 Hi, I'm Peter Burris with another Wikibon Action on QuickTake. David Floyer, you've been at the vanguard of talking about the role that Flash, SSDs and other technologies are going to have in the technology industry, predicting early on that it was going to eclipse HDD, even though you got a lot of blowback about the, we're going to remain expensive and small. That's changed, what's going on? Well, I've got a prediction that we'll have petabyte drives, SSD drives within five years. Let me tell you a little bit why. So there's this new type of SSD that's coming into town. It's the Mega SSD. And Nimbus data has just announced this Mega SSD. It's a 100 terabyte drive. It's very high density, obviously. It has much fewer, much fewer. It has fewer IOPS and bandwidth than SSD. The access density is much better than HDD, but still obviously lower than high performance SSD. Much, much lower space power than either SSD or HDD in terms of environmentals. It's three and a half inch and that's compatible with HDD. It's obviously looking to go into the same slots. 100 terabytes today, 200 terabytes, 10X. That's 10X of the hammer drives that are coming in from HDDs in 2019, 2020. And the delta will increase over time. It's still more expensive than HDDs per bit, but it's not a direct replacement, but much greater ability to integrate with data services and other things like that. So the prediction then is get ready for Mega SSDs. It's going to carve out a space at the low end of SSDs and into the HDDs. And we're going to have one petabyte or more drives within five years. Big stuff from Small Things. David Floyer, thank you very much. And once again, this has been a Wikibon Action Island Quick Take.