 The backup business was old and slow. You put stuff out there and D-Doupe came along. Now things are happening faster. What's the next big trend beyond the D-Doups and low-reliance? I mean, put a little more color in that. You've got competitors like Symantec who are wanting to go to appliances or suggesting appliances are the way to go. What's your strategy in that area? Well, we're going to talk a lot about this at the show, but if you look at both Avamar and Data Domain, they're appliances and they've been out there for four-plus years now. And we have our competitors actually coming towards it, I think, acknowledging it that you've got to have appliances. So Symantec, who had been a software-only approach, now is delivering appliances into the marketplace. And we're going to talk about this. We feel today for data protection, the appliance market is over a billion and a half dollars right now. We think it'll go up to three billion by 2015. And I think you're seeing the shift where it was backup software and tape. Now it's really almost equal backup software and purpose-built backup appliances. Appliances are giving customers greater efficiency in their backups, but they're also giving them a way to enhance the recovery strategies that they never could before. And if you think about tying that in with VMware, how are you moving your protection data? How are you creating multiple sites to recover from? To an existing VM or to a new VM, there's a whole bunch of new protection strategies that customers are trying to deploy. Appliances are a perfect, fast, affordable way for customers to get the benefit. And we've been happy that someone like Symantec's coming in and validating that for us. And we feel like we're on our, this is fourth generation of the Avamar hardware, sixth generation of Avamar data domain. It's been out for over four years. We're in a really good position from that standpoint. I was...