 Hi everybody, this is Dave Vellante. We're here at the new Wikibon studio in Marlboro, Mass inside the Cube. We're here with Craig Nunez and Sean Kinney of HP. Guys, welcome. Yeah, thanks, Dave. They're very thin, Craig Nunez. You're looking great. Thanks. Thin provisioning, thin guarantee, that's right. That's good. He lives it. I like it. That's good. Marketing all the way. Right on. So we're here to talk about the new HP announcement, the August 23rd announcement. You guys have been busy. It feels like we were just at HP Discover. Yesterday, I mean, just the great event. You guys have recovered from that for the most part. And we had the cube there, of course. Yeah, right on into the next thing. So the summer has always been a big time for three-part announcements. You've kind of been on that cycle, and here we are again. Sean, you have a variety of background. You joined HP relatively recently, right? Yeah, four a year ago. Just ahead of the three-part, guys. So anyway, welcome, guys. Appreciate you guys coming on here. So why don't we start off, Craig? Tell us a little bit about what was announced today, and then we can dig into it a little bit. Sure, yeah. So we announced a couple of things. One is kind of building on what we talked about in June. We introduced our Converged Storage architecture. And what we talked about Converged Storage is really being storage without boundaries, and kind of driving storage much more closely to your applications, and breaking down the boundaries between server storage and networking. We're kind of taking that to the next level today in announcing peer-based storage federation for HP Storage. And what that is really doing is, again, delivering on that storage without boundaries theme and really allowing our customers to turn on data and keep that up and running wherever it might land, wherever they might need it to be. Peer-based storage federation, one big part of our announcement, the other big part is a platform extension to our HP three-part family called the P10,000 v-class. The HP v-class, a three-part v-class, is a platform that delivers new scalability for your virtual machines. It delivers really untouchable efficiency in terms of some of the new enhancements we've driven into silicon and software. And we kind of view it with the peer-based federation capability and everything that the platform has brought to bear over the last several years, the benchmark for federated tier one storage.