 We're here with Mike Kendall, who's been very instrumental in the HP Pathfinder program, which is one of the three legs of the stool that you guys announced today, right? I mean, it's the ecosystem component, right? So talk about Pathfinder, what it is, why it's important, and why you start actually with your role here at HP. So what do you bring to the table? Well, a couple things. So I think earlier today it was mentioned by Paul Sandler that the model for this program was a program we did around the HP Blade System and C-Class C-7000. It's called HP Solution Builder, and actually my team pulled that together, and so it was time to pull together an ecosystem partner program for this whole new architecture. So that was a whole new architecture that began to federate the capabilities of compute, storage, and networking together. When it was time to put one together here, then I kind of answered the call on that. So I'm also involved a lot with a lot of our infrastructure products and our memory disk, but heavily involved in this program. So good. We've been hearing in this announcement also a hyperscale term that you guys use in the industry around massive scale. We know of web companies like Facebook and Google and Amazon, these folks running massive data centers with web applications. And now you're seeing new applications being run by financial firms, governments, big data, cloud computing specifically. What is going on with cloud in particular in the marketplace today? And why is this new announcement, which you guys announced today around low energy, power management? Because developers today are building those next apps, whether it's angry birds like application that goes supernova overnight and this new breed of developers, they want all these resources. They want to turn key. Some of them are younger developers. Some are old like us. Dave and I who have been around the block who understand that this stuff doesn't just happen. And so you're involved in the foundation of putting this partner program together. And you guys are calling the Pathfinder program, the underpinnings of support and enablement. So talk about the impact of this new systems view, this new hyperscale and what it means to the marketplace and to the ecosystem. Those are great questions. So if you look at as Paul said earlier today, I mean, we've generally been in a world where an HP has been very much a leader in this area of what I like to call the pizza boxes. So you get like in a 42 U rack, you get like 40 plus servers in there, dual core servers and they have their connections and everything like that. Well, a lot of workloads can really benefit from a lot of cores with a lot of memory and a lot of storage close by them. But you're limited by the amount of space that took up and also limited by the amount of power and cooling that that consumes as well. So when you think about architecture like this where you're able to put like 288 processors in a 4U type box. So that's for the Redstone development platform. How many processors? 288 in a 4U box along with their memory. And then you can also exchange that with different levels of storage. And I showed you the storage box. Just to give people a sense of that. So you said 288 in a 4U box. Right. Well, how would that compare? How many would you be able to, how many traditional microprocessors, x86 processors would you be able to fit? I mean. Eight. Okay. Because you think of like something like a DL360, very popular product that's used extensively, particularly in cloud-based type applications because it's very space efficient. It's got 1U and you can put a lot of memory in there and you have the two processor is right there. So you got four of those. You got eight. So it's hard to interrupt, but that's a great point. So you're talking about 288. So that also provides a lot of processing capability within a pretty constrained space right there. The challenge, and this gets into the partner side of the whole thing, is that requires somewhat of a different approach. So I was talking to one company, they said, well, all you're doing is putting lower power servers in a traditional pizza box and everything. What's the big deal about that? And what's different about that? But if you're talking about putting 288 in there, and they're very closely coupled, so the word that was used this morning was a federated type of architecture. We have a very close coupling of memory. You have a lot of high speed interconnects between all those within the box before you ever go to an outside switch. And you have storage that's integrated into that. How do you optimize the operating system, the IO subsystem, how do you optimize the disk access, the way that you set up your storage, the way you partition your storage, the way that you go ahead and put down applications, the way that you manage failovers and everything, that changes from the normal pizza box. So that's when we talk about that. We have the HPE Discovery Lab. We have the Pathfinder program that we're really going to bring together a collaborative environment. That's the key word, collaborate together with folks that are very smart in this area. So from the hardware standpoint, Calzada, ARM, other people that are involved, people from the software, from the software stack area, on how you're going to set up and create new ways of managing new ways of allocating the software stacks, the new way that you're going to go ahead and manage the IO and everything else like that is quite a bit different than a standard pizza box type of cluster. So you announced five today, right? Canonical, Red Hat, Calzada, ARM and AMD. Correct, those are what we call our foundational members. But we're going to have a lot more. Well, how many was it in the blade, initiative 300? It was, it's well over 300. Okay, so you would expect similar numbers here? And what kind of uptake? Well, we'll have to see, but I expected we'll see a pretty rapid uptake on this once the news of this gets out. And it's very easy for people to go ahead and apply for it. So what it is, it is a program where you apply in HP, you know, looks at how you fit into the program and everything and it will get back to you on that. But it's very easy to go. If you just go to our hp.com. Slash go slash Moons shot page. One of the pages there is for the HP Pathfinder program. And it'll tell you about it. It talks about the five founding members and then a place where you can go ahead and click and get more information. Has Oracle applied yet? You know, I haven't checked the inbox yet. They must be in your spam folder. Couldn't resist on the Oracle Show. So, Michael, talk about what you learned from the Blades Initiative and what's different here. Well, so, first of all, let's talk about what's similar. There's a great opportunity to apply value for customers if the hardware and the software and even the services aspects have been designed to work with each other. So you're not just taking, you know, a square peg round hole and making the best of fit right there. We actually can proactively work with folks to make sure that software stacks and hardware can be optimized together. So that's where we have a lot of similarity. That's what we did with the HP Blades System Solution Builder Program, is that we worked closely with different companies and actually got them access to the systems and they could try their software out and find out where they could further optimize it and improve it and make sure it ran better than it would if they just bought it off the shelf and just had to work with a pizza box style, you know, server. Thank you.