 Hey, that was just great. We could have gone out. I would get a beer. We could have kept this thing rolling and we could have gone deep, but that's exactly the kind of content we want to bring to you. We'll cut that up. We'll riff on it. Go to O'Reilly. We've got a great blog over there. O'Reilly, we've got live streaming. Great company, great content. And Dave, again, it's not as hyped this year, but it's deeper in content. So I've noticed that it's not as hypey. It's just more real. He talked about some of the deep profiling around machine data. Last year was, oh yeah, big data, data science. Data science is the new thing now. It's like, it's getting in the weeds. It's broad. Well, I think we've had this in our own experience, right? You get all this data and they say, okay, what are we going to do with it? How do we narrow it down? What rules are we going to use? How do we automate some of this? How do you apply machine learning? Well, I took some notes there. I took some notes there and I just want to share with you my opinion about what he talked about. First of all, great content. I don't really disagree with anything he said fundamentally, but I love the fact that he's talked about the JavaScript and brought up the Node Summit, node.js, because theCUBE, SiliconANGLE.tv, and Wikibon brought you live coverage from Node Summit, the first event, where that community really showcased, to me, its power. Node.js is fundamentally a cool technology, really hitting the IO scale issue in a very asynchronous way. Very good for developers. Love that. And dramatically simplifying programming and expanding the pool of developers. Increase the number of human labor that could code on cool stuff around IO. I loved his discussion around big data and our question about Fusion IO. He brought that up and talked about some of those things. But really what I thought he hit on that was fantastic was this notion of algorithms and big data sets, because again, I'm hearing the same exact thing. This notion of rule-based early on is fundamentally a huge innovation because that takes the human capital component and takes the pressure of writing complex algorithms. And simple algorithms, right? It was the key message there. So I was really impressed by that. So, Dave, we're going to be back tomorrow strong all day. Eight hours. We're starting at nine. We're going to end at six. Sometimes we end at seven. Depends how good the content is. Go to siliconangle.tv. Any final thoughts to end this out for the day? Yes, I'm looking forward to tomorrow. It was really sort of, today was the warm-up day. We start with Mike Olson tomorrow and then we get into it. We gave you a preview. Oh, I've got to mention, we have a new walk-on tomorrow. CEO of Pure Storage. Scott Davis. Flash guys. I remember he was on theCUBE at VMworld. Great guy. Season entrepreneur, multiple winner entrepreneur. Great guy. I told him no marketing can fluff. Last time at VMworld it was- The no fluff zone. It was definitely the talking points. I asked six questions and I got the six savings. So, we're going to rattle them up tomorrow. Okay, good. I'm Graham, feel good. All right, John, looking forward to tomorrow and Thursday. And thanks for watching everybody. Thanks to Mark Hopkins, Kean, Alex Williams, David Fleury, thanks to all our guests. That's a wrap at SiliconANGLE.tv theCUBE. Thanks to 1010Data for the ads that they're running. MapR, the ads that are running. Cloudera, ad support of theCUBE. That brings this content to you. Thank you very much and have a great day. See you tomorrow. We'll be on Twitter at SiliconANGLE, at Furrier, at D-Valante. Watch the Stratoconference hashtag. Stratoconf, Stratoconf. All the action will be on there. So, till tomorrow. See you on Twitter.