 A little bit about how it was down at the, and we saw each other down at the Pure Systems, the Pure Flex announcement, which is very impressive, by the way. We've said a lot of very positive things about that. Storage fits into that. Can you talk about how you're drafting off of that announcement? What it means to you, that whole strategy of integrated systems? Well, first of all, Pure Systems, Pure Flex, and Pure Application Systems are where clean sheet initiatives from IBM. So we really started from scratch, based on our understanding of what clients are looking for in that integrated space. And it really is a new category, expert integrated systems. And storage has been and will continue to be an integral part of that solution set going forward. So have we drafted on it? I would say no. I think we've been an integral part of the design and development of that. A lot of the capabilities we delivered in storage over the last many years are an integral part of that solution set, and frankly has influenced the design to a great extent around graphical user interface, virtualization, and some of those capabilities. Okay, so now you guys made the BNT acquisition over a year ago now. And that part of that IP, a big part of that IP was the scale-in networking, which is sort of a new term that you guys put forth. That's obviously IP that's part of your organization. Now you talked about sort of starting from scratch, which was I think a very impressive way to approach it. How about the storage piece? How does storage fit in? You're uniquely allowing other people storage. I don't think anybody else does that with their converged infrastructure, what you guys call expert integrated systems. Talk about how storage fits into that white sheet of paper design. Well, I think it starts with what we were trying to accomplish with peer systems to begin with, the integrated nature of the platform, the ability to scale seamlessly, the ability to simplify the deployment of the technology, the ability to simplify the management of the overall infrastructure, and the ability to add it in very efficient ways that you want to add more capacity and more functionality and feature set. So, storage in that regard, and what we've done with technologies like sand volume controller and our virtualization capabilities, was a natural fit as part of that solution set. At the same time to your point, we know storage needs to be evolutionary, not necessarily revolutionary, and we understand that clients have made investments in pre-existing storage platforms, whether it's from IBM or third party. So, our ability to allow clients to integrate that existing infrastructure investment into those systems, we think is an important differentiator that allows customers to protect that investment and yet get the advantages from the integrated capabilities we deliver with peer.