Harsh V. Kumar - Stephens, Inc.
Analyst · Harsh Kumar from Stephens. Go ahead, your line is open
Yes, hey, guys. Congratulations on great numbers. Two quick questions. A lot of your competitive companies have a lot of parts and pieces of the IoT puzzle. You guys have all the solutions with complete parts and complete parts and pieces. I'm curious, Tyson, your thoughts on how much of a lead this provides and how much of an advantage it is relative to your ability to outgrow the competition.
George Tyson Tuttle - Chief Executive Officer & Director: So, on the IoT side, we have been targeting this market fairly strongly for the last five years. I believe that we identified this market and have been investing in this, both organically as well as through targeted acquisitions, since 2012 and before. We also had a strategy even before that of targeting the microcontroller market and of going into the broad-based markets, building a channel for close to a decade after we sold our wireless business in 2007, our cellular wireless business. And so we have technology. We have been focused on the markets and really developing and understanding what IoT is going to require for quite some time. Today, we have a leading portfolio of software stacks, of tools, of SoCs that I believe is best-in-class in the industry, and we are engaged with a large number of the market leaders in designing-in our products into those areas. In terms of the competition, you have really mostly the microcontroller companies. You've got Microchip. You've got NXP. You've got ST, who are also investing in this area and have solutions out into the markets, but have traditionally not been wireless companies, and so they are – I would say we are ahead of them. We respect their capabilities and their scale and their channel and the customers that they serve. And because it's such a large market, a broad market, we believe we're going to get more than our fair share here going forward, and that will result in taking market share from existing sockets but really driven by the fact that this IoT market is a greenfield of new opportunities where people are adding wireless and connectivity functionality into applications that did not have it before. So, I think it's really driven by both having a lead, having a good market share gain, but also being in the right market that is going to grow and the number of sockets and applications. We talked about 75 billion devices by 2025. That's a lot of units for a lot of people