 San Francisco. Just a few of the highlights of the show. First of all, great introduction yesterday of the Nexus 7, great tablet, 7 inch. Very nice and easy to use, but probably the most interesting thing is its entry point price, $199, going to be available later on. So that really does make a full-function tablet available at a price point, which is going to really energize the whole tablet marketplace. So that was very interesting. The other thing that's very interesting is the big data store here. One of the figures that just really impressed me was that Google are offering 700,000 cores in their cloud compute. That's an amazing number of cores. They're offering a number of other services, big data services, and one of the really interesting things to me that if it happens will really revolutionize big data is not only the ability to compute and to analyze their customers data, IT data, but to merge that, to join that with data that they themselves have from all the other data sources possible. From, for example, the ability to join data about sentiment, about what people are querying about together with data from customers own, company's own data. That's a very powerful model. And in the future it seems to me that there's going to be more money spent on buying and selling data than ever there is going to be made on particular software like Hadoop or anything else. It's the buyers and sellers of data, the providers of data services, and the experts who are going to be the moneymakers of the next 10 years. So other highlights, they came out with a nice apple like product of the home entertainment, expensive at $299. Not sure what that is going to do in that space to be honest. They weren't very clear about it. And then the last but by no means least are the glass, the Google glass, being able to have your data available on your eyes, be able to look straight up at it, part of your everyday life. That's an amazing concept. If that comes to fruition in 2014, it could really revolutionize again the way that we use data, use data, use clients, add to the set of clients that we have that we can use this data. So with that, from the Moscone Center in San Francisco, this is David Flora. This is a really exciting show. Great to be here. And back to you.