 Hadoop represents that creation, that entrepreneurship, and it's still early, and there's an ecosystem developing. EMC's partnering heavily in general. How are you looking at Hadoop with Apache? It's open source. What's your ecosystem strategy there? Yeah, well we announced, I think we had about a dozen partners that were announcing support for our Hadoop distribution. Right, we had big names, Informatica, and SAP as part of that, VMware as part of it, and then a bunch of little guys, some of the key startup guys as well. So we're going to be very aggressive in embracing the community and having them work with us on our distribution. Secondly, we're fully committed to the open source community. The work that we do, we'll roll back into Apache as well, because we've seen this bubbling cauldron of activity around Hadoop, and we're going to keep it bubbling. We're going to keep contributing, participating with it. We're hiring several of the key committers, are joining our team as well. We're fully committed to making that open source community very effective as well. People are comparing it to Linux, but Linux was early on, it was formed within the community, and then people had different versions. Had Hadoop still vulnerable? Yeah, you know, there's one, you guys will make it more. There is different trees today, and actually we're seeing that potentially fracturing. You know, it's one of our concerns, so one of the efforts that we want to do is make sure the community comes together, right, and we really see that it's important for us, right, with Pladera, IBM, and we're really reaching out to them saying, okay, how can we make sure that we have a common distribution tree over time? Because, you know, there's a Facebook, there's a Yahoo, an IBM, Pladera, right now ours, right, we really want to make sure that we agree on common standards, interfaces, et cetera, so you'll see us doing more in that area as well to make sure that it doesn't fracture over time, because we do see this criticality of keeping the open source innovation alive and well. That's a delicate balance, isn't it? Oh, absolutely. And then, because at the end of the day, we use the, Johnny used the Linux analogy, you got Red Hat and Suse, and those are the guys that made a lot of the money and everybody else sort of fought over the scraps, and presumably you're going all in to be one of the leaders. You want to be number one or number two, right? That's a validation to the market space, too. I mean, you guys essentially validate Cloudera's and Business Model and all the other competitors are out there now. Yeah, it's going to be fun, right? I'm excited about it. We're getting great interest from it. That's stuff, we love it. And, you know, I guess one more point as well, EMC isn't a big open source player, right? How many big open source things has EMC done? Yeah, name them. Can't really name any. You know, we have a little bit that we've done and clearly Spring has been very open source on the VMware side. But, you know, for us, this is saying, okay, you know, we really are going to participate with the open source community in a very substantive way. And this is a strong commitment. In an organic way as well.