 Live from Las Vegas, it's theCUBE, covering Discover 2016 Las Vegas. Brought to you by Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Now, pure your hosts, Dave Vellante and Jeff Frick. Hi everybody, welcome back to HP Enterprise. Hewlett Packard Enterprise Discover 2016, HP's big, HPE's big user conference, customer conference here in Las Vegas. Subsequent to the split, this has become sort of the flagship show in the US. They have a sister show in Europe, in London, where I believe theCUBE will be there at the end of this year as well. So today, I'm here with Jeff Frick. Today the big news, Jeff, is GE and HPE getting together. HPE, as we know, has made a big push in Internet of Things. We've had Dr. Don Bradovich on several times. He's coming on again tomorrow. They're going to be part of the keynote this morning. Big push in IoT, really focusing on edge to core and all the devices in between the data capabilities, the networking fabric, the storage and compute. Again, end to end, really using things like Moonshot. Remember Moonshot several years ago announced this sort of low, small package, easy to distribute, computing server architecture as fundamental part of their IoT. But the big news here is GE and HPE getting together. GE, of course we know, industrial giant, turbines and aerospace. But what GE doesn't have, Jeff, is they don't have computing and networking infrastructure gear that HPE brings to the table. Yesterday, Dave, I was able to get some time with Doug Othout, the VP of IoT marketing here at HPE. And he talked about this concept of IT versus OT. So think of HP as IT, information technology, infrastructure, keeping the lights on. What GE's done, what large manufacturers have been doing for a long time is OT, operational technology, optimizing plants, supply chain optimization, those types of things. And what this kind of internet of things really represents is the coming together of those two practices in the integrated system. Because now you can take the data, you can take the exhaust off the sensors, off the shop floor, feed it into these algorithms that are really managed more by IT, kind of traditional big data space to bring a better optimization to both parties. So it's a really interesting time. And the other thing he really talked about, as you said, it's edge to core. So there's all types of philosophies in terms of how much compute can you put to the edge? Where do you put the security between the sensors and the edge compute and the network and then getting back in the core and how do you keep bad things from happening if there's things happening along the line? So it's a really exciting announcement for HPE. Obviously, we've been to the GE software campus a number of times, talked to Bill Rue and his team. And the other thing that I think is really powerful is they're looking, even like GE, is looking beyond the jet engine manufacturing, but the whole experience from the time you leave your house to the time you arrive at your destination, oh, by the way, there's going to be a GE engine that's powering the airplane in the middle of that thing. All right, we got to wrap. The key notes are starting. This is a big deal. Bill Rue, your buddy has talked about this being a $15 billion business for GE. The key to it for GE is pre-Dix software, which handles that distributed data, brings data back and allows you to analyze that data. Okay, so we are going to cut over to the key notes. Very shortly, this is theCUBE. We're live here at HPE Discover 2016. We've got wall-to-wall coverage all day. We'll see you right after the key notes.