 And then rest stops came, more and more layers are building on our technology world, and it's complicated. And the bottleneck in all of this is storage. And we keep on coming back, David, to storage. Good old boring storage, or storage as Dave Vellante was saying, but it's a sexy part of the equation. I mean, it is a bottleneck in the operations cycle. And companies that are looking into this flash, like FusionIO, have the potential to make a huge impact on the architectural design of the systems that are going to come in the next ten years. I have to go on a slightly different subject, and that is this change in all our lives, or most of us. And that is the time we spend on the web with places like Facebook. And I don't know what that's going to do to our diet and our health, but I have to make a slightly different observation, which was made by Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the web. And he said, he finds Facebook a little alarming. He said he spent his career trying to design the web so that nobody could take charge of it, and particularly he had in mind governments taking charge of it. He says, but Facebook is a huge private venture, which is growing. As is Twitter, basically. That's right, Twitter, Twitter. These are social utilities that are integrating into people's lives, and they're not open, technically not open. That's right, and that's really very interesting. Is there any views around some of your colleagues at MIT and around the world around how these operations could be transformed and be quasi-open? Is there any? That's the open source. MIT has what it calls open courseware. It decided early on, there was a lot of notion and education a few years ago. But universities essentially running big educational operations, and MIT decided no. It wouldn't. It would essentially give away the software and video and what have you that was in MIT courses to anybody in the world. Let's talk about some future. And just to reiterate, Wikibon is about an open source of research where we give away the research. Wikibon.org is an open research platform with contents free. Content is free, exactly the same philosophy as MIT. Our business is improving that research. As is SiliconANGLE.com and SiliconANGLE.tv, of which we have to lower our latency and increase our transactions. We will apply Little's Law certainly to that. Question on the future. This is going to make you uncomfortable, I'm sure, but this gray area is not black and white. You talk about Taco Bell. I think about Taco Bell, I think about banks and bank tellers and I think about McDonald's and In-N-Out Burger and all those franchises. They all have drive-throughs. But back in the day when I was a kid, not everyone had drive-throughs. So someone must have applied some Little's Law and said, hey, we have people in cars. There's drive-throughs in and all that math that goes into cycle times and adding another teller. It's still operations theory is what has happened. Will there be something like a drive-through that's going to be a breakthrough in our social lives with computer technology? Is there any vision around these new latency busters? Any things out there that might create better latency for us in our life? Is it mobile phones? Is mobile phone an opportunity for transactional efficiency? It's certainly going that road. Dave, do you have any vision on there? Just speculation. I mean, it's something I think about. It is. If the quicker we can do things, if you apply it to our own lives, the quicker we can do things, the more things we can do in our lives. And if you can do the transaction quicker on your phone, on the move, when you've got downtime, yes. It has a direct relationship to the potential quality of our life, whether we choose to spend it to improve the quality. That's a personal decision. I find that with all these things that I can do so quickly and fast with email and on the web and what have you, and communicate with my students, why I can work 24 hours a day. It's a dangerous topic. We all are mobile. We're here at the extraction point with John Furrier with John Little from MIT who invented Little's law pioneer and what's called as marketing science, which is quite popular these days with the access to data and David Floyer, co-founder of Wikibon.org, a cutting edge research firm that gives away its data for free. Final question for John Little, obviously your career, a certain story career, you have a great reputation, and you're out talking to all the young engineers and young guns in the computer industry. Is there any advice you can share with folks out there that are watching that either may go to MIT in the future or have gone to MIT or are inventing the future? Is there any advice you want to convey to them? I think they're doing fine, and my only advice is, you know, well at school we used to say that there were 24 hours in the day, and the first shift was for your homework. The second shift was for your job, and the third shift, you could do anything you wanted. So advice is, use your shifts, do whatever you want, be creative, invent the future, apply Little's law, increase your transactions, whatever that may be. Thanks for coming on the extraction point. We appreciate it, and we're going to come right back and do a deep dive with David Floyer and get into the deep dive data science behind some of Little's law's applications. So thank you for watching. Ricky, that's a wrap.