 Phil, I want to talk about a compelling. You really have done an amazing job. Entrepreneur, started a number of companies, in of all places, you know, the middle part of the country. You know, you don't think about the Minneapolis area being storage central, but it actually historically has been, you know, with CDC and impromise, and so there's a lot of talent out there, isn't there? Yeah, I actually think it's a competitive advantage. There's a big competitive advantage to be out in Minneapolis. Couple things, in the old mainframe days, you had IBM and the Bunch. All but one of the Bunch was headquartered in Minneapolis. There was a lot of innovation that happened there. Now one that was real big was CDC, control data, and their roots, they would actually fund entrepreneurial companies within the company, and so I'm not sure the venture community got as well-established in Minneapolis, but the engineering community sure did, and we would all take advantage of that. The quality of talent we have, they're more loyal, they're affordable, you know, the engineers we've started with are all still there at Compellent. They don't hop around like they might out here in the valley, and it's the quality that they come out of this enterprise-class architectures is just really, really differentiated for them, so you got a lot of the storage comes out there. You got Seagate's high-end enterprise drive division, all that stuff out there, the old Veritas operations, C&T, the old, you know, channel extension company, network systems, so there's a lot of ecosystem for storage talent.