as well. And then overlaying that with Java once at the same time is key component. And three, finally the competition. Oracle's not afraid to take the gloves off from the competition. And Larry will fight until they get disrupted. Oracle, if you look at this picture, that's Oracle in the future, going to be disrupted by an open source and the competition. So watch this slow motion, Oracle, the incumbent 800 pound gorilla falling over right there, boom. Okay, I predict Oracle's going to be disrupted. And then Mark Andreessen, who was quoted as saying, not one of his single companies actually use Oracle. And so Dave, I know you're going to give me the $12 billion in free cash flow, but that could be Oracle's future. Can you run that clip one more time? I mean, let's do that one more time. This is Oracle's future right here. If they don't truly get their act together, this could be Oracle's future. And by getting your act together, you mean getting more open source? No, by jamming exa down everyone's throat. So, let's see how that one code base will work. Is Larry getting into the boat right there? All right, so Dave, that's a wrap day too. We can just run that over and over again. I think that's a great theme for the day and get Larry's keynote going. We should run that picture in picture during Larry's keynote. A replay of Larry's keynote. Boom. All right, how about that? Every time he says exa anything, we play that clip. Play that, next slide please. Yeah. Gotta love it, Larry Ells. Larry, we love you. Come on theCUBE anytime. Actually, I got an email from their PR person. Larry wants to come on theCUBE tomorrow at one o'clock Pacific, so. Just before his keynote. Larry, there'll be a spot here. We'll be waiting for you. We'll keep the mic open. Come on theCUBE. Looking forward to having you. Come on, you can dance with us, Larry. Right down here at theCUBE logic booth, Larry. Come on in. All right, it's a wrap for day two. Okay everyone, John Furrier and Dave Vellante signing out of the great.