 When I wanted to go to college, I looked around at a bunch of different colleges and I really fell in love with the University of Alabama and I came here to study applied math and it was just the best decision I could have made. Alabama started me on the platform of what I wanted to study and I just built on it from there and eventually went from computer science and then into business, got an MBA and now I work at Google where I do a lot of the technical plus business aspects of the partnerships that Google Cloud puts in place. So I made it to Google by going to Caltech for graduate school and as I left Caltech with a PhD in computer science, I helped found a company and so I found this company and helped run it and eventually became the CEO of it and then about three years after I became CEO Google acquired most of the company and so I wound up being acquired into Google with a team and really joined Google at a time about six years where we could really have some really foundational impact on the way Google builds its infrastructure and since that time I've moved over to the cloud division where I help run all of our partnerships with technology partners. I often talk to youth and folks who are trying to figure out you know what do they want to study and I tell them that when I was at the University of Alabama when I was in their shoes that there was no job that I have now that industry did not exist in any form there was no giant internet company there was no internet to speak of and so what Alabama did for me was prepared me for a future that I couldn't see yet. I think if you learn that way and you'd be able to follow the vector of what your interests are and where you see that you can have impact you can really do some amazing things that are just not visible to you yet.