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Roland Lee & Hawn Nguyen Loughren | AWS re:Invent 2022 - Global Startup Program


 

>>Good afternoon everybody. I'm John Walls and welcome back to our coverage here on the cube of AWS Reinvent 22. We are bringing you another segment with the Global Startup Program, which is part of the AWS Start Showcase, and it's a pleasure to welcome two new guests here to the showcase. First, immediately to my right Han w lre. Good to see you Han. Good to see you. The leader of the Enterprise Solutions Architecture at aws. And on the far right, Rolin Lee, who is the co-founder and CEO of Heim Doll Data. Roland, good to see you. Great >>To be here. >>All right, good. Thanks for joining us. Well first off, for those at home, I may not be familiar with Heim Doll. What do you do? Why are you here? But I'll let you take it from there. >>Well, we're one of the sponsors here at AWS and great to be here. We offer a data access layer in the form of a proxy, and what it does is it provides complete visibility and the capability to enhance the interaction between the application and one's current database. And as a result, you'll, the customer will improve database scale, database security and availability. And all these features don't require any application changes. So that's sort of our marketing pitch, if you will, all these types of features to improve the experience of managing a database without any application >>Changes. And, and where's the cloud come into play then, for you then, where, where did it come into play for you? >>So we started out actually helping out customers on premise, and a lot of enterprise customers are moving over to the cloud, and it was just a natural progression to do that. And so aws, which is a key part of ours, partners with us to help solve customer problems, especially on the database side, as the application being application performance tends to have issues between the interaction between the application database and we're solving that issue. >>Right. Sohan, I mean, Roan just touched on it about OnPrem, right? There's still some kickers and screamers out there that, that don't, haven't bought in or, or they're about to, but you're about to get 'em. I, I'm sure. But talk about that, that conversion or that transition, if you would, from going OnPrem into a hybrid environment or to into the, the bigger cloud environment and and how difficult that is sometimes. Yes. Maybe to get people to, to make that kind of a leap. >>Well, I would say that a lot of customers are wanting to focus more on product innovation experimentation, and also in terms of having to manage servers and patching, you know, it's to take away from that initiative that they're trying to do. So with aws, we provide undifferentiated heavy lifting so that they can focus on product innovation. And one of the areas talking about Heim is that from the database side, we do provide Amazon rds, which is database and also Aurora, to give them that lift so they don't have to worry about patching servers and setting up provisioning servers as well. >>Right. So Roland, can you get the idea across to people very simply, let us take care of the, the hard stuff and, and that will free you up to do your product innovations, to do your experimentations to, to really free up your team, basically to do the fun stuff and, and let us sweat over the, the, the details basically. Right? >>Exactly. Our, our motto is not only why build when, when you can buy. So a lot of it has to do with offering the, the value in terms of price and the features such as it's gonna benefit a team. Large companies like amazon.com, Google, they have huge teams that can build data access layers and proxies. And what we're trying to do here is commercialize those cuz those are built in house and it's not readily available for customers to use. And you'd need some type of interface between the application and the database. And we provide that sort of why build when you can buy. >>Well, I was gonna say why h right? I mean what's your special sauce? Because everybody's got something, obviously a market differentiator that you're bringing into place here. So you started to touch on a little bit there for me, but, but dive a little deeper there. I mean, what, what is it that, that you're bringing to the table with AWS that you think puts you above the crowd? >>Well, lemme give you a use case here. In typical events like let's say Black Friday where there's a surge traffic that can overwhelm the database, the Heim doll data access layer database proxy provides an auto scaling distributed architecture such that it can absorb those surges and traffic and help scale the database while keeping the data fresh and up to date. And so basically traffic based on season time of day, we can, we can adjust automatically and all these types of features that we offer, most notably automated query caching, ReadWrite split for asset compliance don't require any code changes, which typically requires the application developer to make those changes. So we're saving months, maybe years of development and maintenance. >>Yeah, a lot of gray hairs too, right? Yeah, you're, you're solving a lot of problems there. What about database trends in just in general Hunt, if you will. I mean, this is your space, right? I mean, what we're hearing about from Heindel, you know, in terms of solutions they're providing, but what are you seeing just from the macro level in terms of what people are doing and thinking about the database and how it relates to the cloud? Right. >>And some of the things that we're seeing is that we're seeing an explosion of data, relevant data that customers need to be able to consume and also process as well. So with the explosion of data, there's also, we see customers trying to modernize their application as well through microservices, which does change the design patterns of like the applications we call the access data patterns as well. So again, going back to that, a differentiated heavy lifting, we do have something called purpose built databases, right? It's the right tool for the right purpose. And so it depends on what their like rpo, rto their access to data pattern. Is it a base, is it an acid? So we want to be able to provide them the options to build and also innovate. So with that, that's why we have the Amazon rds, the also the, we also have Redshift, we also have Aurora and et cetera. The Rediff is more of the BI side, but usually when you ingest the data, you have some level of processing to get more insight. So with that, that's why customers are moving more of towards the managed service so that they can give that lift and then focusing on that product and innovation. Yeah. >>Have we kind of caught up or are we catching up to this just the tsunami of data to begin with, right? Because I mean, that was it, you know, what, seven, eight years ago when, when that data became kind of, or becoming king and, and reams and reams and reams and all, you know, can't handle it, right? And, and are we now able to manage that process and manage that flow and get the right data into the right hands at the right time? We're doing better with that. >>I would say that it, it definitely has grown in size of the amount of data that we're ingesting. And so with the scalability and agility of the cloud, we're able to, I would say, adapt to the rapid changes and ingestions of the data. So, so that's why we have things like Aurora servers to have that or auto scale so they can do like MySQL or Postgres and then they can still, like what you know, I'm trying to do is basically don't have to co do like any code changes. It would be a data migration. They still use the same underlying database on also mechanisms, but here we're providing them at scale on the cloud. >>Yeah. Our proxies, they must have for all databases. I mean, is that, is that essential these days? >>Well, good question John. I would say yes. And this is often built in house, as I mentioned, for large companies, they do build some type of data access layer or proxy and, or some utilize some orm, some object relational map to do it. And what again, what we're trying to do is offer this, put this out into the market commercially speaking, such that it can be readily used for, for all the customers to use rather than building it from scratch all the time. >>You know what I didn't ask you was Roy, how does AWS come into play for you then? And, and as in the startup mode, the focus that they've had in startups in general, but in you in particular, I mean, talk about that partnership or that relationship and the value that you're extracting from that. >>The ad AWS partnership has been absolutely wonderful. The collaboration, they have one of the best managed service databases. The value that it that adds in terms of the durability, the manageability, what the Heim doll data does is it compliments Amazon rds, Amazon Redshift very well in the sense that we're not replacing the database. What we're doing is we are allowing the customer to get the most out of the managed service database, whether it be Redshift or Aurora Serverless, rds, all without code changes. And or the analogy that I would give John is a car, a race car may be very fast, but it takes a driver to get to those fast speeds. We're the driver, the Hyundai proxy provides that intelligence so that you can get the most out of that database engine. >>And, and Hfi would then touch on, first off AWS and the emphasis that you have put on startups and are obviously, you know, kind of putting your money where your mouth is, right? With, with the way you've encouraged and nurtured that environment. And they would be about Heim doll in general about where you see this going or what you would like to have, where you want to take this in the next say 12 months, 18 months. >>I think it's more of a better together story of how we can basically coil with our partners, right? And, and basically focusing on helping our customers drive that innovation and be collaboration. So as Heim, as a independent service vendor isv, most customers can leverage that through a marketplace where basically it integrates very nicely with aws. So that gives 'em that lift and it goes back to the undifferentiated heavy lifting on the Hein proxy side, if you will, because then you have this proxy in the middle where then it helps them with their SQL performance. And I've seen use cases where customers were, have some legacy system that they may not have time to modernize the application. So they use this as a lift to keep, keep going as they try to modernize. But also I've seen customers who use are trying to use it as a, a way to give that performance lift because they may have a third party software that they cannot change the code by putting this in there that helps optimize their lines of business or whatever that is, and maybe can be online store or whatever. So I would say it was a better together type of story. >>Yeah. Which is, there's gotta be a song in there somewhere. So peek around the corner and if you wanna be headlights here right now in terms of 12, 18 months, I mean, what, you know, what what next to solve, right? You've already taken, you've slayed a few dragons along the way, but there are others I'm sure is it always happens in innovation in this space. Just when you solve a problem you've just dealt or you have to deal with others that pop up as maybe unintended consequences or at least a new challenge. So what would that be in your world right now? What, what do you see, you know, occupying your sleepless nights here for the next year or so? >>Well, for, for HOMEDALE data, it's all about improving database performance and scale. And those workloads change. We have O ltp, we have OLA with artificial intelligence ml. There's different type of traffic profiles and we're focused on improving those data profiles. It could be unstructured structured. Right now we're focused on structured data, which is relational databases, but there's a lot of opportunity to improve the performance of data. >>Well, you're driving the car, you got a good navigator. I think the GPS is working. So keep up the good work and thank you for sharing the time today. Thank you. Thank you, joy. Do appreciate it. All right, you are watching the cube. We continue our coverage here from AWS Reinvent 22, the Cube, of course, the leader in high tech coverage.

Published Date : Nov 30 2022

SUMMARY :

Good to see you Han. Why are you here? a data access layer in the form of a proxy, and what it does is it And, and where's the cloud come into play then, for you then, where, where did it come into play for you? and a lot of enterprise customers are moving over to the cloud, and it was just a that conversion or that transition, if you would, from going OnPrem into a hybrid environment or and patching, you know, it's to take away from that initiative that they're trying to do. the hard stuff and, and that will free you up to do your product innovations, So a lot of it has to do with offering the, the value in terms So you started to touch on a little bit there for me, but, but dive a little deeper there. Well, lemme give you a use case here. but what are you seeing just from the macro level in terms of what people are doing and thinking about the database The Rediff is more of the BI side, but usually when you ingest the data, you have some level of processing Because I mean, that was it, you know, what, seven, eight years ago when, then they can still, like what you know, I'm trying to do is basically don't have to co do like any I mean, is that, is that essential to use rather than building it from scratch all the time. And, and as in the startup mode, the focus that they've so that you can get the most out of that database engine. you have put on startups and are obviously, you know, kind of putting your money where your mouth is, right? heavy lifting on the Hein proxy side, if you will, because then you have this proxy in the middle where I mean, what, you know, what what next to solve, right? to improve the performance of data. up the good work and thank you for sharing the time today.

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Michael Garski, Fender | ServerlessConf 2018


 

>> From the Regency Center in San Francisco, it's theCUBE, covering Serverlessconf, San Francisco, 2018. Brought to you by SiliconANGLE Media. >> Hi, I'm Stu Miniman, and you're watching theCUBE here at Serverlessconf, 2018 in San Francisco. Happy to welcome to the program Michael Garski, who's the director of platform engineering at Fender. Thanks so much for joining me. >> Thanks, Stu. Thanks for having me on. >> All right, so, luckily, I don't need to introduce Fender because I think most of our audience will be familiar with, you know, Fender, guitars, music, all that stuff, but we're going to talk a little bit about the tech side. >> Okay. >> Even though, let me ask, there's a question I usually ask. Most companies, you know, going through the digital transformation, lots of changes there. How does digital impact Fender? >> Digitally, Fender started a digital division in late 2015 and it was a focus on all-new digital products to complement our well-known physical products. Since then we've launched Fender Mod Shop, where a user can order a customized guitar online, have it delivered in a month. We have a single sign-on solution across all of our web and mobile applications, a guitar tuner, we have connected amplifiers, with companion apps to control amplifiers remotely. And our flagship product is Fender Play, which is an instructional app which allows the user to learn to play guitar, ukulele, and coming soon, bass. >> Love it. I'm guessing that has something to do with what you're involved with on the cloud and Serverless side to enable those technologies on the mobile side. >> Exactly. We've fully embraced AWS Lambda to support all of the services for the web and mobile applications. >> Okay, so A Cloud Guru's a training company and we've talked to them extensively as to why Serverless was a good fit for them, and enabled them to do it, but bring us through what led to your adoption of AWS Lambda, give us a little bit about what kind of technologies you were using before, and how you got to this solution. >> Well, we started out building services and go, just standard EC2 based microservices, and then we started tinkering a bit with Lambda. We had to adjust the product catalog from SAP. They could deliver a file, drop it into an S3 bucket, so it was simple enough to create a function that can process that file and ingest it into elastic search. From there, we used custom authorizers with API Gateway mapping templates to save custom tunings for users, and then as we started building for Tone and Play, Tone especially is a very limited audience. It's whoever buys the amplifiers. So we're not talking millions of people, it's going to be hundreds of thousands. So, it was a very good use case to go ahead and do that. Same thing with Play, we're starting a new business that's a great model for us, that we can just pay per usage. >> All right, so, yeah it sounds like you were using cloud and the usage model fit for what Serverless was built for, correct? >> Exactly, yes. >> All right, how much is management aware of, you know, kind of the underlying technology? Is your group, kind of just allowed free reign to kind of deal with this? Or are there anything you need to go to the CFO, and be like, well, you know our billings going to change a little bit compared to what you might have known in the past? >> It's, we pretty much have free reign. And our biggest AWS expense is actually what we pay for, in AWS Glacier for storage for the raw footage, of all the 4K footage from, instructional video shoots, and Lambda on top of that is simply a rounding error. >> Yeah, excellent. And the mobile apps that you've built, are there trials on there? Is everybody up to sign-up to be able to use it? Is it a freemium model or is it a paid model? >> The Tuner is a completely free application. There is an in-app purchase for cord and scale libraries, and some pro features of the tuner. Custom tunings are free. The Play application comes with a 30-day free trial, so user can sign up either on the web, or via the Google or Apple app stores on their mobile device. >> Okay, so, with that kind of model, I would think that Lambda would be nice. There's, you know, you said your expenses aren't that high using this kind of service. >> No, not at all, like I, in the month of June, we spent, I think it was like $132 for 68 million Lambda invocations. And to kind of put that in perspective a bit, it's what we pay for some EC2 services, EC2 instances that support our legacy authentication service, but we're also moving that over to Cognito now so we can get rid of all the EC2 instances. >> Okay, when you started using this technology, how'd you first learn about it? How'd you get up to speed on it? Tell us a little bit about kind of, training adoption. >> It was a lot of experimentation. So, we have it set up where we use one account for our QA and production environments and another account for our development environment. All the engineers on the team have free-reign to do whatever they want to in the development environment. They can spin up whatever they need to. So we just started playing around with things and experimenting. Like, let's hook up Lambda function to API Gateway, oh, this is going to work really well! And just kind of proceeded down that path. >> All right, great, and any learnings, anything that you tried playing with and said, like wow, this just isn't going to be a fit for what I need? Tell us, you know, what worked, what didn't? >> I would say about the only thing we found that really doesn't fit within Lambda and Serverless would be really very low latency applications. You're doing an auto complete for a search system. You want that snappy. It's, humans observe, I think it's about 100 milliseconds things seemed instantaneous, and that's going to be very challenging to get from API Gateway Lambda to get that consistently. >> Okay, great. And you're speaking here at the conference, how'd that end up happening, what are you looking to share with your peers? >> How it happened was I submitted a talk for a conference and then Drew from A Cloud Guru approached me and asked me to submit I had to tell him I already did, so they went ahead and approved it. And, I'm sharing what we've done and built at Fender Digital, and sort of what we found as far as tools for monitoring, performance optimization, as well as some things to really be cautious of when you're dealing with Lambda, especially with regards to concurrency controls. >> 'Kay, great and, how have you found the show so far? You were at the keynote, got about 500 people here. >> Yeah, it's really interesting. I'd really like the focus all on Serverless. You see, go to a lot of conferences, there might be one or two talks that kind of focus on that. It's nice to have something completely focused in that space. >> All right, and, you know, from a maturity standpoint, are there things that you're looking for in the roadmap from Amazon? They've been baking Serverless kind of into all of their services, so do you expect to stay on Lambda, or are there other services that kind of, you know FAZ or Serverless built into it that you might be using? >> We expect to stay on Lambda for the near term. I don't, we don't have any plans or looking at anything else like Azure or Google Cloud functions, our intention is to stay with AWS. They have a lot of other services, their new machine learning services, we use DynamoDB quite extensively, and so we're probably going to stick with them. >> Yeah, but inside Amazon, they've been expanding their Serverless portfolio as it was. >> Oh, yeah. >> And I remember, I was at the show when Lambda was announced, and then, you know it's Aurora with Serverless underneath and all those, so do you expect to adopt some of those other services that have AWS Serverless kind of baked into it as opposed to just using, kind of a Lambda tool. >> Absolutely, especially with, you just mentioned the Aurora Serverless model. That's one that we're taking a look at and evaluating as we've got some data in DynamoDB, but as requirements have shifted in the business over time it's really, it's becoming very difficult to model in DynamoDB, so we're going to kind of take a look at that, and possibly move to Aurora Serverless. >> I'm curious, how does Fender, does Fender think of the data involved? Is that something that, you mentioned AI, some of these, is that something that you'll be able to take the data and leverage that potentially even make new business revenue streams out of that in the future? >> We're doing some of that already by just watching user, analyzing user behavior so we can improve our products internally. And we're looking at adding more features to where we can really understand what people are doing, and then make our products better. >> All right. Michael, want to give you the final word. For your peers out there that might be saying hey, I've heard of Serverless, I'm kind of thinking at it, what advice would you give them? >> Just dive in, get started, don't hesitate. It's, it doesn't cost you anything, really to experiment with it. That model works very, very nice. >> Yeah, and it's one of the things that's great. It used to be you would take a lot of period of time and some big investment to be able to try a technology out or maybe you would get some demo, but Serverless is pretty easy to get started on. >> Exactly. Especially if you're using a framework like say, Serverless framework, or maybe using AWS. Excuse me, AWS's Serverless application model, it really helps as far as setting up all the resources that your function needs as well. >> All right well, Michael really appreciate you riffing with us on your deployments with Serverless and hope your peers will definitely check it out. All right, lots more coverage here from The Serverless Conference here in San Fransisco. I'm Stu Miniman, and thanks for watching theCUBE. (electronic music)

Published Date : Aug 2 2018

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by SiliconANGLE Media. Hi, I'm Stu Miniman, and you're watching Thanks for having me on. All right, so, luckily, I don't need to introduce Most companies, you know, going through and it was a focus on all-new digital products I'm guessing that has something to do with all of the services for the web and mobile applications. and enabled them to do it, but bring us through what and then we started tinkering a bit with Lambda. And our biggest AWS expense is actually what we pay for, And the mobile apps that you've built, and some pro features of the tuner. There's, you know, you said your expenses aren't And to kind of put that in perspective a bit, Okay, when you started using this technology, All the engineers on the team have free-reign to do and that's going to be very challenging to get from what are you looking to share with your peers? to submit I had to tell him I already did, 'Kay, great and, how have you found the show so far? You see, go to a lot of conferences, our intention is to stay with AWS. Yeah, but inside Amazon, they've been expanding and then, you know it's Aurora with and possibly move to Aurora Serverless. and then make our products better. what advice would you give them? really to experiment with it. and some big investment to be able to try a technology all the resources that your function needs as well. All right well, Michael really appreciate you riffing with

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Andy Jassy Keynote Analysis | AWS re:Invent


 

>> Voiceover: Live from Las Vegas, it's theCUBE, covering AWS re:Invent 2017. Presented by AWS, Intel, and our ecosystem of partners. >> Hey, hello everyone. Welcome back to day two of live coverage as theCUBE's exclusive analysis coverage of AWS re:Invent 2017. I'm John Furrier, co-host on set one with Stu Miniman here, analyst at Wikibon. And we got two sets here at Amazon re:Invent The first time we've done two sets, so much content. We have our directors' set with captains' chairs over there getting all the community content. And all the folks doing the innovation here at AWS. Stu, a lot to talk about. We've had companies come through, tell us about their innovation with AWS. But the bottom line is Andy Jassy's keynote just went off. I mean, he's like the energizer bunny. He keeps going and going and going. Announcement after announcement. I broke that Forbes story, laid out what ended up turning out to be the core messaging. Tons of stories on SiliconANGLE.com around Andy Jassy's exclusive interview that we had about a week and a half ago, prior to re:Invent. He's geared up. He's giddy up, as they say, his favorite word. He's taken on the competition. He took Oracle head on and called Oracle a company that abuses their customers. That was hard core, "abuse." He used the word, "abuse." In this culture, he could have just said, "predator." He's that kind of competitive vibe. Microsoft kind of called out Vinder 2 on the chart. Laying out the sets and services. Amazon putting the aggressive we're real stamp out there. What's your thoughts? You got the only analysis. >> So first of all John, this show is always impressive. One of the ones that I look forward to more than almost anything for the entire year. 43,000 people here. I spent the last day and a half in the analyst sessions. There wasn't a single analyst that was like, "Ho-hum." There are so many announcements. You go down the list and the number 73rd announcement on there, you're like, "I'm not sure." "There's this group of customers that's been waiting "for them and is going to transform their business. "It's potentially going to crush certain parts "of the industry." There's so much happening, there's lots of fanboys here. It's tough not to get exuberant about what's going on. Surprised to see Andy punching a little bit of competitors. Sure, he takes jabs at Larry Ellison every year. You know the red stack stuff, you know database. They're making huge piece on the migration. But talking a little bit more about Google and Microsoft, "Well they must be real competitors," a lot of people are saying, "if they're actually putting them up there, "going through the numbers," so many things we want to dig into here, and throughout the next two days. >> Yeah man, and the fact that he talks about the competitors means that it's still on his mind, although they're still full steam ahead. The thing about Jassy though, getting to know him, his style is not just talk, he walks it more than he talks. He'll only talk trash if he's got a solution in his back pocket. And what's different this year is, the bravado has gone up and the rhetoric around Oracle specifically has been really hard core. I mean he called them an abusive partner to their customers. That's a line in the sand. Those are fightin' words but then he goes on stage and essentially rolls out a series of database options. He spent a lot of time talking about databases, Stu, in his keynote. >> John, we got Aurora Serverless totally talking about, "How many companies, how many resources do you have focused "on managing the infrastructure under your database?" So, RDMS, paired with Serverless, absolutely game changer. People are super excited about it. There's so much going on. But I mean, John just take alone, the one thing they put up, it was one of the Gartner slides, and what's Amazon at now, 44% up from 39%? So there's talk about growth rates and everything like that. Amazon chugging along, dominant in their space, and so many pieces. >> That's the one critique I would give Jassy, the one thing I don't like about his keynote, and I don't like in general about Amazon is, they talk new guard, new guard, old guard is bad. They're using Gartner slides, too. I mean, you couldn't old guard then Gartner. Magic Quadrant has nothing to do with the presentation. It was infrastructures of service, didn't include platform as a service, didn't include SAS. I mean, they're using the wrong scoreboard. Now, I think he throws it up there because buyers kinda use Gartner as kind of a bellwether but they're not, they're old guard. He's got to get better stats and I'm pressuring them to get the stats. What is the scoreboard for cloud? >> Well, john, you know one of the things we always look at, there's two days of keynotes. Today is really the enterprise. Enterprise, Andy says, we're in kind of the early part of massive adoption from enterprise. He's talking enterprise-speak and yeah, they go to the Gartner Magic Quadrant, absolutely. John, what's happening in the software world? I mean, that's really where this is is the change of what's happening in the software. Amazon's at the vanguard. There was plenty of things that I'm sure developers will love here, but it wasn't the big focus of today's keynotes. >> To me, the canary in the coalmine is developers. The canary in the coalmine for the big mega trans are also venture capitalists. The canary in the coalmine of the startup entrepreneurs, those alpha entrepreneurs and last night we had a chance. I sat down multiple one on ones with some venture capitalists. We had some here on theCUBE, then we went to the Greylock, Amplify, and then IVP party and haD a chance to talk to some people. The general sentiment is this, we are in a sea change. It's like a tsunami. The whole beach is exposed before the big wave comes in, Stu. The top venture capitalists like Greylock and others, are looking at this going, "the models have changed." The funding model, the dynamics and everyone is going, "holy shit." That's where this renaissance in software development is happening and the top guys on the entrepreneurial side is saying, "the new way to do it is, "take less funding, I need to get in market fast "with a product, I need a partner that's gonna get me." The rest of the market is deer in the headlights, Stu. They're like, "wait a minute, do I compete with Amazon? "Do I partner with Amazon? "Which could do I use?" They get caught rearranging the deck chairs and they're taking their eye off the ball which is software. >> So john, the struggle I've been hearing, you know, you talked to a bunch of Amazon customers already this week. If you're in the enterprise and you're building your strategy, you got to write it on a whiteboard or an etch-a-sketch because things are changing so fast. The thing I was really looking forward to is what were they gonna be in cubernetties and you know, server list, huge promise, what are they delivering? What was the proof point? And I have to say, definitely impressed with what I saw so far. >> What's the top? I mean first of all, you're in the analyst meeting and I heard feedback from the analysts like, "we can't even comprehend all these things." I want you to boil it down for the folks not here and they're gonna be reading some blog posts and still getting a lot of coverage to go through certainly on theCube and SiliconANGLE will keep on. Bottom line, what's the executive summary in your mind, Stu? What should people pay attention to? What's the most important story? >> It is impossible to give one story to everyone but let me start with, Andy lays out, in your interview for Forbes and what he talked about in the keynote, kind of a compute continuum so if you're just using compute instances, there are some new big ones. If you want your AI stuff, your big data, they've got new compute instances. The bare middle offering is basically the fruits of what they have to do to be able to get vmware on AWS to work and they're now making that same instance available for those that want to be able to do other things with it, bring their own hypervisor, things like that. I could tell you, it's a massive... It's like 72 logical cores, huge amounts of memory and it is gonna be wicked expensive because it's not like most of the instances with Amazon, pick between these six versions, it's one. Here's a server and it's a big server, it's gonna be really expensive. We're gonna be digging in with a couple of vmware executives on that piece but the newer stuff, containers. The last year we've been hearing, Amazon's behind on cubernetties, Amazon's behind on cubernetties. They joined the CNCF for a couple months. Now they have EKS so full supporting cubernetties but here's the nuance, I talked to the people that run that group and ECS is not going away. They're there, we've seen all the time is they say, "oh here's the standard and we're gonna fully embrace it, "but our proprietary's version." Cubernetties doesn't scale the way you need, you gotta do our thing. Cubernetties, we can't integrate it with all our services, you know use our services. Andy was like, "hey, we're gonna give you a choice." Underneath that they had farpoint, I'm sorry fargate. Fargate is the underlying level that basically allows me to take rather than, you know, managing at the server level which really I was managing virtualization before. Now I'm managing at the compute level. When containers came out and Docker was buzzing, it was, "this is the new atomic instance "of how we manage things." Fargate really cooled down at that lower level so you have (mumbles) I keep saying fargate at the bottom level, now I've got ECS or cubernetties and I've got things like istio on top of that. You and I are gonna be at the CNCF show next week, CubeCon and everything like that. I'm sure Amazon is gonna suck a lot of the air out of that with what they're doing and gosh, I haven't even talked about serverless yet. >> First of all I mean, it's hard to boil it down like you said. You can't even breathe at this point, it's so exciting but the thing that is a success at Amazon also could be an Achilles heel because it has complexity so I noticed in messaging was everything to everyone or is everything to everything. It's got this vibe going on... >> Stu: Everything is everything. >> Everything is everything. A lot of people have been criticizing the software business on the community side, supplier side of trying to be everything to everyone. But that's what Amazon's doing, right? They're basically saying, "we're gonna give you everything "but it's not mandated that you choose one." So talk about that dynamic because the people critiquing them and saying, "well they're just throwing all this stuff out there, "it's just a feature." Is it viable? >> It's a great point and right, if you look at traditional enterprise vendors, it was, "oh my god look at that catalog "and all these thousands and thousands of skews "that are out there." I believe the number I heard is in the Amazon services, there's like 30,000 services out there and how do you, as a company, manage that? I talked to one global web company and I gave that. How do you keep up with this? How do you know what to do? And he's like, "well, we reach a certain price point. "I've got two TAMs, they help us work through this." There's no way any one person or even any company could be an expert on this. That's where Amazon needs to get consultative. That's where SIs need to come in. I'll tee up, that's where serverless really comes in because there's certain pieces that, as Andy talked about in the keynote, you know lambda is going everywhere. It's getting integrated into the environment. There's certain pieces of the stack that before I needed to choose my compute instance. I needed to figure out how much memory. I have to do all of these kind of things. If I choose a certain layer of integration, Amazon is gonna take care of those things underneath so absolutely they hear loud and clear that they want to simplify things. What was it, last year light sale was one of the big announcements. There's so many things. Spot instances had a huge growth to be able to drive down costs this year. I mean, dozens and dozens of features that Andy talked about this morning. Serverless, John, really massive wave. (mumbles) >> Let's connect the dots. There's a lot to talk about, we've got Werner Vogles keynote tomorrow. That should be really geeky and tech under the hood, but what Jassy is putting out there is a lot of the stuff you're mentioning but also he's got a wireless camera for facial recognition, they've got transcribe recognition, poly, lex, so the sets of services that are new and new guard like and the use cases from this are interesting. A lot of different connective devices so you see a little IOG. They're kind of laying out like this is a landscape. You know, we're gonna do statcast for MLB, NFL. We got edge devices, databases for S3. The programming model, the new assembly model. It's very modular. This is like the building blocks approach. It's not just the lambda and S3. You've got wireless cameras that do facial recognition. >> Right, because John, I talked to a couple customers that are doing serverless and they're working with Amazon and it's like, "oh well, where do you think of serverless functions as a service?" And they're like, "well really I have you know..." One customer was like, "I have a bunch of my own services "and I have APIs I write and now I can just call into "various Amazon services so it makes..." John, the whole API economy that we've been talking about for many years, you know, this is really Amazon having this come to fruition. I should be able to write my own APIs that can program to many of Amazon's APIs. If Dave Vellante was here, I'm sure he'd be talking about API creep because there's so many pieces but you know, Amazon, Andy is saying, "we have everything of the best." I think a lot of he's trying to attack there. Many customers we've talked to, they're going multi-cloud. What does that really mean? It's Amazon the primary. When are they using Google, Microsoft, Oracle, IBM? There's so many pieces. >> Stu, it's impressive to me. I get called a fanboy all the time, but I just call it as I see it and Amazon is crushing everyone else, in my opinion. There's no doubt about it. When we get more data from Microsoft or Google, then we'll compare, you know, and Oracle. They're not even talking so like they're hiding. They're building again. The tsunami is coming. The war is here. No doubt there's a cloud war and Microsoft is in it to win it. Google's hardcore so this is game on. What Amazon is doing is they're integrating new kinds of interactivity. You start to see Twitch more here. You see the NFL demo on stage that Andy did. The actual data that they're getting from the sensors. They're integrating the application so you know Goldman Sachs never goes on stage and does a testimonial. The guy's basically giving a lovefest for Amazon. That's Goldman Sachs. So you have new software models that are coming. This is something I think nobody's seeing. I think you talk to hardcore dudes. The infrastructures now with serverless is enabling creativity and I think this renaissance is for real. >> John, you nailed something. It's Sandy Carter who you know and have had on theCUBE many times, joined Amazon within the last year, talked about how Amazon, not just AWS but Amazon, is helping customers with buzzword digital transformation but how do you innovate? It's not just Amazon Web Services, there's so many things that the broader Amazon portfolio can tie into, you know. Absolutely, it's impressive. Customers always said it used to be like, "oh how can I have a network that's kinda like Google's?" Now it's "how can I innovate like Amazon?" >> Well Stu, we go to all the shows. We didn't go to Oracle Open World this year. Again, they're kind of silent right now because they don't want to talk to the press because they're gearing up. You've got Oracle, Microsoft, certainly very aggressive, more aggressive than Oracle, but Jassy is laying the line in the sand so we're gonna watch the new guard old guard thing play out. Microsoft is absolutely moving the needle. They are coming up to Amazon. There's no doubt that they're in the sights, in the rearview mirror. I think everyone else is really gearing up. You've got Alibaba cloud in China coming to the US. This is going to be exciting. The cloud game has got so much action in it. It's got the geeky under the hood and the sexiness of the application, Stu. I'm really super excited. >> Yeah, there's just so much information, you know. Choose your category. Choose where you're going. There is just no shortage. Everybody is geeking out. The big complaint is like how there's too many people. If you go standby, you go an hour ahead of time and you're still there and it's spread out, you know. The Aria and the MGM, there's all these things there. We're here at the heart of what used to be the one facility and now it's just spread out so much so you really need to kind of choose your focus, dig on in, and you know, we've got so many interviews. >> Stu, we're gonna want to wrap this up by saying the company that's behind us, you can't see or maybe you're able to see in the shot that's winning that no one's talking about much because they're just winning is Intel. They sell more chips. They sell more compute. The compute game is where it's at. You've just Intel kind of quietly under the surface and this growth is only gonna help Moore's law and everything else. >> John, it's just like the old Intel inside, you know. Amazon does more. They're buying more compute, whether that's standard compute, it's containers, or serverless at the end of the day, there's some Intel chips underneath almost all of it today. >> Intel's not putting their strategy up but it's clear to me through observation and talking to them, is that they're targeting the cloud as that new inside moment. They want to power the top clouds. They already are. They're kinda quietly keeping their nose clean and have their head down and power all those clouds. TheCUBE here powering all the data here at AWS re:Invent. I'm John Furrier, Stu Miniman. Day two kickoff, more great coverage. Stay with us, two sets here in Las Vegas. We'll be right back. (digital music)

Published Date : Nov 29 2017

SUMMARY :

Voiceover: Live from Las Vegas, it's theCUBE, I mean, he's like the energizer bunny. One of the ones that I look forward to more than Yeah man, and the fact that he talks about the competitors But I mean, John just take alone, the one thing they put up, What is the scoreboard for cloud? is the change of what's happening in the software. The canary in the coalmine of the startup entrepreneurs, So john, the struggle I've been hearing, you know, and I heard feedback from the analysts like, it's not like most of the instances with Amazon, but the thing that is a success at Amazon A lot of people have been criticizing the I believe the number I heard is in the Amazon services, a lot of the stuff you're mentioning "we have everything of the best." I get called a fanboy all the time, that the broader Amazon portfolio can tie into, you know. It's got the geeky under the hood and the The Aria and the MGM, there's all these things there. by saying the company that's behind us, the old Intel inside, you know. TheCUBE here powering all the data here at

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