i.b.m. wasn't supporting at the time and it really made computers available to smaller businesses that couldn't afford a big main frame or an i.b.m. 360. and that's been our legacy over time. the midrange computing systems from the system three starting to system 32, 34, 38 and today for 100 and beyond and now i.b.mi. so the announcement in 1988 was one of the -- one of the biggest days in i.b.m. rochester history. it was the largest simultaneous announcement in the computer industry. we had business partners that announced on the same day over 1,000 applications that could run on it. that's a really important part of the success of the integrated system that was ready to run customer applications. another big event in i.b.m. rochester history was when we won the malcolm bulger award in 1990. >> let me start with imple b.m. at rochester. a company -- imple b.m. at i.b.m. at rochester. >> we were really proud to represent i.b.m. as a whole and win that award in 1990. i.b.m. rochester has a strong history of supporting supercomputers and if you member supercomputer in 1997 beat gary casper, the world chess master in chess. it was called deep blue. locally here in 2002 we started partnering with i.b.m. research and with the u.s. department of energy on a system called blue jean and we started the de