 So I spent a lot of time talking with HP, so you were out in Barcelona, and I think you got to see their pods. Yeah, in fact, we went inside a pod. It was very cool. We went in early in the morning, the morning was supposed to fly out, and so they had to power it up, and it takes, I don't know, five, seven minutes to power it up. And when it powers up, the fans come on in a big way, and we're standing there, and shh. So you're inside this, did you see one? Did they have one there? No, they didn't have one there. So you're inside, you know, a trailer, almost like an air stream, you know, like a camper. But narrow, it feels narrow, it's probably wider in total, but it feels narrow because there's all servers, and power and cooling in there, and just racked and stacked servers and storage. So yeah, so they were talking about the pod works? Yeah, definitely. So I got to speak with their vice president of converged infrastructure, and it's Doug, I think it's Oat Hote is his last name, and he was talking to me a little bit about pods, and he was also talking to me about kind of a future project that they've got coming called the HP Garage. What's interesting is they just got a $7.3 million grant from the department of energy, and if you think about how the pod is kind of like a whole trailer that you can create a whole data center, the garage is a smaller version of that that you'd be able to plop inside an existing data center. And you think about where we're going with power and cooling, it's going to use water cooling, and it's going to use DC power on the inside, and be able to do about four to eight racks inside a data center self-contained, much better efficiencies on the power and the cooling. And as we know, that's one of the biggest challenges in data centers today is keeping those costs for power and cooling down. Yeah, so the cool thing about the pod that I saw is they, it basically, you order it, they announced this pod works, now they say you can have one in as little as six weeks, but if you and I called up we wouldn't have one in six weeks. It's got to be in their pipeline, and I know they've got a couple that went out to Microsoft, and they probably plan for it, and once they plan for it and it's in the pipeline, and they're going to get all the parts and the equipment, then they can do it in six weeks, or six to twelve weeks let's say. But the cool thing about the pod that I recall was that it has a PUE out of the box of 1.2. The average data center is probably between, a PUE of probably between 2 and 3, and what we mean is that normally data centers, they power the IT equipment, and so for every watt you use to power the IT equipment, you need additional watts to power the power and the cooling. Right. The power distribution and the cooling, and the average data center is probably twice the IT equipment needs, maybe three times, and there's an HP saying it's only 20% additional power over the IT equipment to power these pods, which is very efficient. I had a really interesting discussion talking about really where's the market for these pods, because you've got the giant guys, I mean the Googles out there, the Facebooks that have these just tremendously huge scalable data centers, then you've got the service providers, and that's really where they think the pods are going to be going a lot, as well as they said there's certain companies that are going to be able to use this type of technology, it's what they call almost IT as a weapon, so rather than IT as a service as a weapon. So the companies that say I want to be able to have massively scalable architectures be able to provide these services, and even HP themselves are going to be a cloud provider using these kind of technologies.