 between Ellison and Hasso Plotner. I mean, Ellison makes fun of his Einstein-like hair. He says, you'll never compete with us in database. He says, that's like me playing Kobe in basketball. I mean, it's great theater. It's great drama. We'll be covering it. I mean, the war between those two companies' data is fantastic. That's really great, isn't it? The thing that I'm excited about and covering SAP in this world that we're following closely is the fact that the world we're living in is changing and everyone's recognizing it and that now you're seeing the tech giants create an environment where your work and your play, what you do in your leisure time, is exactly the same. There's no boundaries between the two. People who are used to technology and the consumer side, all the great experiences of gaming, iPhone, Android, set-top boxes will all come into the enterprise. And I think it's just going to be a completely amazing opportunity for the future, future workforce, how people globally communicate. And I think that's going to be the disruption. Did you notice the Pinterest-looking field to the HCM technology today that they show when they're doing a few of the demos for success factors? Oh, yeah. Yeah, it was definitely a Pinterest kind of perspective. So, Alex, I'm not sure if you recognize the fact that Reggie Lewis was on the Cube. Reggie Jackson. I mean, Reggie Reggie Lewis was on the Cube. Of course I recognize Reggie. Best of star, sorry, my northeastern days. Reggie Jackson, Yankees' leader. So we're going to show the clip. So I asked him a question about the hip move in Game 4, the World Series. And, Dave, here's the clip right now. Look at the screen. So Thurman Munson scores. Rest in peace, Thurman Munson. What a great scene. Lou Penilla hits the ground, line drives at the shortstop. He's about to catch it. Reggie has to freeze, watch, and then he throws his hip at it. He is in the base path. I cooperate with Reggie Jackson's story. I support it. Look at this. Look at it. He didn't move. He didn't move. He just let it hit him. He's like a Don Baylor. He just created a wall. Yeah, did he? And he was sort of looking away. He did not step towards it, but he kind of rolled his hip. Look at it. Hey, ball's coming. Which way do I go? But he was looking at the opposite. See, he was looking to the catcher. See, back to him. But he was in the base path. Back to him. He really is. He was in the back. Mark, can we run that back and see again? So watch this. Great stuff. Watch when the ball hits him from that view from second base. He said this is old school baseball. Look at this shoe. This is great. This is the old school. Look at how Amela's soaring out there. It's going crazy. Oh, it's great stuff. Ron's day. So watch this. Now watch this next angle, too. So OK, so he doesn't move. Now watch the next angle. Watch where his head goes when they show it from second base. He says he clearly threw his hip. Now watch. Now watch. Look at his head. He's looking back. I know he's a little bit, but he's still in the base. It doesn't matter. He didn't look at the ball and lean into it. He's looked where his head is right now. So he's not even looking at the ball. But he's just been hit. I think Reggie's case. So Reggie was very passionate. Because that question came out from a tone. At the time, I didn't, because I was at the ball. Well, what did Reggie say? Passionate Yankee hater. Reggie was very animated. And he said, if that guy's thinking I'm lying, I'm not. And then he went on and explained that it was in the base path. And actually had another example of a use. And he said he's clearly in the base path. So we love baseball. Obviously, Dave brought up the money ball. Look at the lean. He leaned a little bit there, right there. Rewind that mark. OK, but he leans. But look, he's not looking at the ball. If you wanted to do it on purpose, you'd be looking at the ball. Yeah, no, but he leans right here. Look at his eye on the ball there. He kind of throws his hip out a little bit. It doesn't matter. It doesn't matter if he throws his hip out. It's totally legal what he did. It's totally legal what he did. They won it that year. Yeah, they won it. This was the bundle moment of game four. Yep. He throws his hip at it. So that's nothing like what Alex Rodriguez did. Alex Rodriguez purposely, you know. Went out of the base path all year long. Bronson Arroyo, he came again, slapped his hand. Reggie would never do that. That's not what. This was a smart play by Reggie. If in fact he did it on purpose, he claims he didn't. I think he just, he said, hey, I got the right away here. I'm going to take it. This is the 77 series that he hit three homers on three swings. That was 77. That was 77. This was 78. 78. Gosh, those are my teams. I tell you. Well, they weren't my teams. I'll tell you. They were mine. I'm not sure we can actually put picture-in-picture. Reggie's actual interview. That is the best Q thing I've seen ever. This is the Q. We're innovation. The innovation's coming. We're bringing on baseball. Dave Weed in the running ball comment. This is day two. We are excited to bring you all the action. This is SiliconANGLE.com with Alice Williams, Dave Vellante, myself, John Furrier of Silicon Angle Wikibon. We'll be right back after this guest. This is day two. Coming to a close, and thank you for watching.