 Actually, I came two years ago to the company after serving 20 years in a government company, and what I found is Haiminger, which was about six months in the company, and a lot of issues, a lot of application issues. And since we want to get a quick wins and to show something else to the company regarding using the application, I've made a decision to actually replace all the infrastructure of the company. And we've done it in the last two years. We replaced all the servers, all the storage, all the computers, everything. And since we've done it, we reduced the downtime of our system to actually one force of what we got two years ago, and we have systems that people can work with today because everything is running smoothly and we can react to the needs of the company. So it really is an availability improvement, recovery, right? And then speed of being able to deliver a new function to the business. There was a system that we had running in the company that was planned to be thrown out because the response time was so bad that the decision actually was made to throw them out. And after we've put them on new infrastructure and the new cloud, new servers, new storage, now they are working perfectly. So this journey took about two years, is that right? Exactly two years. To go from zero to four nines of virtualization. Exactly from zero and during those two years, one of the initial dilemmas we had is we needed to build a DR site. And the basic thing to do when building a DR site is to put servers and storage that sees and do nothing and just wait for any day to happen on your production site and then those servers and storage are coming up. When we decided to go to virtualization, we decided to go to an active, active data center. So our main data center almost 100% virtualized. The DR site is actually running, the servers and the storage are running all of our development and test environment. And we want to do DR, if it's a partial DR, we don't affect the development side because it has enough computing power to run a few hundred servers along with the development servers. But on a full DR, I just take down the development servers, bring up the virtual servers of the production and we did actually a DR at half the cost of a usual DR project. Now we talked about Oracle, we're going to be at SAP Sapphire next week, down in Orlando. SAP as well, similar experience to Oracle or different experience in terms of the support? No, actually the fully support VMware. So SAP is very much behind VMware? Yes, very much behind. Actually when you open a case and ask them if they fully support all the features like VMotion, they told us that we must use VMotion in order to gather support for the product, so no problems there. That's good. All right, Yossi and Hyam, thank you very much for coming on theCUBE. I appreciate you sharing your experiences with virtualizing all your applications. 99.998% of your applications in your servers and we really appreciate your perspectives. Thank you. Thank you very much.