 I want to just point out you're wearing a VMware tattoo for the folks who see it. Pat is making all those employees have a VMware tattoo. On their arms. We have this tattoo machine, we're in Vegas. We should order some more cube stickers, so what happens in Vegas stays on your arm. Remember that. You can't take the tattoos up. That's funny and clever. But let's get back to the keynote. You had a quote around the old adage of the network is the computer, that's old, the new adage is the application is a network. I think is what you said. Yep, precisely. Talk about this bridging, and then why that quote? That was a really good quote, I want to expand on that. Yeah, and clearly, we think about the history of VMware and it started with this idea of HP, Dell, IBM, et cetera, and all of a sudden it became VMware with different hardware underneath it. We bridged across those hardware islands. Now, those hardware islands when they started weren't bad. Extraordinary innovation, but all of a sudden customers want to start using them together. And VMware bridged that gap. We talked about the device gap and BYOD and the iPhone showing up, and all of a sudden, IT wasn't ready to manage it, but customers wanted it. So we see Windows devices, Macs and iOS and Google and Chrome and so on. How do you bridge VMware's doing that? We saw many of the network. Boy, my protocols are bound. Okay, again, we're bridging across that. And that's clearly where Anisex is uniquely playing. So this idea of bridging across these elements is deep in our heritage. We do it in an ecosystem-friendly hardware, independent now cloud-independent way, where we're now saying in the cloud health acquisition, we're going to bridge across these worlds and make them easier for our customers to consume them wherever they may be.