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HPE GreenLake Day Power Panel | HPE GreenLake Day 2021


 

>>Okay. Okay. Now we're gonna go into the Green Lake Power Panel. Talk about the cloud landscape hybrid cloud and how the partner ecosystem and customers are thinking about cloud hybrid cloud as a service and, of course, Green Lake. And with me or CR Houdyshell, president of Advise X. Ron Nemecek, Who's the business Alliance manager at C B. T s. Harry Zaric is president of competition, and Benjamin Clay is VP of sales and alliances at Arrow Electronics. Great to see you guys. Thanks so much for coming on the Cube. >>Thanks for having us >>would be here. >>Okay, here's the deal. So I'm gonna ask you guys each to introduce yourselves and your company's add a little color to my brief intro and then answer the following question. How do you and your customers think about hybrid cloud and think about it in the context of where we are today and where we're going? Not just the snapshot, but where we are today and where we're going. CR, why don't you start, please? >>Sure. Thanks a lot. They appreciate it. And, uh, again cr Howdy Shell President of advising. I've been with the company for 18 years the last four years as president. So had the great great opportunity here to lead a 45 year old company with a very strong brand and great culture. Uh, as it relates to advise X and where we're headed to with hybrid Cloud is it's a journey, so we're excited to be leading that journey for the company as well as HP. We're very excited about where HP is going with Green Lake. We believe it's it's a very strong solution when it comes to hybrid. Cloud have been an HP partner since since 1980. So for 40 years it's our longest standing OM relationship, and we're really excited about where HP is going with Green Lake from a hybrid cloud perspective. Uh, we feel like we've been doing the hybrid cloud solutions in the past few years with everything that we've focused on from a VM Ware perspective. But now, with where HP is going, we think really changing the game and it really comes down to giving customers at cloud experience with the on Prem solution with Green Lake, and we've had great response from our customers and we think we're gonna continue to see how that kind of increased activity and reception. >>Great. Thank you. Cr and yeah, I totally agree. It is. It is a journey. And we've seen it really come a long way in the last decade. Ron, I wonder if you could kick off your little first intro there, please? >>Sure. Dave, thanks for having me today. And it's a pleasure being here with all of you. My name is Ron Nemecek, business Alliance manager at C B. T. S. In my role, I am responsible for RHP Green Lake relationship globally. I've enjoyed a 33 year career in the I T industry. I'm thankful for the opportunity to serve in multiple functional and senior leadership roles that have helped me gather a great deal of education and experience that could be used to aid our customers with their evolving needs for business outcomes. The best position them for sustainable and long term success. I'm honored to be part of the C B. T s and Annex Canada Organization, C B T s stands for consult Bill transform and support. We have a 35 year relationship with HP or a platinum and inner circle partner. We're headquartered in Cincinnati Ohio. We service 3000 customers, generating over a billion dollars in revenue, and we have over 2000 associates across the globe. Our focus is partnering with our customers to deliver innovative solutions and business results through thought leadership. We drive this innovation VR team of the best and brightest technology professionals in the industry that have secured over 2800 technical certifications 260 specifically with HP and in our hybrid cloud business. We have clearly found the technology new market demands for instant responses and experiences evolving economic considerations with detailed financial evaluation and, of course, the global pandemic have challenged each of our customers across all industries to develop an optimal cloud strategy we have. We now play an enhanced strategic role for our customers as there Technology Advisor and their guide to the right mix of cloud experiences that will maximize their organizational success with predictable outcomes. Our conversations have really moved from product roadmaps and speeds and feeds to return on investment, return on capital and financial statements, ratios and metrics. We collaborate regularly with our customers at all levels and all departments to find an effective, comprehensive cloud strategy for their workloads and applications, ensuring proper alignment and costs with financial return. >>Great. Thank you, Ron. Yeah, Today it's all about the business value. Harry, please, >>I Dave. Thanks for the opportunity and greetings from the Great White North, where Canadian based company headquartered in Toronto, with offices across the country. We've been in the tech industry for a very long time. What we would call a solution provider hard for my mother to understand what that means. But our goal is to help our customers realize the business value of their technology investments just to give you an example of what it is we try and do. We just finished a build out of a new networking and point in data center technology for a brand new hospital is now being mobilized for covid high risk patients. So talk about are all being an essential industry, providing essential services across the whole spectrum of technology. Now, in terms of what's happening in the marketplace, our customers are confused. No question about it. They hear about cloud and cloud first, and everyone goes to the cloud. But the reality is there's lots of technology, lots of applications that actually still have to run on premises for a whole bunch of reasons. And what customers want is solid senior serious advice as to how they leverage what they already have in terms of their existing infrastructure but modernized and updated So it looks and feels a lot like a cloud. But they have the security. They have the protection that they need to have for reasons that are dependent on their industry and business to allow them to run on from. And so the Green Lake philosophy is perfect. That allows customers to actually have 1 ft in the cloud, 1 ft in their traditional data center, but modernize it so it actually looks like one enterprise entity. And it's that kind of flexibility that gives us an opportunity collectively, ourselves, our partners, HP to really demonstrate that we understand how to optimize the use of technology across all of the business applications they need to rest >>your hair. It's interesting about what you said is is cloud is it is kind of chaotic. My word not yours, but but there is a lot of confusion out there. I mean, it's what's cloud right? Is it Public Cloud is a private cloud the hybrid cloud. Now, now it's the edge. And of course, the answer is all of the above. Ben, what's your perspective on all this? >>Um, from a cloud perspective. You know, I think as an industry, you know, I think we we've all accepted that public cloud is not necessarily gonna win the day and were, in fact, in a hybrid world, there's certainly been some some commentary impress. Um, you know, that would sort of validate that. Not that necessarily needs any validation. But I think it's the linkages between on Prem, Um, and cloud based services have increased. Its paved the way for customers to more effectively deploy hybrid solutions in the model that they want that they desired. You know, Harry was commenting on that a moment ago. Um, you know, as the trend continues, it becomes much easier for solution providers and service providers to drive there services, initiatives, uh, you know, in particular managed services. So, you know, from from an arrow perspective, as we think about how we can help scale in particular from Greenland perspective, we've got the ability to stand up some some cloud capabilities through our aero secure platform. um that can really help customers adopt Green Lake. Uh, and, uh, benefit to benefit from, um, some alliances, opportunities as well. And I'll talk more about that as we go through >>that. I didn't mean to squeeze you on a narrow. I mean, you got arrows. Been around longer than computers. I mean, if you google the history of arrow, it'll blow your mind. But give us a little, uh, quick commercial. >>Yeah, absolutely. So, um, I've been with arrow for about 20 years. I've got responsibility for alliances, organization, North America for Global value, added distribution, business consulting and channel enablement Company. Uh, you know, we bring scope, scale and and, uh, expertise as it relates to the I t industry. Um, you know, I love the fast paced, the fast paced that comes with the market, that we're all all in, and I love helping customers and suppliers both, you know, be positioned for long term success. And, you know, the subject matter here today is just a great example of that. So I'm happy to be here and or to the discussion. >>All right, We got some good brain power in the room. Let's let's cut right to the chase. Ron, Where's the pain? What are the main problems that C B. T s. I love the what it stands for. Consult Bill Transform and support the What's the main pain point that that customers are asking you to solve when it comes to their cloud strategies. >>Third day of our customers' concerns and associated risk come from the market demands to deliver their products, services and experiences instantaneously. And then the challenges is how do they meet those demands because they have aging infrastructure processes and fiscal constraints. Our customers really need us now more than ever to be excellent listeners so we can collaborate on an effective map for the strategic placement of workloads and applications in that spectrum of cloud experiences, while managing their costs and, of course, mitigating risk to their business. This collaboration with our customer customers often identify significant costs that have to be evaluated, justified or eliminated. We find significant development, migration and egress charges in their current public cloud experience, coupled with significant over provisioning, maintenance, operational and stranded asset costs in their on premise infrastructure environment. When we look at all these costs holistically through our customized workshops and assessments. We can identify the optimal cloud experience for the respective workloads and applications through our partnership with HP and the availability of the HP Green Lake Solutions. Our customers now have a choice to deliver SLA's economics and business outcomes for their workloads and applications that best reside on premise in a private cloud and have that experience. This is a rock solid solution that eliminates, you know, the development costs at the experience and the egress charges that are associated with the public cloud while utilizing HP Green Lake to eliminate over provisioning costs and the maintenance costs on aging infrastructure hardware. Lastly, our customers only have to pay for actual infrastructure usage with no upfront capital expense. And now that achieves true utilization to cost economics. You know, with HP Green Lake solution from C B. T s. >>I love to focus on the business case because it's measurable. That sort of follow the money. That's where it's where the opportunity is. Okay, See, I got a question for you thinking about advise X customers. How are they? Are they leaning into Green Lake? You know, what are they telling you? Is the business impact when they when they experience Green Lake, >>I think it goes back to what Ron was talking about. We have to solve the business challenges first, and so far the reception's been positive. When I say that is, customers are open, everybody wants to. The C suite wants to hear about cloud and hybrid cloud fits, but what we're hearing, what we're seeing from our customers is we're seeing more adoption from customers that it may be their first put in, if you will. But as importantly, we're able to share other customers with our potentially new clients that that say, What's the first thing that happens with regard to Green like Well, number one, it works. It works as advertised and as a as a service. That's a big step. There are a lot of people out there dabbling today, but when you can say we have a proven solution, it's working in in in our environment today. That's key. I think the second thing is is flexibility. You know, when customers are looking for this, this hybrid solution, you've got to be flexible for again. I think Ron said it well, you don't have a big capital outlay but also what customers want to be able to. We're gonna build for growth, but we don't want to pay for it, so we'll pay as we grow. Not as not as we have to use because we used to do It was upfront of the capital expenditure, and I will just pay as we grow and that really facilitates. In another great examples, you'll hear from a customer, uh, this afternoon, but you'll hear where one of the biggest benefits they just acquired a $570 million company, and their integration is going to be very seamless because of their investment in Green Lake. They're looking at the flexibility to add the Green Lake as a big opportunity to integrate for acquisitions and finally is really we see it really brings the cloud experience and as a service to our customers bring. And with HP Green Lake, it brings best to breathe. So it's not just what HP has to offer. When you look at hyper converged, they have Nutanix kohi city, so I really believe it brings best to breathe. So, uh to net it out and close it out with our customers thus far, the customer experience has been exceptional with Green Lake Central has interface. Customers have had a lot of success. We just had our first customer from about a year and a half ago, just re up, and it was a highly competitive situation. But they just said, Look, it's proven it works and it gives us that cloud experience So I had a lot of great success thus far, looking forward to more. >>Thank you. So, Harry, I want to pick up on something, CR said, And get your perspectives. So when you when I talk to the C suite, they do all want to hear about, you know, Cloud, they have a cloud agenda and and what they tell me is it's not just about their I t transformation. They want, they want that. But they also want to transform their business. So I wonder if you could talk Harry about competence, perspective on the potential business impact of Green Lake, and and also, you know, I'm interested in how you guys are thinking about workloads, how to manage work, you know how to cost optimize in i t. But also the business value that comes out of that capability. >>Yes. So, Dave, you know, if you were to talk to CFO and I have the good fortune to talk to lots of CFOs, they want to pay the cost. When they generate the revenue, they don't want to have all the cost up front and then wait for the revenue to come through. A good example of where that's happening right now is related to the pandemic. Employees that used to work at the office have now moved to working from home, and now they have to. They have to connect remotely to run the same application. So use this thing called VD virtual interfacing to allow them to connect to the applications that they need to run in the off. Don't want to get into too much detail. But to be able to support that from an at home environment, they needed to buy a lot more computing capacity to handle this. Now there's an expectation that hopefully six months from now, maybe sooner than that people will start returning to the office. They may not need that capacity so they can turn down on the cost. And so the idea of having the capacity available when you need it, But then turning it off when you don't need it is really a benefit of a variable cost model. Another example that I would use is one in new development if a customer is going to implement and you, let's say, line of business application essay P is very, very popular, you know, it actually, unfortunately takes six months to two years to actually get that application setup installed, validated, test it and then moves through production. You know what used to happen before they would buy all that capacity at front and basically sit there for two years? And then when they finally went to full production, then they were really getting value out of that investment. But they actually lost a couple of years of technology, literally sitting almost idle. And so, from a CFO perspective, his ability to support the development of those applications as he scales it perfect Green Lake is the ideal solution that allows them to do that. >>You know, technology has saved businesses in this pandemic. There's no question about it and what Harry was just talking about with regard to VD. You think about that. There's the dialing up and dialing down piece, which is awesome from an i t perspective and then the business impact. There is the productivity of Of of the end users, and most C suite executives I've talked to said Productivity actually went up during covid with work from home, which is kind of astounding if you think about it. Ben, you know Ben, I We said Arrow has been around for a long, long time, certainly before all of us were born and it's gone through many, many industry transitions during our lifetimes. How does arrow and how do How do your partners think about building cloud experience experiences? And where does Green Lake fit in from your perspective? >>A great question. So from a narrow perspective, when you think about cloud experience and, of course, us taking a view as a distribution partner, we want to be able to provide scale and efficiency to our network of partners. So we do that through our aero screw platform. Um, just just a bit of a you know, a bit of a commercial. I mean, you get single quote single bill auto provision compared multi supplier, if you will Subscription management utilization reporting from the platform itself. So if we pivot that directly to HP, you're going to get a bit of a scoop here, Dave. So we're excited today to have Green Lake live in our platform available for our part of community to consume in particular the swift solutions that HP has announced. So we're very excited to to share that today, Um, maybe a little bit more on Green Lake. I think at this point in time, there it's differentiated, Um, in a sense that if you think about some of the other offerings in the market today and further with, um uh, having the solutions himself available in a row sphere So, you know, I would say, Do we identify the uniqueness, um, and quickly partner with HP to to work with our atmosphere platform? One other sort of unique thing is, you know, when you think about platform itself, you've got to give a consistent experience the different geographies around the world. So, you know, we're available in north of 20 countries. There's thousands of resellers and transacting on the platform on a regular basis, and frankly, hundreds of thousands and customers are leveraging today, so that creates an opportunity for both Arrow HP and our partner community. So we're excited. >>Uh, you know, I just want to open it up and we don't have much time left, but thoughts on on on differentiation. You know, when people ask me Okay, what's really different about H P E and Green Lake? As others you know are doing things that with with as a service to me, it's a I I always say cultural. It starts from the top with Antonio, and it's like the company's all in. But But I wonder from your perspective because you guys are hands on. Are there other differential factors that you would point to let me just open that up to the group? >>Yeah, if I could make a comment. You know, Green Lake is really just the latest invocation of the as a service model. And what does that mean? What that actually means is you have a continuous ongoing relationship with the customer. It's not a cell. And forget not that we ever forget about customers, but there are highlights. Customer buys, it gets installed, and then for two or three years, you may have an occasional engagement with them. But it's not continuous. When you move to a Green Lake model, you're actually helping them manage that you are in the core in the heart of their business. No better place to be if you want to be sticky and you want to be relevant, and you want to be always there for them. >>You know, I wonder if somebody else could add to and and and in your in your remarks from your perspective as a partner because, you know, Hey, a lot of people made a lot of money selling boxes, but those days are pretty much gone. I mean, you have to transform into a services mindset. But other thoughts, >>I think I think Dad did that day. I think Harry's right on right. What he the way he positioned Exactly. You get on the customer. Even another step back for us is we're able to have the business conversation without leading with what you just said. You don't have to leave with a storage solution to leave with a compute. You can really have step back, have a business conversation, and we've done that where you don't even bring up hp Green Lake until you get to the point of the customer says, So you can give me an on prem cloud solution that gives me scalability, flexibility, all the things you're talking about. How does that work then? Then you bring up. It's all through this HP Green link tool. It really gives you the ability to have a business conversation. And you're solving the business problems versus trying to have a technology conversation. And to me, that's clear differentiation for HP. Green length. >>All right, guys. CR Ron. Harry. Ben. Great discussion. Thank you so much for coming on the program. Really appreciate it. >>Thanks for having us, Dave. >>All >>right. Keep it right there for more great content at Green Lake Day. Right back? Yeah.

Published Date : Mar 17 2021

SUMMARY :

to see you guys. So I'm gonna ask you guys each to introduce yourselves and your company's So had the great great opportunity here to lead a 45 Ron, I wonder if you could kick I'm thankful for the opportunity to serve in multiple functional and senior leadership roles that They have the protection that they need to have for reasons And of course, the answer is all of the above. you know, I think we we've all accepted that public cloud is not necessarily gonna win the day and were, I didn't mean to squeeze you on a narrow. that we're all all in, and I love helping customers and suppliers both, you know, point that that customers are asking you to solve when it comes to their cloud strategies. Third day of our customers' concerns and associated risk come from the market demands to deliver I love to focus on the business case because it's measurable. They're looking at the flexibility to add the Green Lake as a big opportunity to integrate So when you when I talk to the C suite, they do all want to hear about, you know, the capacity available when you need it, But then turning it off when you don't executives I've talked to said Productivity actually went up during covid with work from having the solutions himself available in a row sphere So, you know, I would say, It starts from the top with Antonio, and it's like the company's all in. No better place to be if you want to be sticky and you want to be relevant, as a partner because, you know, Hey, a lot of people made a lot of money selling boxes, but those days are able to have the business conversation without leading with what you just said. Thank you so much for coming on the program. Keep it right there for more great content at Green Lake Day.

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HPE Discover 2020 Analysis | HPE Discover 2020


 

>>from around the globe. It's the Cube covering HP. Discover Virtual experience Brought to you by HP. >>Welcome back to the Cube's coverage of HP Discover. 2020. The virtual experience. The Cube. The Cube has been virtualized. My name is Dave Vellante. I'm here with Stuart Minuteman and our good friend Tim Crawford is here. He's a strategic advisor to see Io's with boa. Tim, Great to see you. Stuart. Thanks for coming on. >>Great to see you as well, Dave. >>Yes. So let's unpack. What's going on in that Discover Antonio's, He notes, Maybe talk a little bit about the prospects for HP of coming forward in this decade. You know, last decade was not a great one for HP, HP. I mean, there was a lot of turmoil. There was a botched acquisitions. There was breaking up the company and spin merges and a lot of distractions. And so now that companies really and you hear this from Antonio kind of positioning for innovation for the next decade. So So I think this is probably a lot of excitement inside the company, but I want to touch on a couple of points and then you get your guys reaction, I guess, you know, to start off. Obviously, Antonio's talking about Cove in the role that they played in that whole, you know, pandemic and the transition toe the the isolation economy. But so let me start with you, Tim. I mean, what is the sort of posture amongst cios that you talk to? How strategic is HB H B two? The folks that you talk to in your community? >>Well, I think if you look at how CIOs are thinking, especially as we head into covert it into Corona virus and kind of mapping through that, that price, um, it really came down to Can they get their hands on technology? Can they get people back to work working from home? Can they do it in a secure fashion? Um, keeping people productive. I mean, there was a lot of block and tackling, and even to this day, there's still a fair amount of that was taking place. Um, we really haven't seen the fallout from the cybersecurity impact of expanding our foot print. Um, quite. But we'll see that, probably in the coming months. There are some initial inklings there when it comes to HP specifically I think it comes back to just making sure that they had the product on hand, that they understood that customers are going through dramatic change. And so all bets are off. You have to kind of step back and say, Okay, those plans that I had 60 9100 and 20 days ago those strategies that I may have already started down the path with those are up for grabs. I need to step back from those and figure out What do I do now? And I think each company, HP included, needs to think about how do they start to meld themselves, to be able to address those changing customer needs? And I think that's that's where this really kind of becomes the rubber hits the road is is HP capable of doing that? And are they making the right changes? And quite frankly, that starts with empathy. And I think we've heard pretty clearly from Antonio that he is sympathetic to the plight of their customers and the world >>on the whole. >>Yeah, and I think culturally 10 minutes do I mean I think you know HP is kind of getting back to some of its roots, and Tony has been there for a long time. I think people I think is very well liked. Andi, I think, ease of use, and I'm sure he's tough. But he's also a very fair individual, and he's got a vision and he's focused. And so, you know, I think again, as they said, looking forward to this decade, I think could be one that is, you know, one of innovation. Although, you know, look, you look at the stock price, you know, it's kind of piqued in November 19. It's obviously down like many stocks, so there's a lot of work to do there, and it's too. We're certainly hearing from HP. This notion of everything is a service that we've talked about green like a lot. What's your sense of their prospects going forward in this, you know, New Era? >>Yeah, I mean, Dave, one of the biggest attacks we've heard about H E in the last couple of years, you know the line Michael Dell would use is you're not going to grow by, say, abstraction. But as a platform company, HP is much more open. From what I've seen in the HP that I remember from, you know, 5 to 10 years ago. So you look at their partner ecosystem. It's robust. So, you know, years ago, it seemed to be if it didn't come out of HP Labs, it wasn't a product, you know. That was the services arm all wanted to sell HP here. Now, in this software defined world working in a cloud environment, they're much more open to finding that innovation and enabling it. So, you know, we talk about Green Lake Day. Three lakes got about 1000 customers right now, and a big piece of that is a partner. Port Police, whether it's VM Ware Amazon Annex, were H B's full stack themselves. They have optionality in there, and that's what we hear from from users is that they want flexibility they don't want. You know, you look at the cloud providers, it's not, you know, here's a solution. You look at Amazon. There's dozens of databases that you can use from Amazon or, if you use on top of Amazon, so H p e. You know, not a public cloud provider, but looking more like that cloud experience. They've done so many acquisitions over the years. Many of them were troubled. They got rid of some of the pieces that they might have over paid for. But you look at something like CTP them in this multi cloud world in the networking space, they've got a really cool, open source company, the company behind spiffy, inspire. And, you know, companies that are looking at containers and kubernetes, you know, really respond to say, Hey, these are projects that were interesting Oh, who's the company that that's driving that it's HP so more open, more of a partner ecosystem definitely feels that there's a lot there that I respect and like that hp >>well, I mean, the intent of splitting the company was so that HP could be more focused but focused on innovation was the intent was to be the growth company. It hasn't fully played out yet. But Tim, when you think about the conversations that CIOs are having with with HPI today versus what they were having with hpe HP, the the conglomerate of that the Comprising e ds and PCs, I guess I don't know, in a way, more more Dell like so Certainly Michael Dell's having strategic conversations, CIOs. But you got to believe that the the conversations are more focused today. Is that a good thing or a jury's still out? >>No, it absolutely is a good thing. And I think one of the things that you have to look at is we're getting back to brass tax. We're getting back to that focus around business objectives. So no longer is that hey, who has the coolest tech? And how can we implement that tax? Kind of looking from a tech business? Ah, spectrum, you're now focused squarely is a C i. O. You have to be squarely focused on what are the business objectives that you are teamed up for, and if you're not, you're on a very short leash and that doesn't end well. And I think the great thing about the split of HP HP e split and I think you almost have to kind of step back for a second. Let's talk about leadership because leadership plays a very significant role, especially for CIOs that are thinking about long term decisions and strategic partners. I don't think that HP necessarily had the right leadership in place to carry them into that strategic world. I think Antonio really makes a change there. I mean, they made some really poor decisions. Post split. Um, that really didn't bode well for HP. Um, and frankly, I talked a bit about that I know wasn't really popular within HP, but quite frankly, they needed to hear it. And I think that actually has been heard. And I think they are listening to their customers. And one of the big changes is they're getting back into the software business. And when you talk about strategic initiatives, you have to get beyond just the hardware and start moving up the proverbial stack, getting closer to those business initiatives. And that is software. >>Yeah, well, Antonio talked about sort of the insights. I mean, something I've said a lot about borrowed from the very Meeker conversations that that data is plentiful. Something I've always said. Insights aren't. And so you're right. You've seen a couple of acquisitions, you know, Matt bahr They picked up, I think pretty inexpensively. Kind of interesting cause, remember, HP hp had an investment in Horton works, which, of course, is now Cloudera and Blue Data. Ah Kumar Conte's company, you know, kind of focusing on maybe automating data, you know, they talked about Ed centric, cloud enabled, data driven. Nobody's gonna argue with those things. But you're right, Tim. I mean, you're talking more software than kind of jettisons the software business and now sort of have to rebuild it. And then, of course, do this cloud. What do you make of HP ease Cloud play? >>Yeah, well, I >>mean, >>Dave, you the pieces. You were just talking about math bar and blue data, where HP connects it together is, you know, ai ops. So you know, where are we going with infrastructure? There needs to be a lot more automation. We heard a great quote. I love from automation anywhere. Dave was, if you talk about digital transformation without automation, it's hallucination. So, you know, HP baking that into what they're doing. So, you know, I fully agree with Tim software software software, you know, is where the innovation is. So it can't just be the infrastructure. How do you have eyes and books into the applications? How are you helping customers build those new pieces? And what's the other software that you build around that? So, you know, absolutely. It's an interesting piece. And you know, HP has got a lot of interesting pieces. You know, you talk about the edge. Aruba is a great asset for that kind of environment and from a partnership, that is a damn point. Dave. They have. John Chambers was in the keynote. John, of course. Long time partners. He's with Cisco for many years Intel. Cisco started eating with HP on the server business, but now he's also the chairman of pensando. HP is an investor in pensando general availability this month of that solution, and that's going to really help build out that next generation edge. So, you know, a chip set that HP E can offer similar to what we see how Amazon builds outpost s. So that is a solution both for the enterprise and beyond. Is as a B >>yeah course. Do. Of course, it's kind of, but about three com toe. Add more fuel to that tension. Go ahead, Tim. >>Well, I was going to pick apart some of those pieces because you know, at edge is not an edge is not an edge. And I think it's important to highlight some of the advantages that HP is bringing to the table where Pensando comes in, where Aruba comes in and also we're really comes in. I think there are a number of these components that I want to make sure that we don't necessarily gloss over that are really key for HP in terms of the future. And that is when you step back and you look at how customers are gonna have to consume services, how they're going to have to engage with both the edge and the cloud and everything in between. HP has a great portfolio of hardware. What they haven't necessarily had was the glue, that connective tissue to bring all of that together. And I think that's where things like Green Lake and Green Lake Central really gonna play a role. And even their, um, newer cloud services are going to play a role. And unlike outposts and unlike some of the other private cloud services that are on the market today, they're looking to extend a cloud like experience all the way to the edge and that continuity creating that simplicity is going to be key for enterprises. And I think that's something that shouldn't be understated. It's gonna be really important because when I look at in the conversations I'm having when we're looking at edge to cloud and everything in between. Oh my gosh, that's really complicated. And you have to figure out how to simplify that. And the only way you're going to do that is if you take it up a layer and start thinking about management tools. You start thinking about autumn, and as companies start to take data from the edge, they start analyzing it at the edge and intermediate points on the way to cloud. It's going to be even more important to bring continuity across this entire spectrum. And so that's one of the things that I'm really excited about that I'm hearing from Antonio's keynote and others. Ah, here at HP Discover. >>Yeah, >>well, let's let's stay on that stupid. Let's stay on that for a second. >>Yeah, I wanted to see oh interested him because, you know, it's funny. You think back. You know, HP at one point in time was a leader in, you know, management solutions. You know, HP one view, you know, in the early days, it was really well respected. I think what I'm hearing from you, I think about outpost is Amazon hasn't really put management for the edge. All they're doing is extending the cloud piece and putting a piece out of the edge. It feels like we need a management solution that built from the ground up for this kind of solution. And do I hear you right? You believe that to be as some of those pieces today? >>Well, let's compare and contrast briefly on that. I think Amazon and the way Amazon is well, is Google and Microsoft, for that matter. The way that they are encompassing the edge into their portfolio is interesting, but it's an extension of their core business, their core public cloud services business. Most of the enterprise footprint is not in public cloud. It's at the other end of that spectrum, and so being able to take not just what's happening at the edge. But what about in your corporate data center in your corporate data center? You still have to manage that, and that doesn't fall under the purview of Cloud. And so that's why I'm looking at HP is a way to create that connective tissue between what companies are doing within the corporate data center today, what they're doing at the edge as well as what they're doing, maybe in private cloud and an extension public cloud. But let's also remember something else. Most of these enterprises, they're also in a multi cloud environment, so they're touching into different public cloud providers for different services. And so now you talk about how do I manage this across the spectrum of edge to cloud. But then, across different public cloud providers, things get really complicated really fast. And I think the hints of what I'm seeing in software and the new software branding give me a moment of pause to say, Wait a second. Is HP really gonna head down that path? And if so, that's great because it is of high demand in the enterprise. >>Well, let's talk about that some more because I think this really is the big opportunity and we're potentially innovation is. So my question is how much of Green Lake and Green Lake services are really designed for sort of on Prem to make that edge to on Prem? No, I want to ask about Cloud, how much of that is actually delivering Cloud Native Services on AWS on Google on Azure and Ali Cloud etcetera versus kind of creating a cloud like experience for on Prem in it and eventually the edge. I'm not clear on that. You guys have insight on how much effort is going into that cloud. Native components in the public cloud. >>Well, I would say that the first thing is you have to go back to the applications to truly get that cloud native experience. I think HP is putting the components together to a prize. This to be able to capitalize on that cloud like experience with cloud native APS. But the vast majority of enterprise app they're not cloud native. And so I think the way that I'm interpreting Green Lake and I think there are a lot of questions Greenland and how it's consumed by enterprises there. There was some initial questions around the branding when it first came out. Um, and so you know it's not perfect. I think HP definitely have some work to do to clarify what it is and what it isn't in a way that enterprises can understand. But from what I'm seeing, it looks to be creating and a cloud like experience for enterprises from edge to cloud, but also providing the components so that if you do have applications that are shovel ready for cloud or our cloud native, you can embrace Public Cloud as well as private cloud and pull them under the Green Lake >>Rela. Yeah, ostensibly stew kubernetes is part of the answer to that, although you know, as we've talked about, Kubernetes is necessary containers and necessary but not sufficient for that experience. And I guess the point I'm getting to is, you know we do. We've talked about this with Red Hat, certainly with VM Ware and others the opportunity to have that experience across clouds at the Edge on Prim. That's expensive from an R and D standpoint. And so I want to kind of bring that into the discussion. HP last year spent about 1.8 billion in R and D Sounds like a lot of money. It's about 6% of its of it's revenues, but it's it's spread thin now. It does are indeed through investments, for instance, like Pensando or other acquisitions. But in terms of organic R and D, you know, it's it's it's not at the top of the heap. I mean, obviously guys like Amazon and Google have surpassed them. I've written about this with regard to IBM because they, like HP, spend a lot on dividends on share buybacks, which they have to do to prop up the stock price and placate Wall Street. But it But it detracts from their ability to fund R and d student your take on that sort of innovation roadmap for the next decade. >>Yeah, I mean, one of the things we look at it in the last year or so there's been what we were talking about earlier, that management across these environments and kubernetes is a piece of it. So, you know, Google laid down and those you've got Microsoft with Azure, our VM ware with EMS. Ooh! And to Tim's point, you know, it feels like Green Lake fits kind of in that category, but there's there's pieces that fall outside of it. So, you know, when I first thought of Green Lake, it was Oh, well, I've got a private cloud stack like an azure stack is one of the solutions that they have there. How does that tie into that full solution? So extending that out, moving that brand I do here, you know good things from the field, the partners and customers. Green Lake is well respected, and it feels like that is, that is a big growth. So it's HB 50 from being more thought of, as you know, a box seller to more of that solution in subscription model. Green Lake is a vehicle for that. And as you pointed out, you know, rightfully so. Software so important. And I feel when that thing I'd say HPI ee feels toe have more embracing of software than, say, they're closest competitors. Which is Dell, which, you know, Dell Statement is always to be the leading infrastructure writer, and the arm of VM Ware is their software. So, you know, just Dell alone without VM ware, HP has to be that full solution of what Dell and VM ware together. >>Yeah, and VM Ware Is that the crown jewel? And of course, HP doesn't have a VM ware, but it does have over 8000 software engineers. Now I want to ask you about open source. I mean, I would hope that they're allocating a large portion of those software engineers. The open source development developing tooling at the edge, developing tooling from multi cloud certainly building hooks in from their hardware. But is HP Tim doing enough in open source? >>Well, I don't want to get on the open source bandwagon, and I don't necessarily want to jump off it. I think the important thing here is that there are places where open source makes sense in places where it doesn't, um, and you have to look at each particular scenario and really kind of ask yourself, does it make sense to address it here? I mean, it's a way to to engage your developers and engage your customers in a different mode. What I see from HP E is more of a focus around trying to determine where can we provide the greatest value for our customers, which, frankly, is where their focus should be, whether that shows up in open source for software, whether that shows up in commercial products. Um, we'll see how that plays out. But I think the one thing that I give HP e props on one of several things I would say is that they are kind of getting back to their roots and saying, Look, we're an infrastructure company, that is what we do really well We're not trying to be everything to everyone. And so let's try and figure out what are customers asking for? How do we step through that? I think this is actually one of the challenges that Antonio's predecessors had was that they tried to do jump into all the different areas, you know, cloud software. And they were really X over, extending themselves in ways that they probably should. But they were doing it in ways that really didn't speak to their four, and they weren't connecting those dots. They weren't connecting that that connective tissue they needed to dio. So I do think that, you know, whether it's open source or commercial software, we'll see how that plays out. Um, but I'm glad to see that they are stepping back and saying Okay, let's be mindful about how we ease into this >>well, so the reason I bring up open source is because I think it's the mainspring of innovation in the industry on that, but of course it's very tough to make money, but we've talked a lot about H B's strength since breath is, we haven't talked much about servers, but they're strong in servers. That's fine We don't need to spend time there. It's culture. It seems to be getting back to some of its roots. We've touched on some of its its weaknesses and maybe gaps. But I want to talk about the opportunities, and there's a huge opportunity to the edge. David Flores quantified. He says that Tam is four. Trillion is enormous, but here's my question is the edge Right now we're seeing from companies like HP and Dell. Is there largely taking Intel based servers, kind of making a new form factor and putting them out on the edge? Is that the right approach? Will there be an emergence of alternative processors? Whether it's our maybe, maybe there's some NVIDIA in there and just a whole new architecture for the edge to authority. Throw it out to you first, get Tim Scott thoughts. >>Yeah, So what? One thing, Dave, You know, HP does have a long history of partnering with a lot of those solutions. So you see NVIDIA up on stage when you think about Moonshot and the machine and some of the other platforms that they felt they've looked at alternative options. So, you know, I know from Wicky Bon standpoint, you know, David Foyer wrote the piece. That arm is a huge opportunity at the edge there. And you would think that HP would be one of the companies that would be fast to embrace that >>Well, that's why I might like like Moonshot. I think that was probably ahead of its time. But the whole notion of you know, a very slim form factor that can pop in and pop out. You know, different alternative processor architecture is very efficient, potentially at the edge. Maybe that's got got potential. But do you have any thoughts on this? I mean, I know it's kind of Yeah, any hardware is, but, >>well, it is a little hardware, but I think you have to come back to the applicability of it. I mean, if you're taking a slim down ruggedized server and trying Teoh essentially take out, take off all the fancy pieces and just get to the core of it and call that your edge. I think you've missed a huge opportunity beyond that. So what happens with the processing that might be in camera or in a robot or in an inch device? These are custom silicon custom processors custom demand that you can't pull back to a server for everything you have to be able to to extend it even further. And, you know, if I compare and contrast for a minute, I think some of the vendors that are looking at Hey, our definition of edge is a laptop or it is this smaller form factor server. I think they're incredibly limiting themselves. I think there is a great opportunity beyond that, and we'll see more of those kind of crop up, because the reality is the applicability of how Edge gets used is we do data collection and data analysis in the device at the device. So whether it's a camera, whether it's ah, robot, there's processing that happens within that device. Now some of that might come back to an intermediate area, and that intermediate area might be one of these smaller form factor devices, like a server for a demo. But it might not be. It might be a custom type of device that's needed in a remote location, and then from there you might get back to that smaller form factor. Do you have all of these stages and data and processing is getting done at each of these stages as more and more resources are made available. Because there are things around AI and ML that you could only do in cloud, you would not be able to do even in a smaller form factor at the edge. But there are some that you can do with the edge and you need to do at the edge, either for latency reasons or just response time. And so that's important to understand the applicability of this. It's not just a simple is saying, Hey, you know, we've got this edge to cloud portfolio and it's great and we've got the smaller servers. You have to kind of change the vernacular a little bit and look at the applicability of it and what people are actually doing >>with. I think those are great points. I think you're 100% right on. You are going to be doing AI influencing at the edge. The data of a lot of data is going to stay at the edge and I personally think and again David Floor is written about this, that it's going to require different architectures. It's not going to be the data center products thrown over to the edge or shrunk down. As you're saying, That's maybe not the right approach, but something that's very efficient, very low cost of when you think about autonomous vehicles. They could have, you know, quote unquote servers in there. They certainly have compute in there. That could be, you know, 2344 $5000 worth of value. And I think that's an opportunity. I'd love to see HP Dell, others really invest in R and D, and this is a new architecture and build that out really infuse ai at the edge. Last last question, guys, we're running out of time. One of the things I'll start with you. Still what things you're gonna watch for HP as indicators of success of innovation in the coming decade. As we said last decade, kind of painful for HP and HP. You know, this decade holds a lot of promise. One of the things you're gonna be watching in terms of success indicators. >>So it's something we talked about earlier is how are they helping customers build new things, So a ws always focuses on builders. Microsoft talks a lot. I've heard somethin double last year's talk about building those new applications. So you know infrastructure is only there for the data, and the applications live on top of it. And if you mention Dave, there's a number of these acquisitions. HP has moved up the stack. Some eso those proof points on new ways of doing business. New ways of building new applications are what I'm looking for from HP, and it's robust ecosystem. >>Tim. Yeah, yeah, and I would just pick you back right on. What's do was saying is that this is a, you know, going back to the Moonshot goals. I mean, it's about as far away as HP ease, and HP is routes used to be and that that hardware space. But it's really changing business outcomes, changing business experiences and experiences for the customers of their customers. And so is far cord that that eight p e can get. I wouldn't expect them to get all the way there, although in conversations I am having with HP and with others that it seems like they are thinking about that. But they have to start moving in that direction. And that's actually something that when you start with the builder conversation like Microsoft has had, an Amazon has had Google's had and even Dell, to some degree has had. I think you missed the bigger picture, so I'm not saying exclude the builder conversation. But you have to put it in the right context because otherwise you get into this siloed mentality of right. We have solved one problem, one unique problem, and built this one unique solution. And we've got bigger issues to be able to address as enterprises, and that's going to involve a lot of different moving parts. And you need to know if you're a builder, you've it or even ah ah, hardware manufacturer. You've got to figure out, How does your piece fit into that bigger picture and you've got to connect those dots very, very quickly. And that's one of the things I'll be looking for. HP as well is how they take this new software initiative and really carry it forward. I'm really encouraged by what I'm seeing. But of course the future could hold something completely different. We thought 2020 would look very different six months ago or a year ago than it does today. >>Well, I wanna I want to pick up on that, I think I would add, and I agree with you. I'm really gonna be looking for innovation. Can h P e e get back to kind of its roots? Remember, H B's router invents it was in the logo. I can't translate its R and D into innovation. To me, it's all about innovation. And I think you know cios like Antonio Neri, Michael Dell, Arvind Krishna. They got a They have a tough, tough position because they're on the one hand, they're throwing off cash, and they can continue Teoh to bump along and, you know, placate Wall Street, give back dividends and share buybacks. And and that's fine. And everybody would be kind of happy. But I'll point out that Amazon in 2007 spent spend less than a $1,000,000,000 in R and D. Google spent about the back, then about the same amount of each B E spends today. So the point is, if the edge is really such a huge opportunity, this $4 trillion tam is David Foyer points out, there's a There's a way in which some of these infrastructure companies could actually pull a kind of mini Microsoft and reinvent themselves in a way that could lead to massive shareholder returns. But it was really will take bold vision and a brave leader to actually make that happen. So that's one of things I'm gonna be watching very closely hp invent turn r and D into dollars. And so you guys really appreciate you coming on the Cube and breaking down the segment for ah, the future of HP be well, and, uh and thanks very much. Alright. And thank you for watching everybody. This is Dave Volante for Tim Crawford and Stupid men. Our coverage of HP ease 2020 Virtual experience. We'll be right back right after this short break. >>Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Published Date : Jun 23 2020

SUMMARY :

Discover Virtual experience Brought to you by HP. He's a strategic advisor to see Io's with boa. And so now that companies really and you hear this from Antonio kind of positioning for innovation for the next decade. I think it comes back to just making sure that they had the product on hand, And so, you know, that I remember from, you know, 5 to 10 years ago. But you got to believe that the the conversations And I think one of the things that you have to look you know, kind of focusing on maybe automating data, And you know, HP has got a lot of interesting pieces. Add more fuel to that tension. And that is when you step back and you look at how customers are gonna have to consume services, Let's stay on that for a second. You know, HP one view, you know, in the early days, it was really well respected. And so now you talk about how do I manage this across Well, let's talk about that some more because I think this really is the big opportunity and we're potentially innovation edge to cloud, but also providing the components so that if you do have applications And I guess the point I'm getting to is, you know we do. Which is Dell, which, you know, Dell Statement is always to be the leading infrastructure Yeah, and VM Ware Is that the crown jewel? had was that they tried to do jump into all the different areas, you know, Throw it out to you first, get Tim Scott thoughts. And you would think that HP would be one of the companies that would be fast But the whole notion of you custom demand that you can't pull back to a server for everything They could have, you know, quote unquote servers in there. And if you mention Dave, that this is a, you know, going back to the Moonshot goals. And I think you know cios like Antonio Neri, Michael Dell, Arvind Krishna. Yeah, yeah, yeah,

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Joep Piscaer & Nikola Bozinovic, Nutanix | Nutanix .NEXT EU 2019


 

>>Live from Copenhagen, Denmark. It's the cube covering Nutanix dot. Next 2019 brought to you by Nutanix. >>Welcome back everyone to the cubes live coverage of Nutanix. Dot. Next we are here in Copenhagen, Denmark. I'm your host, Rebecca Knight, along with Stu minimun. We are joined by Nicola Bosun awic. He is the VP GM desktop services at Newtanics. Thanks so much for coming on the show. And also you piss Carr who is an industry analyst and and the many time guest on the cube. That's right. Thank you so much for coming on the show. So you are actually the founder of frame and frame was bought by Nutanix a about a year ago. So tell us a little bit about the acquisition, how its acquisitions are challenging. How has it has, how has it been going? >>It's mayor great year. Uh, there's no better place than a tannics to do end user computing in VDI. And that's what frame was all about. How we make it simple. Uh, that was also all about Newtanics. How do you make computing simple, fast, delightful, and um, we've done, uh, so many things to really bridge that world of on prem and cloud off traditional legacy VDI, like Citrix and VMware on hyperconverged infrastructure and now new broker like frame. And we are really looking at that as one end user computing team and just do what's right for the customers. So it's been a blast. Yeah. Nicola, you know, last year when we had you on, we talked a lot about frame, so you've got a broader mandate now to do the whole desktop services. Give us your view of the landscape a little bit out there as you know, definitely. >>I understand, you know, VDI traditionally, boy was it complicated building that stack, the infrastructure and the software pieces. Um, you know, where are your customers today and you know, how's the industry doing it a whole on that modernization journey. >> Uh, it, as I said, it's been a great 12 months. If you're in VDI. A lot of people who are in the traditional VDI world with brokers like Citrix and VMware are looking to modernize their data centers and there is no better options than uh, hyperconverged and Newtanics to have bite size and linearly, um, scaled infrastructure, run VDI. We continue to innovate, we continue to work closely with um, the vendors, especially Citrix. Um, and at the same time as the focus is shifting to the public clouds, uh, we are, um, having our own opinion and how the broker in the public cloud should look like with frame and then mixing and matching where the desktops really are and really looking at very, um, industry and vertical specific use cases. We're seeing lot of new adoption in healthcare and financial services and with frame, we're seeing a lot of new use cases in education and public sector as well. Right. >>Is this, is this jiving with what you see as the terms of the way they're positioning themselves and what you're hearing from your sources in the market? >>Yeah, absolutely. I mean, um, you know, given the trend that, you know, applications are going into the cloud, um, it makes sense to kind of pick up those, you know, those applications that are harder to virtualize, harder to move to the cloud and you know, find a way to bring them to the cloud as well. To bring that, I don't know, that cloud like experience for the older applications as well. Um, and then the other hand there's, you know, the simplicity of running the, um, the older desktops. Uh, the traditional VDI just likes to set, I mean, it's difficult to set up that whole environment to manage it, to make sure it continues to operate and then to have something that kind of replaces that with a simple solution. I mean, that's what customers are looking for. Yup. >>Nicola, I know some of the conversations I had years ago was, you know, it's not even desktop. It's, it's about my applications, it's about my users. It's about how things, things are changing. They're in today's world where have many customers who are trying to do SAS first. You know, how, how do you, I guess, reframe that conversation of, you know, what was, you know, we spent over a decade with that VDI discussion. Look, I think we're going to end up, when it comes to infrastructure and when it comes to virtualization, we're going to come ups where some somewhere in the middle where not everything's going to be public cloud and that everything's going to be on prem. It's going to be somewhere in the middle of when it comes to application delivery versus full desktops. It started obviously with app virtualization, but more and more people are looking at delivering full desktop solutions. >>There is a great benefit to it, consistent performance, um, you know, isolation and security or some things that come to mind and we are now able to deliver great performance. Look at windows 10, which is a big migration. We can deliver great windows 10 performance using Citrix or using frame and um, for example, some of the innovation that NVIDIA's bringing to market with a virtualizing GPS. So for the longest time it was a niche and as becoming more of a mainstream, if you just want your desktop to be scrolling smoothly, you'll probably need your GPU. So I think that's where a VDI and a simplicity of VDI, um, really takes over. >>So you are talking about speed and security. What about design? How does that play into it? >>Well, kind of Newtanics is all about, you know, data delivery, design and delight. And a, I think with end user computing, uh, it's end user for a reason. It's experienced by a user, it's experienced by an administrator, and at the end of the day, best user experience is going to win. So for administrators, if they can install their applications and manage them in one click, that's a great benefit. Then that's what we bring with combination of hybrid converged and a frame. Same goes for end user experience, um, as opposed to, let's say 10 years ago when everybody was in a wired network. Uh, these days people work from anywhere. They work from Starbucks, they work over and allows a seller a. So it's very important to have that user experience. Um, you know, uh, be delightful. And, um, that's something that we're very focused on. Yeah. I think I've had so many discussions this year about kind of the CX, the customer experience as well as the employee experience. So, you know, I would think that this whole EUC discussion ties it. What, what are you hearing from them and seeing out there? >>So, you know, the, the whole, the whole discussion about experience. Um, I think it's really important. I mean, employees have to do their job. They are given the tools to do the job, but sometimes the tools that are given or you know, slightly older, um, they may not be modern, they may not be web-based, they may not be performant or, so the issue is how do you, you know, in a very specific niche and a very specific use case, how do you make sure that the older application will actually continue running? Right? Um, how do you bring that, you know, windows application into a, um, into a framework where you can actually work with it everywhere on any device? Right. And that's, that's of where, where I see the, um, um, the wish for a good employee experience cannot be broken down by the technical technical limitations of what applications can do. Right. Um, and the issue is, you know, not every application is cloud native, not every, every application runs in the cloud. So you have to have something that kind of bridges that gap between, you know, on the one hand what you want to offer to the employee and the other hand what you're kind of forced to use in specific use cases. Um, there's just no other way than, you know, w using that old windows application. Yeah. >>Nicola, once again, I think back to some of the years of talking about VDI deployments and it was like up, well, organizationally, we're now off to have the desktop team versus the server team and the storage people need to get involved. And you brought a customer to come talk to the analyst yesterday and they didn't, they were like, we don't want to worry about any of this. We want to worry about our application, what's going on. So help, help explain a little bit, kind of some of the transformational potential of the new model. It's almost the same way we can hyper converged compute within storage and hypervisor. We're hyper converging all these different roles from the storage role to the it role to the business for all where to be honest, you don't need three separate people or three separate teams to do it. Um, solutions like, um, frame for example, make it possible to do that from a single pane of glass and to manage it all. So the customer that we had yesterday is doing that thing. Exactly. And it's not going even to there. It, um, in some cases, um, like, Oh customer we're going to have tomorrow Vodafone, uh, that is, they're on a hyperconverged still has lot more than what I'd call a legacy. It's 5,000 applications delivered to 50,000 concurrent users and they're just doing a new refresh shot. It's here to stay. VDI is here to stay. Yeah. What are >>you see as some of the biggest challenges facing companies like Nutanix? Um, particularly in this space? >>So, I mean, the biggest challenge is going to be integration, right? I mean Nutanix is becoming a big company. It's up to you, I don't know, 5,500 people. I think it's a big company. It's a lot of products that, you know, the portfolio is expanding. And so making sure that all of those solutions fit into the portfolio. And again, coming back to that experience, right? Um, so can candidates annex deliver a solution for many different problems within the data center and Indiana briars cloud without it seeming to be, you know, different products that are not integrated where the user experience is bad. I mean, we've all been there where you try to run a data center and you got bogged down with all of the details simply because the products that you use are not integrated. Um, so I think, you know, from, from any tannics perspective, making sure that everything's integrated and worked well with all of the other products in a portfolio, that's going to be the big challenge for the next year. You know, Nicola, we had Dera John this morning and he talked about those experiences. You know, customers shouldn't have >>Oh my gosh. You know, I looked on the slide and there's 30 different Nutanix products and I can't even spell all of them. Um, you know, uh, so, uh, tell us a little bit about, uh, you know, integrating frame through and making sure a desktop just becomes a, you know, a piece of that experience. The big switch for us as being thinking about solutions, not products for that same reason because there's so many products right now in a portfolio and end user computing or VDI has been one of the key solutions that we are focusing on in the next 12 and 24 mods. So would, that really means is that all the products are designed to work seamlessly. So it starts with your, um, hyper-converged, um, widths, um, Citrix as a broker, horizon as a broker, a frame as a broker, but it extends way beyond that. >>So talking about files, you obviously need your enterprise file server that is very, very seamlessly integrated with the end user computing solution. Same goes for flow. You can now have boundaries of who can access VMs or now we have identity based micro segmentation. Um, and then, uh, things like beam where you can seamlessly again have one-click integration and now how much is something costing you right now and how much the same workload would cost you if you ran it on prem or in a different cloud. So I think all of these things are designed to work seamlessly and we spend a ton of time, I mean literally a ton of time to get together with all the teams and to make sure that that user experience is as seamless as possible. >>So I want to go deeper into your past when at the age of 22, you helped lead a revolution that overthrew Slobodan Milosevic. I want to know the lessons that you learned as a revolutionary and how and how you apply them to the technology industry today. I mean because there is a lot of, you know, move fast and break, which is what you were doing then. Yeah. >>Now also like, ah, I, I spoke to a group of executive last night and mentioned, um, uh, those times in the 90s. I grew up in Serbia where the rest of the world was going for dotcom. Boom. We were dealing with, um, um, basically Yugoslavia breaking apart and in 96, from, um, um, pretty anonymous student in the, in a crowds after Milosevic's stolen election, um, I became the leader of what was a very, uh, uh, natural, but also very attentive, um, movement. Uh, within four weeks I was sitting with him just like this, negotiating and negotiating with about a hundred thousand people yelling and screaming under his window, and he had to, um, reverse the results of his election fraud. It took another couple of years. Then we got rid of him. The lesson that I learned at a very young age and just, you know, things just happen was that if you do things in an authentic way, if you speak with conviction ed the right time, you know, there, there are no things that you can do. >>And that was probably the revolutionary spirit that Newtanics shares when I met Dhiraj that, uh, you know, everything's possible that incumbencies not are insurmountable. And that's what led me to move to the U S um, go to my grad school, get BHD start gobbling companies. And looking back, I'm in my mid forties right now. It's pretty crazy to looking at the odds and they'll, what it takes to build a company, make it successful and how risky that is. Just going through some of these experiences when I was in my early twenties, certainly helped me. And, um, I think we'll live in the day and age where the risk is probably overestimated and that we should probably all take more risk. Uh, in modern day and age, the gain is potentially very large and the risk is relatively small. >>Those are that, that's great. But then the timing is everything too >>thing. And I know there was, um, a fall of two 96 20 cup, 20 something years ago. And I remember, um, you know, the biggest lesson that I've learned, if we've done exactly the same thing and we've done it 10 times better six months before or six months after, it wouldn't happen. It was really the right moment and the right wave of underlying energy that if you serve that way the right way, you can move mountains. But it's really important to have a krill clear message to do it with conviction and to do it the right time. >>Right. So it's a little bit of luck, but then also the willingness to take a risk. Absolutely. Excellent. Well, thank you so much. You've and Nicola. Thank you. It was a pleasure talking to you both. Thank you. Thank you. I'm Rebecca Knight for Stu Miniman. We will have more coming up tomorrow from nutanix.next.

Published Date : Oct 9 2019

SUMMARY :

Next 2019 brought to you by Nutanix. So you are actually the founder Nicola, you know, last year when we had you on, Um, you know, where are your customers today focus is shifting to the public clouds, uh, we are, I mean, um, you know, given the trend that, you know, applications are going into the cloud, Nicola, I know some of the conversations I had years ago was, you know, There is a great benefit to it, consistent performance, um, you know, So you are talking about speed and security. Um, you know, uh, be delightful. Um, and the issue is, you know, not every application the storage role to the it role to the business for all where to seeming to be, you know, different products that are not integrated where the user experience Um, you know, uh, so, uh, tell us a little bit about, much the same workload would cost you if you ran it on prem or in a different cloud. I mean because there is a lot of, you know, move fast and break, which is what you were doing then. you know, there, there are no things that you can do. I met Dhiraj that, uh, you know, everything's possible that incumbencies not are insurmountable. Those are that, that's great. And I remember, um, you know, the biggest lesson that I've learned, It was a pleasure talking to you both.

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Claude Lavigne, Dell EMC | WTG Transform 2018


 

>> From Boston, Massachusetts, it's The Cube, covering WTG Transform 2018. Brought to you by Winslow Technology Group. >> Welcome back to The Cube here at WTG Transform 2018, I'm Stu Miniman and happy to welcome to the program, a first time guest, Claude Lavigne, who's the director of product management and servers at Dell EMC. Claude, thanks so much for joining us. >> Thank you, Stu. >> All right, so I had David Singer on this morning, who is from the EMC legacy side of things >> Yes. >> talking about storage, so you're from the legacy Dell side, if we will. You know we're working on servers. So tell us a little bit about your background and what you work on these days. >> So yes, so I'm doing planning for several powers. I've been on the server team for about 18 years. So, all the way from the beginning to now I'm #1 in the world, so it feels very, very good after 18 years. But yeah, that's why we do it. So I'm based in Austin with the product group over there and our role is to optimize and plan the best possible road map and portfolio of servers for rack towers and module. >> Yeah, it's funny, I remember back, you go back 5-10 years ago >> Yes >> and some people were like: wait, Dell does servers? You know, aren't they, you know, here's a Dell laptop sitting in front of me, and it was like Dell's done a lot of servers. I mean, I remember when Dell's Blade server first came out. A lot of pieces, but you know, so get us at a high level. You know, what's Dell's position in the marketplace these days? >> I mean, #1, but also to me, at the profile level #1, but at the platform level, we have one rack, the rack, the R740, our mainstream rack. It's the #1 server sold in the world. So, we're #1 profile, even at the platform level, and the 740 is used across, it's kind of a bedrock, it's used for as a server, but also in all of the EMC solution. It's used for virtualization, VDI, so that platform is kind of the, it's doing very, very well these days. >> Yeah, it's one of those things: see, people sometimes forget that a server isn't just something that does the compute for, you know, when an operating system sits on it, there's servers in lots of devices. Every year when I go to Dell World, I would see that giant OEM rack, >> Yes. >> and it was servers, OEM storage, OEM, HCI of course all has servers inside of it. And it was one of those things when the acquisition was initially announced of EMC, it was like, well, look, EMC both in their products and bundled with their solutions really pushes a lot of servers >> Yes. >> that didn't get talked about, you know, in the discussion. >> So now it's great for us. We have the full portfolio. I mean, every day you're going to see new announcements. We're going to have the best VFC solution, the best VxRail. We have best in class, you know, performance, and all that, I mean, the big part I mean, it's the research of years and investments and the system management we have at the server level. Because we have a great automation and system management, we're able to kind of reimagine or create profile on our servers, so it can be a VDI server again, but the best VSUN server or the best VxRail server. And all that because we have a great system management engine called the iTrack 9 inside our servers. And that's years of engineering and6 development, but now finally, now you have the hardware on the system management. We get the reconnection from the customers, and I think that's what made us #1. I mean, we see a lot of acceptance in 14G, a lot of demand for our security and system management capabilities. So I think that's the overall solution that help us, I mean, get to the point. >> All right, so Claude actually as an industry the server business is doing pretty well. >> Yeah. >> Especially for the last few quarters. What's driving growth? You're working on the product strategy, you know, what are some of the interesting nuggets in the portfolio? >> All, I mean, so how much we have to call. So the, like I just mentioned, the one year and two year servers but there is a couple pockets on innovations, so that's what we did in the last few months. So, I mean, the first one is, you see different key or card architecture that something to be very interesting not on the AMD, so we're trying to balance the portfolio to really showcase each of the goodness of this architecture. So that's why we launched the full AMD portfolio not a long time ago. Then, the other one is in the full circuit. What's really interesting, something I've never seen in 15 years, more and more people are doing, not on the database, machine learning, AI on full server, they're requiring more chip use and all flash solution within the server to get the best possible performance. So that's what we did, we announced that a month ago at the award and now in the future, it's the, we're moving to kinetic architectures. So we had a preview at the award of our Annex platform that we're going to launch later this year. And that one is really going to take the IT infrastructure to the next level. So, it's designed for the next 10 years of, again, modular, flexible, kinetic architecture that not only can optimize the right balance between compute and storage, but future technology like all flash and in-memory compute with the right fabric. So that's what you're going to see from us. It's going from the traditional rack servers to this advanced, modular architecture for the big design for the next 10 years. >> Claude, maybe give us a little compare and contrast. How is the module architecture different from what we saw on traditional racks or even blade servers? >> Yeah, so the traditional blade servers, I mean the, we don't blade for, I don't know, 10-15 years. And in the past it was, compute and then outer storage will external to a send. It was very traditional, but now with scale out storage, #1, scale out storage and all this HCI solution, customers asking us have very flexible computer and storage architecture. So that's kind of the first step and most of the blade architecture today are out there. It's like storage and compute, but moving forward we're going to go way beyond that. It's, we're going to have blocks of memory and GPU and flash storage, you know, and different cares of, you know, architecture ahead of the traditional storage. And if you look at the modular architecture, nobody else can deal with that today. Annex is going to be the first platform that can handle all that. It's not going to happen in the next three months, but the chassis is designed to be ready for this architecture of the future. Because we have very unique design in the bag. You know, we're getting rid of the traditional midplane that we have in the past and our competition is still using today. So it's going to be much more open to future, flexible, connectivity in the back of the chassis. So, that's why they never asked us to be ready for these next 10 years of IT innovation. >> Alright, so, Claude we're here at the Winslow Technology user event. What kind of feedback are you hearing from Winslow and their customers and what kind of things are you talking to the channel about these days? >> I mean, we've been in this conference for the last few years and we still think it's a great, great poniverse and they are part of what we call the technical council back in Austin. So, they are CTO sits with us on the PG side to help us plan future warmups, so they are very, very close now. And that's what we're doing, I mean, this, we're trying to optimize the portfolio with these guys. But right now, it's mostly the trying to improve the server, I mean, around storage and compute. So what you're going to see us launching toward the end of the year on the storage side. We're going to have a, remember the #1 server mentioned the alt 740, #1 in the world. Again, talking to the Winslow team and their customers, that server is great, but not good enough, so you're going to see us later this year, based on that feedback launching a new, improved version that will still base, use the 740 base, but be even more optimized for HCI and this several story solution. And that's the perfect example of the feedback we're getting from the Winslow team that we're integrating into the roadmap. So yeah, we are here every year because, I mean these guys are very sharp, they are good. >> Claude, last thing I wanted to ask you is, you know, for a very long time when you thought about the server market, it was, let's watch the intel, the tick-tock, the roadmap. So every few months you could expect something happened. That was what drove the innovation. >> Yes. >> What's the cadence today and what's driving innovation going forward? >> I mean, the cadence is getting faster, so for serving planning it makes it a little bit difficult. Also, now you have again you have these two vendors. Before it's really the innovation and I think that's what made us #1 is beyond the server, beyond the two processors and the storage solution. It's how we manage, how we make sure we have the best security end-to-end. So, our system management, the way we can provision servers, make sure we can do the update in the most secure way. The premise, that's kind of what makes a difference for PowerEdge and I think that's why, I mean, it took years of investment from, you know, the pitching team but I think that's what is making a difference, and the differentiation right now. It's like, you know, our servers are not just like any other servers. They're much easier to, much more secure, much easier to manage, you know, through the entire life cycle. So, I think that's the key differentiation is how we manage the server, you know, so not just at the server level, but we have deployments of thousands of servers. So we have a new console called OpenManage Enterprise. We just launched that, I think that was, what, six months ago, and that's the latest and greatest of one too many managements of servers and it's free. I mean, it's, that's another good think about PowerEdge. You can get OpenImage Enterprise for free. >> Alright, well Claude Lavigne really appreciate the update on everything happening in the server world. Lots more coverage. Check out theCUBE.net for everything we're doing, as well as, we actually take some of the key analysis from the shows that we go to, put that in our podcast that's called theCUBE Insights. Find that on iTunes, GooglePlay, Spotify, your favorite podcast player. I'm Stu Miniman. Thanks so much for watching theCUBE. (techno music)

Published Date : Jun 19 2018

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by Winslow Technology Group. I'm Stu Miniman and happy to welcome to the program, the legacy Dell side, if we will. I've been on the server team for about 18 years. in the marketplace these days? but at the platform level, we have one rack, something that does the compute for, you know, and it was servers, OEM storage, OEM, HCI and the system management we have at the server level. the server business is doing pretty well. Especially for the last few quarters. So, I mean, the first one is, you see different How is the module architecture different from So that's kind of the first step What kind of feedback are you hearing from And that's the perfect example of the feedback So every few months you could expect something happened. so not just at the server level, but we have some of the key analysis from the shows that we go to,

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Nutanix Keynote Day 2 Afternoon final thank yous


 

whether you're just getting started in terms of transforming your data center modernizing looking at hyperconvergence infrastructure or whether you're building out your cloud strategy thinking about private public distributed clouds Nutanix and the partners that you met here are committed to helping you on that journey I am very excited and proud to share that together we have made quite an impact on the four organizations that were here at dot next is part of our dot heart initiative girls intact the women's Sports Foundation move the foundation for hospital art and workforce opportunity services we have thanks to your generosity donated more than 7,500 dollars now we have a couple more hours to go to get to ten thousand and I know that we can do it so thank you so much for your generosity and be sure to take advantage of the last couple of hours I'm a solutions Expo to grab some tokens and get us to ten thousand dollars it is also my pleasure in the spirit of giving to award this tricked-out Nutanix colored Trek bicycle to one lucky winner from our social contest trek has been a customer of newt annexes since 2014 and like Nutanix they share a number of business values around giving back into the community creating positive change building things that last memories relationships products and so I'd like to take a moment to please welcome back out to stage Nutanix CMO Ben Gibson to help me do the honors [Music] [Applause] welcome back hey Julie that's a gorgeous bike yeah lights it's very like carbon fiber frame look at this thing Wow sleek can you tell me a little bit about it you know Julie this bike I mentioned before I'm a cyclist this is not only in beautiful Nutanix brand color it's got top-of-the-line component REE Shimano El Tigre this thing all comes together I'd like to think of this as hyperconvergence for the cyclist just as beautiful the same impute value it does have a Nutanix monkey on the front all right so we ready to unveil our winner let's do it all right so the winner of the trek social contest is Rob chlorine are you here yeah now Rob yeah come on up you got to come you know check this out we're not gonna ask you to clip in well actually maybe you should clip in I'm not sure we can ship it home for you so maybe you just ride it all the way home where you from New York from New York it's just a short ride back up there congratulations Rob we'll get this ship to you awesome thank you I think we have someone help you out done okay been in the spirit of giving I think I'm just gonna continue let the good times roll yeah in the beginning yesterday you also put out a challenge to our next audience trying to find the Easter eggs that were in the brand video yeah so we got some good responses people were hunting watching the video if you look carefully you could see some of these Easter eggs that were popping up on this video you look carefully you see some Nutanix logo you see prism up on the screen for someone who's showing freedom to get a lot of work done the one my favorite actually is number three there that's artistic the Nutanix acts in the sky so Julie we had a lot of people that tweet it in to try to identify and we have a winner don't worry yeah it was a little bit harder than I think people thought but there was one lucky winner who was one of the first people to find the Nutanix Easter eggs and that is Chad door are you here dad or are you here so you'll recall Chad gets to join us at dot next 2019 all expenses paid airfare hotel and pass very good we also intrude on X fashion like to reward the person who's been the most active on our mobile app so this is someone who's been giving us feedback being part of the community very prolific with the dot next app so congratulations to Faizal Joe waves if you are here you also will be joining us at Sonic's 2019 on us and then how many people are interested in the Nook anyone understand if we were given away all right congratulations to Mike Gellar nice job Mike so we have given away two prizes all expenses paid to dot next 2019 however we haven't mentioned where that's going to be Julie where is dot next 2019 well I think maybe in the spirit of the the culinary theme that we've been on we had Anthony Bourdain on stage we could make us a challenge we will throw out three culinary hints to you Nutanix employers you may not play and I think I have oh I do I have one more science cookbook for whoever gets it right all right so everything you get it right shout it out we've got people in the audience you're gonna be listening and then why don't you do the honors of the first clue all right first hint we're going to a place that's going undergoing a culinary revolution there's a famous chef named Jimmy Martinez just opened up a new restaurant renowned for handcrafted tacos I'm not sure with mr. Modine would say about that but handcrafted they sound delicious to me no I'm here too a few coming out let me give you a second I don't I'm not hearing it this city is also renowned the city is also renowned for celebrating the medieval era so you can enjoy a four-course meal while you're watching nice just for their honor I haven't yet say it again Anaheim yes so you will be joining us dot next 2019 in the sunny Southern California area of Anaheim so please mark your calendars May 7 through 9 and then of course if you really enjoyed the learning and the fun that we had this week and maybe some of your teammates weren't able to join you we will be out on dot next on tour coming to a city near you and if you enjoy the conference experience and would like to participate six months from now across the pond please feel free to join us at Dominic's conference in London from November 27th through 29 and I think maybe one of the the high notes to end on then might be to circle back on freedom yeah you know like I said when I opened our show this week this is a community we talked about enterprise cloud we explored a lot around what invisibility means and what we're achieving together on that front and we talked about why why are we together on it's about realizing new freedoms freedoms to build the data so do you want to build all the way through to freedom to play and I was at the party last night and I saw a good deal play last night too you know we were thrilled to have you join us here this week as a continuation of this growing community I want to thank you for your time and your energy and your engagement to make this what it is and I thought also I wanted to mention a couple things first of all thank you to all the wonderful Nutanix engineers and employees that worked so hard to bring this all together and there's two people in particular I want to acknowledge as part of our Newt annex family and broader community here that really put their heart and soul into making this experience what it is the first is Aaron Alonso and her wonderful team who create this entire event thank you very much Aaron amazing there's another gentleman named Rohit Goyal and he's not the only one but Rohit more than anyone else and his colleagues spend immeasurable amounts of time creating the wonderful content that showed up in all of our breakout sessions Rohit thank you so much and as a reminder those breakout sessions actually continue our last said right after this session here we'll go to our last set of breakout sessions and then we're going to depart for home so again Julie and I both thank you so much for being a part of this week hope to see you in London and if not London I heard a yes and if not London certainly we'll see you in Southern California beautiful Anaheim next year thank you so much baby thank you Jordao free [Applause] ladies and gentlemen this concludes our afternoon keynote breakout sessions will begin in 20 minutes

Published Date : May 10 2018

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to circle back on freedom yeah you know

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INFINIDAT Waltham Ribbon Cutting: Brian Carmody Interview


 

it's the cue now here's your host stool minimun hi this is Stu miniman with Wikibon with a special presentation of the cube here at the ribbon cutting at infinite at new briefing center in Waltham Massachusetts excited to have with me Brian Carmody who is the CTO of infinite at Brian thanks for joining me hey Stuart how you doing I'm doing great so we've talked to some of your team here got on the inside so here we're outside but we're going to be digging into some of the innards of what's going on in the industry so yeah Brian you know not much has been going on in the storage industry let me see in the last month we had the you know finalization of the largest kind of acquisition / merger in the industry of technology with Dell buying EMC and Newt annex just IP ode so you know when we've got the CTO we always want to kind of dig in you know what what's in your head what what are the big kind of mega trends that you're seeing and how's that impact what you're doing yeah so this was obviously it's been a crazy era of innovation for us I would even just looking back at the past two years you know 2016 or let's say 2015 was kind of the year that storage got fast it was the year that NAND flash at the knee of the adoption curve and every marketing person everywhere was hashtag AFA and then 2016 was kind of the year we think that storage got commoditized this was when software-defined in hyper converged technologies kind of hit the knee of the adoption curve it was capped just like 2015 was capped by the pure IPO 2016 was capped by the mechanics IPO telling is a really interesting question of what comes next like what's the next mountain that we're going to climb as an industry and we're hearing really interesting things from customers about what their priorities and what their challenges are so first off going into 2017 one of the really interesting phenomenon is that the requirements from traditional enterprise let's say a CTO of a bank that's building a next-generation data center versus a mega cloud provider those requirements are starting to converge so this idea that the cloud is one thing an enterprise is something else I think we're starting to kind of move past that obviously there's a huge trend still going on for compute heavy workloads to move off premise into into public clouds and kind of a net flow of storage heavy workloads tend to move on premise but I think we're at the point now where we're kind of reaching an equilibrium point between those two so that is certainly one trend another thing that we're hearing very much about is the the rise of new KPIs for measuring IT systems acquisition cost is still a big piece of the equation but new technologies are new new new metrics like power space and cooling are becoming very critically important because with the transition to the cloud even CIOs of very large fortune 500 companies their computations are often happening for the first time now in spaces where they are a tenant in someone else's get they are renting space or renting capacity so all this is putting a lot of pressure on systems designers to really focus on density of storage and density of computation and you know we see that this is contributing to the rise of a new class of storage technologies called hyper storage systems which are designed to to meet those goals all right so so Brian I'm I've tried to create different market categories before when I join Wikibon it was hyperscale invades the enterprise when people before were they were talking about hyper converged asthma much we talked about we called it server San actually because it was you know the benefits of ass and brought to the server but you know so you've got that term hyper in there is that hyper scales and hyper converge is it some other you know hyperness you know what what's what's the general idea you're trying to get food this new category it so let's take a look at kind of the existing commercially available technologies and it's kind of interesting to look at it and think about it on a two-dimensional axis of looking at the density and then the latency so you have the for example the traditional monoliths these are latency that's low enough for primary storage they do not tend to be very dense you know they're under a petabyte of storage per rack and that's where the industry began that's what a lot of us kind of cut our teeth on there being superseded by all-flash arrays these are higher density because they have data reduction technologies built-in natively into their data paths they have better latency so they're kind of moving up and to the right with respect to the monoliths but they come at a price they tend to be exceedingly expensive and relatively small systems then you have the SDS and the server storage and the scale out stuff they tend to be very close to the density of the monoliths again a half about half a petabyte to a petabyte per rack a regression on latency but they're being widely adopted because the costs are just so much better than the monoliths and the AFA is and that's the entire enterprise storage industry right in this area here now all the way down if you move to higher density you have systems like the Facebook open vault so this is you know an awesome open source storage system that I'm that Facebook developed it's the basis of haystack and f4 two of the largest storage systems in the world right now these are incredibly dense storage systems multiple petabytes per rack but they're very high latency they're used for cold data only and other things like Amazon glacier and whatnot are kind of all clustered down in that high latency but super dense so hyper storage is if you move around that two-dimensional chart is the upper right-hand quadrant it is storage technology that has the reliability of monoliths it has the cost structure the programmability and the the ability to run on any type of hardware that the SDS systems have but it has the density and the data center profile of the hyper scalar storage so this is completely uncharted territory this is where all of the R&D spend companies in like Google and Amazon everybody's racing to try to go figure this out and this is the kind of wild west where we operate we have a three year head start I'm a on-prem part of this but it's not going to last because this is you know it's the remaining uncharted territory in the industry really interesting so you've heard it first hyper storage definitely something I've been hearing for number of years is especially the big financial guys have been they've had hyperscale Envy is really what it was there like you know we spent huge amounts of budgets on IT you know we know our stuff how dare you know a bunch of retail guys basically you know come in here and think that they understand this space so it sounds like you're bringing some of that back to them um you know is infinite out the only ones you know you mentioned some of the you know kind of Google and Facebook are there anybody else that's kind of packaging this for the enterprise other than infinite at not yet so the sum of the of our competitors that are building their systems out of all flash technologies are moving in the right direction but their their media itself has to become a lot more dense and the cost has to drop significantly until they can be realistic plays and until then it's going to be differentiated by scale when you want to do petabyte scale stuff you do it with art with hyper storage architectures and one you want to be small and tight and fast you do it with a FAS but I think those lines will be blurred over time great so it sounds like you've got a clear differentiation compared to kind of just the the software-defined pieces don't deliver on you know some of the density that you're talking about or some of the high level performance when we start getting things like nvme i hear is going to be a game changer for the the hyperscale pieces do we start to see the blurring of lines between some of these architectures or is this something that you know two years from now you're going to say ok here's the last wave and here's the next wave yeah so I mean if you take a longer view instead of two years I mean if we if we look at a five and a ten year view this is all there is going forward there's hyperscale architectures or disaggregated architectures which are for compute heavy storage light workloads and then you have hyper storage which is for storage heavy compute neutral workloads and going forward if you take a 10-year window that's all there is out there well Brian I'm hoping we can do a whiteboard with you sometime in the future or maybe there'll be some kind of you know thesis on you know the kind of the hyperscale the hyper storage category but appreciate you here sharing it with our audience here I want to give you the final word as to kind of you know that the hard work that still needs to be done in the storage industry over the next few years go Patriots alright well we'll drop the mic there thank you brian says is so much for joining us and thank you for watching the cube

Published Date : Nov 14 2016

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