 Hi, Jeff Frick here with the Q. We are on the ground at Cassandra Summit 2014 at the Weston St. Francis in San Francisco, California. A lot of excitement. We just got out of the keynote, Cassandra, the leading distributed database out there seeing a lot of growth and so we're going to get some folks on, tell them what they're involved in here, Cassandra, and bring you the news. So, first off we've got Brian Lynch from Google. Brian, welcome. Thank you. Thank you, Jeff. Nice to be on here. I appreciate that. So, what's Google doing here? So, to be honest, Google is a big fan of Cassandra. We have several acquisitions we recently brought on that are using Cassandra heavily and for the last year we've been deep on doing performance tuning and making it the best place to run Cassandra. So, that's really not part of, well maybe it is, is that part of Google running on Cassandra for Google or is it really more part of your cloud offering and your kind of go-to-market around what we're seeing? Well, to be honest, it's a combination because we look at the companies we're bringing on, we want them to run in the same place that all our customers are running and we're really dog-fooding the entire thing. So, to be honest, everything we do for performance on Cassandra is both for us and our customers. So, you mentioned before we came on there that you guys have made some recent acquisitions, kind of around performance tuning and really optimizing. So, I wonder if you can share any insight and information on that. Sure. Well, not a ton of details, but in the last six months we've been doing a deep dive on performance and we actually published a blog post. There was a million QPS on our platform and kind of based it on something earlier Netflix had done and we did it on for our platform and then additionally that we're actually taking that performance tuning we did and packaging it up so our customers can take that, the click of a webpage button, deploy a cluster of their own, running all that performance tuning. So, you also told me before we came on you got a little secret something project that you're working on, so why don't you go ahead and tell the world here if they don't know it already. Absolutely. It's not going to be secret anymore. It's not going to be secret. We call it click to deploy and again the idea would be that you have the best tuning that we've done all packaged up for you. You come to a webpage and select a size of your cluster. You click the button and you can deploy your own high performance cluster in minutes. In minutes, awesome. So, talk a little bit about, you guys have, you know, you're kind of increasing your presence in the cloud space and really, you know, given Amazon some competition, obviously there's a lot of press releases that go back and forth that provide good fodder for us in the media business. You've got a show coming up. Why don't you give us a little plug for the show? Why should people come? What are you guys going to be covering? What's going to be new and exciting there? Sure. So, what I'll say is we're pushing the envelope. We're taking what everyone else has done and we're putting our own spin on it and we're turning everything we're doing internally and giving it to our customers. So, all the tools we've built up over the last ten years to serve the worldwide web as well as YouTube, these huge properties, we're all turning that up for our customers. So, the cloud event coming up next month is all about putting that all together and giving everyone the opportunity to look at it. Excellent. And we see that, right? Could you make Google Analytics available? I mean, it really is an interesting strategy to put the power in the hands of the users and give them the tools that they need to really do a better job. Absolutely. I think it's kind of unique to Google. So, Brian, thanks for stopping by. A quick visit. Hopefully we'll see you in a month or so at your event. And we'll be back with our next guest, Cassandra Summit 2014, the West in San Francisco. Be right back.