 Hi, I'm Peter Burris with another Wikibon action item. Quick take, Neil Raiden. What's going on with Tableau? Well, you know, Tableau software has been a huge success story over the years, 10 years or more, but in the last couple of years, they've really exploded. What they did is they allowed end users to take analytical data, build some models, and generate all sorts of beautiful visualizations from it. The problem was, the people who used Tableau had no tools to work with to prep the data, and that was causing the problem. They worked with partners and so forth, but that's all changing. Last year, they announced Project Maestro, which is their own data prep product. It's built on a in-memory column or oriented database called Piper that they bought. And my information coming from developers who are using the data is that Maestro is going to be a huge success for them. Excellent. And one other thing, I think it points out that a pure play visualization vendor can't survive. They have to expand horizontally. And it will remain to be seen what Tableau will do after this is food, not as a blast act. Great, Neil Raiden talking about Tableau and Project Maestro and expectations for it. This is Peter Burris. Thanks again for watching another Wikibon Action Item Quick Take.