 So I'm really delighted to be here today, so I want to thank you for spending breakfast with me. We advance to the next slide. I'm going to talk about the collaborative workplace of the future and our vision around open computing because open computing becomes one of the foundations for the workplace of the future. Background about me. I work in the IT organization. I'm not here to sell anything. I'm here to share my experiences with deploying technology within IBM. So my customers are IBMers around the world making them productive, making them successful. So my role is very tied to having IBMers have the right technology at the right time with the right set of devices and software. My team is responsible for sending strategy for Windows, Linux, Mac, mobile devices, and then the rich applications on top. So email strategy for IBM, instant messaging strategy, desktop video, desktop cloud. I've also got open standards and accessibility. I've been active in the Linux community for a long time since 1999. I've been part of the Linux Foundation and the GNOME advisory board. I've been deploying Linux and Firefox within IBM for many years, but really it's about open computing and also introducing Lotus Symphony, which is IBM's implementation of open document format. Let's go to the next slide. So big strategic themes. As I start to think about 2015, we're building a workplace of the future strategy. And I am convinced that we shouldn't play the ball where it is now, but kick the ball to where in 2015 IBM will be. So it's a leading pass, setting strategies about the leading paths and driving change within IBM. The big themes, open computing. How do I tie together Mac users, Linux users, Windows users, mobile devices? I need to do that on top of open computing. We also know that we're moving towards lighter weight, thinner clients. So moving to the cloud, many of our business processes being more targeted in our offerings. So one size fits all is no longer the model. Whereas in the past, we would deploy a global image, Windows, everyone in IBM would have that no longer the right model. Some users have Linux, some users have Mac, some users will have mobile as their primary device. So fit for purpose. Shift to mobile is going to be extreme and fast. We've seen devices today with tablets, smart phones. This is just a second generation of that. The next generation and the generation after that in 2015, the power of your phone will rival what you have in your laptop today. So why would we want to carry a laptop and a smart phone? In the past, we said, well, it'll be a constellation. You'll have your laptop and a phone and a tablet. I'm convinced that the phone is what you want. You want to put it in your pocket, take it with you when you travel, jockey, when you get to work, maybe take it, plug it in and present. So really a transformative move away from traditional...