 Next slide, please. Just so you remember, I don't want to make anyone feel bad. Thank you, Bader, in San Francisco. Well, they're at it. It is beautiful, isn't it? I'm telling you, it's like looking at the fins of a 1960 Cadillac. It makes me nostalgic to look at a screen like that. Next slide. Oh, yes, and this is supposedly a more modern application. But again, sales force has been around a long time. They've been around a long time. Okay, next slide. All right, here we go. I'm going to take a short sip of water, and then we're going to start the demo. I'll talk. Okay, we're here at SiliconAngle.com and Wikibon.org, The Cube. It's wrapping up Oracle Open World. Larry Ellison is still on stage finishing up his keynote. He's going to show a demo of the user interface and how easy it is to use. And this is, Dave, the final wrap up for Oracle Open World. And ultimately, Larry did a great job. I thought his presentation was killer. Obviously, he's on his game. This was a great presentation. He was hard charging Larry Ellison in perfect Ellison form, going right after Benioff, False Cloud. He just took the game right to Benioff. Yeah, we called it, John. Ray Rang was on, he was fantastic. But one of the things he said was that, I think we're just going to see more of Exa, Exa, Exa. We saw anything but. He skewered Benioff. He totally depositioned him, announced the Oracle Public Cloud, announced the Oracle Social Network. Absolutely crushed it, in my opinion. Left some details out, like how much this thing cost. How do you move data? He's announcing everything that's hip. So he's basically like, okay, while we're at it, why don't we just announce a venture fund and an incubator. And just, but all the. Hadoop distribution. So he's checking off the boxes. All the criticisms that we laid on Oracle this week, he's checked all those boxes. He beautifully masterminded the Benioff depositioning, exactly as we thought he would. He definitely answered my charge about mobile. If you look at the user interface there, it looks pretty good. He just highlighted Salesforce's user interface. And you know, he's just absolutely taking Benioff to town, getting him out of town, kicked him out of his keynote, and trashed him. He trashed SAP. He said, look, their interface is like looking at the fin of a 1950s Cadillac. Of course, SAP's got modern interfaces. He's showing the old-time interface, but classic Oracle. Great presentation. I mean, he was geared up. No teleprompter failure. He had absolutely his game on. He stepped up in classic end of the show, Larry Form. Tomorrow, a big night to one in the morning. The event's going on. But overall, great show over at Oracle. We're critical of them. They're the 800-pound gorilla. They've got a software stack that has IBM looking over their shoulder. They're beating down competitors, startups like Salesforce. Not startups, but companies like Salesforce, beating them to a pulp right now. And we'll see how Salesforce responds. The mobile question. They've got Fusion. They're showing some mobile. We'll dig into that. We'll see what that looks like, Dave. But I'm still not sure. But ultimately, the big story here is they're launching Oracle Cloud, Public Cloud, and Oracle Social Network. So they're answering two major points in the marketplace, which is cloud and social. Well, this is what happens when a company spends money on R&D. Mark Herd is not going to cut Larry's budget. Larry runs R&D. The Fusion apps took six years. Originally, he said it would take four years. ERP, human capital management, CRM, all the people soft stuff, all the Hyperion. All the applications that they bought, including the Oracle applications, now running on a Java-based middleware platform, portable, on and on and on, open, ticked all the boxes. Really depositioned everybody who was trying to deposition him all week, saved it to the end. Big crescendo, the Oracle Public Cloud, the Oracle Social Network, talking mobile. Very impressive. We had a great bunch of guests here on SiliconANGLE.tv. It's theCUBE, our flagship telecast. We had a lot of smart guests in here. Intel, EMC.