 here with my colleagues, John Furrier and David Floyer who are actually on the West Coast. And we just heard guys, Steve Mills, talking about the billion dollar investment. Really, IBM is all in on Flash. I think IBM is just getting started in this space even though they got a lot of experience. They've got to bring together their systems and storage expertise and their software expertise. The TMS acquisition was the first move there. David Floyer, we're going to hear from a customer in a moment, but talk to me about what customers, you know, what's their perspective today? We like to talk about vision. We like to talk about things like atomic rights and bringing together unstructured and structured, analytic and transaction processing. What's the everyday IT guy going through regarding the Flash? The everyday IT guy is interested in making their applications that they have on the floor work better, work faster. And the most difficult applications to get to run faster are always the database applications. So the first area that these are being applied to is allowing database applications to run faster, to take away the issues with the storage admin, the DBAs, et cetera, fighting about who's got the problem and how to make it go faster. You're seeing that applied almost universally to existing databases, taking away the operational issues, taking away the headaches of the DBA. That's almost always the first area of call. And I think that's what you're going to see from Sprint. Yeah, let's talk to Karim Abdullah. I was with him on 4.11, actually had dinner with him the night before, and let's hear what Karim Abdullah of Sprint is doing with Flash and get his perspectives. So watch this video.