 We're going to modify that LAMP stack for cloud and make sure we're a big part of this 400 million servers that are coming soon. And so to talk about what one of these users is actually doing, we've got Time Warner Cable. They were a Super User Finalist in our Vancouver Summit. And they are now running OpenStack for quite some time and doing some interesting things beyond OpenStack. So to talk us through it, we've got the engineering director of application services, Tim Pletcher. Hey, Mark. Welcome, Tim. Thank you. All right. So what's your role at Time Warner Cable? So I lead a team that has recently stood up to provide a general purpose multi-tenant container runtime for the engineering groups and then also point services like Elastic Surge, Kafka, Cassandra, things like that. Very cool. So talking a bit this morning about what's in different stacks. So what's in your stack? Well, as far as that goes, basically it's Mesos. And we came to that decision after a fairly decent review. OK. And what's Mesos running on? Or what happens below that? So yeah, so the good part about what we have going for us is IAS. And so we came in to and stood up the team able to take advantage of the work that Jason Rualt and his group had done over the past 18, 24 months to get IAS in place. And as you know, if you go do physical provisioning in a large organization, it can be a fairly long process. So yeah. So we were able to kickstart and get going in the way we went. Cool. So how long did it take? And how did your team kind of get mobilized? Yeah, so that's actually one of the cool things about it. We have a very small team. It's four engineers. And we had the team fully populated internally mid-January and started to work. And then we'll turn on in production in two regions at the end of May. Well, so January of this year? Yes. OK, so four or five months, you're already rolling into production? Yeah, absolutely. That's amazing. So how did you pull that off with a small team? Well, it was a matter of folks that had open stack experience and came from high velocity shops. I brought some folks with me from previous gig where we had a fairly sizable platform. And it just all came together. And having all the plumbing of the IS side with the network and everything else made it go pretty fast. So we were pretty pleased. Cool. So in terms of that plumbing, what's your wish list for that team that's running your open stack cloud? How can they serve you better for what you want to do with the app side? Yeah, so with Mesos, you'd probably prefer to run it on bare metal, which is the more common implementation mode. And so I nag Jason on about a weekly basis for Ironic at this point. So that's the next big thing from the open stack side that we're looking for. Cool. So Jason, wherever you are, give him his Ironic. The Ironic team will be happy about that as well. I'm sure you can meet the PTL while you're here if you haven't already. So you're combining different technologies. I mean, what's the kind of philosophy behind that? Well, so on top of Mesos, because we are a small team, we had to make some decisions around value add components to that. So we ended up with Mesosphere as an add-on. And we're actually our primary Mesos provider. And then also AVI Networks and CoreOS. And so that allowed us to pick and choose. So you're going to find that some things fit better for your team and your maturity level and how you want to work. And you can pick and choose on that and have a lot of success. OK, so you're working with different partners and looking for the ones that are willing to plug and play with other companies and that. Well, to your point when you're talking, I mean, it is the reality that you can find really great tooling, and you'll find things that really work for a scenario that you have. And the ability to be that modular in your approach is really critical. Cool, thank you, Tim. Thanks, Marty, for the update. Hey, yeah, have a good one, if you hear it.