 Doesn't everything cost more in the cloud? The answer is kind of complex. It's yes and no. So in the cloud, we have a number of great capabilities that we don't necessarily have on premise. So it's not a one-to-one relationship. But one of the things that we do see in the cloud is we do see a more direct tie from our expense to the value that's being delivered. Can it cost more? Sure. If I run the same size virtual machine inside of Azure as I do in my on-premise data center, where I've got hardware that I've expensed as part of the capital expense and is spread across a number of different projects, yeah, potentially. But if I actually can take a look at services at autoscale, if I can take a look at the actual resource utilization or the effectiveness of the service for the value, I can make money saving choices. And I can also make sure that we're focusing on the real thing here. It's not the cost savings. It's the value delivery. It's the value for the dollar that we're getting. And the cloud helps make that a much easier determination.