 We're live in New York City where we are on the ground covering Hadoop World 2011, the Cube, in addition to the Cube, and Dave and I doing interviews all day yesterday and today. We've got our second win for today. We have on the ground all our bloggers, Clint Finley, Alex Williams, Mark Risenhobbkins, Kristen Nicole. We are in sessions. We're talking to people in the hallways. We're getting all the stories, and we're going to bring that to you via the Cube. We'll have them on here. We'll see you on the site at siliconangle.com. Go check out all the stories. Hadoop World is on fire, Dave. It's really hot. You're hearing from people in the trenches. They're using Hadoop. HBase, he mentioned Uzi for the coordination. It's real. This is so cool because he was saying he's running Oracle and he couldn't get the things done. It's like, that's what's happening. I mean, even- Never finished. Yeah, I mean, the tables are so big and the data is becoming so massive they really need to kind of change the game on the analytics. That's just one of many examples. We use HBase at Hadoop SiliconANGLE. So you know, I mean, this stuff you can do now that you couldn't do three years ago. So really compelling. Mike Olson kind of said it yesterday. Whole new tsunami of an ecosystem that's going to change business and change society. And I thought, that wasn't really picked up much yesterday in our conversations, but that whole society message was really compelling that Mike Olson kind of weaved into his keynote. And for the greater good, you're seeing big data being used at the government level. You're seeing it used for helping people. All kinds of cool stuff. So it's awesome. So we got it covered here at Hadoop World. You know, I just want to mention to a lot of folks out there, this is new, right? We kind of take it for granted. We've been coming here now for a while. You've been all over the big data trend. You got us into it early on. But for a lot of folks, there's a lot of buzzwords. You got pig, you got hive, HBase, things that you've maybe never heard of before. So I want to just let you know, Jeff Kelly and some other members of the Wikibon community just published the Wikibon Big Data Manifesto. Go to wikibon.org. Check out, you know, just search for the Big Data Manifesto and you'll find that there's a lot of information in there. Ask a question if you're not sure. We'll try to get you an answer. Go to siliconangle.com. Go to SiliconANGLE.tv. Check it out, we're here to help. You got questions, hopefully we have answers. Okay, we're gonna take a quick break and we're gonna come right back and we're gonna keep rolling. Okay, great. Okay, so some news today, breaking that we're getting over the wire here. Yeah, so let's have a news break. We're gonna bring on Alex Williams. Is Alex, okay, Alex just got some remote news that he's gonna bring in. He's on the show floor. He's talking to people. So are we ready to go? Okay. Okay, so Alex will be joining us in a few minutes. We're gonna Skype him in, so this is cool. He's gonna be on the Wi-Fi with Skype, with a video remote. We're trying to do new things here. It's cool, so we're gonna try to bring him in. But in the meantime, we're gonna have stories today. Facebook, Pandora, Netflix, Rhapsody Games, and Electronic Arts, Zynga, Rovio, which is Angry Birds. More apps and more games coming to the Kindle Fire next weekend. And really, Dave, the Kindle is just a really, really strong alternative. Amazon is sneaking up in this game, putting the app store out there. They have an e-commerce back end. So, you know, they've really done a good job of entering in. Love the Kindle. They're coming in, Mark Hopkins uses it. I know you have the iPad. I have the iPad. I have the Kindle too. I use it all the time. Battery life's phenomenal. So, you know, this is a real serious threat to the iPad. And so, you know, they're doing a good job. Other news that we saw is that HP's reconsidering WebOS. So, story came in, essentially that- Good. Thank God. So, well, no, they wasn't saying, they're just saying Meg Whitman has stated that they're not sure what they're going to do with WebOS. Essentially, a cry for help saying people don't freak out. I personally have been on record, as you know, and have been advocating that WebOS should hang around because it's got so much possibilities. It still has a loyal developer community. Well, that's dropped a bit over the past year because of the whole debacle. I think- But it's an alternative. And, you know, like I said, like on our last cue, but HP, an Apple senior engineer told me privately that of all the things in the marketplace, WebOS is really the only threat to Apple. So, the Apple people are saying that WebOS is actually the really only viable alternative. So, just you go, oh my God. HP, hold on to it. How can you not play? How are you going to get in there? Yeah, have an Android, have, you know, a couple of horses in the race there, but you can bring WebOS, you can repurpose it, get into a new architecture, get your bill of materials on some hardware down lower, around 99 dollars, and compete at the Kindle Fire level. So, HP can compete. I believe they can do it. Hire to get the smartest people working on it. HP Labs is strong. So, you know, obviously I'm bullish on this. Well, I think the other point that's worth mentioning is your scenario. The fact that HP now, I think correctly, is going to keep the PC division, that's a distribution channel for WebOS and the tablets. You've told the story about the calculator division and how that actually was a distribution channel for printers, which essentially saved HP. Yeah, HP was saved by the laser printer back in the 80s, I mean, 85, when the printer came out, the wing, word processor was the hottest thing and the penetration and just the overall growth in the channel that would not have existed if the calculator division wasn't there. And at the time, it wasn't making any money. So, you know, if you were a operator, you'd be like, oh, let's kill that division, we're not making any money, but no one wanted to kill the calculator division at HP because Bill Hewlett's baby was the calculator. And you know, the story is, is that he built up a calculator you can put in your pocket. We've all used an HP calculator at some point in our life. And so that legacy just hanging around ended up, the timing for that channel was amazing. So I believe that even though they're number one at PCs, as they get their manufacturing or supply chain, shift that over, you can easily come out and engineer a bill of materials for a low cost. Amazon's doing it, other people are doing it. HP certainly has the expertise to do that. More news, Yelp is getting ready to do an IPO. It's going to, the company's going to be valued between one to two billion. I love Yelp. I use it all the time. I don't know if you guys use it out there, but it's a fantastic service. Yelp's an interesting company. I mean, I think it's harder for Yelp to sell advertising than it is, say, for a Facebook and obviously a Google. But it's a great service. They get a lot of users, and so that's more IPO. We saw Group Pongo, more IPO fever, maybe it's not fever, but there's a little tepid temperature. So we had a story that was on Silicon Angle yesterday that went viral. So on our talk with Amar Awadallah, he talked about Pig Hive and Hadoop and all this stuff. But we actually talked to him about gaming because he's a real gamer. And we wrote a post, Kit Dodson wrote a post on SiliconAngle.com that said, Cloudera's CTO and VP of Engineering co-founder, Amar Awadallah. He did a quick review of Modern Warfare 3. That thing went viral. The Modern Warfare game is just on fire right now. So of all the content that he did yesterday, that little snippet about the Modern Warfare 3 review was a home run. Did you see his body language? He lit up. He brought that up. He was like, oh, gaming. So a lot of gamers. And what I liked about Amar was that he essentially challenged the audience, and I'll reiterate it here, the Cloudera engineering team has put out a challenge that they will play anyone in Modern Warfare 1, which they do internally. Every day, at around four o'clock, the Cloudera engineers take a break and they play Modern Warfare 1 against each other. Kind of like team building, I guess. So he said, if anyone wants to challenge them, bring it on. So let's get LinkedIn or Google, bring your best A game, pick up game for Modern Warfare 1. Cloudera will challenge you. So that is out there. I'm gonna write a blog post on it. I thought that was clever. So you'll hear more about that and I think that's just a cool thing.