 So one of the most amazing things for me is I have this incredible job at Intel. I work with the Linux operating system and I get to work with the data center. And when you combine those two things together, then you're coming up with this open data center. And when you think, okay, what is an open data center? You have open compute projects, things like OpenStack that are managing the different layers. You have open networking. You have projects like, you know, the OPNFE. You have storage. You have people that are trying to do things in an open environment for giving more bandwidth with data analytics. All these things are, you know, you put them in a big circle and it really shows what the open data center is. And the cool thing is when you bring Linux and open source projects into it, there's a wealth of information that is going on out there that people are sharing. People are collaborating. People are bringing up new projects and standards are even happening. And it's, you know, it's exciting to see things that also the Linux Foundation is involved in, you know, the recent open container projects that just happened. When you're actually saying, hey, we want to keep things open and we don't want a huge fragment in industry, let's bring our great ideas together, let's bring our innovation together and let's really make something great happen for this industry and for this ecosystem. So I'm always amazed at the power of open source projects, at the power of Linux, the way that it brings about innovation and creative ideas. There are new projects, new technologies coming out every day to support the open data center. I view that it's definitely a competitive advantage, a strategic advantage for what I do, providing great experiences and great usages for an open data center running on Intel hardware. I mean, you wake up every day and you're just like, hey, how are these 50 billion devices going to connect to this back end? And what innovative technology-driven ways is this back end actually going to support all these devices? And working in the open and collaborating is definitely a way to make that an amazing experience going toward the future.