 So, working with the Linux Foundation, there are things that we couldn't do before, that we can now do working in partnership with the Linux Foundation. That partnership brings the credibility that this is a project that will be truly governed out of the open. We set up organizations and work effectively to create an atmosphere where people will come and collaborate and they'll be sticky and they'll want to go and work on those projects. If we were just to take a project and open source it ourselves and expect people to come to that project, it's a very difficult path, but when you do it in partnership with someone like the Linux Foundation, that path very much gets smoothed. We have great contacts, great recruitment into these projects and the staff that can really go and help and deliver on that and that's really the difference that it makes working in partnership. So actually, I'm involved in many projects with the Linux Foundation. So, Node.js Foundation, the formation of that, which was a really great effort that brought together Node and the IOJS community back together to form something that's actually much stronger now, much healthier on a great trajectory. Three million users of Node.js now, up a million just over the last year. That's the kinds of things that we like to go and do, but there's other projects like the Open Data Platform Initiative where we're taking in building specifications that will allow Hadoop users to feel confident that their applications can be deployed across multiple Hadoop environments, as an example. Most exciting is the Hyperledger project. We've got some of the biggest names in the industry now jumping in very quickly to go do this and we hope that that open blockchain work that goes on turns into a world changer and we think it will and so there's great things going on here, great things.