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Pete Ungaro & Addison Snell


 

>> Announcer: From around the globe it's theCUBE with digital coverage of HPE GreenLake Day made possible by Hewlett Packard Enterprise. >> Welcome everybody to this spotlight session here at GreenLake Day and we're going to dig into high-performance computing. Let me first bring in Pete Ungaro who's the GM for HPC and Mission Critical Solutions at Hewlett Packard Enterprise. And then we're going to pivot to Addison Snell, who's the CEO of research firm Intersect360. So Pete started with you welcome and really a pleasure to have you here. I want to first start off by asking you what are the key trends that you see in the HPC and super computing space. And I really appreciate if you could talk about how customer consumption patterns are changing. >> Yeah, appreciate that Dave and thanks for having me. I think the biggest thing that we're seeing is just the massive growth of data. And as we get larger and larger data sets larger and larger models happen and we're having more and more new ways to compute on that data. So new algorithms like AI would be a great example of that. And as people are starting to see this, especially as they're going through digital transformations, more and more people I believe can take advantage of HPC but maybe don't know how and don't know how to get started. And so they're looking for how to get going into this environment. And many customers that are long-time HPC customers just consume it on their own data centers, they have that capability but many don't. And so they're looking at how can I do this? Do I need to build up that capability myself? Do I go to the Cloud? What about my data and where that resides? So there's a lot of things that are going into thinking through how do I start to take advantage of this new infrastructure? >> Excellent, I mean, we all know HPC workloads. You're talking about fording research and discovery for some of the toughest and most complex problems particularly those that are affecting society. So I'm interested in your thoughts on how you see GreenLake helping in these endeavors specifically. >> Yeah, one of the most exciting things about HPC is just the impact that it has. Everywhere from building safer cars and airplanes to looking at climate change to finding new vaccines for things like COVID that we're all dealing with right now. So one of the biggest things is how do we take advantage of that and use that to benefit society overall. And as we think about implementing HPC, how do we get started and then how do we grow and scale as we get more and more capabilities. So that's the biggest things that we're seeing on that front. >> Yeah, okay, so just about a year ago you guys launched the GreenLake initiative and the whole complete focus on as a service. So I'm curious as to how the new GreenLake services the HPC services specifically as it relates to GreenLake, how do they fit into HP's overall high-performance computing portfolio and the strategy? >> Yeah, great question. GreenLake is a new consumption model for us. So it's a very exciting. We keep our entire HPC portfolio that we have today but extend it with GreenLake and offer customers expanded consumption choices. So customers that potentially are dealing with the growth of their data or they're moving to digital transformation applications, they can use GreenLake just easily scale up from workstations to manage their system costs or operational costs or if they don't have staff to expand their environment, GreenLake provides all of that in a managed infrastructure for them. So if they're going from like a pilot environment, I've been to a production environment over time, GreenLake enables them to do that very simply and easily without having to have all that internal infrastructure people, computer data centers, et cetera, GreenLake provides all that for them. So they can have a turnkey solution for HPC. >> So a lot easier entry strategy is a key word that you use there was choice though. So basically you're providing optionality, you're not necessarily forcing them into a particular model, is that correct? >> Yeah, 100% Dave. What we want to do is just expand the choices so customers can buy and acquire and use that technology to their advantages. Whether they're large or small, whether they're a startup or a fortune 500 company, whether they have their own data centers or they want to use a colo facility, whether they have their own staff or not. We want to just provide them the opportunity to take advantage of this leading edge resource. >> Very interesting, Pete, I really appreciate the perspectives that you guys are bringing to the market. I mean, it seems to me it's going to really accelerate broader adoption of high-performance computing to the masses, really giving them an easier entry point. I want to bring in now Addison Snell to the discussion. Addison, he's a CEO, as I said of Intersect360 which in my view is the world's leading market research company focused on HPC. Addison you've been following this space for a while. You're an expert, you've seen a lot of changes over the years. What do you see as the critical aspects in the market specifically as it relates toward this as a service delivery that we were just discussing with Pete? And I wonder if you could sort of work in there the benefits in terms of in your view how it's going to affect HPC usage broadly. >> Yeah, good morning Dave, and thanks very much for having me. Pete it's great to see you again. So we've been tracking a lot of these utility computing models in high-performance computing for years. Particularly as most of the usage by revenue is actually by commercial endeavors using high-performance computing for their R and D and engineering projects and the like. And cloud computing has been a major portion of that and has the highest growth rate in the market right now where we're seeing this double digit growth that accounted for about $1.4 billion of the high-performance computing industry last year. But the bigger trend and which makes GreenLake really interesting is that we saw an additional about a billion dollars worth of spending outside what was directly measured in the cloud portion of the market in areas that we deemed to be cloud-like which were as a service types of contracts that were still utility computing, but they might be under a software as a service portion of a budget under software or some other managed services type of contract that the user wasn't reporting directly as cloud but was certainly influenced by utility computing. And I think that's going to be a really dominant portion of the market going forward when we look at a growth rate and where the market's been evolving. >> So that's interesting. I mean, basically you're saying this utility model is not brand new, we've seen that for years. Cloud was obviously a catalyst that gave that a boost. What is new you're saying is, and I'll say it this way. I'd love to get your independent perspective on this is sort of the definition of cloud is expanding where we people always say, it's not a place, it's an experience and I couldn't agree more. But I wonder if you could give us your independent perspective on that, both on the thoughts of what I just said but also how would you rate HPE position in this market? >> Well, you're right absolutely that the definition of cloud is expanding. And that's a challenge when we run our surveys that we try to be pedantic in a sense and define exactly what we're talking about. And that's how we're able to measure both the direct usage of a typical public cloud but also a more flexible notion of as a service. Now you asked about HPE in particular and that's extremely relevant, not only with GreenLake, but with their broader presence in high-performance computing. HPE is the number one provider of systems for high-performance computing worldwide. And that's largely based on the breadth of HPE's offerings in addition to their performance at various segments. So picking up a lot of the commercial market with our HPE Apollo Gen10 plus, they hit a lot of big memory configurations with the Superdome Flex and scale up to some of the most powerful supercomputers in the world with the HPE Cray EX platforms that go into some of the leading national labs. Now GreenLake gives them an opportunity to offer this kind of flexibility to customers rather than committing all at once to a particular purchase price. But if you want to do position those on a utility computing basis, pay for them as a service without committing to a particular public cloud, I think that's an interesting role for GreenLake to play in the market. >> Yeah, yeah it's interesting. I mean, earlier this year we celebrated Exascale Day with the support from HPE and it really is all about a community and an ecosystem. Is a lot of comradery going on in the space that you guys are deep into. Addison, it says we can wrap what should observe as expect in this HPC market, in this space over the next few years? >> Yeah, that's a great question what to expect because if 2020 has taught us anything it's the hazards of forecasting where we think the market is going. Like when we put out a market forecast, we tend not to look at huge things like unexpected pandemics or wars but it's relevant to the topic here. Because as I said, we were already forecasting cloud and as a service models growing. Anytime you get into uncertainty where it becomes less easy to plan for where you want to be in two years, three years, five years, that model speaks well to things that are cloud or as a service to do very well flexibly. And therefore, when we look at the market and plan out where we think it is in 2020, 2021, anything that accelerates uncertainty actually is going to increase the need for something like GreenLake or an as a service or cloud type of environment. So we're expecting those sorts of deployments to come in over and above where we were already previously expected them in 2020, 2021. Because as a service deals well with uncertainty and that's just the world we've been in recently. >> I think those are great comments and a really good framework. And we've seen this with the pandemic, the pace at which the technology industry in particular and of course HPE specifically have responded to support that. Your point about agility and flexibility being crucial. And I'll go back to something earlier that Pete said around the data, the sooner we can get to the data to analyze things, whether it's compressing the time to a vaccine or pivoting our businesses, the better off we are. So I want to thank Pete and Addison for your perspectives today. Really great stuff, guys, thank you. >> Yeah, thank you. >> Thank you. >> All right, keep it right there for more great insights and content. You're watching GreenLake Day. (ambient music)

Published Date : Nov 23 2020

SUMMARY :

the globe it's theCUBE and really a pleasure to have you here. and don't know how to get started. for some of the toughest So that's the biggest and the whole complete or they're moving to digital into a particular model, is that correct? just expand the choices the perspectives that you guys And I think that's going to both on the thoughts of what I just said that the definition of cloud is expanding. in the space that you guys are deep into. and that's just the world the time to a vaccine for more great insights and content.

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Mark Francis, Electronic Caregiver | AWS Summit DC 2021


 

>>Hello and welcome back to the cubes live coverage of A W. S. Public sector summit. I'm john Kerry hosting CUBA. We're live in Washington D. C. For two days, an actual event with an expo floor with real people face to face and of course we're streaming it digitally on the cube and cube channels. And so our next guest, Mark Francis chief digital health integration officer Electronic caregiver, Mark great to see you tech veteran and former intel back in the day. You've seen your ways of innovation. Welcome to the cube. >>Thanks so much. It's a pleasure to be here. >>So we were talking before we came on camera about all the innovation going back in the computer industry but now with health care and delivery of care telemedicine and how the structural systems are changing and how cloud is impacting that. You guys have an interesting solution on AWS that kind of, to me connect the dots for many tell us what you guys do and take us through the product. >>Sure. Happy to do so uh our company is electronic caregiver were actually founded back in 2009. We're based in Los cruces new Mexico so off the grid. Um but since that time we have been spending a lot of time and money doing foundational R and D pilots and product development work. Really say how do you bridge that chasm between the doctor's office and the patient home in a way that you can put a patient facing device and equipment in a patient's home that's going to drive high level of engagement, obtain actionable curated data that's presented out to caregivers and the caregivers can then act upon that to help direct and deliver high quality care. >>So basically is the future of medicine, >>the future of medicine. Right. Right. We look at medicine, we look at the future of medicine as being a hybrid model of in person care plus remote care. And we really see ourselves at the epicenter of providing a platform to help enable that. >>You know the big story here at the public sector. Some and we've been reporting on a digitally for the previous year is the impact the pandemic has had on the industry and and not just normal disruption, you know technology and start ups, disruption happens, structural changes being forced upon industries by the force majeure. That is the pandemic education, health care and so video and data and connected oriented systems are now the thing structurally that's changing it. That's causing all kinds of business model, innovations and challenges. Yeah. What's your take on that? Because this is real. >>Yeah. It is real. It it's funny that this is actually my third digital health company. Um First one was in in uh Silicon Valley early remote patient monitoring company. We end up selling it to bosh uh when I joined intel to be part of our digital health group, we did that for five years and ended a joint venture with G. E. So people have been playing around in remote patient monitoring telehealth for some time until the pandemic though there wasn't really a strong business model to justify scaling of these businesses. Um uh the pandemic change that it forced adoption and force the government to allow reimbursement coach as well. And as a result of that we've seen this pure if aeration of different product offering service offerings and then payment models around telehealth broadly speaking >>well since you started talking the music started cranking because this is the new music of the industry, we're here on the expo floor, we have face to face conversations going on and uh turn the music down. Hey thanks guys, this is a huge thing and I want to uh highlight even further what is the driver for this? Because is it, I mean actually clouds got some benefits but as you guys do the R. And D. What's going on with what's the key drivers for medicine? >>Yeah, I would take two things from a from a technology perspective, the infrastructure is finally in place to enable this type of charity distance before that it really wasn't there now that's there and the products that folks are used are much more affordable about the provider's side and the patient side. The main driver is um uh there's a lot of underlying trends that were happening that we're just being ignored Whether it was 50% non adherence to treatment plans, massive medication mismanagement um lack of professional and informal caregivers, all those things were kind of happening underneath the surface and then with Kobe, it all hit everybody in the phase. People started using telehealth and then realize, hey, we can deliver high quality care, we can deliver value based care mixed with a hybrid model of tele care plus patient care. And it turned out that, that, that works out well. So I think it's now a realization that tell care not only connects patients but solve some of these other issues around adherents, compliance, staffing and a number of other >>things and that this is a structural change we were talking about. Exactly. All right, So talk about amazon, what do you guys are doing on AWS? How's that all work? >>That's working out great. So as we, as we launch at a 2.0, we built it on 24 foundational aws and Amazon services. It's a serverless architecture, um, uh, which is delivered. What enables us to do is we have a whole bunch of different patients facing devices which we now integrate all into one back end through which we can run our data analytics are machine learning and then present curated actual data to the providers on top of that. We've also been developing a virtual caregiver that's really, really innovative. So we're using the unity engine to develop a very, very realistic virtual caregiver that is with the patient 24 hours a day in their home, they develop a relationship with that individual and then through that they can really drive greater you know more intimate care plan and a more intimate relationship with their human caregivers that's built using basic technology behind Alexa pauline lacks as well as IOT core and a lot of other ai ml services from from amazon as well. >>Not to get all nerdy and kind of seeking out here because under the hood it's all the goodness of amazon. We've got a server list, you got tennis is probably in there doing something who knows what's going on there, You've got polly let's do this and that but it also highlights the edge the ultimate network edges the human and if you've got to care for the patient at home or wherever on the run whatever. Yeah you got to get the access to the data so yeah I can imagine a lot of monitoring involved too. Yeah can you take us through how that works? >>Yeah and for us we like to talk about intelligence as opposed to data because data for data sakes isn't actionable. So really what can we do through machine learning and artificial intelligence to be able to make that data more actionable before the human caregiver because you're never going to take a human out of the equation. Uh But uh we had a lot of data inputs, they're both direct data inputs such as vital signs, we also get subtle data input. So with our with our uh with Addison or virtual caregiver uh the product actually come to the camera away from intel called the real sense cameras. And with that we get to see several signs of changes in terms of gate which might be in the indicative of falls risk of falls. We can see body temperature, pulse, heart rate, signs of stress, lack of sleep. Maybe that's a sign of uh adverse reaction to a new medication. There's a bunch of different direct and indirect inputs. We can take run some analysis against and then say hey there's something here you might want to look at because it might be indicating a change in health. >>So this is where the innovation around these bots and ai come in because you're essentially getting pattern matching on other signals you already know. So using the cameras and or sensors in to understand and get the patients some signaling where they can maybe take action call >>fun or Yeah, that's exactly. And the other thing we get, we get to integrate information related to what are called social determinants of health. So there's a whole body of research now showing that 65% of someone's health is actually driven by non clinical issues. So again issues of food security, transportation, access to care, mental health type issues in terms of stress and stuff like we can start gathering some of that information to based upon people's behaviors or for you to assessments which can also provide insights to help direct care. >>So maybe when I'm doing the Cuban reviews, you guys can go to work and look at me. I'm stressed out right now, having a great time here public sector, this is really cool. So take a minute to explain the vision. What does this go from here? I'll see low hanging fruit, telemedicine, check data, observe ability for patient for optimizing care, check what happens next industry disruption, what how these dominoes have been kind of fall? >>Yeah, for us uh we really are seeing more providers and more payers system. Integrators looking now to say how do I put together a comprehensive solution from the doctor's office to inpatient hospital to home that can remove it. A lot of barriers to care addi which is our platform is designed to be interoperable to plug into electronic health care systems, whether it's Cerner, Epic or Athenahealth, whatever it might be to be able to create that you pick us seamless platform for provider to use. We can push all of the data to their platform if they want to use that or they could use our platform and dashboard as well. We make it available to healthcare providers but also a lot of people are trying to age in place and they're getting treated by private duty providers, senior housing providers and other maybe less clinical caregivers. But if you're there every day with somebody you can pick up signs which might prevent a major health episode down the road. So we want to close that circle our our vision is how do we close the circle of care so that people get the right information at the right time to deliver the right >>care. So it's kind of a health care stack of a new kind of stack. So I have to ask you if there was an eye as pass and sass category um infrastructure as a service platform as a service. And then says it sounds like you guys are kind of combine the lower parts of the stack and enable your partners to develop on top of. Is that how it >>works? Yes it does. Yeah. Yeah. So with addie, the interesting thing that we've done it's designed to have open a P. I. For a lot of modules as well. So if we're working with the american Heart Association and we want to do a uh cardiac care module from using their I. P. We could do that if we want to integrate with Uber health or lift we could do that as well if we want to do something in the amazon and pill pack, it's a plug in that we could do that. So if I'm a patient or or a loved one at home instead of going to 10 different places or use our platform and then pull up four different apps. Everything can be right there at their fingertips. You can either do it by touch or you can use this voice because it's all a voice or a touch of interaction. >>So just because I'm curious and and and for clarification, the idea of going past versus SAS platform versus software as a service is why flexibility or customization? Why not go SAS and be a SAS application? >>Uh we've talked mostly about, we've we've gone back and forth platform as a service or infrastructure as a service. So that's more the debate that we've had. It's more about the scalability that we can offer. Um uh not just in the United States, but globally as well. Um and really that's really the thing that we've been looking at, especially because there's so many different sources of data, if you want to provide high quality care that needs to be integrated. We want to make sure that we created a platform, not just for what we provide but for what others in the environment can provide. >>So you really want to enable other people to create that very much layer on top of you guys, do you have out of the box SAS to get people going or is that just >>With the release of adding 2.0, now we do. So now folks go to our website and they contact our development those tools and and those libraries are available. >>Now, this is an awesome opportunity. So for people out there who are wanting to innovate on you, they can just say, okay, I'll leverage your the amazon web services of healthcare essentially. >>That's a nice bold ambitious statement. Yeah, but I mean kind of but if we if we can achieve that, then we'd be quite happy and we think the industry, you're gonna partner >>benefit of that. It's an ecosystem play. Exactly, yeah. It's kind of like. >>Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And for us, what we do covert is a perfect example going back to that. So when Covid hit um were based in las cruces, new Mexico last winter lost crew system to el paso and overwhelmed. They're at capacity. Different health care systems came to us, they asked if we partner with them to deliver a basically a triage program for folks that were coming into the er with Covid. So we designed a Kobe at home programs. So you get diagnosed, get a kit, go home and using telehealth virtual visits, remote monitoring. Be able to stay healthy at home without doing community spread. And by making sure that you were being watched over by a care professionals 24 hours a day. We did that um worked with 300 people Malcolm would all of them said healthy. We were able to expand uh inpatient capacity by 77%. We saved the system over $6 million in in three months. We've now been asked and we're actually replicating that in Memphis now and then also we've been asked to do so down in Mississippi >>mark, great conversation. Uh real quick. I only I don't have much time left but I want to ask you, does this mean that we're gonna see a clip of proliferation of in home kind of devices to assist? >>Yeah, we will. Uh, what we've seen is a big pivot now towards hospital at home model of care. So you have providers saying, you know, I'll see you in my facility but also extend capabilities so I can see you and treat you at home as well. We've also seen a realization that telehealth is more than a than an occasional video visit because if all you're doing is replacing an occasional in person visit with an occasional video visit. You're not really changing things now. There's a whole different sensors ai other integrations that come together to be able to enable these different models >>for all the business school folks out there and people who understand what's going on with structural change. That's when innovation really changes. Yeah, this is structural change. >>Absolutely. >>Mark, thanks for coming on. Mark Francis chief Digital Health Integration Officer Electronic Caregiver here on the Q. Thanks. Coming >>on. Thank you. My pleasure. >>Okay, more coverage after this short break. I'm john Kerry, your host Aws public Sector summit, We'll be right back mm mm mm

Published Date : Sep 28 2021

SUMMARY :

caregiver, Mark great to see you tech veteran and former intel back in the day. It's a pleasure to be here. So we were talking before we came on camera about all the innovation going back in the computer industry but now with Um but since that time we have been spending a lot of time and money doing epicenter of providing a platform to help enable that. and connected oriented systems are now the thing structurally adoption and force the government to allow reimbursement coach as well. do the R. And D. What's going on with what's the key drivers for medicine? is finally in place to enable this type of charity distance before that it really wasn't things and that this is a structural change we were talking about. to the providers on top of that. Yeah can you take us through how that works? the product actually come to the camera away from intel called the real sense cameras. So this is where the innovation around these bots and ai come in because you're essentially getting pattern matching And the other thing we get, So take a minute to explain the vision. circle of care so that people get the right information at the right time to deliver the right So I have to ask you if I. P. We could do that if we want to integrate with Uber health or lift we could do that as well if we want to do So that's more the debate that we've had. So now folks go to our website and they So for people out there who are wanting to innovate on you, Yeah, but I mean kind of but if we if we It's kind of like. Different health care systems came to us, they asked if we partner with them to deliver a to assist? So you have providers saying, for all the business school folks out there and people who understand what's going on with structural on the Q. Thanks. Okay, more coverage after this short break.

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Wrap and Roll | HPE GreenLake Day


 

>>from around the globe. It's the Cube with digital coverage of HP Green Lake Day made possible by Hewlett >>Packard Enterprise. Okay, so we're deep into H B E Green Lake Day Hope. Hopefully, you've enjoyed the spotlight sessions with Keith with with Pete, with Addison and and Skip from Splunk and, of course, the platform session that our Qadoura hosted. You know, we're going for proof points here. We really want you toe squint through the narrative today and see for yourself what's what's really here and the kind of progress that HP is making with Green Lake. So thanks to everybody for joining the conversation, we now want to turn our attention to more proof points. The next segment of this HB Green Lake day is where you'll have further opportunities toe Learn mawr about Green Lake and how you might apply it to your business. Now, if you're interested in watching watching additional sessions, we have two new ones available for you to see. The first is a session on the new managed security service from H P E with HP Green Lake, Or you could take a deeper dive into high performance computing with Green Lake just look, navigate the agenda tab and select one of those two sessions. They're available at any time. But if you want to stick with us for the live show, we have to live demos in our meat experts sessions, where you'll have the opportunity to ask your questions and have real time interaction with the experts from HP. In fact, I have Steve Showalter and Ash nor here, and they're with me right now to tell you a little bit about their meet the experts sessions. So, Steve, let's start with you. Tell us a little bit about yourself and what you'll be covering in your demo today. >>Sure, Thanks, Dave. My name's Steve Showalter. I'm a part of the Green Lake Cloud Services R and D Team Super excited to be here today, and I hope everyone conjoined our session coming up or we'll take a deeper dive and a live demo of Green Lake Central. In case you haven't seen it before, Green Lake Central's a platform we used to deliver services and capabilities to our Green Lake customers. In Todays Demo will show you how we've designed Green Lake Central to take a persona based approach to deliver the right capabilities and insights to various constituents in our customers. Organizations, for example, will show how a CEO or CFO would use Green Lake Central to view their green light consumption and costs and compare those two public cloud costs from AWS or azure right within the same reporting tool. We'll also show you how a nightie operation staff would use Green Lake Central to engage in capacity planning for their Green Lake environment or manage their Green Lake private Cloud services. We also show how end users within a customer and environment would use Green Lake central to self service and lifecycle manage resource is from these Green Lake Cloud services, or even how a chief security officer would use the continuous compliance capability that we delivered through Green Lake Central toe understand their real time compliance posture against whatever regulatory frameworks they may need to be audited against. So I hope you can join me for this informative and interactive session and look forward to seeing everyone there. >>That's awesome. It sounds like some great details. Their full 3 60 view great visibility are snore. So tell us a little bit about yourself. What's going on your session. Give us Give us the hook. >>Hi. I'm marginal product manager for Green Lake for containers, Um, and three leg for containers is our upcoming service, which promises a true cloud like experience with massive operational simplicity. Uh, this offering is built on our experience middle container platform software and aims to bring speed and portability. Tow both your cloud native and non cloud native applications. Using open source communities, we have a unique data fabric that provides persistent storage for state fel applications. And today you'll see how we demystify communities, operational complexity and provide value to various personas throughout the containerized application life cycle, for example, an idea it men will have all the standardized communities cluster templates on invent automation to spin up the environment for a developer in just a few clicks. And the developer has to just focus on continuous deployment and delivery off their applications on a CEO gets complete visibility across different communities. Clusters for the cough. >>That's awesome. I mean, we know from our data that containers generally kubernetes specifically one of the most significant areas where customers are are spending time and money, so that all sounds fantastic. so you can. You having trouble deciding what you're gonna go to? We're gonna have the chance to see both demos if you want. So we'll be live for the next hour with each meet the expert session. So we're gonna run him twice If you can't decide. Go to both. Okay. Thanks for watching HB Green Lake Day. You're watching the cube?

Published Date : Dec 2 2020

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HPE Spotlight Segment v2


 

>>from around the globe. It's the Cube with digital coverage of HP Green Lake day made possible by Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Okay, we're not gonna dive right into some of the news and get into the Green Lake Announcement details. And with me to do that is Keith White is the senior vice president and general manager for Green Lake Cloud Services and Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Keith, thanks for your time. Great to see you. >>Hey, thanks so much for having me. I'm really excited to be here. >>You're welcome. And so listen, before we get into the hard news, can you give us an update on just Green Lake and the business? How's it going? >>You bet. No, it's fantastic. And thanks, you know, for the opportunity again. And hey, I hope everyone's at home staying safe and healthy. It's been a great year for HP Green Lake. There's a ton of momentum that we're seeing in the market place. Uh, we've booked over $4 billion of total contract value to date, and that's over 1000 customers worldwide, and frankly, it's worldwide. It's in 50 50 different countries, and this is a variety of solutions. Variety of workloads. So really just tons of momentum. But it's not just about accelerating the current momentum. It's really about listening to our customers, staying ahead of their demands, delivering more value to them and really executing on the HB Green Lake. Promise. >>Great. Thanks for that and really great detail. Congratulations on the progress, but I know you're not done. So let's let's get to the news. What do people need to know? >>Awesome. Yeah, you know, there's three things that we want to share with you today. So first is all about it's computing. So I could go into some details on that were actually delivering new industry work clothes, which I think will be exciting for a lot of the major industries that are out there. And then we're expanding RHP capabilities just to make things easier and more effective. So first off, you know, we're excited to announce today, um, acceleration of mainstream as adoption for high performance computing through HP Green Lake. And you know, in essence, what we're really excited about is this whole idea of it's a. It's a unique opportunity to write customers with the power of an agile, elastic paper use cloud experience with H. P s market. See systems. So pretty soon any enterprise will be able to tackle their most demanding compute and did intensive workloads, power, artificial intelligence and machine learning initiatives toe provide better business insights and outcomes and again providing things like faster time to incite and accelerated innovation. So today's news is really, really gonna help speed up deployment of HPC projects by 75% and reduced TCO by upto 40% for customers. >>That's awesome. Excited to learn more about the HPC piece, especially. So tell us what's really different about the news today From your perspective. >>No, that's that's a great thing. And the idea is to really help customers with their business outcomes, from building safer cars to improving their manufacturing lines with sustainable materials. Advancing discovery for drug treatment, especially in this time of co vid or making critical millisecond decisions for those finance markets. So you'll see a lot of benefits and a lot of differentiation for customers in a variety of different scenarios and industries. >>Yeah, so I wonder if you could talk a little bit mawr about specifically, you know exactly what's new. Can you unpack some of that for us? >>You bet. Well, what's key is that any enterprise will be able to run their modeling and simulation work clothes in a fully managed because we manage everything for them pre bundled. So we'll give folks this idea of small, medium and large H p e c h piece services to operate in any data center or in a cold a location. These were close air, almost impossible to move to the public cloud because the data so large or it needs to be close by for Leighton see issues. Oftentimes, people have concerns about I p protection or applications and how they run within that that local environment. So if customers are betting their business on this insight and analytics, which many of them are, they need business, critical performance and experts to help them with implementation and migration as well as they want to see resiliency. >>So is this a do it yourself model? In other words, you know the customers have toe manage it on their own. Or how are you helping there? >>No, it's a great question. So the fantastic thing about HP Green Lake is that we manage it all for the customer. And so, in essence, they don't have to worry about anything on the back end, we can flow that we manage capacity. We manage performance, we manage updates and all of those types of things. So we really make it. Make it super simple. And, you know, we're offering these bundled solutions featuring RHP Apollo systems that are purpose built for running things like modeling and simulation workloads. Um, and again, because it's it's Green Lake. And because it's cloud services, this provides itself. Service provides automation. And, you know, customers can actually, um, manage however they want to. We can do it all for them. They could do some on their own. It's really super easy, and it's really up to them on how they want to manage that system. >>What about analytics? You know, you had a lot of people want to dig deeper into the data. How are you supporting that? >>Yeah, Analytics is key. And so one of the best things about this HPC implementation is that we provide unopened platform so customers have the ability to leverage whatever tools they want to do for analytics. They can manage whatever systems they want. Want to pull data from so they really have a ton of flexibility. But the key is because it's HP Green Lake, and because it's HP es market leading HPC systems, they get the fastest they get the it all managed for them. They only pay for what they use, so they don't need to write a huge check for a large up front. And frankly, they get the best of all those worlds together in order to come up with things that matter to them, which is that true business outcome, True Analytics s so that they could make the decisions they need to run their business. >>Yeah, that's awesome. You guys clearly making some good progress here? Actually, I see it really is a game changer for the types of customers that you described. I mean, particularly those folks that you like. You said You think they can't move stuff into the cloud. They've got to stay on Prem. But they want that cloud experience. I mean, that's that's really exciting. We're gonna have you back in a few minutes to talk about the Green Lake Cloud services and in some of the new industry platforms that you see evolving >>awesome. Thanks so much. I look forward to it. >>Yeah, us too. So Okay, right now we're gonna check out the conversation that I had earlier with Pete Ungaro and Addison Snell on HPC. Let's watch welcome everybody to the spotlight session here green. Late day, We're gonna dig into high performance computing. Let me first bring in Pete Ungaro, Who's the GM for HPC and Mission Critical solutions, that Hewlett Packard Enterprise. And then we're gonna pivot Addison Snell, who is the CEO of research firm Intersect 3. 60. So, Pete, starting with you Welcome. And really a pleasure to have you here. I want to first start off by asking you what is the key trends that you see in the HPC and supercomputing space? And I really appreciate if you could talk about how customer consumption patterns are changing. >>Yeah, I appreciate that, David, and thanks for having me. You know, I think the biggest thing that we're seeing is just the massive growth of data. And as we get larger and larger data sets larger and larger models happen, and we're having more and more new ways to compute on that data. So new algorithms like A. I would be a great example of that. And as people are starting to see this, especially they're going through a digital transformations. You know, more and more people I believe can take advantage of HPC but maybe don't know how and don't know how to get started on DSO. They're looking for how to get going into this environment and many customers that are longtime HBC customers, you know, just consume it on their own data centers. They have that capability, but many don't and so they're looking at. How can I do this? Do I need to build up that capability myself? Do I go to the cloud? What about my data and where that resides. So there's a lot of things that are going into thinking through How do I start to take advantage of this new infrastructure? >>Excellent. I mean, we all know HPC workloads. You're talking about supporting research and discovery for some of the toughest and most complex problems, particularly those that affecting society. So I'm interested in your thoughts on how you see Green Lake helping in these endeavors specifically, >>Yeah, One of the most exciting things about HPC is just the impact that it has, you know, everywhere from, you know, building safer cars and airplanes. Thio looking at climate change, uh, to, you know, finding new vaccines for things like Covic that we're all dealing with right now. So one of the biggest things is how do we take advantage event and use that to, you know, benefit society overall. And as we think about implementing HPC, you know, how do we get started? And then how do we grow and scale as we get more and more capability? So that's the biggest things that we're seeing on that front. >>Yes. Okay, So just about a year ago, you guys launched the Green Lake Initiative and the whole, you know, complete focus on as a service. So I'm curious as to how the new Green Lake services the HPC services specifically as it relates to Greenlee. How do they fit in the H. P s overall high performance computing portfolio and the strategy? >>Yeah, great question. You know, Green Lake is a new consumption model for eso. It's a very exciting We keep our entire HPC portfolio that we have today, but extend it with Green Lake and offer customers you know, expanded consumption choices. So, you know, customers that potentially are dealing with the growth of their data or they're moving toe digital transformation applications they can use green light just easily scale up from workstations toe, you know, manage their system costs or operational costs, or or if they don't have staff to expand their environment. Green Light provides all of that in a manage infrastructure for them. So if they're going from like a pilot environment up into a production environment over time, Green Lake enables them to do that very simply and easily without having toe have all that internal infrastructure people, computer data centers, etcetera. Green Lake provides all that for them so they can have a turnkey solution for HBC. >>So a lot easier entry strategies. A key key word that you use. There was choice, though. So basically you're providing optionality. You're not necessarily forcing them into a particular model. Is that correct? >>Yeah, 100%. Dave. What we want to do is just expand the choices so customers can buy a new choir and use that technology to their advantage is whether they're large or small. Whether they're you know, a startup or Fortune 500 company, whether they have their own data centers or they wanna, you know, use a Coehlo facility whether they have their own staff or not, we want to just provide them the opportunity to take advantage of this leading edge resource. >>Very interesting, Pete. It really appreciate the perspective that you guys have bring into the market. I mean, it seems to me it's gonna really accelerate broader adoption of high performance computing, toe the masses, really giving them an easier entry point I want to bring in now. Addison Snell to the discussion. Addison. He's the CEO is, I said of Intersect 3 60 which, in my view, is the world's leading market research company focused on HPC. Addison, you've been following the space for a while. You're an expert. You've seen a lot of changes over the years. What do you see is the critical aspect in the market, specifically as it relates toward this as a service delivery that we were just discussing with Pete and I wonder if you could sort of work in their the benefits in terms of, in your view, how it's gonna affect HPC usage broadly. Yeah, Good morning, David. Thanks very much for having me, Pete. It's great to see you again. So we've been tracking ah lot of these utility computing models in high performance computing for years, particularly as most of the usage by revenue is actually by commercial endeavors. Using high performance computing for their R and D and engineering projects and the like. And cloud computing has been a major portion of that and has the highest growth rate in the market right now, where we're seeing this double digit growth that accounted for about $1.4 billion of the high performance computing industry last year. But the bigger trend on which makes Green like really interesting is that we saw an additional about a billion dollars worth of spending outside what was directly measured in the cloud portion of the market in in areas that we deemed to be cloud like, which were as a service types of contracts that were still utility computing. But they might be under a software as a service portion of the budget under software or some other managed services type of contract that the user wasn't reported directly is cloud, but it was certainly influenced by utility computing, and I think that's gonna be a really dominant portion of the market going forward. And when we look at growth rate and where the market's been evolving, so that's interesting. I mean, basically, you're saying this, you know, the utility model is not brand new. We've seen that for years. Cloud was obviously a catalyst that gave that a boost. What is new, you're saying is and I'll say it this way. I'd love to get your independent perspective on this is so The definition of cloud is expanding where it's you know, people always say it's not a place, it's an experience and I couldn't agree more. But I wonder if you could give us your independent perspective on that, both on the thoughts of what I just said. But also, how would you rate H. P. E s position in this market? Well, you're right, absolutely, that the definition of cloud is expanding, and that's a challenge when we run our surveys that we try to be pedantic in a sense and define exactly what we're talking about. And that's how we're able to measure both the direct usage of ah, typical public cloud, but also ah more flexible notion off as a service. Now you asked about H P E. In particular, And that's extremely relevant not only with Green Lake but with their broader presence in high performance computing. H P E is the number one provider of systems for high performance computing worldwide, and that's largely based on the breath of H. P s offerings, in addition to their performance in various segments. So picking up a lot of the commercial market with their HP apology and 10 plus, they hit a lot of big memory configurations with Superdome flex and scale up to some of the most powerful supercomputers in the world with the HP Cray X platforms that go into some of the leading national labs. Now, Green Light gives them an opportunity to offer this kind of flexibility to customers rather than committing all it wants to a particular purchase price. But if you want to do position those on a utility computing basis pay for them as a service without committing to ah, particular public cloud. I think that's an interesting role for Green Lake to play in the market. Yeah, it's interesting. I mean earlier this year, we celebrated Exa scale Day with support from HP, and it really is all about a community and an ecosystem is a lot of camaraderie going on in the space that you guys are deep into, Addison says. We could wrap. What should observers expect in this HPC market in this space over the next a few years? Yeah, that's a great question. What to expect because of 2020 has taught us anything. It's the hazards of forecasting where we think the market is going. When we put out a market forecast, we tend not to look at huge things like unexpected pandemics or wars. But it's relevant to the topic here because, as I said, we were already forecasting Cloud and as a service, models growing. Any time you get into uncertainty, where it becomes less easy to plan for where you want to be in two years, three years, five years, that model speaks well to things that are cloud or as a service to do very well, flexibly, and therefore, when we look at the market and plan out where we think it is in 2020 2021 anything that accelerates uncertainty actually is going. Thio increase the need for something like Green Lake or and as a service or cloud type of environment. So we're expecting those sorts of deployments to come in over and above where we were already previously expected them in 2020 2021. Because as a service deals well with uncertainty. And that's just the world we've been in recently. I think there's a great comments and in a really good framework. And we've seen this with the pandemic, the pace at which the technology industry in particular, of course, HP specifically have responded to support that your point about agility and flexibility being crucial. And I'll go back toe something earlier that Pete said around the data, the sooner we can get to the data to analyze things, whether it's compressing the time to a vaccine or pivoting our business is the better off we are. So I wanna thank Pete and Addison for your perspectives today. Really great stuff, guys. Thank you. >>Yeah, Thank you. >>Alright, keep it right there from, or great insights and content you're watching green leg day. Alright, Great discussion on HPC. Now we're gonna get into some of the new industry examples and some of the case studies and new platforms. Keith HP, Green Lake It's moving forward. That's clear. You're picking up momentum with customers, but can you give us some examples of platforms for industry use cases and some specifics around that? >>You know, you bet, and actually you'll hear more details from Arwa Qadoura she leads are green like the market efforts in just a little bit. But specifically, I want to highlight some examples where we provide cloud services to help solve some of the most demanding workloads on the planet. So, first off in financial services, for example, traditional banks are facing increased competition and evolving customer expectations they need to transform so that they can reduce risk, manage cop and provided differentiated customer experience. We'll talk about a platform for Splunk that does just that. Second, in health care institutions, they face the growing list of challenges, some due to the cove in 19 Pandemic and others. Years in the making, like our aging population and rise in chronic disease, is really driving up demands, and it's straining capital budgets. These global trance create a critical need for transformation. Thio improve that patient experience and their business outcomes. Another example is in manufacturing. They're facing many challenges in order to remain competitive, right, they need to be able to identify new revenue streams run more efficiently from an operation standpoint and scale. Their resource is so you'll hear more about how we're optimizing and delivery for manufacturing with S. A P Hana and always gonna highlight a little more detail on today's news how we're delivering supercomputing through HP Green Lake It's scale and finally, how we have a robust ecosystem of partners to help enterprises easily deploy these solutions. For example, I think today you're gonna be talking to Skip Bacon from Splunk. >>Yeah, absolutely. We sure are. And some really great examples there, especially a couple industries that that stood out. I mean, financial services and health care. They're ripe for transformation and maybe disruption if if they don't move fast enough. So Keith will be coming back to you a little later today to wrap things up. So So thank you. Now, now we're gonna take a look at how HP is partnering with Splunk and how Green Lake compliments, data rich workloads. Let's watch. We're not going to dig deeper into a data oriented workload. How HP Green Lake fits into this use case and with me, a Skip Bacon vice president, product management at Splunk Skip. Good to see >>you. Good to see you as well there. >>So let's talk a little bit about Splunk. I mean, you guys are a dominant player and security and analytics and you know, it's funny, Skip, I used to comment that during the big data, the rise of big data Splunk really never positioned themselves is this big data player, and you know all that hype. But But you became kind of the leader in big data without really, even, you know, promoting it. It just happened overnight, and you're really now rapidly moving toward a subscription model. You're making some strategic moves in the M and a front. Give us your perspective on what's happening at the company and why customers are so passionate about your software. >>Sure, a great, great set up, Dave. Thanks. So, yeah, let's start with the data that's underneath big data, right? I think I think it is usual. The industry sort of seasons on a term and never stops toe. Think about what it really means. Sure, one big part of big data is your transaction and stuff, right? The things that catch generated by all of your Oracle's USC Cheops that reflect how the business actually occurred. But a much bigger part is all of your digital artifacts, all of the machine generated data that tells you the whole story about what led up to the things that actually happened right within the systems within the interactions within those systems. That's where Splunk is focused. And I think what the market is the whole is really validating is that that machine generated data those digital artifacts are a tely least is important, if not more so, than the transactional artifacts to this whole digital transformation problem right there. Critical to showing I t. How to get better developing and deploying and operating software, how to get better securing these systems, and then how to take this real time view of what the business looks like as it's executing in the software right now. And hold that up to and inform the business and close that feedback loop, right? So what is it we want to do differently digitally in order to do different better on the transformation side of the house. So I think a lot of splints. General growth is proof of the value crop and the need here for sure, as we're seeing play out specifically in the domains of ICTs he operations Dev, ops, Cyber Security, right? As well as more broadly in that in that cloak closing the business loop Splunk spin on its hair and growing our footprint overall with our customers and across many new customers, we've been on its hair with moving parts of that footprints who and as a service offering and spawn cloud. But a lot of that overall growth is really fueled by just making it simpler. Quicker, faster, cheaper, easier toe operates Plunkett scale because the data is certainly not slowing down right. There's more and more and more of it every day, more late, their potential value locked up in it. So anything that we can do and that our partners conducive to improve the cost economics to prove the agility to improve the responsiveness of these systems is huge. That that customer value crop and that's where we get so excited about what's going on with green life >>Yeah, so that makes sense. I mean, the digital businesses, a data business. And that means putting data at the core. And Splunk is obviously you keep part of that. So, as I said earlier, spunk your leader in this space, what's the deal with your HP relationship? You touched on that? What should we know about your your partnership? And what's that solution with H h p E? What's that customer Sweet spot. >>Yep. Good. All good questions. So we've been working with HP for quite a while on on a number of different fronts. This Green lake peace is the most interesting and sort of the intersection of, you know, purist intersection of both of these threads of these factories, if you will. So we've been working to take our core data platform deployed on an enterprise operator for kubernetes. Stick that a top H P s green like which is really kubernetes is a service platform and go prove performance, scalability, agility, flexibility, cost economics, starting with some of slugs, biggest customers. And we've proven, you know, alot of those things In great measure, I think the opportunity you know, the ability to vertically scale Splunk in containers that taught beefy boxes and really streamline the automation, the orchestration, the operations, all of that yields what, in the words of one of our mutual customers, literally put it as This is a transformational platform for deploying and operating spot for us so hard at work on the engineering side, hard at work on the architectural referencing, sizing, you know, capacity planning sides, and then increasing really rolling up our sleeves and taking the stuff the market together. >>Yeah, I mean, we're seeing the just the idea of cloud. The definition of cloud expanding hybrid brings in on Prem. We talked about the edge and and I really We've seen Splunk rapidly transitioning its pricing model to a subscription, you know, platform, if you will. And of course, that's what Green Lakes all about. What makes Splunk a good fit for Green Lake and vice versa? What does it mean for customers? >>Sure, So a couple different parts, I think, make make this a perfect marriage. Splunk at its core, if you're using it well, you're using it in a very iterative discovery driven kind of follow you the path to value basis that makes it a little hard to plan the infrastructure and decides these things right. We really want customers to be focused on how to get more data in how to get more value out. And if you're doing it well, those things, they're going to go up and up and up over time. You don't wanna be constrained by size and capacity planning, procurement cycles for infrastructure. So the Green Lake model, you know, customers got already deployed systems already deployed, capacity available in and as the service basis, very fast, very agile. If they need a next traunch of capacity to bring in that next data set or run, that next set of analytics right it's available immediately is a service, not hey, we've got to kick off the procurement cycle for a whole bunch more hardware boxes. So that flexibility, that agility or key to the general pattern for using Splunk and again that ability to vertically scale stick multiple Splunk instances into containers and load more and more those up on these physical boxes right gives you great cost economics. You know, Splunk has a voracious appetite for data for doing analytics against that data less expensive, we can make that processing the better and the ability to really fully sweat, you know, sweat the assets fully utilize those assets. That kind of vertical scale is the other great element of the Green Lake solution. >>Yes. I mean, when you think about the value prop for for customers with Splunk and HP green, that gets a lot of what you would expect from what we used to talk about with the early days of cloud. Uh, that that flexibility, uh, it takes it away. A lot of the sort of mundane capacity planning you can shift. Resource is you talked about, you know, scale in a in a number of of use cases. So that's sort of another interesting angle, isn't it? >>Yeah. Faster. It's the classic text story. Faster, quicker, cheaper, easier, right? Just take in the whole whole new holy levels and hold the extremes with these technologies. >>What do you see? Is the differentiators with Splunk in HP, Maybe what's different from sort of the way we used to do things, but also sort of, you know, modern day competition. >>Yeah. Good. All good. All good questions. So I think the general attributes of splinter differentiated green Laker differentiated. I think when you put them together, you get this classic one plus one equals three story. So what? I hear from a lot of our target customers, big enterprises, big public sector customers. They can see the path to these benefits. They understand in theory how these different technologies would work together. But they're concerned about their own skills and abilities to go building. Run those and the rial beauty of Green Lake and Splunk is this. All comes sort of pre design, pre integrated right pre built HP is then they're providing these running containers as a service. So it's taking a lot of the skills and the concerns off the customers plate right, allowing them to fast board to, you know, cutting edge technology without any of the wrist. And then, most importantly, allowing customers to focus their very finite resource is their peoples their time, their money, their cycles on the things that are going to drive differentiated value back to the business. You know, let's face facts. Buying and provisioning Hardware is not a differentiating activity, running containers successfully, not differentiating running the core of Splunk. Not that differentiating. He can take all of those cycles and focus them instead on in the simple mechanics. How do we get more data in? Run more analytics on it and get more value out? Right then you're on the path to really delivering differentiated, you know, sustainable competitive basis type stuff back to the business, back to that digital transformation effort. So taking the skills out, taking the worries out, taking the concerns about new tech, out taking the procurement cycles, that improving scalability again quicker, faster, cheaper. Better for sure. >>It's kind of interesting when you when you look at the how the parlance has evolved from cloud and then you had Private Cloud. We talk a lot about hybrid, but I'm interested in your thoughts on why Splunk and HP Green Light green like now I mean, what's happening in the market that makes this the right place and in the right time, so to speak. >>Yeah, again, I put cloud right up there with big data is one of those really overloaded terms. Everything we keep keep redefining as we go if we define it. One way is as an experience instead of outcomes that customers looking for right, what does anyone of our mutual customers really want Well, they want capabilities that air quick to get up and running that air fast, to get the value that are aligned with how the price wise, with how they deliver value to the business and that they can quickly change right as the needs of the business and the operation shift. I think that's the outcome set that people are looking thio. Certainly the early days of cloud we thought were synonymous with public cloud. And hey, the way that you get those outcomes is you push things out. The public cloud providers, you know, what we saw is a lot of that motion in cases where there wasn't the best of alignment, right? You didn't get all those outcomes that you were hoping for. The cost savings weren't there or again. These big enterprises, these big organizations have a whole bunch of other work clothes that aren't necessarily public cloud amenable. But what they want is that same cloud experience. And this is where you see the evolution in the hybrid clouds and into private clouds. Yeah, any one of our customers is looking across the entirety of this landscape, things that are on Prem that they're probably gonna be on Prem forever. Things that they're moving into private cloud environments, things that they're moving into our growing or expanding or landing net new public cloud. They want those same outcomes, the same characteristics across all of that. That's a lot of Splunk value. Crop is a provider, right? Is we can go monitor and help you operate and developed and secure exactly all of that, no matter where it's located. Splunk on Green Lake is all about that stack, you know, working in that very cloud native way even where it made sense for customers to deploy and operate their own software. Even if this want, they're running over here themselves is hoping the modern, secure other work clothes that they put into their public cloud environments. >>Well, it Z another key proof point that we're seeing throughout the day here. Your software leader, you know, HP bring it together. It's ecosystem partners toe actually deliver tangible value. The customers skip. Great to hear your perspective today. Really appreciate you coming on the program. >>My pleasure. And thanks so much for having us take care. Stay well, >>Yeah, Cheers. You too. Okay, keep it right there. We're gonna go back to Keith now. Have him on a close out this segment of the program. You're watching HP Green Lake Day on the Cube. All right, We're So we're seeing some great examples of how Green Lake is supporting a lot of different industries. A lot of different workloads we just heard from Splunk really is part of the ecosystem. Really? A data heavy workload. And we're seeing the progress. HPC example Manufacturing. We talked about healthcare financial services, critical industries that are really driving towards the subscription model. So, Keith, thanks again for joining us. Is there anything else that we haven't hit that you feel are audience should should know about? >>Yeah, you bet. You know, we didn't cover some of the new capabilities that are really providing customers with the holistic experience to address their most demanding workloads with HP Green Lake. So first is our Green Lake managed security services. So this provides customers with an enterprise grade manage security solution that delivers lower costs and frees up a lot of their resource is the second is RHP advisory and Professional Services Group. So they help provide customers with tools and resource is to explore their needs for their digital transformation. Think about workshops and trials and proof of concepts and all of that implementation. Eso You get the strategy piece, you get the advisory piece, and then you get the implementation piece that's required to help them get started really quickly. And then third would be our H. P s moral software portfolio. So this provides customers with the ability to modernize their absent data unify, hybrid cloud and edge computing and operationalized artificial intelligence and machine learning and analytics. >>You know, I'm glad that you brought in the sort of machine intelligence piece in the machine learning because that's, ah, lot of times. That's the reason why people want to go to the cloud at the same time you bring in the security piece a lot of reasons why people want to keep things on Prem. And, of course, the use cases here. We're talking about it, really bringing that cloud experience that consumption model on Prem. I think it's critical critical for companies because they're expanding their notion of cloud computing really extending into hybrid and and the edge with that similar experience or substantially the same experience. So I think folks are gonna look at today's news as real progress. We're pushing you guys on some milestones and some proof points towards this vision is a critical juncture for organizations, especially those look, they're looking for comprehensive offerings to drive their digital transformations. Your thoughts keep >>Yeah, I know you. You know, we know as many as 70% of current and future APS and data are going to remain on Prem. They're gonna be in data centers, they're gonna be in Colo's, they're gonna be at the edge and, you know, really, for critical reasons. And so hybrid is key. As you mentioned, the number of times we wanna help customers transform their businesses and really drive business outcomes in this hybrid, multi cloud world with HP Green Lake and are targeted solutions. >>Excellent. Keith, Thanks again for coming on the program. Really appreciate your time. >>Always. Always. Thanks so much for having me and and take Take care of. Stay healthy, please. >>Alright. Keep it right there. Everybody, you're watching HP Green Lake day on the Cube

Published Date : Dec 2 2020

SUMMARY :

It's the Cube with digital coverage I'm really excited to be here. And so listen, before we get into the hard news, can you give us an update on just And thanks, you know, for the opportunity again. So let's let's get to the news. And you know, really different about the news today From your perspective. And the idea is to really help customers with Yeah, so I wonder if you could talk a little bit mawr about specifically, experts to help them with implementation and migration as well as they want to see resiliency. In other words, you know the customers have toe manage it on So the fantastic thing about HP Green Lake is that we manage it all for the You know, you had a lot of people want to dig deeper into the data. And so one of the best things about this HPC implementation is and in some of the new industry platforms that you see evolving I look forward to it. And really a pleasure to have you here. customers that are longtime HBC customers, you know, just consume it on their own for some of the toughest and most complex problems, particularly those that affecting society. that to, you know, benefit society overall. the new Green Lake services the HPC services specifically as it relates to Greenlee. today, but extend it with Green Lake and offer customers you know, A key key word that you use. Whether they're you know, a startup or Fortune 500 is a lot of camaraderie going on in the space that you guys are deep into, but can you give us some examples of platforms for industry use cases and some specifics You know, you bet, and actually you'll hear more details from Arwa Qadoura she leads are green like So Keith will be coming back to you a little later Good to see you as well there. I mean, you guys are a dominant player and security and analytics and you that tells you the whole story about what led up to the things that actually happened right within And that means putting data at the And we've proven, you know, alot of those things you know, platform, if you will. So the Green Lake model, you know, customers got already deployed systems A lot of the sort of mundane capacity planning you can shift. Just take in the whole whole new holy levels and hold the extremes with these different from sort of the way we used to do things, but also sort of, you know, modern day competition. of the skills and the concerns off the customers plate right, allowing them to fast board It's kind of interesting when you when you look at the how the parlance has evolved from cloud And hey, the way that you get those outcomes is Your software leader, you know, HP bring it together. And thanks so much for having us take care. hit that you feel are audience should should know about? Eso You get the strategy piece, you get the advisory piece, That's the reason why people want to go to the cloud at the same time you bring in the security they're gonna be at the edge and, you know, really, for critical reasons. Really appreciate your time. Thanks so much for having me and and take Take care of. Keep it right there.

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