 The other big one there was Dell. So Dell actually had one of the keynotes on Thursday, Dario Zemarian, who is the new kind of czar, general manager of the networking space. And I got to sit down with him, which was really quite interesting, because if you think from a networking standpoint, well, how does Dell really fit into that picture? And I asked him that question, and he was very kind of frank and honest in saying, I asked that same thing when I interviewed. Dell is not, you know, they have their own kind of low consumer end product line, but mostly they're doing things through partnering. So their big partners are Juniper, Brocade, and Aruba Networks on the wireless side. And he said, really, his job is to give Dell some credibility in the space, first working with their partners and eventually growing, you know, of course probably their services with their Perot acquisition and trying to get into that space a little more as they build their converged infrastructures. So we saw, well, Dell bought Equalogic, tried to buy three-part to do the high-end storage play. You just mentioned the Perot acquisition. Obviously, Dell is transforming itself. Do you see Dell actually acquiring a networking company? So I asked him that specifically. And if you look at the options that they have out there, you know, they're not going to buy Juniper. Juniper is just way too big. It's, you know, $12 to $15 billion for that acquisition. You know, they're not going to buy Brocade. It really doesn't make a whole lot of sense. It's also, you know, $3 to $4 billion, at least, from what Brocade's market cap is. He said that if they made an acquisition, it would probably be something on the smaller side, something on the edge. So if you look at what IBM did recently with the Blade Network's B&T acquisition, that was rumored to be somewhere between the $300 and $400 million range. Or even look at what Cisco did a few years back with buying Linksys, which was about a $500 million acquisition. So if you look at where Dell plays in the marketplace, they're not going to get a core, you know, switch supplier. They're not going to be competing with the Cisco Nexus 7000 or some of the products that Juniper makes at the core. But at the edge, which is a little more defensive, and at the line where the server and networking and virtualization all play into space, there could be an acquisition, or in the consumer space, if it made sense.