 Hi, I'm Peter Burris with another Wikibon Action I'm QuickTake. Jim Kabilis, IBM's up to some good with new tooling for managing data. What's going on? Yes, Peter, it's not brand new tooling, but it's important because it actually is a foreshadowing of what's going to be universal, I think it's a capability for programming the Unigrid as we've been discussing. Essentially this week at the IBM signature event, Sam Lightstone of IBM discussed with Dave Vellante, a product they have called QueryPlex, which has been on the market for about a year or more. Essentially it's a data virtualization environment for distributed query processing in a mesh fabric. And what's important about QueryPlex to understand in a Unigrid context is it enables late binding, distributed computation to find the lowest latency path which across very fairly complex edge clouds to speed up queries no matter where the data may reside and so forth in a fairly real time dynamic fashion. So I think the important things to know about QueryPlex are A, that it prioritizes connections with lowest latency based on ongoing computations that are performed and is able to distribute this computation to find the lowest path across the network to prevent that query, the computation controller from being a bottleneck. I think that's a fundamental architectural capability we're going to see more of with the advent or the growth of the Unigrid as a broad concept for building out a distributed cloud computing environments. And very importantly, there's still a lot of applications that run the businesses on top of IBM machines. Jim Compilis, thanks very much talking about IBM QueryPlex and some of the next steps coming. This is Peter Burris with another Wikibon Action Item Quick Take.