 Well I think you know first of all a lot of customers have questions about how Hadoop fits in with everything and you know to some extent you know my comment about Hadoop is it has to declare its major for really you know everyone to understand it because you know you even heard today there's guys that are focusing on the H base side there are guys that are focusing on the analytics side so you know is it a transaction processing system like you know some of the guys were implying is it a purely analytics environment so informatica is really kind of seeing you know seeing this like everyone evolve I think that you know the most natural cases right now are around the analytics they're not really a substitute for other things that are going on we're seeing it as a complement to existing analytic environments you know Hadoop doesn't yet support the full range of SLAs that you see with some of these traditional analytic environments but it seems like it's it's getting there so you know I think it's just it's just early days with Hadoop and I'd say that a lot of the people that I talked to at the conference are still just trying to figure out you know what what it is what it means to them and where it fits in with their IT landscape. It's maybe a major in analytics with a minor in transaction processing is that your sort of vision for the future how do you see that shaping up? Well I think that you know I wouldn't want to presuppose anything about Hadoop right now I think that it kind of looks that way now I think that there's nothing but green space or green field ahead of Hadoop yeah very smart guys working on it yeah I think when you look at how Hadoop got started some of the you know the early papers that came out of both Google and Amazon now it reminded me a lot of how relational databases got you know really kick-started so like back in the 70s cotton date write a paper Larry Ellison and Bob Minor read the paper and it's like hey I'm you know reading about the future here and when you read the you know seminal papers around Hadoop and MapReduce it's like hey you you get a feeling like it really glimpsing the future of something and I think like we didn't know exactly how relational databases would evolve at that point you know it's a little bit early to tell where Hadoop is going I think it's going to have a healthy footprint in both transactions.