 Okay, so let's get to what we're announcing here today. So we held back some things that we've been working on for announcing today because we thought this is a great audience to talk about some of the new things we're doing. The first thing we're doing is sort of a business model thing. So obviously Oracle Databases and all of the Oracle products for years have been sold via what we call perpetual licenses. You pay us money for the license up front, okay? You get the use of that software for the lifetime of your business, basically. And then you pay us an annual fee for support, right? In the open source space, people have been using a slightly different business model, which says, okay, you don't pay us up front, but you do pay us annual support fees for getting support for our products. Or we're just open source, you can just download the software from the web and play with it for free. So what we're announcing today is we are going to add to our existing perpetual licensing business model for Oracle NoSQL Database, a more open source friendly kind of model where we now have a version of Oracle NoSQL Database called the Community Edition. That edition of the product is available for download by anybody on Oracle's website. You go to OTN, which is what we call our technology network. You go down, download the software, you go play with it, you don't have to pay us anything. And then if you decide, hey, this is a pretty cool product, I want to get support. What we're announcing here today is now you can get support. And you can get it in a very simple fashion. You can just go to the Oracle store on the web, shop.oracle.com. You can give us your credit card number. And for $2,000 per server per year, which is actually a very good deal. You get full support, the full enterprise class support that Oracle provides for all of its other products are now available for the Community Edition of our NoSQL Database product. And I know a lot of you, maybe, from startups. Startups, of course, don't want to spend any money at all. This is great for them. They can just start using the software. And then when they finally become real, go live. They can get support and get the full benefits of Oracle's support organization. So that's the first announcement. Number two, we want to talk about appliances. So over the last few years, Oracle, since we bought Sun, is now not only a software vendor, but we're a hardware vendor too. And what we've been doing is something we call engineered systems. Other people call appliances or converge solutions. What we do is we take our software and we take the hardware, we integrate it together. We're basically like a systems integrator in my group. And we deliver appliances to customers. So that customers don't have to be in the business of engineering complex, clustered computer systems anymore. The first one we delivered for my group is called Exadata. Exadata is sort of a play on the Teradata name. And Exadata is this database machine for running massively parallel, clustered, scale out, database technologies, database systems for big data warehouses. We have customers running over multiple petabytes of information on the Exadata systems for data warehouses. They're also used for big transaction processing systems as well. After that, we added something called the Oracle Database Appliance, which is, again, an engineered system for the Oracle Database for more low-end use cases. And what we're announcing today is our big data appliance for Oracle NoSQL Database is our latest engineered system. So if you want to go and start playing with Oracle's NoSQL technology, you can buy our big data appliance. You can start with a six-node cluster of two-socket commodity Intel servers. That's what we call the starter rack. And we will have a whole set of scripts to pre-install your software for you on that machine so that you can be up and running in a matter of hours. You order the hardware, you order the software, you load it up, and you're ready to go. So it's something we found our customers really like, this whole notion that they don't have to design complex clustered computer systems anymore. Of course, all the technologies I mentioned earlier work in this environment. Enterprise Manager works. We give you full support. The big data appliance also is an engineered system for Hadoop, so you can also run Hadoop on the same hardware as you run Oracle NoSQL. You can have some of the nodes on the big data appliance running Oracle NoSQL Database. Some of the nodes can be running Hadoop if you want to integrate the two together. We support that as well. And just the last note, if you want to go to this link, this hardware is very competitive in price. And if you do the math, we think you'll find in a lot of cases this is actually cheaper than going out and buying hardware yourself and integrating it together. And then the last thing I wanted to mention is that in order to get people playing around with our product, we welcome you to go to this website. nosequelcontest.com. And play around with the product. Come up with some interesting app, send it into us. And we are going to give a prize, an iPad as a prize, for whoever sends in the most creative use of Oracle NoSQL Database. The contest ends October 18th, so download the software today and start playing. And with that, I'd like to welcome you all to go to our website, get more information. At the conference this week, this afternoon, I think we have a panel session from some of our developers who are going to be here to talk about Oracle NoSQL Database. I think we have another session tomorrow as well, so where you can learn about the technology in a lot more depth. And with that, I think we have a couple minutes. I'll be happy to answer a couple questions if we've got any questions from the audience.