 this points to a whole new persona developer. You got eSports on the Twitch side, booming. eSports is changing the game in the whole digital sports category. Robotics, space, you got a satellite announcement. This is a genre change in digital culture. All those areas that we're continuing to expand into are areas that our customers are asking us to help them with and where there are huge opportunities for customers, but where it's hard. I mean, if you look at space as an example, if you have to interact with a satellite, it's expensive to have to have all those satellites set up and those ground antennas set up and then you have to program them and then you actually have to pay this fixed price instead of on demand. Customers say, why can't you give us access to those satellites the way we consume AWS? And then if you can have the ground antennas where when the data comes down from the satellite, it's basically on the same premises as your AWS region so we can store the data and process the data, analyze it and take action, that is very compelling. So that just felt like a natural fit. And the same thing with robotics. I think that robotics is one of the most underrated areas in technology. I think robots will do all kinds of things for us at work and in the home. People are gravitating towards robotics. Robotics clubs are booming. That maker culture goes to a whole another level with robotics. Congratulations. It's funny, we had the youngest person to ever pass the AWS certification exam is a kid named Karthik. Nine years old, he was here this week actually and I got a chance to meet with him today and I said, well after the certification, what are you doing? He said, well, I'm building a robot. And I'm building a robot. And he said, now with your launch of DeepRacer, I want to try and find a way to have the DeepRacer car be the eyes and the camera and the reinforcement learning for my robot. Nine years old.