 So, I have a question about the value of EMC, and I wonder if you could just make an observation and you can comment. Sure. I have my numbers exactly right, but roughly speaking, on January 1st I looked at the value of EMC compared to a year ago, and I assumed an 80% valuation of VMWare, ownership of VMWare, and the core value of EMC actually dropped in a year where you had a great year. I throw out tons of free cash flow, great revenues. So do you feel like EMC is undervalued as a result of that, or is it fairly value because of the VMWare ownership, and you get the uplift from that? I wonder if you could just talk about that dynamic, does it matter? I know you think it's undervalued, but just if you could talk a little bit about the dynamic, and does that matter, and is there anything you can add to that? There's shareholders that own VMWare. I'm talking about taking EMC ID equation. There's shareholders that own VMWare. And for the year last year, they got 110% return on their investment. There's shareholders that owned EMC, and they got about a 33% return on their investment. So 110% up, 33% up. These are both far in excess. So customers are liking both sides. Now to your point, if you took VMWare's value, I don't even know where it is anymore, but it's approaching, it's called 40 billion because it's close. If you took 80% or 81% of 40 billion, is that reflected in EMC's 50 billion? And EMC would probably be no. Now we can go into why is that, and there's a lot of ways ARBs. When you give two ways to play something, there's ARB charge. And then of course EMC at a company of close to $17 billion in revenue, can you afford to give that? You kind of got a bit of a sanity coming in, too. In terms of what am I going to give VMC? This big company, forget about VMWare a second. What am I going to give? Just that consolidated P and L. What P, am I going to give that relative to its peers? So if you look at the big peers, you look at an Oracle, you look at a Microsoft, you look at an Intel, you look at Cisco, et cetera, et cetera. They are giving us a higher P in all of those companies. I make a statement that of the really big companies in IT, we're the smallest of the big. So we didn't announce this quarter, but last quarter, we had 50 billion in market cap and last quarter we had 10 and a half billion in cash. That's a lot. In any other industry, you'd be a giant. But in our industry, there's companies that are way bigger and way more cash. So again, not all the big ones have more cash, but if you look at it in kind of a macro. So we're kind of the smallest of the big, which is, okay, we have a lot to run. But if you look at all the ones that are above us, we have a higher P in all of them. So I think there's two ways to look at it. One way is you look at a consolidator and that's what we're telling the world. We're telling the world, hey, VMWare is part of the family. Yes, we shared it with employees and we shared it with public. But we're holding our stake and it's a consolidated company, part of our financials. So they believe us and they're looking at EMC as a whole. And they're saying, what do I want to get EMC as a whole? What P, they want to give that company? What's their growth? What's their prospect? And I'm not going to argue with the market. So it's just cheap. We just got to continue to perform and things tend to take care of themselves. So that's, I think what's happening with EMC. They're looking at it as a whole because they're now believing us. There's a lot of fodder for a while. You're going to split them off. You're going to do additional. And I kept saying, no, we're not. No, we're not. This strategy together makes a lot of sense. I mean, if you look at the cloud, you know, do you need what VMWare is doing? Absolutely. Do you need information? Information storage? Information management? Information protection? Information security? Information intelligence? Yes, you do. Those are pieces. So we got all of that in one company. You know, we partnered very closely with Cisco and get some of the pieces that we don't have. Namely, networking and we use their UCS servers. So again, I like what we have. But I do think what's happening is customers, they're not customers. Investors are looking at us and they're believing us. They're saying, okay, let's look at this as a consolidated entity. And in VMWare, you know, it's just got an opportunity to go to a really unique place in life and go treating that more as a, you know, it's got great momentum. It's got a great place in the cloud. And it believes it will grow into its P over time so they're willing to give that more of an advanced TE, which we don't, multiples of EMCs. And that's kind of the way they're playing it. And a lot of investors play both sides. So it is what it is.