You found the backup wrap up your go-to podcast for all things
Speaker:backup recovery and cyber recovery.
Speaker:In this episode, we're excited to announce something that's going to make life
Speaker:easier for NetBackup users everywhere.
Speaker:A completely free NetBackup reader S2|DATA.
Speaker:If you've got NetBackup disc images lying around and you need to know what's on
Speaker:them, or you need to get data off of them.
Speaker:You don't want to maintain or pay for a full NetBackup environment.
Speaker:This tool is for you.
Speaker:We're joined by Brendan Sullivan, CEO S2|DATA to discuss why they created
Speaker:this free tool and how it can help you take control of your backup data.
Speaker:Full disclosure, I work for S2|DATA and am just as excited
Speaker:about the tool as Brendan is.
Speaker:By the way, if this is your first time listening and you don't know who
Speaker:I am, I'm w Curtis Preston, AKA, Mr.
Speaker:Backup, and I've been passionate about backup and recovery for over 30 years.
Speaker:Ever since.
Speaker:I had to tell my boss that we had no backups of our production
Speaker:database that we had just lost.
Speaker:I don't want that to happen to you, and that's why I do this.
Speaker:On this podcast, we turn unappreciated backup admins into cyber recovery heroes.
Speaker:This is the backup wrap up.
Speaker:Welcome to the show.
Speaker:Hi, I am w Curtis Preston, AKA, Mr.
Speaker:Backup, and I have with me my fellow Wicked.
Speaker:Convert Prasanna Malaiyandi, how's it going?
Speaker:Prasanna?
Speaker:I'm doing well,
Speaker:Curtis.
Speaker:it's an amazing movie.
Speaker:I had never seen the musical, right, and I heard someone enjoyed it so
Speaker:much that they decided to go see it twice this weekend, helping contribute
Speaker:to that $114 million box office
Speaker:earnings.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:It, it.
Speaker:I did enjoy it enough to go see it twice.
Speaker:I would totally go to see it a third time, but the reason I saw it twice,
Speaker:because the first time I saw it, I saw it by myself and then I, I made
Speaker:sure that my wife got a chance to see it, and she of course loved it.
Speaker:Uh, my favorite part was, you know, there's the one really sad slash
Speaker:touching part, and my granddaughter, who wasn't with me during either of
Speaker:these, my granddaughter, when she was watching it with her mother.
Speaker:She, um, she turned to her mother and said, I bet Papa
Speaker:is crying during this part.
Speaker:And Papa is what she calls you.
Speaker:Yeah, yeah.
Speaker:Papa is what she calls me, and yeah, she was right.
Speaker:Uh, it was a great movie.
Speaker:Um, you know, and for, for the, for just for frame of reference, I typically
Speaker:hate Hollywood versions of my favorite musicals, but this one, they knocked
Speaker:it outta the park in every sense.
Speaker:I have no complaints and I'm no.
Speaker:My only complaint is that I have to wait a year to see part two.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:But at least they're making part two.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So I took my wife to go see it, and I would say the only complaint that we
Speaker:had was, it's a little long, right?
Speaker:For a couple
Speaker:that watches Bollywood movies on a regular basis.
Speaker:You think that this movie was long?
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Well, it was
Speaker:just a touch long, but
Speaker:two hours and 40 minutes.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Plus if you add the 15 or so or 20 minutes of previews Right, you're
Speaker:sitting there for three hours.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Which is just long enough to get a Bollywood movie started.
Speaker:So, um,
Speaker:but no, it was great.
Speaker:Yeah, like, uh, my wife was like, I really, really, really wanna see it again.
Speaker:So we will wait.
Speaker:Maybe we will watch it on streaming whenever it comes out.
Speaker:I'm glad, just so
Speaker:we can pause, take breaks in between, you know, that sort of thing.
Speaker:Oh, right.
Speaker:Yeah, that makes
Speaker:sense.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So we have someone chomping at the bit.
Speaker:We once again are visited by the CEO of S2|DATA.
Speaker:Brendan Sullivan.
Speaker:How's it going Brendan?
Speaker:Not too bad at all.
Speaker:How are you doing?
Speaker:I, I'm, I'm just gonna go on a limb and say that you did
Speaker:not see Wicked this weekend.
Speaker:I have not seen Wicked.
Speaker:You, you are missing out, my friend.
Speaker:Missing out.
Speaker:Um, but we're, we're here to actually, to talk about some pretty big news and
Speaker:so I'm, I'm, I'm just gonna jump right to the, you know, the, the news release
Speaker:that's, that's basically going to go live today as the, the day that we're, um,
Speaker:uh, publishing this particular episode.
Speaker:And that is, that S2|DATA is releasing a free NetBackup reader.
Speaker:So do you, you want to just give a summary of that and then we will jump
Speaker:into why would you do such a thing?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So, um, what it is, is a standalone application that, uh, anybody can
Speaker:download and, uh, if they have, um, old.
Speaker:Uh, NetBackup disc images lying around that, uh, they wanna know what's on
Speaker:there, or they know what's on there and they want to get what's off those images.
Speaker:Then you have two choices.
Speaker:You, you, you either crank up the, the legacy NetBackup environment
Speaker:or the existing NetBackup environment to restore them.
Speaker:Um, or you can download our app.
Speaker:And find out what's on them and restore what's on them, or just
Speaker:get an index of, of, uh, all the metadata and, uh, find out that way.
Speaker:And, and the, the kind of the driver to do it, um, is largely because, you
Speaker:know, there's, there's a lot of legacy backup environments out there, and.
Speaker:As is often the case data outlasts the infrastructure or the environment
Speaker:in which it was created in.
Speaker:Um, things like, uh, litigation, business compliance, regulatory reasons actually
Speaker:compel companies to either keep it, um, or extract it long after they've paid
Speaker:for or maintained the environments.
Speaker:So this application allows them to do that, whether they have
Speaker:the environment in place or not.
Speaker:So this sounds amazing, Brendan, but I guess one of the questions
Speaker:some listeners may have is you did a backup using, say, NetBackup, right?
Speaker:And you're keeping it around.
Speaker:Why would I need a tool like this given that I have like my backup sitting?
Speaker:Like, is there a reason why I can't just reuse NetBackup that
Speaker:I have in my environment already?
Speaker:No, there's no reason you couldn't use that.
Speaker:And really the, the reason to use the application is if you no longer have that.
Speaker:And so what is often the case is that, customers.
Speaker:Haven't got the, that existing environment around, no longer have the support, no
Speaker:longer have the hardware infrastructure or the software licenses to do it.
Speaker:Um, but yet they still need to find the data.
Speaker:So it is actually only in the instance when you don't have
Speaker:the environment around and.
Speaker:We, we see that that is happening with increasing frequency, that,
Speaker:uh, companies are moving on.
Speaker:They're moving on to, you know, backing up to the cloud or other
Speaker:versions or other flavors of backup.
Speaker:And, um, they've got all data out there
Speaker:I guess one of the reasons that, especially let's say a, a Veritas
Speaker:customer might be in this scenario.
Speaker:Is if they are considering moving on to another product, or perhaps they're
Speaker:concerned about the Cohesity news, even though Cohesity is, you know,
Speaker:made it clear they're not killing off NetBackup, they're not, you know,
Speaker:they're not gonna orphan these customers.
Speaker:I think there's still a certain amount of uneasiness there.
Speaker:Um, and this gives them that option right?
Speaker:To, to use, to continue to read their backups.
Speaker:But while they don't have to keep the NetBackup environment around, if
Speaker:they still have it right, it, it'd be like you said, it, it, there's
Speaker:no reason to use the tool if you have the NetBackup stuff running.
Speaker:But if you have backups, uh, but don't have NetBackup or don't want
Speaker:to continue paying, uh, Veritas, then that would be the u use for the tools.
Speaker:Does that sound about right?
Speaker:That sounds about right.
Speaker:I would say that, that it's also fast.
Speaker:You point it to, um, a location, a path, or a, uh, a destination, a local
Speaker:destination drive and say, gimme the index of all the files on, on this disc image.
Speaker:And it does it extremely quickly.
Speaker:So there's no, there's no convoluted path that you have have to go through other
Speaker:than a couple of clicks of a button.
Speaker:So, uh, it can also be pretty quick.
Speaker:Um, but really the driver is.
Speaker:You wanna, clients wanna have their data in their own hands
Speaker:under all circumstances, and, uh, for, for as long as they want it.
Speaker:Um, this, this is not a replacement, this is an alternative for a
Speaker:certain, certain situation.
Speaker:And, um, you know what, what might also be interesting is, is.
Speaker:Why did we do this?
Speaker:Uh, or what, what gave rise to it?
Speaker:Because we're an IT professional services company and we make our money by offering
Speaker:services to find, restore, delete, dispose of, et cetera data from all sorts of
Speaker:legacy backup environments and current backup environments for that matter.
Speaker:Um, and we were, uh, doing a project internationally actually in Europe about
Speaker:a year or so ago, and, uh, the project was going well and there was lots of
Speaker:different, uh, sources of, of, um, or destination sources where data that was
Speaker:having to be collected was collected from.
Speaker:And one of the challenges with this, with companies is, is that.
Speaker:If they don't necessarily want to because of data privacy or, uh, regulation or
Speaker:because of their own business policy, then they won't, don't necessarily
Speaker:wanna move that data worked on within our facilities or with anybody's
Speaker:facilities other than their own.
Speaker:And we were, so, we were on site behind the firewall doing this kind of work.
Speaker:And uh, and then it became clear that certain.
Speaker:Um, data sources were not in that physical proximity.
Speaker:They were on some disc images, or they believed that they
Speaker:were on some disc images.
Speaker:So we developed, um, a kind of a piecemeal solution at the time and said,
Speaker:look, we can pull this into the, the, the grander population of, of data.
Speaker:If you run this, run this, we'll get an index of, of, uh, of the
Speaker:content, of, of those disc images that are in a different location.
Speaker:Did that work fine?
Speaker:Sent some data, didn't send others, and the project was complete.
Speaker:And at the end of the project we thought, you know, that's a
Speaker:pretty useful utility for, for anybody to have, you know, so, um.
Speaker:It's not always the case that you can be on site.
Speaker:It's not always the case that you want to do anything extravagant or
Speaker:anything comprehensive with your date with the data, like an e-discovery
Speaker:production or something like that.
Speaker:Maybe you just want to know to rule in or to rule out whether or not
Speaker:target data, um, is actually there.
Speaker:So we built that application.
Speaker:We thought that's pretty useful and it could be useful going forward.
Speaker:So why don't we put that in a, uh, a, you know, get a.
Speaker:Quite attractive user interface.
Speaker:I may, I may add, and a standalone application that'll boot it, boot
Speaker:itself and, uh, it could be quite useful for clients to have it.
Speaker:So that was the, that was the driver.
Speaker:Having worked at a quite a few backup vendors, uh, uh, one of the things that
Speaker:we would always talk about is, Hey, let's always have our own proprietary format,
Speaker:because then it makes it so sticky, right?
Speaker:A customer can't easily switch from your software to a different software
Speaker:because like you said, they have all this data, what are they going to do with it?
Speaker:And so you kind of become very sticky, which for a vendor
Speaker:is good, but for a customer.
Speaker:Isn't always the right approach because you might want to pick a different
Speaker:vendor because there is a new business problem or challenge you have that
Speaker:requires a different solution and now you're kind of stuck, right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So it's great to hear.
Speaker:See tools like this that gives you, gives customers that freedom to decide
Speaker:what tools they should be using, what vendors they should be using,
Speaker:and not necessarily be stuck because they made a decision in the past.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So, uh, I, I just wanna jump in here.
Speaker:Full disclosure, uh, I work for Brendan.
Speaker:I guess I maybe should have started with that, but I do work for Brendan.
Speaker:I just wanted to jump on a piece that you said earlier, Brendan, and that is that.
Speaker:This is one of the businesses that S2|DATA is in, is to, is to do exactly
Speaker:what, uh, Prasanna talked about, is to give people the freedom to
Speaker:use their old backups, but without having to be tied to that old backup
Speaker:company if they don't want to.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:That is
Speaker:correct.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And if I can kind of just add on, um, what, what Ana just
Speaker:said, it's the client's data.
Speaker:It's not the backup software's data.
Speaker:Um, the, the companies that create, uh, these environments, it's not their data.
Speaker:It's the client's data and they want to have total command of it.
Speaker:And that's one of our taglines.
Speaker:We give you total command of your data.
Speaker:So, you know, you, you hear over the years we've heard a a lot about, you
Speaker:know, standardization of formats and why can't we have, uh, you know, the, some
Speaker:level of standardization here or there.
Speaker:But the reality is it's a market environment.
Speaker:Uh, everybody wants the standard to be their own standard.
Speaker:Uh, and as long as they never go out of business or as long as their
Speaker:standards never change and everybody's happy, but of course we all know that
Speaker:that is a, that's never gonna happen.
Speaker:So this is, this is all about really just giving the tools so that clients can
Speaker:be in total command of their own data.
Speaker:Whenever they need it to be.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And even with standardization, like I just think about NDMP and even though
Speaker:NDMP is a standard, every vendor has their own format within NDMP, so you don't
Speaker:end up with that cross compatibility.
Speaker:So, yeah.
Speaker:When you talked about, you said that it can, it can catalog the
Speaker:data and it can restore the data.
Speaker:What format is that catalog output?
Speaker:The catalog output is, is CSV.
Speaker:Um, so you, you can, you know, read it on an Excel spreadsheet, you'll
Speaker:just get a dump look to a local disk, and then you'll have a list
Speaker:and it'll have the major pieces of metadata of those individual files.
Speaker:So things like, um, file name, file extension, the
Speaker:path that it was originally.
Speaker:Backed up to create modified access date file extension and the size of the file.
Speaker:So standard type information that you might need for future discovery
Speaker:or future production of that data.
Speaker:Yeah, I like that.
Speaker:'cause the idea, you know, again, you know, you talked about faster, like
Speaker:in, in the case of NetBackup, which is what this tool, uh, right now is
Speaker:designed to, to work with the first tool.
Speaker:The catalog is great.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:What was that
Speaker:the first tool?
Speaker:NetBackup is a, you know, huge amount of users out there.
Speaker:But this is not to say that we can't develop subsequent
Speaker:apps on all of the other major backup software, uh, platforms,
Speaker:right?
Speaker:The, the, the NetBackup catalog is nice, but also this idea of
Speaker:being able to create sort of a.
Speaker:Human readable, um, catalog as I make quotes in the air, but basically if
Speaker:I could create a CSV file of every one of my backups, that that's,
Speaker:there's a lot of things that I, as a, a UNY type person can do with that.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:You know, beautiful words like GR and sort, and all sorts of things.
Speaker:I can, I can find really interesting things in that data if you give me.
Speaker:The data in a format that allows me to do text manipulation.
Speaker:I, I think that's a, that's something that this offers, that even, even if you
Speaker:have NetBackup, it doesn't necessarily offer that, uh, at least, certainly
Speaker:not in in as easy a format of, of this.
Speaker:Yeah, that's, that, that's correct.
Speaker:That's not in a simple format.
Speaker:You'll typically have, you know, when you're creating a
Speaker:backup, a NetBackup, Amazon.
Speaker:A hundred percent sure.
Speaker:You know, you'll, you know, you'll typically have a phase one import, a
Speaker:phase two import, and then you'll have a process to go through to get those.
Speaker:This is closer to a phase two import catalog for those
Speaker:NetBackup users out there.
Speaker:It's closer to that, but it also has backup session level information as well.
Speaker:And, uh, you know, it's, it, it, it's quick.
Speaker:So certainly.
Speaker:From our company that has, um, developed a lot of its business from
Speaker:servicing the legal technology industry.
Speaker:Um, decisions are made, I don't know if it's more, but it's
Speaker:certainly significantly, uh, evident that decisions are made.
Speaker:Based on metadata, file catalogs, session catalogs, as much as the actual content
Speaker:itself, because a lot of what discovery and production is all about, it's all
Speaker:about ruling out rather than ruling in.
Speaker:And so a catalog is, that's the most beautiful thing for it, or the most,
Speaker:most common use for it, is to be able to rule out stuff because you wanna be
Speaker:able to delete it in a defensible manner.
Speaker:You wanna be able to ignore it and be able to say, here's why I ignored it.
Speaker:And so the creation of a catalog.
Speaker:Um, is is extremely important.
Speaker:And Brendan, one question.
Speaker:You mentioned sort of it being faster, and I know you talked about
Speaker:import one, import two, I'm not as familiar with NetBackup terminology.
Speaker:Could you sort of like high level, walk us through like comparing this tool
Speaker:to like what a customer may have to do if they didn't have a tool like this,
Speaker:like in, at a hypothetical scenario?
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So I'm gonna answer that by se by referring you to.
Speaker:Somebody who said they worked for me 10 minutes ago, and because I'll
Speaker:wager that Curtis has used NetBackup a lot more than I've used it.
Speaker:We
Speaker:create, yeah, we've
Speaker:created our native file restoration tools and extraction tools, so we
Speaker:create emulated environments that that en, that enable you to do things with
Speaker:data that was created by NetBackup.
Speaker:But Curtis would've used NetBackup a lot more than me, so he might
Speaker:actually be better placed to answer.
Speaker:Curtis, you're on the spot.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:So basically assuming what you have is a pile of NetBackup backups and
Speaker:you don't have a catalog, right?
Speaker:That the, the sort of the worst case scenario, the first thing you'd have to do
Speaker:is to create a NetBackup environment, find some NetBackup software that's compatible
Speaker:with diversion of NetBackup that you happen to have, which you're not sure.
Speaker:So it's just, there's some, there's some uncertainty there.
Speaker:You install the NetBackup software, um, and then you're going to do a phase
Speaker:one and a phase two import on all of these images, and that will put it
Speaker:into the NetBackup catalog, which then you would be able to, um, you know,
Speaker:do the regular NetBackup searches.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Um, but.
Speaker:You wouldn't be able to do this idea of just putting it into plain text and
Speaker:then searching it with various tools.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, and you know, even, I mean, dare I speak even AI tools, right?
Speaker:You could take this, you could take these text.
Speaker:Uh, this tech CSV feed it into something like chat, GPT or, or, uh, Claude.
Speaker:And, uh, and, and look at the stuff and tell me what you
Speaker:can tell me about these files.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, so yeah, it, it, it's not that it's not doable with, uh, Veritas, right?
Speaker:But there is that challenge of.
Speaker:The, the first thing of getting the software Yeah.
Speaker:That you may not even have anymore and you may not be able to get the software that's
Speaker:compatible with diversion that you have.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:And the cost associated with that too.
Speaker:And the cost.
Speaker:Well, yeah.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:Um, the, the, um, I, not just the
Speaker:software license, but also like.
Speaker:The hardware, everything else you might need.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:In order to be able to provision and run
Speaker:you, you need, you definitely need a a, a, a server that can satisfy the, the basic
Speaker:requirements of the Veritas software.
Speaker:Uh, whereas this is a very basic app that can run on a desktop, uh,
Speaker:and it just needs, uh, basically, uh, directory file access.
Speaker:Right.
Speaker:So NFS Mount or something like that.
Speaker:Um, it's not going to handle like, um, things that were
Speaker:backed up to object storage.
Speaker:At least not yet.
Speaker:And, uh, and if it doesn't handle what you have, right.
Speaker:If you have tape NetBackups, if you have networker, TSM.
Speaker:Arcserve, if you have all of those other formats, that's what, uh, S2|DATA does,
Speaker:is they can handle all of those other formats on a professional services basis.
Speaker:Uh, but this tool will do exactly what it says for the low, low price of $0.
Speaker:And it basically to, you know, to, to get the tool, you just download it
Speaker:directly from, um, we'll get the, we'll put the, um, the link in the show notes.
Speaker:You can download it directly from S2|DATA.
Speaker:It, it is a signed app by the way, for those are concerned about that.
Speaker:But it downloads and it installs, um, and as a demo version.
Speaker:And that will do a certain number of files.
Speaker:Um, you know, without putting in the license, the license is free, but you do
Speaker:need to contact us to get the license.
Speaker:It's sounds so amazing, but the one question I have is like, why
Speaker:has no one thought of this before?
Speaker:You know, like, it seems like a common problem that like every customer.
Speaker:Dealing with their backup environment, migrating from one environment to
Speaker:another would have, and yet, like it, like I've looked online and I
Speaker:haven't heard or seen anything like this, so it's kind of surprising.
Speaker:What do you think, Brendan?
Speaker:I think, um, I think there's definitely an element here that we're market
Speaker:shaping, um, as, as much as anything, um.
Speaker:I can't tell you the number of times that when we've had potential projects,
Speaker:uh, that we've been scoping and we've been on conference calls and the client
Speaker:explains their environment and they say, we need to get this data and
Speaker:that data, and uh, can you do this?
Speaker:And we say yes.
Speaker:And they say, so you have this environment.
Speaker:And then we say, no, uh, we have our own, uh, application here with our own
Speaker:technology and we can restore your data.
Speaker:And they say, not everybody.
Speaker:Uh, uh, thinks that we can do it or thinks that it's possible.
Speaker:And of course, it is possible.
Speaker:We're not the only company in the world that does this kind of non-native file
Speaker:restoration, uh, type, uh, type approach.
Speaker:Um, but so number one is, largely within the IT backup world,
Speaker:like when we hired Curtis.
Speaker:He was surprised at what we do because he's been living with the, in, in the
Speaker:world of using licenses and infrastructure and, and handshakes with certain library
Speaker:types, et cetera, et cetera, to, uh, to get hold of his, uh, the data.
Speaker:So it's just that not everybody has necessarily thought that
Speaker:there may be an alternative way to get access to your data.
Speaker:Mm-Hmm.
Speaker:Other than the original native environment.
Speaker:So that, so there is that and it's, that's part of the driver if you like.
Speaker:Um, towards launching a free app.
Speaker:It's the, the world of getting data back for clients or helping data
Speaker:get back for clients is very broad.
Speaker:We're an IT professional services company primarily.
Speaker:And, um, you know, there's, there's a lot of ways for us to
Speaker:have relationships with customers.
Speaker:And so we thought, you know, this is one good way here is, is, uh, we know that
Speaker:a lot of the times it administrators, um, like Curtis from a past life.
Speaker:They wanna get hold of the application themselves and play around with
Speaker:it rather than speak to somebody.
Speaker:So what we're doing is we're allowing them to get hold of an application
Speaker:and see what can be achievable.
Speaker:And if they achieve what they want, great.
Speaker:And if they need more information, because they've got a larger
Speaker:requirement we're there, too, for that.
Speaker:So they're the, they're the drivers really for, for, for doing this.
Speaker:Yeah, I like that.
Speaker:And, and, and today it's NetBackup disc, and it's free tomorrow.
Speaker:Who knows, right?
Speaker:Who knows what applications, uh, you know, what, what forms this will take over time.
Speaker:I'm super excited for, I mean, both, both for you, uh, Brendan,
Speaker:like for, for the company.
Speaker:Uh, but also because I'm sitting here waiting to see how this thing,
Speaker:we've been talking about it for a while and, uh, release releasing it today.
Speaker:I know that the, the journalists that I've spoken to, they were very interested.
Speaker:They were like, oh, this, you know, they, it was
Speaker:sort of like you, what, what you said of like the, the, um, the disbelief, right?
Speaker:Um, and it's like, what, you know, why would you release a free tool?
Speaker:You know, that whole thing, right?
Speaker:What I think it does, is it demonstrates the kinds of things that are possible.
Speaker:I think that's a good thing.
Speaker:Any final thoughts?
Speaker:Um, no.
Speaker:I'm kind of, uh, waiting to see how it goes down as well.
Speaker:I have a, i, I have a suspicion that there's gonna be plenty of downloads.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I, I, I suspect the same.
Speaker:We'll be, we'll be watching the same logs, I'm sure.
Speaker:Um, all right, well, uh, thanks Prasanna for the usual chat.
Speaker:No, thank you and super excited to hear the uptake in this tool.
Speaker:I think it's a great way and hopefully more companies realize
Speaker:they shouldn't lock users in so luck.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:That should hopefully
Speaker:change
Speaker:things.
Speaker:Luck.
Speaker:Good luck with that.
Speaker:Thanks Brendan.
Speaker:Thanks for coming on.
Speaker:Thank you very much.
Speaker:All right, and thanks to our listeners, we'd be nothing without you.
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