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Rod Stuhlmuller & Eric Norman | AWS re:Invent 2022


 

>>Oh, welcome back to the Cube here at aws Reinvent 22. As we continue our coverage here, the AWS Global Showcase, the Startup Showcase, John Wall is here hosting for the Cube as we've been here all week. Hope you're enjoying our coverage here. This is day three, by the way. We're wrapping it up shortly with us to talk about what's going on in the, kind of the hotel world in it and what's going on in the cloud, especially at I hg is Eric Norman, head of infrastructure, architecture, and innovation at I H G Hotels and Resorts. Eric, good to see you, >>Sir. Oh, thank you. And thank you for inviting me. Yeah, >>You bet. Glad to have you board here on the queue. First time, I think too, by the way, right? >>It is. And can I just tell you who IHG is >>Real quick? Yeah, wait a second. First I want another rest. I got Introduc to Rod Stuller, who is the Vice president and of Solutions marketing at Aviatrix and Rod. Good to see you, sir. Thanks a lot. Now let's talk about I ih. >>Great. Well, IHGs a a hospitality company, it's been around for 200 years, that has 17 brands globally in over a hundred countries. We sleek, you know, up could up to 888,000 people a night. So it's a pretty large company that we compete with, you know, all the hotel companies globally. >>So let's talk about your, your footprint right now in, in terms of what your needs are, because you've mentioned obviously a lot of, you have a lot of customers needs, you have a lot of internal stakeholder needs. Yeah. So just from that perspective, how are you balancing out, you know, the products you wanna launch as opposed to the, on the development side and the maintenance side? >>Yeah, I mean we, we have focused our, our attention to our, our guests and our hotels globally and, and taking technology and from a foundation, getting it at, at the edge so that way the consumer and the hotel owner can deliver a quality product to a guest experience. You know, we've have moved larger, a large deployment of our mission critical applications over the last five years really, of moving into more SaaS and infrastructure like AWS and GCP and, and leveraging their global scale to be able to deliver at the edge or get closer to the edge. And so we've, you know, I'm pretty sure you've seen, you know, kind of people building, you know, mission critical apps. You know, probably in the last three years it's probably escalating and more of like a hockey stick of moving stuff. I'd love to hear what AVIA is seeing. Oh >>Yeah. Now we're, we're seeing that quite a bit, right? As people move into the cloud, it's now business critical applications that are going there. So good enough isn't good enough anymore, right? It has to be, you know, a powerful capability that's business critical, can support that, give people the ability to troubleshoot it when something goes wrong. And then multi-cloud, you mentioned a couple different cloud companies, a lot of enterprises are moving to multiple clouds and you don't want to have to do it differently in every cloud. You want a infrastructure management layer that allows you to do that across >>Clouds. So how do you go about that, you know, deciding what goes where. I mean, it sounds like a simple question, but, but if you are dealing in a lot of different kinds of environments, different needs and different requirements, whatever, you know, how are you sorting out, delegating, you know, you know, you're, you're you're gonna be working here, you're gonna be >>Working there. Yeah. So we built some standards base that says, you know, certain types of apps, you know, transactional base, you know, go to this cloud provider and data analytics that's gonna go to another, another cloud provider based on our decision of key capability, native capability, and, and also coverage. You know, cuz we are in China, right? You know, you know, I, I've gotta be able to get into China and, and build not only a network that can support that, but also business apps locally to meet, compete with compliance, regulatory type activities. I mean, even in, in the US market, I got, you know, California privacy laws, you know, you have globally, you've gotta deal with getting data applications into compliance for those globally, right? >>Yeah. So, so you got that compliance slash governance Yeah. Issue. Huge issue. Yeah. I would think for you, you gotta decide who's gonna get to what when, and also we have to meet certain regulatory standards as you pointed out. And not just there, but you got European footprint, right? I mean, you're global. Yeah. So, so you know, handling that kind of scope or scale, what kind of nightmares or challenges does that provide you and how's Aviatrix helping you solve >>That? Yeah, in the early days, you know, we were using cloud native, you know, constructs for networking and a little bit of a security type angle to it. What we found was, you know, you can't get the automation you need. You can't get the, the scalability, you know, cuz we're, we're trying to shift left our, you know, our DevOps and our ability to deploy infrastructure. Aviatrix had come in and, and provided a, a solution that gets us there quicker than anybody else. It's allow us to, you know, build a mesh network across all our regions globally. I'm able to deploy, you know, new landing zones or, you know, public cloud fairly quickly with my, you know, networking construct. We also, we found that because we are a multi hybrid cloud, we, we introduced on the edge a a new network. We had to introduce a performance hub architecture that's using Equinix that sits in every region in every public cloud and partner. Cuz all our partners, you know, we, we've moved a lot of stuff to sas. You know, Amadeus is our centralized reservation system. That's our key, you know? Sure. You know, reservation tool, it's so sourced out. I need to bring them in and I need to get data that's closer to where, in a region to where it needs the land so I can process it. Right. >>And it's a big world out there too. I mean, you're, you're not in your head Rod. So talk about if you would share some of the, the aviatrix experience in that regard. When you have a client like this that has these, you know, multinational locations and, and yet you're looking for some consistency and some uniformity. You don't, you know, you can't be reinventing the wheel every time something pops up, right? >>Right. No. And then, and it's about agility and speed and, you know, being able to do it with less people than you used to have to do things, right? You, you want to be able to give the developers what they need when they need it. There was a time when people were going around it, swiping their credit card and, and saying, it doesn't give me what I need. And so cloud is supposed to change that. So we're trying to deliver the ability to do that for the developers a lot faster than had been done in the past. But at the same time, giving the enterprise the controls, the security, the compliance that they need. And sometimes those things got in the way, but now we're building systems that allow that to happen at, at the piece that developers needed to happen. >>But what Rod said about, you know, one of the big things you sparked my thinking is it also, you know, building a overlay of the cloud native construct allows for visibility that, you know, you didn't have, you know, from a developer or even a operations day two operations, now you get that visibility into the network space and controls and management of that space a lot easier now, you know? >>Yeah. I mean, business critical applications, right? People, the people, the business does not care about networking, right? They see it as electricity and if it's down somebody else's problem to fix it. But the people who do need to keep it up, they need the telemetry. They need the ability to understand, are we trending in the wrong direction? Should we be doing something so that we don't get to the point where it goes down? And that's the kind of information that we're providing in this multi-cloud environment. You mentioned Equinix, we, we just have a partnership with Equinix where we're extending the cloud operational model that Aviatrix delivers all the way out to Equinix and that global fabric that you're talking about. So this is allowing the, the comp companies to have that visibility, that operational ability all the way globally. >>Yeah. Because you know, when you start building all these clouds now and multi regions, multiple AZs or different cloud providers or SaaS providers, you're moving data all over the place. And if you, if you don't have a single pane of glass to see that entire network and be able to route stuff accordingly, it's gonna be a zoo. It's not gonna >>Work. We were, I was talking earlier with, with another guest and we were just talking about companies in your case, I, I IHG kind of knowing what you have and it's not like such a basic thing he said, but yeah, you'd be surprised how many people don't know what they have. Oh, yeah. And so they're trying to provide that visibility and, and, and awareness. So, so I'm kind of curious because you were just the next interview up, so sorry Ken, but, but do you know what you have, I mean, are you learning what you have or is how do you identify, prioritize? How valuable is this asset as opposed to this can wait? I mean, is that still an ongoing process for >>You? It, it's definitely an ongoing process. I mean, we've done over the last three years of constantly assessing all our inventory of what we have, making sure we have the right mo roadmaps for each of the apps and products that we have. Cause we've turned to more of a product driven organization and a DevOps and we're, we're moving more and more product teams onto that DevOps process. Yep. So we can shift left a lot of the activities that developer in the past had to go over a fence to ask for help and, and, you know, kind of the automation of the network and the security built in allows us to be able to shift that left. >>Did that, I, you were saying too three years, right? You've been on, on this path Yep. Going back then to 2019 right. Pandemic hits, right. The world changes. How has that affected this three year period for you? And where are you in terms of where you expected to be and, and Yep. And then what's your, what are your headlights seeing down the road as to what your, your eventual journey, how you want that to end? >>I probably, the biggest story that we have a success story is when the pandemic did happen, you know, all our call centers, all agents had to go home. We were able within 30 days be able to bring up remote desktops, you know, workspaces an a uws and give access to globally in China and in Singapore and in the Americas. There's >>No small task there, >>That's for sure. So we built a desktop, certified it, and, and agents were able to answer calls for guests, you know, you know, so it was a huge success to us. Sure. It did slow down. I mean, during the pandemic it did slow us down from what gets migrated. You know, our focus is, you know, again, back to what I was saying earlier is around our guests and our loyalty and, you know, how do we give value back to our hotel owners and our guests? >>And how do you measure that? I mean, how do you know that what you're doing is working with, with that key audience? >>We'd measured by, you know, one occupa >>There so many, how many people do we have in the rooms? Right? But in terms of the interface, in terms of the effectiveness, the applications, in terms of what you're offering. Yeah. >>It gets back to uptime of our systems and you know, being able to deploy an application in multiple regions elevates the availability of the product to our guest. You know, the longer I'm up, the more revenue I can produce. Right. So, you know, so we, we try to, you know, we measure also guest satisfaction at the properties, you know, them using our tech and that kind of stuff to >>Be so you surveying just to find out what, how they feel about, so some, >>Cause we have a lot of tech inside of our hotels that allow for, we have ISG connect, which allows for people to go from one hotel another and not ask for passwords and, you know, that kind of stuff. >>That would not be made by the way. I'd be begging for help. Let's talk about skills, because I hear that a lot. Talk a lot about that this week. Hearing that, that, you know, the advancement of knowledge is obviously a very powerful thing, but it's also a bit of a shortcoming right now in terms of, of having a need for skills and not having that kind of firepower horsepower on your bench. What, what do you see in that regard? And, and first off, what did you see about it? And then I'll follow >>Up with Yeah, I mean, over our journey, it started off where you didn't have the skills, you know, you didn't have the skill from an operations engineering architecture. So we went on a, you know, you know, how do we build training programs? How do we get, you know, tools to, to either virtual training, bringing teachers, we built, you know, daily, our weekly calls where we bring our experts from our vendors in there to be able to ask questions to help engineering people or architecture people or operations to ask questions and get answers. You know, we, we've been on a role of, you know, upscaling over the last three years and we continue to drive that, you know, we have lunch and learns that we bring people to. Yep. You know, and, and we, and we, we ta tailor the, the content for that training based on what we are consuming and what we're using as opposed to just a, you know, a broad stroke of, of public cloud or, it's >>Almost like you don't have to be holistic about it. You just need to, what do you need to know to >>Make >>Them successful, to be better at what you're doing here? Right. Sure. >>And that's been huge. And, >>And yeah, we, and we have a program called ace, which is AVIATRIX certified engineer. And there's a bunch of different types of classes. So if you're a networking person in the past it's like A C C I E, but we have about 18,000 people over the last three years who have gone through that training. One of them. One of them, right? Is that right? Yeah. Yeah. And, and this is not necessarily about aviatrix. What we're doing is trying to give multi-cloud, you know, networking expertise because a lot of the people that we're talking about are coming from the data center world. And networking is so different in the cloud. We're helping them understand it's not as scary as they might think. Right. If your whole career has been networking in the data center and all of a sudden there's this cloud thing that you don't really understand, you need somebody to help you sort of get there. And we're doing that in a multi-cloud way. And we have all kinds of different levels to teach people how to do, do infrastructure as code. That's another thing, you know, data center guys, they never did infrastructure as code. It was, you had to bolt it in and plug stuff in. Right. But now things are being done much faster with infrastructure as code. And we're teaching people how >>To do that. Yeah. I mean, yesterday, one of the keynotes is about the partner in the, the marketplace. And they use the image imagery of, of marathon runner, you know, a marathon runner. Yeah. You could do a marathon by yourself, but if you want to improve and become a, a great marathon runner, you need a coach, you need nutritionist, you need people running with you to, to make that engine go faster a little bit. Yeah, exactly. And you know, having a partner like Aviatrix helps you know the team to be successful. >>Well, it is, it is a marathon, not a sprint. That's for sure. And you've been on this kind of three year jog. You might feel like you've been running a marathon a little bit, but it sounds like you're really off to a great start and, and have a pretty good partnership here. So thank you. Congratulations on that, Eric. Thank you for being with us. And Rod, same to you. Thank you. Appreciate the time here on the AWS Global Showcase. I'm John Wal, you're watching The Cube. We're out in Las Vegas and of course the cube, as you well know, is the leader in high tech coverage.

Published Date : Dec 1 2022

SUMMARY :

the AWS Global Showcase, the Startup Showcase, John Wall is here hosting for And thank you for inviting me. Glad to have you board here on the queue. And can I just tell you who IHG is I got Introduc to Rod Stuller, who is the Vice So it's a pretty large company that we compete with, you know, out, you know, the products you wanna launch as opposed to the, on the development side and the maintenance side? And so we've, you know, I'm pretty sure you've seen, you know, kind of people building, It has to be, you know, a powerful capability that's business critical, can support that, whatever, you know, how are you sorting out, delegating, you know, I mean, even in, in the US market, I got, you know, California privacy laws, So, so you know, handling that kind of scope Yeah, in the early days, you know, we were using cloud native, you know, constructs for networking You don't, you know, you can't be reinventing the wheel every you know, being able to do it with less people than you used to have to do things, They need the ability to understand, are we trending data all over the place. up, so sorry Ken, but, but do you know what you have, I mean, are you learning what you have you know, kind of the automation of the network and the security built in allows us to be able to shift And where are you in terms of where you expected to be and, and Yep. you know, all our call centers, all agents had to go home. You know, our focus is, you know, again, back to what I was saying earlier But in terms of the interface, in terms of the effectiveness, the applications, It gets back to uptime of our systems and you know, being able to deploy an application in multiple and, you know, that kind of stuff. you know, the advancement of knowledge is obviously a very powerful thing, but it's also a bit of a shortcoming So we went on a, you know, you know, how do we build training programs? You just need to, what do you need to know to Them successful, to be better at what you're doing here? And that's been huge. trying to give multi-cloud, you know, networking expertise because a lot of the people that we're And you know, We're out in Las Vegas and of course the cube, as you well know,

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Anais Dotis Georgiou, InfluxData | Evolving InfluxDB into the Smart Data Platform


 

>>Okay, we're back. I'm Dave Valante with The Cube and you're watching Evolving Influx DB into the smart data platform made possible by influx data. Anna East Otis Georgio is here. She's a developer advocate for influx data and we're gonna dig into the rationale and value contribution behind several open source technologies that Influx DB is leveraging to increase the granularity of time series analysis analysis and bring the world of data into realtime analytics. Anna is welcome to the program. Thanks for coming on. >>Hi, thank you so much. It's a pleasure to be here. >>Oh, you're very welcome. Okay, so IO X is being touted as this next gen open source core for Influx db. And my understanding is that it leverages in memory, of course for speed. It's a kilo store, so it gives you compression efficiency, it's gonna give you faster query speeds, it gonna use store files and object storages. So you got very cost effective approach. Are these the salient points on the platform? I know there are probably dozens of other features, but what are the high level value points that people should understand? >>Sure, that's a great question. So some of the main requirements that IOCs is trying to achieve and some of the most impressive ones to me, the first one is that it aims to have no limits on cardinality and also allow you to write any kind of event data that you want, whether that's lift tag or a field. It also wants to deliver the best in class performance on analytics queries. In addition to our already well served metrics queries, we also wanna have operator control over memory usage. So you should be able to define how much memory is used for buffering caching and query processing. Some other really important parts is the ability to have bulk data export and import, super useful. Also, broader ecosystem compatibility where possible we aim to use and embrace emerging standards in the data analytics ecosystem and have compatibility with things like sql, Python, and maybe even pandas in the future. >>Okay, so a lot there. Now we talked to Brian about how you're using Rust and and which is not a new programming language and of course we had some drama around Russ during the pandemic with the Mozilla layoffs, but the formation of the Russ Foundation really addressed any of those concerns. You got big guns like Amazon and Google and Microsoft throwing their collective weights behind it. It's really, adoption is really starting to get steep on the S-curve. So lots of platforms, lots of adoption with rust, but why rust as an alternative to say c plus plus for example? >>Sure, that's a great question. So Rust was chosen because of his exceptional performance and rebi reliability. So while rust is synt tactically similar to c c plus plus and it has similar performance, it also compiles to a native code like c plus plus. But unlike c plus plus, it also has much better memory safety. So memory safety is protection against bugs or security vulnerabilities that lead to excessive memory usage or memory leaks. And rust achieves this memory safety due to its like innovative type system. Additionally, it doesn't allow for dangling pointers and dangling pointers are the main classes of errors that lead to exploitable security vulnerabilities in languages like c plus plus. So Russ like helps meet that requirement of having no limits on card for example, because it's, we're also using the Russ implementation of Apache Arrow and this control over memory and also Russ, Russ Russ's packaging system called crates IO offers everything that you need out of the box to have features like AY and a weight to fixed race conditions to protect against buffering overflows and to ensure thread safe ay caching structures as well. So essentially it's just like has all the control, all the fine grain control, you need to take advantage of memory and all your resources as well as possible so that you can handle those really, really high ity use cases. >>Yeah, and the more I learned about the the new engine and the, and the platform IOCs et cetera, you know, you, you see things like, you know, the old days not even to even today you do a lot of garbage collection in these, in these systems and there's an inverse, you know, impact relative to performance. So it looks like you're really, you know, the community is modernizing the platform, but I wanna talk about Apache Arrow for a moment. It's designed to address the constraints that are associated with analyzing large data sets. We, we know that, but please explain why, what, what is Arrow and and what does it bring to Influx db? >>Sure, yeah. So Arrow is a, a framework for defining in memory calmer data and so much of the efficiency and performance of IOCs comes from taking advantage of calmer data structures. And I will, if you don't mind, take a moment to kind of illustrate why calmer data structures are so valuable. Let's pretend that we are gathering field data about the temperature in our room and also maybe the temperature of our stove. And in our table we have those two temperature values as well as maybe a measurement value, timestamp value, maybe some other tag values that describe what room and what house, et cetera we're getting this data from. And so you can picture this table where we have like two rows with the two temperature values for both our room and the stove. Well usually our room temperature is regulated so those values don't change very often. >>So when you have calm oriented st calm oriented storage, essentially you take each row, each column and group it together. And so if that's the case and you're just taking temperature values from the room and a lot of those temperature values are the same, then you'll, you might be able to imagine how equal values will then neighbor each other and when they neighbor each other in the storage format. This provides a really perfect opportunity for cheap compression. And then this cheap compression enables high cardinality use cases. It also enables for faster scan rates. So if you wanna define like the min and max value of the temperature in the room across a thousand different points, you only have to get those a thousand different points in order to answer that question and you have those immediately available to you. But let's contrast this with a row oriented storage solution instead so that we can understand better the benefits of calmer oriented storage. >>So if you had a row oriented storage, you'd first have to look at every field like the temperature in, in the room and the temperature of the stove. You'd have to go across every tag value that maybe describes where the room is located or what model the stove is. And every timestamp you'd then have to pluck out that one temperature value that you want at that one times stamp and do that for every single row. So you're scanning across a ton more data and that's why row oriented doesn't provide the same efficiency as calmer and Apache Arrow is in memory calmer data, calmer data fit framework. So that's where a lot of the advantages come >>From. Okay. So you've basically described like a traditional database, a row approach, but I've seen like a lot of traditional databases say, okay, now we've got, we can handle colo format versus what you're talking about is really, you know, kind of native it, is it not as effective as the, is the form not as effective because it's largely a, a bolt on? Can you, can you like elucidate on that front? >>Yeah, it's, it's not as effective because you have more expensive compression and because you can't scan across the values as quickly. And so those are, that's pretty much the main reasons why, why RO row oriented storage isn't as efficient as calm, calmer oriented storage. >>Yeah. Got it. So let's talk about Arrow data fusion. What is data fusion? I know it's written in rust, but what does it bring to to the table here? >>Sure. So it's an extensible query execution framework and it uses Arrow as its in memory format. So the way that it helps influx DB IOx is that okay, it's great if you can write unlimited amount of cardinality into influx cbis, but if you don't have a query engine that can successfully query that data, then I don't know how much value it is for you. So data fusion helps enable the, the query process and transformation of that data. It also has a PANDAS API so that you could take advantage of PDA's data frames as well and all of the machine learning tools associated with pandas. >>Okay. You're also leveraging par K in the platform course. We heard a lot about Par K in the middle of the last decade cuz as a storage format to improve on Hadoop column stores. What are you doing with Par K and why is it important? >>Sure. So Par K is the calm oriented durable file format. So it's important because it'll enable bulk import and bulk export. It has compatibility with Python and pandas so it supports a broader ecosystem. Parque files also take very little disc disc space and they're faster to scan because again they're column oriented in particular, I think PAR K files are like 16 times cheaper than CSV files, just as kind of a point of reference. And so that's essentially a lot of the, the benefits of par k. >>Got it. Very popular. So and these, what exactly is influx data focusing on as a committer to these projects? What is your focus? What's the value that you're bringing to the community? >>Sure. So Influx DB first has contributed a lot of different, different things to the Apache ecosystem. For example, they contribute an implementation of Apache Arrow and go and that will support clearing with flux. Also, there has been a quite a few contributions to data fusion for things like memory optimization and supportive additional SQL features like support for timestamp, arithmetic and support for exist clauses and support for memory control. So yeah, Influx has contributed a a lot to the Apache ecosystem and continues to do so. And I think kind of the idea here is that if you can improve these upstream projects and then the long term strategy here is that the more you contribute and build those up, then the more you will perpetuate that cycle of improvement and the more we will invest in our own project as well. So it's just that kind of symbiotic relationship and appreciation of the open source community. >>Yeah. Got it. You got that virtuous cycle going, the people call it the flywheel. Give us your last thoughts and kind of summarize, you know, where what, what the big takeaways are from your perspective. >>So I think the big takeaway is that influx data is doing a lot of really exciting things with Influx DB IOCs and I really encourage if you are interested in learning more about the technologies that Influx is leveraging to produce IOCs, the challenges associated with it and all of the hard work questions and I just wanna learn more, then I would encourage you to go to the monthly tech talks and community office hours and they are on every second Wednesday of the month at 8:30 AM Pacific time. There's also a community forums and a community Slack channel. Look for the influx D DB underscore IAC channel specifically to learn more about how to join those office hours and those monthly tech tech talks as well as ask any questions they have about IOCs, what to expect and what you'd like to learn more about. I as a developer advocate, I wanna answer your questions. So if there's a particular technology or stack that you wanna dive deeper into and want more explanation about how influx TB leverages it to build IOCs, I will be really excited to produce content on that topic for you. >>Yeah, that's awesome. You guys have a really rich community, collaborate with your peers, solve problems, and you guys super responsive, so really appreciate that. All right, thank you so much and East for explaining all this open source stuff to the audience and why it's important to the future of data. >>Thank you. I really appreciate it. >>All right, you're very welcome. Okay, stay right there and in a moment I'll be back with Tim Yokum. He's the director of engineering for Influx Data and we're gonna talk about how you update a SaaS engine while the plane is flying at 30,000 feet. You don't wanna miss this.

Published Date : Nov 8 2022

SUMMARY :

to increase the granularity of time series analysis analysis and bring the world of data Hi, thank you so much. So you got very cost effective approach. it aims to have no limits on cardinality and also allow you to write any kind of event data that So lots of platforms, lots of adoption with rust, but why rust as an all the fine grain control, you need to take advantage of even to even today you do a lot of garbage collection in these, in these systems and And so you can picture this table where we have like two rows with the two temperature values for order to answer that question and you have those immediately available to you. to pluck out that one temperature value that you want at that one times stamp and do that for every about is really, you know, kind of native it, is it not as effective as the, Yeah, it's, it's not as effective because you have more expensive compression and because So let's talk about Arrow data fusion. It also has a PANDAS API so that you could take advantage of What are you doing with So it's important What's the value that you're bringing to the community? here is that the more you contribute and build those up, then the kind of summarize, you know, where what, what the big takeaways are from your perspective. So if there's a particular technology or stack that you wanna dive deeper into and want and you guys super responsive, so really appreciate that. I really appreciate it. Influx Data and we're gonna talk about how you update a SaaS engine while

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Jacklyn Osborne, Bank Of America | Collibra Data Citizens'21


 

>>from >>around the globe. >>It's the cube >>covering Data Citizens >>21 brought to you by culebra. >>Well how everybody john Wallace here as we continue our coverage here on the cube of Data Citizens 21 it is a pleasure of ours to welcome in an award winner here at Data Citizens 21 were with Jacqueline Osborne who is the Managing Director and risk and Finance technology executive at Bank of America and she is also the data citizen of the Year, one of the culebra Excellence Award winners. And Jacqueline congratulations on the honor. Well deserved, I'm sure. >>Thank you so much. It is a true honor and I am so happy to be here and I'm looking forward to our conversation today. Yeah, what is it? >>It's all about just the concept of being a data citizen um in your mind um what is all that about? What are those pillars in terms of being a good data sets? And that gets to the point that you are the data citizen of the year? >>I think that's such a good question and actually is something that I don't even know if I know everything because it's constantly evolving. Being a data citizen yesterday is not what it is today and it's not what it means tomorrow because this field is evolving but with that said I think to me being a data citizen is being is having that awareness that data matters is driving to that data as an asset and really trying to lay the foundation to ensure its the right data in the right place at the right time. >>Yeah, let's talk about that high wire act because it's becoming increasingly more complex as you know, you've been in This realm if you will for what 15 years now? I believe it has evolved dramatically right in terms of capabilities but also complexity. So let's talk about that, about making finding the relevance of data and delivering it on time to the right people within your organization. >>How much >>More challenging is that now than it was maybe five or just you know, 10 years ago? >>I mean it's kind of crazy. There are some areas that make it so much easier and then for your question in some areas that make it so much harder. But if I can, let's start with the easier because I think this is something that really is important is when I started this, I've been in data my entire professional career, I've been achieved data officer since 2013. Um and when I started, I used to joke that I was a used car salesman. I was selling selling something this idea of data quality, data governance that nobody wanted. But now, so the shift of your question is the good if I am now a luxury car salesman selling a product that everybody wants, but shift to the bad nobody wants to pay for. So the complexity of it as data becomes bigger as we talk about big data and unstructured data and social media and facebook feeds. That is hard. It is complex. And the ability to truly manage and govern data to the degree of that perfection is really hard. So the more data we get, the more complexity, the more challenge, the more there is a need to really prioritize align with business strategy and ensure that you are embedding into the culture and the DNA of the corporate and not do it in the silos. >>You know, delivering that data to in the secure environment obviously, critically important for any enterprise, but even more so to put a finer point on financial services in terms of your work in that regard. So, so let's add that layer into this to not only internal, all the communication you have to do in the collaboration, you have to have but you have these external stakeholders to write, you have me, you know, a boa client if you will um that you've got to be aware of and have to communicate with. So so let's talk about that, that kind of merger if you will of not only having to work internally but also externally and making sure that with all the data you've got now that it works >>indeed. And you're kind of moving towards this new one of the newer dimensions, which is privacy, I mean G D p R was the first regulation in the UK, but now you have the C C P A and the California and it's coming and that that right to be forgotten or more importantly, as you said, as a customer of financial issues, that right to understand where your data is is very important because customers do want to know that their information is understood, trusted protected and going to be taken care of. So that ability to really transform back that you have a solid basis and that you are taking the measures and the necessary steps to ensure that that data is air quotes govern is so important. And it really again that shift from that used car salesman to a luxury car salesman. Your question is another example of how that shift is happening. It's no longer a should do or could do. Data governance is really becoming a must do and why you are seeing so many more. Chief data officers. Chief analytics officers, data management professionals. The profession is growing. I mean, incrementally every single day. >>What about the balancing act that you do? Let's just do with the internal audiences that you have to contend with. I shouldn't say content, content has that pejorative term to that you that you that you deal with, you collaborate with. Um you know, governance is also critically important because you want to make data available to the right people at the right time, but only the right people. Right. So what kind of practices or procedures are you putting in a place at B. O. A to make sure that that data is delivered to the right folks, but only to the right people and trying I guess to educate people within your organization as to the need for these strict governance processes. >>Sure. I tend to refer to them as the foundational pillars and if I was to take a step back and say what they are and how we use them. So the first one is metadata management and it is really around that. What data do you have? It's that understanding the information. So I used to refer to it or I still refer to it as when we were going to the library and you used to have to look at the card catalog That metadata manages very similar to the card catalogue for books. It tells you all the information. What's the genre? Who's the author, what the section is, where it is in the library and that is a core pieces. If you don't understand your data you can govern it. So that's kind of Pillar one. Metadata management. Pillar two is what's often referred to his data lineage. But I do think the new buzzword is that a providence? It's really that access low. It's understanding where data comes from the movement along the journey and where it's going. If you don't understand that horizontal front to back you can't govern the information as well because it can be changing hands, it can be altering and so it's that that end to end look at things. This pillar to pillar three is data quality and that's really that measurement of is it the right data and it is made up of a series of data quality dimensions, accuracy, completeness, validity, timeliness, conformity, reasonable nous etcetera. And it's really that fit freezes the data that I have the right data as I said earlier and then last but not least is issue management. At the end of the day there will be problems, there is too much data. It is in too many hands. So it's not we're not trying to remove all data issues but having a process where you can actually log prioritized and ultimately remediate is that that last and final pillar of the data management I would call circle because it has to all come back together and it's rinse and repeat. >>Yeah. And and so you you raise a point, a great point about things are going to go wrong. You know, eventually something happens. We know nothing is foolproof, nothing is bulletproof. Uh and we're certainly seeing that in terms of security now right with breaches pretty well publicized with invasions, ransom, where you name it, right, all kinds of flavors of that. Unfortunately. So from your perspective in terms of being that this data data guardian, if you will um how much of your concerns now have been amplified in terms of security and privacy and and that kind of internal uh communication you have to have or or I guess by in you know to understand the need to make this data ultra secure and ultra private, especially in this environment where the bad actors you know are are prolific, so kind of talk about that it's a struggle but maybe that challenge That you have in this environment here in 2021. >>Yeah, I think what you know the way I would do it is the struggle is again that that need or the desire to to protect everything and at the end of the day that's hard. And so the struggle right now that I have ri faces the prioritization. How do we differentiate what we call the critical few some call it cds chris critical data elements that they call it Katie key dad elements there, there's there's a term but really as that need and that demand grows whether it's for security or privacy or even data democratization, which hopefully we do talk about at some point, all these things are reliance on the right data because like statistics garbage in garbage out. So whether it's because you need the right information because of your analytics and your models or as you talked about its prevention and defensive security reasons that defensive and offensive isn't going away. So the real struggle is not around the driver, but the prioritization. How do you focus to ensure you're spending your time on the right areas and more importantly in alignment with the business priorities? Because one of the things that's critically important for me is ensuring that it's not metadata or data governance or data quality for the sake of it, it is in alignment with that business priority. >>And and and a big part of that is is strategy for the future, right strategy going forward. you know, where you're going to go in the next 18, 24 months and so from uh without, you know, revealing state secrets here. How do you how do you see this playing out in terms of this continual digital transformation? If you will from the B O a side of the fence? Um, you know, what what do you see as being important or in terms of what you would like to accomplish over the next year and a half, two years >>for me? I think it's that and I'm glad you asked that question, cause I wanted to mention that that data democratization I think. And if we if we debunk that or look into that, what do I mean by democratization? It's that real time access, but it's not real time access to the wrong information or to the wrong people as we talked about, it really is ensuring almost like an amazon model that I can simply search for the information I need, I can put it in my shopping cart and I can check out and I am able to that's that data driven, I'm able to use that information knowing it's the right data in the right hands for the right reasons and that's really my future mind where I'm getting to is how do I enable that? How do I democratize it? So data is truly and does become that enterprise asset that everybody and anybody can access, but they can do so in a way that has all of those defensive controls in place, going back to that right data, right place the right time because the shiny toys of ai machine learning all those things is if you're building models off of the wrong data from the wrong place or in the wrong hands, it's going to bite you in about whether it's today, tomorrow, the future. >>Well, exactly. I love that analogy and on that I'm going to thank you for the time. So I'm gonna call you a luxury data salesperson, not a car car salesman. But uh it certainly has paid off and we certainly congratulate you as well on the award that you wanna hear from calabria. >>Thank you so much and thank you for the time. Hopefully you've enjoyed our conversations as much as I have. >>I certainly have. Thank you very much Jacqueline Osborn, joining us on the Bank of America, the data citizen of the Year. Her data citizens 2021. I'm john walls and you've been watching the cube >>mm

Published Date : Jun 17 2021

SUMMARY :

data citizen of the Year, one of the culebra Excellence Award winners. Thank you so much. that data matters is driving to that data as an asset and about making finding the relevance of data and delivering it on time to the right people within your that you are embedding into the culture and the DNA of the corporate and not so let's add that layer into this to not only internal, all the communication back that you have a solid basis and that you are taking the measures I shouldn't say content, content has that pejorative term to that you that you that you deal with, And it's really that fit freezes the data that I have the right data as I said earlier in terms of being that this data data guardian, if you will um So whether it's because you need the right information because of your analytics and your models or as you talked about And and and a big part of that is is strategy for the future, right strategy going forward. or in the wrong hands, it's going to bite you in about whether it's today, I love that analogy and on that I'm going to thank you for the time. Thank you so much and thank you for the time. Thank you very much Jacqueline Osborn, joining us on the Bank of America, the data citizen

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Pradeep Sindhu, Fungible | theCUBE on Cloud 2021


 

>>from around the globe. It's the Cube presenting Cuban cloud brought to you by silicon angle. As I've said many times on the Cube for years, decades, even we've marched to the cadence of Moore's law, relying on the doubling of performance every 18 months or so. But no longer is this the mainspring of innovation for technology. Rather, it's the combination of data applying machine intelligence and the cloud supported by the relentless reduction of the cost of compute and storage and the build out of a massively distributed computer network. Very importantly, in the last several years, alternative processors have emerged to support offloading work and performing specific Test GP use of the most widely known example of this trend, with the ascendancy of in video for certain applications like gaming and crypto mining and, more recently, machine learning. But in the middle of last decade, we saw the early development focused on the DPU, the data processing unit, which is projected to make a huge impact on data centers in the coming years. As we move into the next era of Cloud. And with me is deep. Sindhu, who's this co founder and CEO of Fungible, a company specializing in the design and development of GPU deep Welcome to the Cube. Great to see you. >>Thank you, Dave. And thank you for having me. >>You're very welcome. So okay, my first question is, don't CPUs and GP use process data already? Why do we need a DPU? >>Um you know that that is a natural question to ask on. CPUs have been around in one form or another for almost, you know, 55 maybe 60 years. And, uh, you know, this is when general purpose computing was invented, and essentially all CPI use went to x 80 60 x 86 architecture. Uh, by and large arm, of course, is used very heavily in mobile computing, but x 86 primarily used in data center, which is our focus. Um, now, you can understand that that architectural off general purpose CPUs has been refined heavily by some of the smartest people on the planet. And for the longest time, uh, improvements you refer the Moore's Law, which is really the improvements off the price performance off silicon over time. Um, that, combined with architectural improvements, was the thing that was pushing us forward. Well, what has happened is that the architectural refinements are more or less done. Uh, you're not going to get very much. You're not going to squeeze more blood out of that storm from the general purpose computer architectures. What has also happened over the last decade is that Moore's law, which is essentially the doubling off the number of transistors, um, on a chip has slowed down considerably on and to the point where you're only getting maybe 10 20% improvements every generation in speed off the grandest er. If that. And what's happening also is that the spacing between successive generations of technology is actually increasing from 2, 2.5 years to now three, maybe even four years. And this is because we are reaching some physical limits in Seamus. Thes limits are well recognized, and we have to understand that these limits apply not just to general purpose if use, but they also apply to GP use now. General purpose, if used, do one kind of confrontation. They really general on bacon do lots and lots of different things. It is actually a very, very powerful engine, Um, and then the problem is it's not powerful enough to handle all computations. So this is why you ended up having a different kind of processor called the GPU, which specializes in executing vector floating point arithmetic operations much, much better than CPL. Maybe 2030 40 times better. Well, GPS have now been around for probably 15, 20 years, mostly addressing graphics computations. But recently, in the last decade or so, they have been used heavily for AI and analytics computations. So now the question is, why do you need another specialized engine called the DPU? Well, I started down this journey about almost eight years ago, and I recognize I was still at Juniper Networks, which is another company that I found it. I recognize that in the data center, um, as the workload changes due to addressing Mawr and Mawr, larger and larger corpus is of data number one. And as people use scale out as the standard technique for building applications, what happens is that the amount of East West traffic increases greatly. And what happens is that you now have a new type off workload which is coming, and today probably 30% off the workload in a data center is what we call data centric. I want to give you some examples of what is the data centric E? >>Well, I wonder if I could interrupt you for a second, because Because I want you to. I want those examples, and I want you to tie it into the cloud because that's kind of the topic that we're talking about today and how you see that evolving. It's a key question that we're trying to answer in this program. Of course, Early Cloud was about infrastructure, a little compute storage, networking. And now we have to get to your point all this data in the cloud and we're seeing, by the way, the definition of cloud expand into this distributed or I think the term you use is disaggregated network of computers. So you're a technology visionary, And I wonder, you know how you see that evolving and then please work in your examples of that critical workload that data centric workload >>absolutely happy to do that. So, you know, if you look at the architectural off cloud data centers, um, the single most important invention was scale out scale out off identical or near identical servers, all connected to a standard i p Internet network. That's that's the architectural. Now, the building blocks of this architecture er is, uh, Internet switches, which make up the network i p Internet switches. And then the servers all built using general purpose X 86 CPUs with D ram with SSD with hard drives all connected, uh, inside the CPU. Now, the fact that you scale these, uh, server nodes as they're called out, um, was very, very important in addressing the problem of how do you build very large scale infrastructure using general purpose computer? But this architectures, Dave, is it compute centric architectures and the reason it's a compute centric architectures. If you open this a server node, what you see is a connection to the network, typically with a simple network interface card. And then you have CP use, which are in the middle of the action. Not only are the CPUs processing the application workload, but they're processing all of the aisle workload, what we call data centric workload. And so when you connect SSD and hard drives and GPU that everything to the CPU, um, as well as to the network, you can now imagine that the CPUs is doing to functions it z running the applications, but it's also playing traffic cop for the I O. So every Io has to go to the CPU and you're executing instructions typically in the operating system, and you're interrupting the CPU many, many millions of times a second now. General Purpose CPUs and the architecture of the CPS was never designed to play traffic cop, because the traffic cop function is a function that requires you to be interrupted very, very frequently. So it's. It's critical that in this new architecture, where there's a lot of data, a lot of East West traffic, the percentage of work clothes, which is data centric, has gone from maybe 1 to 2% to 30 to 40%. I'll give you some numbers, which are absolutely stunning if you go back to, say, 1987 and which is, which is the year in which I bought my first personal computer. Um, the network was some 30 times slower. Then the CPI. The CPI was running at 50 megahertz. The network was running at three megabits per second. Well, today the network runs at 100 gigabits per second and the CPU clock speed off. A single core is about 3 to 2.3 gigahertz. So you've seen that there is a 600 x change in the ratio off I'll to compute just the raw clock speed. Now you can tell me that. Hey, um, typical CPUs have lots of lots, of course, but even when you factor that in, there's bean close toe two orders of magnitude change in the amount of ill to compute. There is no way toe address that without changing the architectures on this is where the DPU comes in on the DPU actually solves two fundamental problems in cloud data centers on these air. Fundamental. There's no escaping it, no amount off. Clever marketing is going to get around these problems. Problem number one is that in a compute centric cloud architectures the interactions between server notes are very inefficient. Okay, that's number one problem number one. Problem number two is that these data center computations and I'll give you those four examples the network stack, the storage stack, the virtualization stack and the security stack. Those four examples are executed very inefficiently by CBS. Needless to say that that if you try to execute these on GPS, you'll run into the same problem, probably even worse because GPS are not good at executing these data centric computations. So when U. S o What we were looking to do it fungible is to solve these two basic problems and you don't solve them by by just using taking older architectures off the shelf and applying them to these problems because this is what people have been doing for the for the last 40 years. So what we did was we created this new microprocessor that we call the DPU from ground doctor is a clean sheet design and it solve those two problems. Fundamental. >>So I want to get into that. But I just want to stop you for a second and just ask you a basic question, which is so if I understand it correctly, if I just took the traditional scale out, If I scale out compute and storage, you're saying I'm gonna hit a diminishing returns, It z Not only is it not going to scale linear linearly, I'm gonna get inefficiencies. And that's really the problem that you're solving. Is that correct? >>That is correct. And you know this problem uh, the workloads that we have today are very data heavy. You take a I, for example, you take analytics, for example. It's well known that for a I training, the larger the corpus of data relevant data that you're training on, the better the result. So you can imagine where this is going to go, especially when people have figured out a formula that, hey, the more data I collect, I can use those insights to make money. >>Yeah, this is why this is why I wanted to talk to you, because the last 10 years we've been collecting all this data. Now I want to bring in some other data that you actually shared with me beforehand. Some market trends that you guys cited in your research and the first thing people said is they want to improve their infrastructure on. They want to do that by moving to the cloud, and they also there was a security angle there as well. That's a whole nother topic. We could discuss the other staff that jumped out at me. There's 80% of the customers that you surveyed said they'll be augmenting their X 86 CPUs with alternative processing technology. So that's sort of, you know, I know it's self serving, but z right on the conversation we're having. So I >>want to >>understand the architecture. Er, aan den, how you've approached this, You've you've said you've clearly laid out the X 86 is not going to solve this problem. And even GP use are not going to solve this problem. So help us understand the architecture and how you do solve this problem. >>I'll be I'll be very happy to remember I use this term traffic cough. Andi, I use this term very specifically because, uh, first let me define what I mean by a data centric computation because that's the essence off the problem resolved. Remember, I said two problems. One is we execute data centric work clothes, at least in order of magnitude, more efficiently than CPUs or GPS, probably 30 times more efficiently on. The second thing is that we allow notes to interact with each other over the network much, much more efficiently. Okay, so let's keep those two things in mind. So first, let's look at the data centric piece, the data centric piece, um, for for workload to qualify as being data centric. Four things have to be true. First of all, it needs to come over the network in the form of packets. Well, this is all workloads, so I'm not saying anything new. Secondly, uh, this workload is heavily multiplex in that there are many, many, many computations that are happening concurrently. Thousands of them. Yeah, that's number two. So a lot of multiplexing number three is that this workload is state fel. In other words, you have to you can't process back. It's out of order. You have to do them in order because you're terminating network sessions on the last one Is that when you look at the actual computation, the ratio off I Oto arithmetic is medium to high. When you put all four of them together, you actually have a data centric workout, right? And this workload is terrible for general purpose, C p s not only the general purpose, C p is not executed properly. The application that is running on the CPU also suffers because data center workloads are interfering workloads. So unless you designed specifically to them, you're going to be in trouble. So what did we do? Well, what we did was our architecture consists off very, very heavily multi threaded, general purpose CPUs combined with very heavily threaded specific accelerators. I'll give you examples of some some of those accelerators, um, de Emma accelerators, then radio coding accelerators, compression accelerators, crypto accelerators, um, compression accelerators, thes air, just something. And then look up accelerators. These air functions that if you do not specialized, you're not going to execute them efficiently. But you cannot just put accelerators in there. These accelerators have to be multi threaded to handle. You know, we have something like 1000 different threads inside our DPU toe address. These many, many, many computations that are happening concurrently but handle them efficiently. Now, the thing that that is very important to understand is that given the paucity off transistors, I know that we have hundreds of billions of transistors on a chip. But the problem is that those transistors are used very inefficiently today. If the architecture, the architecture of the CPU or GPU, what we have done is we've improved the efficiency of those transistors by 30 times. Yeah, so you can use >>the real estate. You can use their real estate more effectively, >>much more effectively because we were not trying to solve a general purpose computing problem. Because if you do that, you know, we're gonna end up in the same bucket where General Focus CPS are today. We were trying to solve the specific problem off data centric computations on off improving the note to note efficiency. So let me go to Point number two, because that's equally important, because in a scale out architecture, the whole idea is that I have many, many notes and they're connected over a high performance network. It might be shocking for your listeners to hear that these networks today run at a utilization of no more than 20 to 25%. Question is why? Well, the reason is that if I tried to run them faster than that, you start to get back. It drops because there are some fundamental problems caused by congestion on the network, which are unsolved as we speak today. There only one solution, which is to use DCP well. DCP is a well known is part of the D. C. P I. P. Suite. DCP was never designed to handle the agencies and speeds inside data center. It's a wonderful protocol, but it was invented 42 year 43 years ago, now >>very reliable and tested and proven. It's got a good track record, but you're a >>very good track record, unfortunately, eats a lot off CPU cycles. So if you take the idea behind TCP and you say, Okay, what's the essence of TCP? How would you apply to the data center? That's what we've done with what we call F C P, which is a fabric control protocol which we intend toe open way. Intend to publish standards on make it open. And when you do that and you you embed F c p in hardware on top of his standard I P Internet network, you end up with the ability to run at very large scale networks where the utilization of the network is 90 to 95% not 20 to 25% on you end up with solving problems of congestion at the same time. Now, why is this important today that zall geek speak so far? But the reason this stuff is important is that it such a network allows you to disaggregate pool and then virtualized, the most important and expensive resource is in the data center. What are those? It's computer on one side, storage on the other side. And increasingly even things like the Ram wants to be disaggregated in food. Well, if I put everything inside a general purpose server, the problem is that those resource is get stranded because they're they're stuck behind the CPI. Well, once you disaggregate those resources and we're saying hyper disaggregate, the meaning, the hyper and the hyper disaggregate simply means that you can disaggregate almost all the resources >>and then you're gonna re aggregate them, right? I mean, that's >>obviously exactly and the network is the key helping. So the reason the company is called fungible is because we are able to disaggregate virtualized and then pull those resources and you can get, you know, four uh, eso scale out cos you know the large aws Google, etcetera. They have been doing this aggregation and pulling for some time, but because they've been using a compute centric architecture, er that this aggregation is not nearly as efficient as we could make on their off by about a factor of three. When you look at enterprise companies, they're off by any other factor of four. Because the utilization of enterprises typically around 8% off overall infrastructure, the utilization the cloud for A W S and G, C, P and Microsoft is closer to 35 to 40%. So there is a factor off almost, uh, 4 to 8, which you can gain by disaggregated and pulling. >>Okay, so I wanna interrupt again. So thes hyper scaler zehr smart. A lot of engineers and we've seen them. Yeah, you're right. They're using ah, lot of general purpose. But we've seen them, uh, move Make moves toward GP use and and embrace things like arm eso I know, I know you can't name names but you would think that this is with all the data that's in the cloud again Our topic today you would think the hyper scaler zehr all over this >>all the hyper scale is recognized it that the problems that we have articulated are important ones on they're trying to solve them. Uh, with the resource is that they have on all the clever people that they have. So these air recognized problems. However, please note that each of these hyper scale er's has their own legacy now they've been around for 10, 15 years, and so they're not in a position to all of a sudden turn on a dime. This is what happens to all companies at some >>point. Have technical debt. You mean they >>have? I'm not going to say they have technical debt, but they have a certain way of doing things on. They are in love with the compute centric way of doing things. And eventually it will be understood that you need a third element called the DPU to address these problems. Now, of course, you heard the term smart neck, and all your listeners must have heard that term. Well, a smart thing is not a deep you what a smart Nick is. It's simply taking general purpose arm cores put in the network interface on a PC interface and integrating them all in the same chip and separating them from the CPI. So this does solve the problem. It solves the problem off the data centric workload, interfering with the application work, work. Good job. But it does not address the architectural problem. How to execute data centric workloads efficiently. >>Yeah, it reminds me. It reminds me of you I I understand what you're saying. I was gonna ask you about smart. Next. It does. It's almost like a bridge or a Band Aid. It's always reminds me of >>funny >>of throwing, you know, a flash storage on Ah, a disc system that was designed for spinning disk gave you something, but it doesn't solve the fundamental problem. I don't know if it's a valid analogy, but we've seen this in computing for a long time. >>Yeah, this analogy is close because, you know. Okay, so let's let's take hyper scaler X. Okay, one name names. Um, you find that, you know, half my CPUs are twiddling their thumbs because they're executing this data centric workload. Well, what are you going to do? All your code is written in, uh, C c plus plus, um, on x 86. Well, the easiest thing to do is to separate the cores that run this workload. Put it on a different Let's say we use arm simply because you know x 86 licenses are not available to people to build their own CPUs. So arm was available, so they put a bunch of encores. Let's stick a PC. I express and network interface on you. Port that quote from X 86 Tow arm. Not difficult to do, but it does yield you results on, By the way, if, for example, um, this hyper scaler X shall we call them if they're able to remove 20% of the workload from general purpose CPUs? That's worth billions of dollars. So of course you're going to do that. It requires relatively little innovation other than toe for quote from one place to another place. >>That's what that's what. But that's what I'm saying. I mean, I would think again. The hyper scale is why Why can't they just, you know, do some work and do some engineering and and then give you a call and say, Okay, we're gonna We're gonna attack these workloads together. You know, that's similar to how they brought in GP use. And you're right. It's it's worth billions of dollars. You could see when when the hyper scale is Microsoft and and Azure, uh, and and AWS both announced, I think they depreciated servers now instead of four years. It's five years, and it dropped, like a billion dollars to their bottom line. But why not just work directly with you guys. I mean, Z the logical play. >>Some of them are working with us. So it's not to say that they're not working with us. So you know, all of the hyper scale is they recognize that the technology that we're building is a fundamental that we have something really special, and moreover, it's fully programmable. So you know, the whole trick is you can actually build a lump of hardware that is fixed function. But the difficulty is that in the place where the DPU would sit, which is on the boundary off a server, and the network is literally on that boundary, that place the functionality needs to be programmable. And so the whole trick is how do you come up with an architectural where the functionality is programmable? But it is also very high speed for this particular set of applications. So the analogy with GPS is nearly perfect because GP use, and particularly in video that's implemented or they invented coulda, which is a programming language for GPS on it made them easy to use mirror fully programmable without compromising performance. Well, this is what we're doing with DP use. We've invented a new architectures. We've made them very easy to program. And they're these workloads or not, Workload. The computation that I talked about, which is security virtualization storage and then network. Those four are quintessential examples off data centric, foreclosed on. They're not going away. In fact, they're becoming more and more and more important over time. >>I'm very excited for you guys, I think, and really appreciate deep we're gonna have you back because I really want to get into some of the secret sauce you talked about these accelerators, Erasure coding, crypto accelerators. I want to understand that. I know there's envy me in here. There's a lot of hardware and software and intellectual property, but we're seeing this notion of programmable infrastructure extending now, uh, into this domain, this build out of this I like this term dis aggregated, massive disaggregated network s so hyper disaggregated. Even better. And I would say this on way. I gotta go. But what got us here the last decade is not the same is what's gonna take us through the next decade. Pretty Thanks. Thanks so much for coming on the cube. It's a great company. >>You have it It's really a pleasure to speak with you and get the message of fungible out there. >>E promise. Well, I promise we'll have you back and keep it right there. Everybody, we got more great content coming your way on the Cube on Cloud, This is David. Won't stay right there.

Published Date : Jan 22 2021

SUMMARY :

a company specializing in the design and development of GPU deep Welcome to the Cube. So okay, my first question is, don't CPUs and GP use process And for the longest time, uh, improvements you refer the Moore's Law, the definition of cloud expand into this distributed or I think the term you use is disaggregated change in the amount of ill to compute. But I just want to stop you for a second and just ask you a basic So you can imagine where this is going to go, There's 80% of the customers that you surveyed said they'll be augmenting their X 86 CPUs and how you do solve this problem. sessions on the last one Is that when you look at the actual computation, the real estate. centric computations on off improving the note to note efficiency. but you're a disaggregate, the meaning, the hyper and the hyper disaggregate simply means that you can and then pull those resources and you can get, you know, four uh, all the data that's in the cloud again Our topic today you would think the hyper scaler all the hyper scale is recognized it that the problems that we have articulated You mean they of course, you heard the term smart neck, and all your listeners must have heard It reminds me of you I I understand what you're saying. that was designed for spinning disk gave you something, but it doesn't solve the fundamental problem. Well, the easiest thing to do is to separate the cores that run this workload. you know, do some work and do some engineering and and then give you a call and say, And so the whole trick is how do you come up I really want to get into some of the secret sauce you talked about these accelerators, Erasure coding, You have it It's really a pleasure to speak with you and get the message of fungible Well, I promise we'll have you back and keep it right there.

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Sanjay Poonen, VMware | VMworld 2020


 

>>from around the globe. It's the Cube with digital coverage of VM World 2020 brought to you by VM Ware and its ecosystem partners. Hello and welcome back to the cubes. Virtual coverage of VM World 2020 Virtual I'm John for your host of the Cube, our 11th year covering V emeralds. Not in person. It's virtual. I'm with my coast, Dave. A lot, of course. Ah, guest has been on every year since the cubes existed. Sanjay Putin, who is now the chief operating officer for VM Ware Sanjay, Great to see you. It's our 11th years. Virtual. We're not in person. Usually high five are going around. But hey, virtual fist pump, >>virtual pissed bump to you, John and Dave, always a pleasure to talk to you. I give you more than a virtual pistol. Here's a virtual hug. >>Well, so >>great. Back at great. >>Great to have you on. First of all, a lot more people attending the emerald this year because it's virtual again, it doesn't have the face to face. It is a community and technical events, so people do value that face to face. Um, but it is virtually a ton of content, great guests. You guys have a great program here, Very customer centric. Kind of. The theme is, you know, unpredictable future eyes is really what it's all about. We've talked about covert you've been on before. What's going on in your perspective? What's the theme of your main talks? >>Ah, yeah. Thank you, John. It's always a pleasure to talk to you folks. We we felt as we thought, about how we could make this content dynamic. We always want to make it fresh. You know, a virtual show of this kind and program of this kind. We all are becoming experts at many Ted talks or ESPN. Whatever your favorite program is 60 minutes on becoming digital producers of content. So it has to be crisp, and everybody I think was doing this has found ways by which you reduce the content. You know, Pat and I would have normally given 90 minute keynotes on day one and then 90 minutes again on day two. So 180 minutes worth of content were reduced that now into something that is that entire 180 minutes in something that is but 60 minutes. You you get a chance to use as you've seen from the keynote an incredible, incredible, you know, packed array of both announcements from Pat myself. So we really thought about how we could organize this in a way where the content was clear, crisp and compelling. Thekla's piece of it needed also be concise, but then supplemented with hundreds of sessions that were as often as possible, made it a goal that if you're gonna do a break out session that has to be incorporate or lead with the customer, so you'll see not just that we have some incredible sea level speakers from customers that have featured in in our pattern, Mikey notes like John Donahoe, CEO of Nike or Lorry beer C I, a global sea of JPMorgan Chase partner Baba, who is CEO of Zuma Jensen Wang, who is CEO of video. Incredible people. Then we also had some luminaries. We're gonna be talking in our vision track people like in the annuity. I mean, one of the most powerful women the world many years ranked by Fortune magazine, chairman, CEO Pepsi or Bryan Stevenson, the person who start in just mercy. If you watch that movie, he's a really key fighter for social justice and criminal. You know, reform and jails and the incarceration systems. And Malala made an appearance. Do I asked her personally, I got to know her and her dad's and she spoke two years ago. I asked her toe making appearance with us. So it's a really, really exciting until we get to do some creative stuff in terms of digital content this year. >>So on the product side and the momentum side, you have great decisions you guys have made in the past. We covered that with Pat Gelsinger, but the business performance has been very strong with VM. Where, uh, props to you guys, Where does this all tie together for in your mind? Because you have the transformation going on in a highly accelerated rate. You know, cov were not in person, but Cove in 19 has proven, uh, customers that they have to move faster. It's a highly accelerated world, a lot. Lots changing. Multi cloud has been on the radar. You got security. All the things you guys are doing, you got the AI announcements that have been pumping. Thean video thing was pretty solid. That project Monterey. What does the customer walk away from this year and and with VM where? What is the main theme? What what's their call to action? What's what do they need to be doing? >>I think there's sort of three things we would encourage customers to really think about. Number one is, as they think about everything in infrastructure, serves APS as they think about their APS. We want them to really push the frontier of how they modernize their athletic applications. And we think that whole initiative off how you modernized applications driven by containers. You know, 20 years ago when I was a developer coming out of college C, C plus, plus Java and then emerge, these companies have worked on J two ee frameworks. Web Logic, Be Aware logic and IBM Web Street. It made the development off. Whatever is e commerce applications of portals? Whatever was in the late nineties, early two thousands much, much easier. That entire world has gotten even easier and much more Micro service based now with containers. We've been talking about kubernetes for a while, but now we've become the leading enterprise, contain a platform making some incredible investments, but we want to not just broaden this platform. We simplified. It is You've heard everything in the end. What works in threes, right? It's sort of like almost t shirt sizing small, medium, large. So we now have tens Ooh, in the standard. The advanced the enterprise editions with lots of packaging behind that. That makes it a very broad and deep platform. We also have a basic version of it. So in some sense it's sort of like an extra small. In addition to the small medium large so tends to and everything around at modernization, I think would be message number one number two alongside modernization. You're also thinking about migration of your workloads and the breadth and depth of, um, er Cloud Foundation now of being able to really solve, not just use cases, you are traditionally done, but also new ai use cases. Was the reason Jensen and us kind of partner that, and I mean what a great company and video has become. You know, the king maker of these ai driven applications? Why not run those AI applications on the best infrastructure on the planet? Remember, that's a coming together of both of our platforms to help customers. You know automotive banking fraud detection is a number of AI use cases that now get our best and we want it. And the same thing then applies to Project Monterey, which takes the B c f e m A Cloud Foundation proposition to smart Knicks on Dell, HP Lenovo are embracing the in video Intel's and Pen Sandoz in that smart make architectural, however, that so that entire world of multi cloud being operative Phobia Macleod Foundation on Prem and all of its extended use cases like AI or Smart Knicks or Edge, but then also into the AWS Azure, Google Multi Cloud world. We obviously had a preferred relationship with Amazon that's going incredibly well, but you also saw some announcements last week from, uh, Microsoft Azure about azure BMR solutions at their conference ignite. So we feel very good about the migration opportunity alongside of modernization on the third priority, gentlemen would be security. It's obviously a topic that I most recently taken uninterested in my day job is CEO of the company running the front office customer facing revenue functions by night job by Joe Coffin has been driving. The security strategy for the company has been incredibly enlightening to talk, to see SOS and drive this intrinsic security or zero trust from the network to end point and workload and cloud security. And we made some exciting announcements there around bringing together MAWR capabilities with NSX and Z scaler and a problem black and workload security. And of course, Lassiter wouldn't cover all of this. But I would say if I was a attendee of the conference those the three things I want them to take away what BMR is doing in the future of APS what you're doing, the future of a multi cloud world and how we're making security relevant for distributed workforce. >>I know David >>so much to talk about here, Sanjay. So, uh, talk about modern APS? That's one of the five franchise platforms VM Ware has a history of going from, you know, Challenger toe dominant player. You saw that with end user computing, and there's many, many other examples, so you are clearly one of the top, you know. Let's call it five or six platforms out there. We know what those are, uh, and but critical to that modern APS. Focus is developers, and I think it's fair to say that that's not your wheelhouse today, but you're making moves there. You agree that that is, that is a critical part of modern APS, and you update us on what you're doing for that community to really take a leadership position there. >>Yeah, no, I think it's a very good point, David. We way seek to constantly say humble and hungry. There's never any assumption from us that VM Ware is completely earned anyplace off rightful leadership until we get thousands, tens of thousands. You know, we have a half a million customers running on our virtualization sets of products that have made us successful for 20 years 70 million virtual machines. But we have toe earn that right and containers, and I think there will be probably 10 times as many containers is their virtual machines. So if it took us 20 years to not just become the leader in in virtual machines but have 70 million virtual machines, I don't think it will be 20 years before there's a billion containers and we seek to be the leader in that platform. Now, why, Why VM Where and why do you think we can win in their long term. What are we doing with developers Number one? We do think there is a container capability independent of virtual machine. And that's what you know, this entire world of what hefty on pivotal brought to us on. You know, many of the hundreds of customers that are using what was formerly pivotal and FDR now what's called Tan Xue have I mean the the case. Studies of what those customers are doing are absolutely incredible. When I listen to them, you take Dick's sporting goods. I mean, they are building curbside, pick up a lot of the world. Now the pandemic is doing e commerce and curbside pick up people are going to the store, That's all based on Tan Xue. We've had companies within this sort of world of pandemic working on contact, tracing app. Some of the diagnostic tools built without they were the lab services and on the 10 zoo platform banks. Large banks are increasingly standardizing on a lot of their consumer facing or wealth management type of applications, anything that they're building rapidly on this container platform. So it's incredible the use cases I'm hearing public sector. The U. S. Air Force was talking about how they've done this. Many of them are not public about how they're modernizing dams, and I tend to learn the best from these vertical use case studies. I mean, I spend a significant part of my life is you know, it s a P and increasingly I want to help the company become a lot more vertical. Use case in banking, public sector, telco manufacturing, CPG retail top four or five where we're seeing a lot of recurrence of these. The Tan Xue portfolio actually brings us closest to almost that s a P type of dialogue because we're having an apse dialogue in the in the speak of an industry as opposed to bits and bytes Notice I haven't talked at all about kubernetes or containers. I'm talking about the business problem being solved in a retailer or a bank or public sector or whatever have you now from a developer audience, which was the second part of your question? Dave, you know, we talked about this, I think a year or two ago. We have five million developers today that we've been able to, you know, as bringing these acquisitions earn some audience with about two or three million from from the spring community and two or three million from the economic community. So think of those five million people who don't know us because of two acquisitions we don't. Obviously spring was inside Vienna where went out of pivotal and then came back. So we really have spent a lot of time with that community. A few weeks ago, we had spring one. You guys are aware of that? That conference record number of attendees okay, Registered, I think of all 40 or 50,000, which is, you know, much bigger than the physical event. And then a substantial number of them attended live physical. So we saw a great momentum out of spring one, and we're really going to take care of that, That that community base of developers as they care about Java Manami also doing really, really well. But then I think the rial audience it now has to come from us becoming part of the conversation. That coupon at AWS re invent at ignite not just the world, I mean via world is not gonna be the only place where infrastructure and developers come to. We're gonna have to be at other events which are very prominent and then have a developer marketplace. So it's gonna be a multiyear effort. We're okay with that. To grow that group of about five million developers that we today Kate or two on then I think there will be three or four other companies that also play very prominently to developers AWS, Microsoft and Google. And if we're one among those three or four companies and remembers including that list, we feel very good about our ability to be in a place where this is a shared community, takes a village to approach and an appeal to those developers. I think there will be one of those four companies that's doing this for many years to >>come. Santa, I got to get your take on. I love your reference to the Web days and how the development environment change and how the simplicity came along very relevant to how we're seeing this digital transformation. But I want to get your thoughts on how you guys were doing pre and now during and Post Cove it. You already had a complicated thing coming on. You had multi cloud. You guys were expanding your into end you had acquisitions, you mentioned a few of them. And then cove it hit. Okay, so now you have Everything is changing you got. He's got more complex city. You have more solutions, and then the customer psychology is change. You got to spectrums of customers, people trying to save their business because it's changed, their customer behavior has changed. And you have other customers that are doubling down because they have a tailwind from Cove it, whether it's a modern app, you know, coming like Zoom and others are doing well because of the environment. So you got your customers air in this in this in this, in this storm, you know, they're trying to save down, modernized or or or go faster. How are you guys changing? Because it's impacted how you sell. People are selling differently, how you implement and how you support customers, because you already had kind of the whole multi cloud going on with the modern APS. I get that, but Cove, it has changed things. How are you guys adopting and changing to meet the customer needs who are just trying to save their business on re factor or double down and continue >>John. Great question. I think I also talked about some of this in one of your previous digital events that you and I talked about. I mean, you go back to the last week of February 1st week of March, actually back up, even in January, my last trip on a plane. Ah, major trip outside this country was the World Economic Forum in Davos. And, you know, there were thousands of us packed into the small digits in Switzerland. I was sitting having dinner with Andy Jassy in a restaurant one night that day. Little did we know. A month later, everything would change on DWhite. We began to do in late February. Early March was first. Take care of employees. You always wanna have the pulse, check employees and be in touch with them. Because the health and safety of employees is much more important than the profits of, um, where you know. So we took care of that. Make sure that folks were taking care of older parents were in good place. We fortunately not lost anyone to death. Covert. We had some covert cases, but they've recovered on. This is an incredible pandemic that connects all of us in the human fabric. It has no separation off skin color or ethnicity or gender, a little bit of difference in people who are older, who might be more affected or prone to it. But we just have to, and it's taught me to be a significantly more empathetic. I began to do certain things that I didn't do before, but I felt was the right thing to do. For example, I've begun to do 25 30 minute calls with every one of my key countries. You know, as I know you, I run customer operations, all of the go to market field teams reporting to me on. I felt it was important for me to be showing up, not just in the big company meetings. We do that and big town halls where you know, some fractions. 30,000 people of VM ware attend, but, you know, go on, do a town hall for everybody in a virtual zoom session in Japan. But in their time zone. So 10 o'clock my time in the night, uh, then do one in China and Australia kind of almost travel around the world virtually, and it's not long calls 25 30 minutes, where 1st 10 or 15 minutes I'm sharing with them what I'm seeing across other countries, the world encouraging them to focus on a few priorities, which I'll talk about in a second and then listening to them for 10 15 minutes and be, uh and then the call on time or maybe even a little earlier, because every one of us is going to resume button going from call to call the call. We're tired of T. There's also mental, you know, fatigue that we've gotta worry about. Mental well, being long term. So that's one that I personally began to change. I began to also get energy because in the past, you know, I would travel to Europe or Asia. You know, 40 50%. My life has travel. It takes a day out of your life on either end, your jet lag. And then even when you get to a Tokyo or Beijing or to Bangalore or the London, getting between sites of these customers is like a 45 minute, sometimes in our commute. Now I'm able to do many of these 25 30 minute call, so I set myself a goal to talk to 1000 chief security officers. I know a lot of CEOs and CFOs from my times at S A P and VM ware, but I didn't know many security officers who often either work for a CEO or report directly to the legal counsel on accountable to the audit committee of the board. And I got a list of these 1,002,000 people we called email them. Man, I gotta tell you, people willing to talk to me just coming, you know, into this I'm about 500 into that. And it was role modeling to my teams that the top of the company is willing to spend as much time as possible. And I have probably gotten a lot more productive in customer conversations now than ever before. And then the final piece of your question, which is what do we tell the customer in terms about portfolio? So these were just more the practices that I was able to adapt during this time that have given me energy on dial, kind of get scared of two things from the portfolio perspective. I think we began to don't notice two things. One is Theo entire move of migration and modernization around the cloud. I describe that as you know, for example, moving to Amazon is a migration opportunity to azure modernization. Is that whole Tan Xue Eminem? Migration of modernization is highly relevant right now. In fact, taking more speed data center spending might be on hold on freeze as people kind of holding till depend, emmick or the GDP recovers. But migration of modernization is accelerating, so we wanna accelerate that part of our portfolio. One of the products we have a cloud on Amazon or Cloud Health or Tan Xue and maybe the other offerings for the other public dog. The second part about portfolio that we're seeing acceleration around is distributed workforce security work from home work from anywhere. And that's that combination off workspace, one for both endpoint management, virtual desktops, common black envelope loud and the announcements we've now made with Z scaler for, uh, distributed work for security or what the analysts called secure access. So message. That's beautiful because everyone working from home, even if they come back to the office, needs a very different model of security and were now becoming a leader in that area. of security. So these two parts of the portfolio you take the five franchise pillars and put them into these two buckets. We began to see momentum. And the final thing, I would say, Guys, just on a soft note. You know, I've had to just think about ways in which I balance work and family. It's just really easy. You know what, 67 months into this pandemic to burn out? Ah, now I've encouraged my team. We've got to think about this as a marathon, not a sprint. Do the personal things that you wanna do that will make your life better through this pandemic. That in practice is that you keep after it. I'll give you one example. I began biking with my kids and during the summer months were able to bike later. Even now in the fall, we're able to do that often, and I hope that's a practice I'm able to do much more often, even after the pandemic. So develop some activities with your family or with the people that you love the most that are seeing you a lot more and hopefully enjoying that time with them that you will keep even after this pandemic ends. >>So, Sanjay, I love that you're spending all this time with CSOs. I mean, I have a Well, maybe not not 1000 but dozens. And they're such smart people. They're really, you know, in the thick of things you mentioned, you know, your partnership with the scale ahead. Scott Stricklin on who is the C. C so of Wyndham? He was talking about the security club. But since the pandemic, there's really three waves. There's the cloud security, the identity, access management and endpoint security. And one of the things that CSOs will tell you is the lack of talent is their biggest challenge. And they're drowning in all these products. And so how should we think about your approach to security and potentially simplifying their lives? >>Yeah. You know, Dave, we talked about this, I think last year, maybe the year before, and what we were trying to do in security was really simplified because the security industry is like 5000 vendors, and it's like, you know, going to a doctor and she tells you to stay healthy. You gotta have 5000 tablets. You just cannot eat that many tablets you take you days, weeks, maybe a month to eat that many tablets. So ah, grand simplification has to happen where that health becomes part of your diet. You eat your proteins and vegetables, you drink your water, do your exercise. And the analogy and security is we cannot deploy dozens of agents and hundreds of alerts and many, many consoles. Uh, infrastructure players like us that have control points. We have 70 million virtual machines. We have 75 million virtual switches. We have, you know, tens of million's off workspace, one of carbon black endpoints that we manage and secure its incumbent enough to take security and making a lot more part of the infrastructure. Reduce the need for dozens and dozens of point tools. And with that comes a grand simplification of both the labor involved in learning all these tools. Andi, eventually also the cost of ownership off those particular tool. So that's one other thing we're seeking to do is increasingly be apart off that education off security professionals were both investing in ah, lot of off, you know, kind of threat protection research on many of our folks you know who are in a threat. Behavioral analytics, you know, kind of thread research. And people have come out of deep hacking experience with the government and others give back to the community and teaching classes. Um, in universities, there are a couple of non profits that are really investing in security, transfer education off CSOs and their teams were contributing to that from the standpoint off the ways in which we can give back both in time talent and also a treasure. So I think is we think about this. You're going to see us making this a long term play. We have a billion dollar security business today. There's not many companies that have, you know, a billion dollar plus of security is probably just two or three, and some of them have hit a wall in terms of their progress sport. We want to be one of the leaders in cybersecurity, and we think we need to do this both in building great product satisfying customers. But then also investing in the learning, the training enable remember, one of the things of B M worlds bright is thes hands on labs and all the training enable that happened at this event. So we will use both our platform. We in world in a variety of about the virtual environments to ensure that we get the best education of security to professional. >>So >>that's gonna be exciting, Because if you look at some of the evaluations of some of the pure plays I mean, you're a cloud security business growing a triple digits and, you know, you see some of these guys with, you know, $30 billion valuations, But I wanted to ask you about the market, E v m. Where used to be so simple Right now, you guys have expanded your tam dramatically. How are you thinking about, you know, the market opportunity? You've got your five franchise platforms. I know you're very disciplined about identifying markets, and then, you know, saying, Okay, now we're gonna go compete. But how do you look at the market and the market data? Give us the update there. >>Yeah, I think. Dave, listen, you know, I like davinci statement. You know, simplicity is the greatest form of sophistication, and I think you've touched on something that which is cos we get bigger. You know, I've had the great privilege of working for two great companies. s a P and B M where the bulk of my last 15 plus years And if something I've learned, you know, it's very easy. Both companies was to throw these TLS three letter acronyms, okay? And I use an acronym and describing the three letter acronyms like er or s ex. I mean, they're all acronyms and a new employee who comes to this company. You know, Carol Property, for example. We just hired her from Google. Is our CMO her first comments like, My goodness, there is a lot of off acronyms here. I've gotta you need a glossary? I had the same reaction when I joined B. M or seven years ago and had the same reaction when I joined the S A. P 15 years ago. Now, of course, two or three years into it, you learn everything and it becomes part of your speed. We have toe constantly. It's like an accordion like you expanded by making it mawr of luminous and deep. But as you do that it gets complex, you then have to simplify it. And that's the job of all of us leaders and I this year, just exemplifying that I don't have it perfect. One of the gifts I do have this communication being able to simplify things. I recorded a five minute video off our five franchise pill. It's just so that the casual person didn't know VM where it could understand on. Then, when I'm on your shore and when on with Jim Cramer and CNBC, I try to simplify, simplify, simplify, simplify because the more you can talk and analogies and pictures, the more the casual user. I mean, of course, and some other audiences. I'm talking to investors. Get it on. Then, Of course, as you go deeper, it should be like progressive layers or feeling of an onion. You can get deeper. It's not like the entire discussion with Sanjay Putin on my team is like, you know, empty suit. It's a superficial discussion. We could go deeper, but you don't have to begin the discussion in the bowels off that, and that's really what we don't do. And then the other part of your question was, how do we think about new markets? You know, we always start with Listen, you sort of core in contact our borough come sort of Jeffrey Moore, Andi in the Jeffrey more context. You think about things that you do really well and then ask yourself outside of that what the Jason sees that are closest to you, that your customers are asking you to advance into on that, either organically to partnerships or through acquisitions. I think John and I talked about in the previous dialogue about the framework of build partner and by, and we always think about it in that order. Where do we advance and any of the moves we've made six years ago, seven years ago and I joined the I felt VM are needed to make a move into mobile to really cement opposition in end user computing. And it took me some time to convince my peers and then the board that we should by Air One, which at that time was the biggest acquisition we've ever done. Okay. Similarly, I'm sure prior to me about Joe Tucci, Pat Nelson. We're thinking about nice here, and I'm moving to networking. Those were too big, inorganic moves. +78 years of Raghu was very involved in that. The decisions we moved to the make the move in the public cloud myself. Rgu pack very involved in the decision. Their toe partner with Amazon, the change and divest be cloud air and then invested in organic effort around what's become the Claudia. That's an organic effort that was an acquisition fast forward to last year. It took me a while to really Are you internally convinced people and then make the move off the second biggest acquisition we made in carbon black and endpoint security cement the security story that we're talking about? Rgu did a similar piece of good work around ad monetization to justify that pivotal needed to come back in. So but you could see all these pieces being adjacent to the core, right? And then you ask yourself, Is that context meaning we could leave it to a partner like you don't see us get into the hardware game we're partnering with. Obviously, the players like Dell and HP, Lenovo and the smart Knick players like Intel in video. In Pensando, you see that as part of the Project Monterey announcement. But the adjacent seas, for example, last year into app modernization up the stack and into security, which I'd say Maura's adjacent horizontal to us. We're now made a lot more logical. And as we then convince ourselves that we could do it, convince our board, make the move, We then have to go and tell our customers. Right? And this entire effort of talking to CSOs What am I doing is doing the same thing that I did to my board last year, simplified to 15 minutes and get thousands of them to understand it. Received feedback, improve it, invest further. And actually, some of the moves were now making this year around our partnership in distributed Workforce Security and Cloud Security and Z scaler. What we're announcing an XDR and Security Analytics. All of the big announcements of security of this conference came from what we heard last year between the last 12 months of my last year. Well, you know, keynote around security, and now, and I predict next year it'll be even further. That's how you advance the puck every year. >>Sanjay, I want to get your thoughts. So now we have a couple minutes left. But we did pull the audience and the community to get some questions for you, since it's virtually wanted to get some representation there. So I got three questions for you. First question, what comes after Cloud and number two is VM Ware security company. And three. What company had you wish you had acquired? >>Oh, my goodness. Okay, the third one eyes gonna be the turkey is one, I think. Listen, because I'm gonna give you my personal opinion, and some of it was probably predates me, so I could probably safely So do that. And maybe put the blame on Joe Tucci or somebody else is no longer here. But let me kind of give you the first two. What comes after cloud? I think clouds gonna be with us for a long time. First off this multi cloud world, you just look at the moment, um, that AWS and azure and the other clouds all have. It's incredible on I think this that multi cloud from phenomenon. But if there's an adapt ation of it, it's gonna be three forms of cloud. People are really only focus today in private public cloud. You have to remember the edge and Telco Cloud and this pendulum off the right balance of workloads between the data center called it a private cloud. The public cloud on one end and the telco edge on the other end. I think we're in a really good position for workloads to really swing between all three of those locations. Three other part that I think comes as a sequel to Cloud is cloud native. All of the capabilities a serverless functions but also containers that you know. Obviously the one could think of that a sister topics to cloud but the entire world of containers. The other seat, uh, then cloud a cloud native will also be topics, but these were all fairly connected. That's how I'd answer the first question. A security company? Absolutely. We you know, we aspire to be one of the leading companies in cyber security. I don't think they will be only one. We have to show this by the wealth on breath of our customers. The revenue momentum we have Gartner ranking us or the analysts ranking us in top rights of magic quadrants being viewed as an innovator simplifying the stack. But listen, we weren't even on the radar. We weren't speaking of the security conferences years ago. Now we are. We have a billion dollar security business, 20,000 plus customers, really strong presences and network endpoint and workload and Cloud Security. The three Coppola's a lot more coming in Security analytics, Cloud Security distributed workforce Security. So we're here to stay. And if anything, BMR persist through this, we're planning for multi your five or 10 year timeframe. And in that course I mean, the competition is smaller. Companies that don't have the breadth and depth of the n words are Andy muscle and are going market. We just have to keep building great products and serving customer on the third man. There's so many. But I mean, I think Listen, when I was looking back, I always wondered this is before I joined so I could say the summit speculatively on. Don't you know, make this This is BMR. Sorry. This is Sanjay one's opinion. Not VM. I gotta make very, very clear. Well, listen, I would have if I was at BMO in 2012 or 2013. I would love to about service now then service. It was a great company. I don't even know maybe the company's talk, but then talk about a very successful company at that time now. Maybe their priorities were different. I wasn't at the company at the time, but I can speculate if that had happened, that would have been an interesting Now I think that was during the time of Paul Maritz here and and so on. So for them, maybe there were other priorities the company need to get done. But at that time, of course, today s so it's not as big of a even slightly bigger market cap than us. So that's not happening. But that's a great example of a good company that I think would have at that time fit very well with VM Ware. And then there's probably we don't look back and regret we move forward. I mean, I think about the acquisitions we have made the big ones. Okay, Nice era air watch pop in black. Pivotal. The big moves we've made in terms of partnership. Amazon. What? We're announcing this This, you know, this week within video and Z scaler. So you never look back and regret. You always look for >>follow up on that To follow up on that from a developer, entrepreneurial or partner Perspective. Can you share where the white spaces for people to innovate around vm Where where where can people partner and play. Whether I'm an entrepreneur in a garage or venture back, funded or say a partner pivoting and or resetting with Govind, where's the white spaces with them? >>I think that, you know, there's gonna be a number off places where the Tan Xue platform develops, as it kind of makes it relevant to developers. I mean, there's, I think the first way we think about this is to make ourselves relevant toe all of that ecosystem around the C I. C. D type apply platform. They're really good partners of ours. They're like, get lab, You know, all of the ways in which open source communities, you know will play alongside that Hash E Corp. Jay frog there number of these companies that are partnering with us and we're excited about all of their relevancy to tend to, and it's our job to go and make that marketplace better and better. You're going to hear more about that coming up from us on. Then there's the set of data companies, you know, con fluent. You know, of course, you've seen a big I p o of a snowflake. All of those data companies, we'll need a very natural synergy. If you think about the old days of middleware, middleware is always sort of separate from the database. I think that's starting to kind of coalesce. And Data and analytics placed on top of the modern day middleware, which is containers I think it's gonna be now does VM or play physically is a data company. We don't know today we're gonna partner very heavily. But picking the right set of partners been fluent is a good example of one on. There's many of the next generation database companies that you're going to see us partner with that will become part of that marketplace influence. And I think, as you see us certainly produce out the VM Ware marketplace for developers. I think this is gonna be a game changing opportunity for us to really take those five million developers and work with the leading companies. You know, I use the example of get Lab is an example get help there. Others that appeal to developers tie them into our developer framework. The one thing you learn about developers, you can't have a mindset. With that, you all come to just us. It's a very mingled village off multiple ecosystems and Venn diagrams that are coalescing. If you try to take over the world, the developer community just basically shuns you. You have to have a very vibrant way in which you are mingling, which is why I described. It's like, Listen, we want our developers to come to our conferences and reinvent and ignite and get the best experience of all those provide tools that coincide with everybody. You have to take a holistic view of this on if you do that over many years, just like the security topic. This is a multi year pursuit for us to be relevant. Developers. We feel good about the future being bright. >>David got five minutes e. >>I thought you were gonna say Zoom, Sanjay, that was That was my wildcard. >>Well, listen, you know, I think it was more recently and very fast catapult Thio success, and I don't know that that's clearly in the complete, you know, sweet spot of the anywhere. I mean, you know, unified collaboration would have probably put us in much more competition with teams and, well, back someone you always have to think about what's in the in the bailiwick of what's closest to us, but zooms a great partner. Uh, I mean, obviously you love to acquire anybody that's hot, but Eric's doing really well. I mean, Erica, I'm sure he had many people try to come to buy him. I'm just so proud of him as a friend of all that he was named to Time magazine Top 100. But what he's done is phenomenon. I think he could build a company that's just his important, his Facebook. So, you know, I encourage him. Don't sell, keep building the company and you'll build a company that's going to be, you know, the enterprise version of Facebook. And I think that's a tremendous opportunity to do this better than anybody else is doing. And you know, I'm as an immigrant. He's, you know, China. Born now American, I'm Indian born, American, assim immigrants. We both have a similar story. I learned a lot from him. I learned a lot from him, from on speed on speed and how to move fast, he tells me he learns a thing to do for me on scale. We teach each other. It's a beautiful friendship. >>We'll make sure you put in a good word for the Kiwi. One more zoom integration >>for a final word or the zoom that is the future Facebook of the enterprise. Whatever, Sanjay, Thank >>you for connecting with us. Virtually. It is a digital foundation. It is an unpredictable world. Um, it's gonna change. It could be software to find the operating models or changing you guys. We're changing how you serve customers with new chief up commercial customer officer you have in place, which is a new hire. Congratulations. And you guys were flexing with the market and you got a tailwind. So congratulations, >>John and Dave. Always a pleasure. We couldn't do this without the partnership. Also with you. Congratulations of Successful Cube. And in its new digital format, Thank you for being with us With VM world here on. Do you know all that you're doing to get the story out? The guests that you have on the show, they look forward, including the nonviable people like, Hey, can I get on the Cuban like, Absolutely. Because they look at your platform is away. I'm telling this story. Thanks for all you're doing. I wish you health and safety. >>I'm gonna bring more community. And Dave is, you know, and Sanjay, and it's easier without the travel. Get more interviews, tell more stories and tell the most important stories. And thank you for telling your story and VM World story here of the emerald 2020. Sanjay Poon in the chief operating officer here on the Cube I'm John for a day Volonte. Thanks for watching Cube Virtual. Thanks for watching.

Published Date : Sep 30 2020

SUMMARY :

World 2020 brought to you by VM Ware and its ecosystem partners. I give you more than a virtual pistol. Back at great. Great to have you on. I mean, one of the most powerful women the world many years ranked by Fortune magazine, chairman, CEO Pepsi or So on the product side and the momentum side, you have great decisions you guys have made in the past. And the same thing then applies to Project Monterey, many other examples, so you are clearly one of the top, you know. And that's what you know, this entire world of what hefty on pivotal brought to us on. So you got your customers air in this in this in this, in this storm, I began to also get energy because in the past, you know, I would travel to Europe or Asia. They're really, you know, in the thick of things you mentioned, you know, your partnership with the scale ahead. You just cannot eat that many tablets you take you days, weeks, maybe a month to eat that many tablets. you know, the market opportunity? You know, we always start with Listen, you sort of core in contact our What company had you But let me kind of give you the first two. Can you share where the white spaces for people to innovate around vm You have to have a very vibrant way in which you are mingling, success, and I don't know that that's clearly in the complete, you know, We'll make sure you put in a good word for the Kiwi. is the future Facebook of the enterprise. It could be software to find the operating models or changing you guys. The guests that you have on the show, And Dave is, you know, and Sanjay, and it's easier without the travel.

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Susie Wee, Cisco DevNet | Cisco Live US 2019


 

>> from San Diego, California It's the queue covering Sisqo live US 2019 Tio by Cisco and its ecosystem Barker's >> We'll get back to the Cube. We are live at Cisco Live in San Diego. Study. San Diego. Lisa Martin with David Lantana and David Ayer. Super geeking out here, Susie, we is with us back with us. SPP in CTO of depth that Suzy Welcome back. Thank you. It's great to be back. So this event is massive. Cisco's been doing customer and partner events for 30 years now. What started as networkers? We? No, no, it's just alive. Something else you might not know that's also 30 years old. Dizzy. The movie, The Field of dreams. >> Wow, uh, kind of feels like the field does kind of feel like that that are one >> years yes, on ly five years. This has been so influential in Cisco's transition and transformation. You've got nearly 600,000 members in this community. Definite zone. It's jam packed yesterday today. Expect tomorrow as well? Yes, and you guys made simple, really exciting announcements. Yes, we didn't tell us >> about it, so it's fantastic. >> So basically what happens is the network has gotten very powerful. It has gotten very capable. You know, you can do intelligence machine learning you Khun Dio Intent based networking. So instead of the network just being a pipe, you can actually now use it to connect users devices applications use policy to make sure they're all connected securely. There's all sorts of new things that you could do. But what happens is, while there's all that new capability, it's in order to take advantage of it. It takes more than just providing new products and new technology. So our announcements are basically in two areas and we call it. It's like unleashing the capabilities of the new network and by doing it in to a So won is by bringing software practices to networking. So now that it really is a software based, programmable network with all of these capabilities, we wantto make sure that practice of software comes into a networking, and then the other is in the area of bringing software skills to networking because you need the right skills to be able to also take advantage of that. So if I just jump right into it, so the 1st 1 in terms of bringing software practices to networking. We've announce something that we call definite automation exchange. And so what happens is, you know, of course, our whole community builds networks. And as businesses have grown, their networks have grown right and they've grown and grown business has grown growing, grown right, and then it's become hardest, become unmanageable. So while you say there's all these great new technologies, but these things have grown in their way, so our customers biggest problem is actually network automation like How do I take my network? How do I bring automation to it? There's all the promise of it and definite automation. Exchange is built to basically help our community work towards network automation, so it's a community based developer center. What we say is that we're helping people walk, run and fly with network automation by walking. We're saying, OK, there's all these cool things you could do, but let's take it in three steps like first of all is let's walk. So first, just do a read only thing like get visibility, get insights from your network, and you can be really smart about it because you can use a lot of intelligence predictive modeling. You can figure out what's going on. So that alone is super valuable. >> Get the data. >> Get the data I learn on DH. Then next is an Okay, I'm ready to take action. Like so. Now I've learned I'm ready to take action, apply a network policy, apply a security policy, put controls into your network. That's you know. So, uh, walk, run, And then when you're ready to fly is when you're saying okay, I'm going to get into the full dev ops soup with my network. I'm going to be gathering the insights. I'm going to be pushing in control. I'm now optimizing managing my network as I go. So that's the whole slice it. So the wing fact, we want to go to them the walk, run, fly. >> And if I understand from reading your blood, Great block, by the way, >> Thank you. >> A lot of executives, right? Blog's and it's kind of short of yours is really substantively like, Wow, that was >> really something on. That's No, >> But if I understood a truck that you're gonna prime Sisko was gonna prime the pump A cz? Well, yeah, with a lot of ideas and code on DH. Yes, and then engineers can share. There's if they so choose. >> Exactly. So the key part of automation exchange beyond helping people take thes areas. The question is, how are we going to help them? Right? So what happens is what we've been doing with Definitive. We've been helping people learned to code, you know, in terms of networkers, we've been helping bring software developers into the community. We've been helping them learn to use a pea eye's all the good stuff a developer a good developer program should do. But what are networkers have said is I need help solving use cases. I need help solving the problems that I'm trying to solve, like how to get telemetry and monetary, how to get telemetry and insights from my network. How do I offer a self serve network service out to my, you know, customers line of business developers, you know, howto I automate it scale. And so what happens is there's a you know there's an opportunity or a gap between the products and AP eyes themselves and then solving these use cases so are now opening up a code repository, Definite Automation exchange, where the community can develop software that actually solves those use cases. Francisco is going to curate it. It's just going to be code on Get Hub. We'll make sure that it has the right, you know, licenses that, you know, we do some tests and it's working well with the FBI's, and then we're hoping it's going to become. We're hoping, you know, kind of the industries leading network automation code repository to solve these problems. >> Well, it's this key because big challenge that customers tell us that they have with automation is they got all these bespoke tools. None of them work together. So do you think something like this exchange can help solve that problem? >> It can. I believe it can. So the reason being is that you know, there are tools that people use and everybody's environments a little different. So some might want Teo integrate in and use answerable terra form, you know, tools like that. And so then you need code that'll help integrate into that. Other people are using service now for tickets. So if something happens, integrate into that people are using different types of devices, hopefully mostly Cisco, but they may be other using others as well way can extend code that goes into that. So it really helps to go in different areas. And what's kind of cool is that our there's an amount of code that where people have the same problems, you know, you know, you start doing something. Everyone has to make the first few kind of same things in software. Let's get that into exchange. And so let's share that there's places where partners are gonna want to differentiate. Keep that to yourselves like use that as your differentiated offer on DH. Then there's areas where people want to solve in communities of interest. So we have way have someone who does networking, and he wants to do automation. He does it for power management in the utilities industry. So he wants a community that'll help write code that'll help for that area, you know, So people have different interests, and, you know, we're hoping to help facilitate that. Because Sisko actually has a great community way, have a great community that we've been building over the last 30 years there the network experts there solving the real problems around the world. They work for partners, they work for customers, and we're hoping that this will be a tool to get them to band together and contribute in a software kind of way. >> So is the community begins to understand never automation and elect your pathway of of walk, run fly swatter. Soothe projected business outcomes that that any industry, whether it's utilities or financial services, will be able to glean from network automation. I can imagine how expensive from topics perspective it is all this manual network management. So what? Oh, that's some of the things that you projecting the future that businesses who adopt this eventually are going to be able to re >> Absolutely, I mean, just, you know, very simple. Well, so many, so many things. So, uh, in the in the case of what's a manufacturing, because you're talking about different industries? So there's a whole opportunity of connected manufacturing, right? So how do I get all of those processes connected, digitized and write. Now write things air being pretty much run in their way. But if you can really connect them in, digitize them. Then you can start to glean business insights from them. Right? Should I speed up? How's my supply chain doing where my parts Where's my inventory? Everything. You get all of that connected. That is like a huge business implications on what you can do. >> You have a kitchen, get start getting the fly will effect around all that data. Akeley. So I've always been fascinated that you see definite zone and there's these engineers ccs saying Okay, I want to learn more. I want to learn how to code numbers keep growing and growing and growing. And so you've got new certifications. Now that you're >> out of that was, >> this's huge. You need to talk about that, >> Yes, so that, you >> know, kind of the second part of our thing is like how we're bringing software skills to networking. So to get you know, the most of all this opportunity, you do need software skills. And of course, that's what Definite was originally founded on is really helping people to build those skills. But we've kind of graduated to the next level because we've teamed up with the Learning and Cisco team, which creates Cisco Start ification program. Cisco has, you know, an amazing certification program. So the C C. A is the gold standard and certifications and you know networkers around the world have that C C I status partners have built up. They pay people for that. You know any customer who's deploying now, which they will hire the CCS. So that was founded in 1993. The first see CIA, and that program in the next 26 years has grown to what it is. And what we've done is we've teamed up with them to now add a definite certification. So we're bringing in software skills along with the networking skills so that we have the Cisco certifications, the Cisco definite certifications sitting side by side and you know we believe it. You know, right now the people who you've seen in the definite Zone are the ones who know what's important. They come in there doing it. But they said, I want credit for what I'm doing. Like I get credit, I get a raise, I get bonuses. My job level depends on my networking sort of occasions. I'm doing this on my nights and weekends, but I know it's important. And now, by bringing this into the program, my company can recognise this. I'm recognized as a professional for my skills. It helps in all sorts of ways. >> So go ahead. Please >> think this just sounds way more to me than the next step. In Definite. It sounds like it's a revolution. >> It's a revolution. >> First addition in 26 years, that's bay >> now. I mean, there have been changes in the program, but it's the biggest change in those 26 years. Absolutely. And you know, like we'll see what what happens. But I think it is, Ah, step change in a revolution for the industry because we're recognizing that networking skills are important and software skills are important and critical. And if you want to build a team that can compete, that can really help your companies succeed, you're gonna want both of these skills together in your organization. And I believe that that's goingto help accelerate the industry, because then they can use all of these tools, right? So right now on it department can either hold the company down or accelerate a company to success because the question is, how quickly can you help someone adopt cloud? How can they do multi cloud? How convey innovative software speeds? And now we're here, hopefully catalyzing the network industry to be ableto work at that speed. >> I was joking. You wanna be the department of No or the Department of Go? Let's go. So is being a C C. A prerequisite to the definite certificate is not okay, so is not linear. So you're getting CC eyes obviously lining up to get certified to see him here So you could get kids out of college saying, Okay, I want in. >> Absolutely. And so the way that it works is that, um so actually you could. So what we have with the Cisco certifications for both the definite as well as the original Cisco started Take bath is that there's an associate level, which means you have about a years working experience. You know enough. So see CNN, Cisco Certified Network associate. They know enough about networking so that they can learn the fundamentals of networking and then be effective as part of a team that runs networks. So that's what that certification does for you. Way also now have a definite associate, which is ensuring that you have the software skills that you can also enter a team that's writing software applications or doing automated work flows for a network. And we have to know that all developers are not created equally. So just cause you wrote a mobile app doesn't mean that you can write software for, you know, running operational network. So the definite association is more like you need to be able to securely use AP eyes, right? So there's a lot of things that are within that. And then we have the professional in the expert levels. Um, and we have it on both sides now. Originally, way were thinking that there's the network engineer path. We're going to sprinkle a little software in there, and we'll have the definite path for a software developer, and it would be its own path. But we got feedback as we started presenting to our partners into our customers. And then they're like, No, this cannot be separate people. It's like it needs to come together. And so then we changed our how we thought about it, and we said that there's a set of engineering certifications and there's a set of software certifications. Anybody can get what they want, and you can start to combine them in very interesting ways. >> I could put together my own career, Mosaic. >> Absolutely so if you said, You know what? I am going to be that tick ass networker. And if we have the unicorn of like and I'm goingto you know over time, we're going to offer definite expert in the future. I said, I'm going to be a CC expert in the future. Be a definite expert. That's awesome. But we're not forcing folks to do it, because maybe you're going to be a CC. I get a definite associates so that you can speak the language of software and know what it does. But then you'll sit alongside a developer, and you guys will be able to speak the same language together. And we also make sure that our developers learn a bit about networking. So if you look at that associate, it's kind of 80 20 networking software, the other one's 80 20 software and networking so that they can actually work and talk to each other. >> So looking at these big waves that were writing right now and compute in network with G WiFi six s edge a prize anywhere, how is definite and the certification that you've just unleashed into the world? How is it going to enable not just the community members. Yes, who helped accelerate Companies take advantage of some of these big ways. But how is it going? Helps drive Cisco's evolution? >> And so and you bring up a great distinction, which is as we talk about a new set of applications. And we talked about this that create a definite create when you're there. Is that APP developers? If they understand the capabilities of the network, they can actually write an entirely new set of applications. Because you know, five g y fi six are better. If you understand EJ computing in the opportunity there, you know a networker will install a network that can host apse that makes edge computing riel. So there's another reason for the app developer a community to come together with the networkers. So when we talk about now, how does this help? Cisco is Well, first of all, it takes all of the networkers that are out there, and it insures that they're getting to that next level so that you're really fully using those capabilities and that worked, which can then accelerate business, you know. So it really is. The new capabilities are entirely different. Wayto look at networking that really do Tie and Dr Business On the other is the other part we're talking about is those APP developers that come in and write great applications can come in and now really be connected and actually use that whole network infrastructure and all its capabilities. So that really ties us to more kind of, you know, instead of a networker going in instead of going in and selling network kit and then figuring out the line of business things separately, you Khun, bring those applications into our ecosystem and into our offerings. So it's an integrated offering like here's a connected manufacturing offering that includes what you need to connect as well a CZ third party applications that are great for the manufacturing industry. And now you're looking at selling that whole solution >> and applications that we haven't even thought of a member in Barcelona walking into the i o. T Zone and seeing some programmable device from a police car on a camera. And, yes, some of these guys could just they're going to create things that we definite create, haven't even conceived, so you're creating sort of this new role. To me, it's like D B A You know, CC, it's now this new definite creator in a role that is going to have a lot of influence in the organization because they're driving value right there, going toe, bring people with them. People going to say, Oh, I want that. So now you think you're going to stand in Barcelona? The number of people that you've trained, I don't know, make many tens of thousands. I mean, where we have today with >> hundreds of thousands, wait half 1,000,000 5 100,000 Last year were at six >> 100,000. This was going 100,000 organic new members over the last year. So >> people here over half 1,000,000 now. >> Yeah. Yeah. So unbelievable. Yep, definitely So I know it's great. And just people are interested, right? So people are interested. People are learning, you know? And that's what makes it, you know, interesting to me is people are finding value in it, and they're coming. So s O. I think that, you know, kind of definite in the last five years has been kind of like an experiment, right? So it's just like, is the industry ready? Like do networkers really want to learn about software. What air? That we've been kind of prime ing it. And, you know, by now getting to this next level, you know, just the certifications. What we have learned from all of that is that it's really and that, you know, with the new capabilities in the network, we can really take our community and our bring new people into our community to make that opportunity really into Dr Business from the network. >> Everybody wants the code >> had they dio and some >> people >> are scared. Actually, some people are very scared. >> You mean intimidated, >> intimidated, intimidated. Yes. So there's the set of people who've come in early, right? And they're the ones who you've seen in the definite Zone. But everybody, of course, they start out scared. But then right after they get over that fear, they realize this really is a new future. And so then they start jumping in, and so it's both beer and then opportunity. >> Then they're on strike. That's what it's all about, Yang. And absolutely, I could do this for my business and >> absolutely, I would love to know the end that near future, how many different products and services and Maybe even companies have been created from the definite community for springing all these different Pittsburgh folks together. Imagine the impact >> it is. I mean, like, one really small things. You've been with us at our little definite create conference is we have something there that's called Camp Create, which is where they spend a week hacking, right? So and this It's kind of sometimes our most serious attendees because they're choosing Teo Code for the weak is what you know as well as to attend way. Didn't really add it all up yet. But what we found is there's about 25 to 30 people who attend. Met a bunch of them got promoted in that year. Wow. So in different ways, you know, not in ways that are necessarily connected but in their own ways, like in their company. This person got promoted to this to this one area. This other person, one person was a contractor. They got converted to a, you know, full time employee. So you know, we have to go and do the math on it. But what's amazing is that you know it just you know that bring that fills our hearts. >> It's organic too. Well, Susie, we Thank you so much for joining David. Me on the clean. You're going back with me tomorrow. And some guests. I'm looking forward to that. Excellent. Yes, Absolutely. More, More great stars. >> Your duel Co hosting a >> way. I didn't know that. No way. But I'll turn. I'll be the host is Well, I try something new. Way we're >> gonna have fun. I am looking forward to it. Thank you >> so much. And thank you for being with us in our whole vision of definite from the beginning. So thank you. >> It's been awesome. All right. We want to thank you for watching the Cube for David. Dante. I'm Lisa Martin. We will catch you right back with our last guest from Cisco Live in San Diego.

Published Date : Jun 12 2019

SUMMARY :

Thank you. Yes, and you guys made simple, really exciting announcements. So instead of the network just being a pipe, you can actually So that's the whole slice it. really something on. But if I understood a truck that you're gonna prime Sisko was gonna prime the pump A cz? We'll make sure that it has the right, you know, licenses that, you know, we do some tests and it's working well So do you think something like this exchange So the reason being is that you know, So is the community begins to understand never automation and elect Absolutely, I mean, just, you know, very simple. that you see definite zone and there's these engineers ccs saying You need to talk about that, So to get you know, the most of all this opportunity, you do need software skills. So go ahead. think this just sounds way more to me than the next step. And I believe that that's goingto help accelerate the industry, because then they can use all of to see him here So you could get kids out of college saying, So the definite association is more like you need to be able to securely use AP eyes, I get a definite associates so that you can speak the language of software and know what it does. How is it going to enable not just the community members. So that really ties us to more kind of, you know, instead of a networker going in instead of going So now you think you're going to stand in Barcelona? So And that's what makes it, you know, interesting to me is people are finding value are scared. And so then they start jumping in, and so it's both beer and then opportunity. And absolutely, I could do this for my business and even companies have been created from the definite community for springing So in different ways, you know, not in ways that are necessarily connected but in their own ways, Well, Susie, we Thank you so much for joining David. I'll be the host is Well, I try something new. Thank you And thank you for being with us in our whole vision of definite from the beginning. We want to thank you for watching the Cube for David.

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Fabio Gori, & Kip Compton, Cisco | Cisco Live US 2019


 

>> Live from San Diego, California It's the queue covering Sisqo Live US 2019 Tio by Cisco and its ecosystem. Barker's >> Welcome Back to San Diego. Everybody watching the Cube, the leader in live tech coverage. This day. One of our coverage of Sisqo Live 2019 from San Diego. I'm Dave a lot with my co host to minimum. Lisa Martin is also here. Kip Compton is the senior vice president of Cisco's Cloud Platform and Solutions, and he's joined by Fabio Gori was the senior director of Cloud Solutions Marketing. Gentlemen, thanks so much for coming on the Cube. >> Thanks. Great to be here having us. >> You're very welcome, Fabio. So, Kip, Let's start with you. I want to start with a customer perspective. People are transforming. Cloud is part of that innovation cocktail, if you will. Absolutely. How would you summarize your customers? Cloud strategies? >> Well, I mean, in one word, I'd say Multi cloud, and it's what I've been saying for some time. Is Custer's air really expanding into the cloud and it really expanding into multiple clouds? And what's driving that is the need to take advantage of the innovation in the economics that are offered in the various clouds, and we sit like to say that they're expanding into the cloud because for the vast majority, their coast of our coasters, they have data centers. They're going to continue to have data centers. Nothing's going to keep running in those data centers now. What's happening is they thought it would be easy to start with everyone here. CEO Chuck likes to talk about, however, and thought they just moved to the cloud like moving to another neighborhood. Everything would be great. Well, when they're multiple clouds, you leaving some stuff on him. All of a sudden, what was supposed to be simple and easy becomes quite complex. >> Yeah, I've often said Well, multi club was kind of a symptom of multi vendor. But what you're saying is, essentially, it's it's becoming horses for courses, the workload matching the workload with the best cloud to solve that problem. >> I think it's a feature not above. I think it's here to stay. >> So how is that informing your strategy is Cisco? >> Well, you know, we're very customer responsive, and we see this problem and we look at how we can solve it and what customs have told us is that they want access to the different innovation in these different clouds and the different economic offers in each of these clouds. But they want to do it with less complexity, and they want to do it with less friction. And there's a bunch of areas where they're not looking for innovation. They don't need things work differently in networking. They want one way for networking to work across the multiple clouds and, frankly, to integrate with their own primus. Well. Likewise, for Security. A lot of Custer's air a little freaked out by the idea that there be different security regimes in every cloud that they use and maybe even different than what they already have on him. So they want that to be connected and to work management an application lifecycle. They're worried about that. They're like they don't want it to be different in every single cloud. A map Dynamics is a great example of an asset here. We got strong feedback for our customers that they needed to be able to measure the application performance in a common way across the environments. When imagine going to your CEO and talking about the performance of applications and having different metrics. 2,000,000,000 where it's hosted. It doesn't make any sense in terms of getting business insights. So I've dynamics is another example of something that Custer's one across all of that. So we really see Cisco's role is bringing all of those common capabilities and really reducing the complexity and friction of multi Cobb, enabling our customers to really take the most advantage possible. Multiple cloud. >> So Fabio kept talked about how moving to cloud is a little bit more complex than moving house from one neighborhood to the other. What are some of the key challenges that you guys are seeing? And how specifically is Cisco helping to ameliorate some of those challenges? >> Well, there are some challenges that are squarely in the camp where we can help. Others are related, and probably they're the toughest in clouds to fundamentally acquisition of talent. Right way can help with our custom off course with our partner ecosystem in this case, but a lot of that is really the culture of the company needs to change, right? We keep talking about develops way, keep talking about what does he mean operating this infrastructure in the cloud. It's a whole different ballgame, right? It's a continues integration, continues. Development is actually moving toe agile, kind of softer. The album models. And, you know, I very often do the analogy or what we've seen a few years ago in the data center space where we so actually, the end off the super specialization, like people on Lino in storage, all innit, working on ly computing. And then we saw the rise of people fundamentally expert in in the entire stack. We're seeing the same in the cloud with the rise of the Cloud Architect. These guys now are the ones they're behind building Cloud Centre of excellence. The issue. If you want guidance, where's the control remains into the other team's right. But this is very, very important. So it's overcoming, overcoming the talent gap and knowing how to deal with that on the bottom of that on the other side, so you get a free economy is technology challenges. For instance, embracing Q Burnett is becomes an embracing open source is a big, big challenge, right? You've gotta be able to master this kind of science if you want and trusting partners like, for instance, ourselves and others that will give you a curated versions of the softer image in life. Very often do customer meetings, and I ask how many how many tools to use in production for your Cuban Embassy plantation? And the answer ranges from 20 to 25. It's crazy, right? So imagine if 12 or three of these stools go away. What are you going to do? So you know, it's it's a whole different ball game really going to go into this kind of world. So Kip, we understand >> today, customers are multi cloud and future. It's going to be multi cloud. Think So. >> How do we make >> sure that multi cloud doesn't become least Domine, Denominator Cloud? Or, you know, you really say All I have is this combination of a bunch of pieces like the old multi vendor. How does multi cloud become more powerful than just the sum of its components? Is a good question, and we've really, I mean, way support a lot of different ways of accessing a cloud, Francisco, because we have such a broad Custer base and our goal is really to support our customers. However, they want to work. But we have made a bet in terms of avoiding the lowest common denominator on DH. Some people look ATT, accessing multiple clouds as sort of laying down one software platform and writing their software to one set of AP eyes that they didn't somehow implement in every cloud. And I think that does tend to get you to lowest common denominator because, you know, if you want to be on the Alexis Smart speaker, you have to be on the Lambda Service at a job. Yes, that's it. It doesn't exist anywhere else. And so if you're trying to create a common layer across so your clouds and that's your approach, you have to give up unique capabilities like that. And almost every consumer brand wants to be our needs to be on that election. Smart speaker. So we actually see it is more taking the functions that are not points of innovation, reducing the friction and leaving our customers with the time and energy to focus on taking advantage of their unique capabilities. And Fabio, you're partnering at Cisco with a number of their providers out there. Where are we with the maturity of all this? We were at the Cube con show and you know you're right. There's a lot of different tools. Simple is not what we're discussing, mostly out that show. So what do we solve today? And what kind of things does Cisco and its partners look to be solving kind of in the next 6 to 12 months? >> Partner? Partnering with this big players is absolutely a company priority for us, for Cisco, and one thing that's important is you, said multi vendor at the beginning. That was an interesting common, because if you think about it, multiple out is really business need, right? You want a hardness, innovation wherever it comes from. But then when you work with a specific provider in your reach, critical mass you want tohave integrations with this with this different providers, and that is the hybrid world. So hybrid is more of a technology need to streamline things like networking or security, or the way you storage because the poor things of this nature so that's three. Liza is a big need, and we'll continue, of course, adding more and more from the standpoint of partnerships every every one of the environments in our customers want to uses of interest for us, right to extend their policies to extend our reach. >> So just following up on that partnership, You guys air cloud agnostic, You don't own your own clouds, right? Not selling that. So you were at Google Cloud next to Europe on stage David Gettler, you've got a relationship with as your you got relationship with a W s. Obviously so talking about the importance of partnerships and specific strategy there in terms of your go to market, >> Well, you know, first, all the partnerships or critical I mean, it's you said we're not trying to move the workload Stark filed. And by the way, a lot of our customers has said that something that they value they see us is one of the biggest, most capable companies on the planet. That still is someone. I got sick and ableto work with them on. What's the right answer for their business? Not trying to move everything to one place and those partnerships a critical. So you're going to see us continue Teo building this partnerships. In fact, it's only day one here. I wouldn't be surprised if you saw some news this week on that. >> We were wondering if we're going to see somebody parachute in, that would be exciting. So why Cisco? Uh, ask each of you guys Maybe maybe, kid, you could You could give us the answer from your perspective and an Aussie. The same question. >> Well, from my perspective, it's based on what our customers tell us that again. You know, the things that were very good at things like networking and security are some of the biggest problems that our customs face in taking advantage of clouds and are some of things that they most want common across clouds. So we have a very natural role in this. I actually think back to the founding of Cisco, if you know the story. But it was Sandy Lerner and Limbo zakat Stanford. Their networks couldn't talk each other. You didn't remember back to the days like deck net and apple talk and all these things. It's hard to even recall because this new thing called peace pipe he obviously took over. That was the beginning of Sisko is building the multi protocol router that let those different islands talk each other. In many ways, Custer's see us doing sort of the same thing or want us to do the same thing in a multi cloud world. >> Well, just aside before I ask you, Fabian, a lot of people think that, you know, the microprocessor revolution killed many computers. IPads. Cisco kind of killed many computers to your point. But, Fabio, anything you would add to the sort of wisest >> guy would say, If you want my three seconds elevator peaches, we make multiple easier and more secure. Multiple this complex. So we definitely make it easier through our software. And we have three big buckets if you want there really compelling for for our customers, the 1st 1 is all of our software. Arsenal around weapon on his cloud center work looked a musician manager that helps last summer in building a unified application management kind of soft or sweet across home Prem and any of the public clouds that we've been talking about. The 2nd 1 is, as you said, we build on our DNA, which is, if you want and you heard Gettler today are multi domain kind of architecture, right, which is incredibly relevant in this case, you are not working in security. Fabric really is important there, and the thirties are ability because we don't compete with any other big players to partner with them and solve problems for our customers. So these three buckets are really, really important that deliver. Ah hi business value to >> our customers if I want to come back to something we're talking about is the Customs said the customers don't want a different security regime for each cloud, right? So it's complicated because, first of all, they're trying to struggle with their own security regime anyway, Right? Right? And that's transforming. What is the right right? Sorry security regime in this cloud here. How is it evolving? >> Well, me, What we're doing is we're bringing tools like Te Trae Shen, which now runs on prim and in the clouds. Things like stealth watch what's runs on permanent cloud and simply bringing them security frameworks that are very effective where I think a very capable of well known security vendor, but bringing them the capability to run the same capabilities in there on prem environments in their data centers as well as a multiple public clouds, and that just eliminates the scenes that hackers could maybe get into. It makes common policy possibles. They going to find policy around an application once and have it apply across Balto environments, which not only is easier for them but eliminates potential mistakes that they might make that might leave things open. Joe Hacker. So for us, it's that simple bringing very effective common frameworks for security across all these >> years. You certainly see the awareness of the security imperative moving beyond the SEC ops team. There's no question about that. It's now board level lines of business are worried about. For their digital transformation was data, but our organizations at the point where there operationalize ing security practices and the like, you know, to the extent that they should be >> well, I mean, I think when you say they should be, there's always room for improvement. Okay, but we're seeing just about all of our customers. I mean, as you said, securities is a sea level, if not a board level discussion and just about all of our customers. It's routinely top first or second concern on a survey when Custer's saw about what's concerning them with the clouds. And so we're seeing them really view, you know, security's foundational to what they're doing. >> I mean, it used to be. This sort of failure equals fire mentality. You somebody cracks through, you're fired. And so nobody talked about it. Now I think people realize, look, bad guys are going to get through. It's how you respond to them. Don't you think about how you using analytics, but yeah. So >> when we start just the >> way you were moving quickly >> towards, well, more or less quickly to a zero trust kind ofwork thie action assist you in this area every since the acquisition ofthe duo is performing exceptionally well. And if you want at the top of the security ecosystem in a multi polar world, you find identity because if you don't know who the user or the thing is, they're trying to use a certain application, you're in trouble because perimeter, all security off course is important. But you know that you're going to be penetrated, right? So it boils down to understanding who's doing what and re mediating a soon as possible. So it's a whole different paradigm >> of a security huge tail. When Francisco it's a business growing 21% a year, it's three more than three times the growth of the company. Overall, which is actually still pretty good. Five or 6%. So security rocketship? >> Yeah, Fabio, Just I noticed before we did the interview here that everybody is wearing the T shirts. The cloud takeover is happening here at the definite zone. So give those of us that you know aren't among the 28,000 you know here at the show. A little bit of what's happening from you're >> gonna do something unusual going, gonna turn that question to keep because he was actually on stage >> the second single. Why don't you just get that off? You know, I think it links back to it. Bobby. Always talking about what talent I mean, obviously the most important thing we bring our customers is the technology. We are a technology company, but so many of our customers were asking us to help them with this talent cap. And I think the growth of definite I mean, we're actually sitting here in the definite zone. It's got its own area Here. It's Sisk alive. It's gotten bigger every single year. Here it's just go live. The growth of definite is a sign of how important talent issue is as well as the new certifications that we announce we expanded our certification program to include software conjuncture with Dev. Net. So now people be able to get professional certifications Francisco not just on networking but on software capabilities and skills. And this is something both our partners, our customers have told us. They're really looking for now in terms of the takeover, it's something fun that the definite crew does. I think you're doing five of them during this week. I was really excited, Suzy. We asked us to be the first Eso es the opportunity. Kick it off. It does include beer. So that's one of the nice things. It includes T shirts, both things that I think are prevalent in the developer community. I'll say, Andi, just have an hour where the focus is on cloud technology. So we got everyone in cloud T shirts, a bunch of the experts for my product enduring teams on hand. We had some special presentations, were just many an hour focused on cloud >> Well, and I love that you're doing that definite zone. We've always been super impressed with this whole notion of infrastructures code. I think I've said many times of all the traditional enterprise cos you know computer companies, if you will hae t companies Cisco has done a better job of anybody than making its infrastructure programmable. We're talking about security before it's critical. If you're still tossing stuff over to the operations team, you're gonna be have exposures. Whereas you guys are in a position now and you talk talent, you're transitioning. You know the role of the C C I. A. And now is becoming essentially a developer of infrastructure is code, and it's a very powerful absolutely. I think we're >> helping our partners and our customers transform. Justus were transforming. I think it's kind of a symbiotic relationship that's super important to us. >> It's also important you think about the balancing act between agility, cost, called security or even data assurance. There. Tradeoffs involved the nobs. You have to turn, but you can. You can you achieve all three, you know, to optimize your business. >> Look, there may always be trade offs, but it's not sort of a zero sum game. All those we sing customers who've automated that through things like C I. D. Move Teo, you know, a different place in a much better place where They're not necessarily making trade offs on security to get better agility if they fully off if they fully automated their deployment chains. So they know that there are no mistakes there. They know that they have the ability to roll out fixes if they need to. They know that they're containers, for instance. They're being scanned from a security perspective, very every time they deploy them. They're actually able to build automated infrastructures that are more agile and more secure so that it's pretty exciting. >> So it involves the automated change management and date assurance talking about containers. That's interesting. Spinning up containers. You want to spend it down frequently. So the bad guys that makes it harder for them to get through. >> You talk about BM sprawling, right? Yeah, right. The Janus sprawling biggest issues out there. And by the way, you know, as you automate this infrastructure, rightly so you mention infrastructures code that you can do the other magic, which is introducing machine learning artificial intelligence. And today they get learn such Gupta gave school. Harold, thank you. Have a terrific demonstration off. You know, finding Rocco's analysis for very, very complex kind of problems that will take forever in the old fashion world. Now, all of a sudden you have the management system. In this case, the nation tells you actually where the problem is, and if you value there that you click a button and instantaneously you deploy, you know, new policies and configuration. That's a dream come true. Literally, you may say, probably we're the last ones to the party in terms of infrastructure players, the industry means. But we're getting there very quickly, and this is a whole new set of possibilities now, >> way talking the cube a lot, and I think it's really relevant for what I'm hearing about your strategies. This cloud is about bringing the cloud operating model to your data wherever your data lives. And that seems to be kind of underscore your your strategy. Absolutely. It's so edge cloud on Prem hybrid, you guys, Your strategy is really to enable customers to bring that operating model wherever they need to. Absolutely right >> that transparency is a big deal. I mean, application anywhere, eating. Did I anywhere? That's a world where we're going to >> guys thoughts. Final thoughts on Sisqo live this year. No, it's only day one gets a customer meetings tonight, but initial impression San Diego >> Well, it's It's a well, it's always great to be in San Diego on DH. It's a great facility, and we know our customers really enjoy San Diego is Well, I think we'll have a great customer appreciation event on Wednesday night. Um, but, you know, I was struck. Uh, you just have to the keynote. I mean, the world solutions was buzzing, and there seems to be is always a lot of energy. It's just go live. But somehow so far this season, maybe even a little bit more energy. I know we've got a number of announcements coming this week across a bunch different areas, including clouds. So we're excited for next few days. >> Well, you got the double whammy first half. We were in February when Barcelona guys don't waste any time. You come right back. And June, your final thoughts value. >> Oh, it's just so exciting to speak with customers and partners. Over here, you can touch their excitement. People love to come together and get old. The news, you know, in one place it's this tremendous amount of energy here. >> Keep copter Fabio Gori. Thanks so much for coming on The Cube. Appreciate it. Thank you for having your walkabout, keeper. Right, everybody. We'll be back with our next guest. David Out. A student of Aunt Lisa Martin. We're live from Cisco Live 2019 in San Diego, right back.

Published Date : Jun 11 2019

SUMMARY :

Live from San Diego, California It's the queue covering Kip Compton is the senior vice president of Cisco's Cloud Platform and Solutions, Great to be here having us. Cloud is part of that innovation cocktail, if you will. Well, when they're multiple clouds, you leaving some stuff on him. the best cloud to solve that problem. I think it's here to stay. So I've dynamics is another example of something that Custer's one across all of that. What are some of the key challenges that you guys are seeing? but a lot of that is really the culture of the company needs to change, right? It's going to be multi cloud. And I think that does tend to get you to lowest common denominator because, So hybrid is more of a technology need to streamline So you were at Google Cloud next to Europe on stage David Gettler, Well, you know, first, all the partnerships or critical I mean, it's you said we're not trying to move the workload Stark Uh, ask each of you guys Maybe maybe, I actually think back to the founding of Cisco, if you know the Cisco kind of killed many computers to your point. we build on our DNA, which is, if you want and you heard Gettler today are What is the right right? the capability to run the same capabilities in there on prem environments in their data centers and the like, you know, to the extent that they should be And so we're seeing them really view, you know, security's foundational to what they're doing. It's how you respond to them. And if you want at the top of the security ecosystem in a multi polar world, you find identity of a security huge tail. us that you know aren't among the 28,000 you know here at the show. So now people be able to get professional certifications Francisco not just on networking but on cos you know computer companies, if you will hae t companies Cisco kind of a symbiotic relationship that's super important to us. You have to turn, but you can. They know that they have the ability to roll out fixes if they need So it involves the automated change management and date assurance talking about containers. And by the way, you know, as you automate this infrastructure, rightly so you mention infrastructures This cloud is about bringing the cloud operating model to your data wherever your data lives. I mean, application anywhere, eating. No, it's only day one gets a Um, but, you know, I was struck. Well, you got the double whammy first half. Oh, it's just so exciting to speak with customers and partners. Thank you for having your walkabout,

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Dr Thomas Scherer & Dave Cope | Cisco Live EU 2019


 

>> Live from Barcelona, Spain. It's the cue covering Sisqo Live Europe, brought to you by Cisco and its ecosystem partners. >> Hi, everybody. Welcome back to Barcelona. This is Cisco Live. I'm Dave a lot with stew Mina, man. And you're watching the Cube. The leader in live tech coverage. We go out to the events, we extract the signal from the noise. Dr. Thomas Shearer's here is the chief architect of tle Indus looks onboard and David Cope is back. He's a senior director of marketing development for the Cisco Cloud Platform and Solutions Group. Gentlemen, welcome to the Cube. Thank you. Thanks. So you're very welcome. So Telindus. Tell us about Telindus. >>So Telindus we are actually an integrator, a cloud operator, and a tech company. And, uh, we're partnering over the years with Cisco with all the products that they have notably, we are moving also into the public cloud. We have private cloud offering, but we see a first appetite coming up with our customers in the public cloud, which are heavily regulated industries. And there we are working notably with the team of Dave to have an offering there that enables them to move into the clouds. >> So these guys are a customer or a partner? >> Well, you know what's special about them, they're actually both. So they're a big customer of Cisco offerings, cloud center. and other offerings. The Cisco container platform, but they also use those to provide services to their customers. So they are a great sounding board about what the market needs and how our products are working. So Thomas telling has been around since. If I saw right. Nineteen seventy nine. So you know, we weren't talking multi cloud back then, but it is a big discussion point here at the show. You said private public, You're using Cloud Center, maybe explain to us what multi cloud means to you and your customers today. >> I would say most customers that we have a large organizations >> B >> managed dalati infrastructure. We're also doing integration projects. But those customers down, I'm really not really technology companies, you know, date. There are searching to work process because we deal with the good part off their operations. So at this, cos they come from a private infrastructure, they have there these days. They're bm vary installation there, private clouds and and I think also, it will stay like this for for a good amount of time. So there's no good reason to just go into the cloud because it's fancy because there is something that you cannot have certainly days. But that's it, stable progress that they're following. So what we need is actually tow catch the low hanging fruit that exist in a public cloud for our customers. But in such a way that it satisfies their day today I T operations and sometimes it's our operations. Who is doing that since we are managing this? So for us, actually, hyper cloud, to say short, is actually just end up >> so our mighty close. So I wonder we're almost two years into GDP are one year into the owner's finds. How has GPR affect you and your customers? And Ted? What's it like out there these days? >> Gpr. It's for me. Not the main reason for public private mighty cloud installations for us and that involves GDP are it is the regulation that so our customers are notably from the financial sector, and that's they're very strict on conservative security Woods for good because their main business is they are selling trust. There is not much more business where you trust that much. Then a bank I know everything about you, and that's something they cannot sacrifice now. In Europe, we have the advantage. Data is that strict regulation which puts kind of standards and that involves obviously also the GDP arcing. But if I look into that standards, that regulation imposes its very technical, they say. For example, please make sure if you move into the clouds that avoid a locket, be confident on what will be your exit costs. What will be a transition because and don't get married to anyone. And that's where Dave Steam comes into the game because that they provide that solution. Actually, that's >> music to your ears. I would think. I mean, have to be honest. If I were a public cloud provider, I'd say No, don't do multi cloud. We have one cloud, does it all? But no customer speaks like that. No, >> you're right. And I think to me what I love about Linda's in the way they use the product is they work in such a highly regulated environment, where policies managing common policies across very different environments becomes critical. So how do I manage access control and security profiles and placement policies all across very different multiplied environments. That's hard, and that's been one of the cornerstones that we've focused on in Cloud Centre. >> Yeah, so look, double click on that fucking Teo a guest earlier and I was asking them, sort of poking it. There's a lot of people who want that business because it's a huge business opportunity. It's, um, some big, well established companies. Cisco's coming at it from a position of strength, which is course network. But I'll ask you the same question. What gives you confidence that Cisco is in the best position for customers? Two. Urn, The right tio manage their multi cloud data and environment. >> I think it's I think it's a great question. I mean, for my perspective of action, love our customer's perspective. But if you think about Cisco's heritage around the network and security, I think most people would agree. They're very strong there. It's a very natural extension. Tohave Sisko Be a leader and multi cloud because, after all, it's how doe I securely connect very diverse environments together. And now a little further. Now, how do I help customers manage workloads, whether they be existing or new cloud native workloads, So we find It's a very natural extension to our core strengths and through both development and acquisition system has got a very, very broad and deep portfolio to do that. So your >> thoughts on that? Yeah, Yes, sister is coming from a network in history. But if your now leg look into the components days actually, yeah, Networking foundation s U. C s, which we have, for example, in our infrastructure, this hyper flex there are there solutions like CCP that you can run a deaf ops organization, can combine it with Cloud Center to make it high pret. And just today I learned a new thing, which is cute flow. I just recognized Cisco. It's the first one that is coming up with a platform is a service in Able Private Cloud. So if you go private, Cloud usually talk about running the M's. But now, with with With a CCP and it's Open sauce Project cute flow, which I think Ah, bee, very interesting to see in conjunction with C. C. P. And I heard that it's going to happen. You're actually Cisco is to first one delivering such a solution to the markets. So it's It's gross that just have >> a thing for the cnc es eso >> que bernetti Slow way Don't have to send a cease and desist letter, right? >> Ccp that Francisco Container platform. Ryan out sad. Some while ago on Prim Cooper. Nettie Stack. Right. So, Thomas, you know, we were the update on Cloud Center. Sweet. Now it's containerized. You got micro services. It's built with communities underneath and using cube flow. I'm guessing that's meaningful to you. There's a lot of things in this announcement that it's like, Okay, it sounds good, but in the real world, you know what? What do you super excited for? The container ization? You know, I would think things like the action orchestrator and the cost Optimizer would have value. But, you know, police tell us yourself, >> like Cloud Center was already variable before, you know, be a did investigation about what kind of flout brokering cloud orchestrations solutions exist big in those days when it was called Clicker Cloud Center. And I'm me and my colleagues know that click a team back then as well as now as assist. Greatly appreciated that, David, they became one family now for me, cloud center for face, certain requirements that I simply have to fulfill for our customer. And it's a mandatory effect that I have to feel for them, like being able to ensure and guarantee portability. Implementing policies, segregation of duties were necessary, things like that. I have to say now that it becomes containerized, that's a lot off ease and managing Cloud Center as a solution by itself, and also you have the flexibility to have it better. Also, my credible It's an important key point that Cloud Santa eyes a non cloud centric products that you can run it on. Prem that the orchestration that you don't have to log in on the orchestration there and have it on now can easily move it on such a cheeky because it's it's a container by solution. But I think also there's a sass option available so you can just subscribe to it. So you have full range off flexibilities so that day to day management work for engine doesn't become a day to day management things by itself. >> So I wonder if you could paint a picture for us of your environment. Bronson since nineteen seventy nine so You must have a lot of a lot of stuff A lot of you developed over the years, but you mentioned that you're starting to look a public clouds. You just mentioned your customer base, largely financial services, so they're highly regulated and maybe a little nervous about the cloud. But so paint a picture of your Maybe not for certain workloads. Paint a picture of your environment kind of where you want to go from. From an architecture in an infrastructure >> perspective, we haven't own what we call private. Manage cloud. That's a product recall. You flex witches, flex port reference architecture. That's Cisco that working. Get up storage. Cisco, UCS in conjunction with, we embarrass completely. It's the use since many years and as I already have said, the regulated market started opening up towards public law. So what does it mean? European Banking Authority. So Ebba, who's the umbrella organization on European level days, send out a recommendation. Dear countries, place your financial institution if they go into the cloud that have to do a B C. The country's I have put in place those regulations they have put in place those controls and for them. What They're mostly now in that let's investigate what its influence in the public they come from their private infrastructure. They are in our infrastructure, which is like private infrastructure virtualized and managed by us, mainly v m base. And now the news thing on top that they investigate at things like big data, artificial intelligence and things like that which you mostly don't have a private infrastructure. So in that combination is what we have to provide our customers but their most in and investigative >> okay. And okay. And Cisco is your policy engine management engine across all those clouds that the >> yes, we are able to managed our struggles with cloud centre. Sometimes it depends also on the operating modern. The customer himself is the one using cloud center, you know? So so it depends Since we are in integrate icloud operate and also off our services in the public cloud. It's always the question about who has to manage one and one >> of the things that I just had on that we see people providing our products as a service. We're just talking about Cooper Netease. Customers today are starting to move you, Burnett. He's just from being like development now into production. And what we're seeing is that these new communities based applications have non containerized dependencies reach out to another traditional app, reach out to pass a database. And what we try to do is to say, How do you give your customers the ability to get the new and the old working together? Because it'll be that way for quite some time. And that's a part of sort of the new cloud center capabilities. Also, >> that's that's a valid reason. So you have those legislate services and you don't want just do it. You can't just replace them now. Now >> let's go all >> in. Let's be cloud native. So you have always sees interoperability things to handle. And And, yeah, that's true. Actually, you can quite some my creation path using content or ization. I >> mean, you can't customer cancers over rotate to all the new fun buzz words. They've got a business to run. So what? >> This And how do I apply security policies and access control and to this very mixed environment now common policies and that becomes challenging. >> But that's also part of our business. Yes, there have there, for example, financial institution than not a ninety company. That's where we come in as a provida towards such an industry and daddy. Here I highly value the partnership with Cisco Heavy Cat Build new services together. We had that early adopters program, for example, regarding CCP. So Cisco is bringing a service provider into the loop bill. What's just right for the customer For them? >> Yes, you describe that is very challenging, is it's In some cases, it's chaos. But that's the opportunity I heard this morning that you guys are going after pretty hard, right? Oh, >> it's right. And you've got one set of desires for developers, but now we move into production. Now I t cops gets involved, the sea so gets involved. And how do we have then well thought out integrations into security and network management. Those air, all of the things that we're trying to really focus on. >> Well, where's the definite zone? You were surrounded by infrastructures code and it fits and cloud. Well, guys, thanks so much for coming in Cuba and telling your story. Really appreciate it. Thank you. Enjoyed it. Thank you. Alright, Keep it right there, buddy. Stupid and Dave. Alon. Today we're live from Cisco Live Barcelona. You watching the Cuba >> booth?

Published Date : Jan 29 2019

SUMMARY :

Sisqo Live Europe, brought to you by Cisco and its ecosystem partners. He's a senior director of marketing development for the Cisco Cloud Platform and Solutions all the products that they have notably, we are moving also So you know, we weren't talking multi cloud back then, So there's no good reason to just go into the cloud because it's fancy because How has GPR affect you and your customers? and that involves obviously also the GDP arcing. I mean, have to be honest. And I think to me what I love about Linda's in the way they use the product is they work in such But I'll ask you the same question. But if you think about Cisco's heritage around the network and security, I think most people would agree. solutions like CCP that you can run a deaf ops organization, So, Thomas, you know, we were the update on Cloud Center. Prem that the orchestration that you So I wonder if you could paint a picture for us of your environment. So in that combination is And Cisco is your policy engine management engine The customer himself is the one using we try to do is to say, How do you give your customers the ability to get the new and So you have those legislate services and you don't want just do it. So you have always sees interoperability things to mean, you can't customer cancers over rotate to all the new fun buzz words. This And how do I apply security policies and access control and to this very mixed So Cisco is bringing a service provider into the loop bill. that you guys are going after pretty hard, right? Those air, all of the things that we're trying Well, guys, thanks so much for coming in Cuba and telling your story.

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Jim Wu, Falcon Computing | Super Computing 2017


 

>> Announcer: From Denver, Colorado, it's theCUBE covering Super Computing '17. Brought to you by Intel. (upbeat techno music) Hey welcome back, everybody. Jeff Frick here with theCUBE. We're at Super Computing 2017 in Denver, Colorado. It's our first trip to the show, 12,000 people, a lot of exciting stuff going on, big iron, big lifting, heavy duty compute. We're excited to have our next guest on. He's Jim Wu, he's the Director of Customer Experience for Falcon Computing. Jim, welcome. Thank you. Good to see you. So, what does Falcon do for people that aren't familiar with the company? Yeah, Falcon Company is in our early stages startup, focus on AVA-based acceleration development. Our vision is to allow software engineers to develop a FPGA-based accelerators, accelerators without FPGA expertise. Right, you just said you closed your B round. So, congratulations on that. >> Jim: Thank you. Yeah, very exciting. So, it's a pretty interesting concept. To really bring the capability to traditional software engineers to program for hardware. That's kind of a new concept. What do you think? 'Cause it brings the power of a hardware system. but the flexibility of a software system. Yeah, so today, to develop FPGA accelerators is very challenging. So, today for the accelerations-based people use very low level language, like a Verilog and the VHDL to develop FPGA accelerators. Which was very time consuming, very labor-intensive. So, our goal is to liberate them to use, C/C++ space design flow to give them an environment that they are familiar with in C/C++. So now not only can they improve their productivity, we also do a lot of automatic organization under the hood, to give them the highest accelerator results. Right, so that really opens up the ecosystem well beyond the relatively small ecosystem that knows how to program their hardware. Definitely, that's what we are hoping to see. We want to the tool in the hands of all software programmers. They can use it in the Cloud. They can use it on premises. Okay. So what's the name of your product? And how does it fit within the stack? I know we've got the Intel microprocessor under the covers, we've got the accelerator, we've got the cards. There's a lot of pieces to the puzzle. >> Jim: Yeah. So where does Falcon fit? So our main product is a compiler, called the Merlin Compiler. >> Jeff: Okay. It's a pure C and the C++ flow that enables software programmers to design APGA-based accelerators without any knowledge of APGA. And it's highly integrated with Intel development tools. So users don't even need to learn anything about the Intel development environment. They can just use their C++ development environment. Then in the end, we give them the host code as well as APGA binaries so they can round on APGA to see a accelerated applications. Okay, and how long has Merlin been GA? Actually, we'll be GA early next year. Early next year. So finishing, doing the final polish here and there. Yes. So in this quarter, we are heavily investing a lot of ease-of-use features. Okay. We have most of the features we want to be in the tool, but we're still lacking a bit in terms of ease-of-use. >> Jeff: Okay. So we are enhancing our report capabilities, we are enhancing our profiling of capabilities. We want to really truly like a traditional C++-based development environment for software application engineers. Okay, that's fine. You want to get it done, right, before you ship it out the door? So you have some Alpha programs going on? Some Beta programs of some really early adopters? Yeah, exactly. So today we provide a 14 day free trial to any customers who are interested. We have it, you can set up your enterprise or you can set up on Cloud. Okay. We provide to where you want your work done. Okay. And so you'll support all the cloud service providers, the big public clouds, all the private clouds. All the traditional data servers as well. Right. So, we are twice already on Aduplas as well as Alibaba Cloud. So we are working on bringing the tool to other public cloud providers as well. Right. So what is some of the early feedback you're getting from some of the people you're talking to? As to where this is going to make the biggest impact. What type of application space has just been waiting for this solution? So our Merlin Compiler is a productivity tool, so any space that FPGA can traditionally play well that's where we want to be there. So like encryption, decryption, video codec, compression, decompression. Those kind of applications are very stable for APGA. Now traditionally they can only be developed by hardware engineers. Now with the Merlin Compiler, all of these software engineers can use the Merlin Compiler to do all of these applications. Okay. And when is the GA getting out, I know it's coming? When is it coming? Approximately So probably first quarter of 2018. Okay, that's just right around the corner. Exactly. Alright, super. And again, a little bit about the company, how many people are you? A little bit of the background on the founders. So we have about 30 employees, at the moment, so we have offices in Santa Clara which is our headquarters. We also have an office in Los Angeles. As well as a Beijing, China. Okay, great. Alright well Jim, thanks for taking a few minutes. We'll be looking for GA in a couple of months and wish you nothing but the best success. Okay, thank you so much, Jeff. Alright, he's Jim Lu I'm Jeff Frick. You're watching theCUBE from supering computing 2017. Thanks for watching. (upbeat techno music)

Published Date : Nov 14 2017

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Brought to you by Intel. Verilog and the VHDL to develop FPGA accelerators. called the Merlin Compiler. We have most of the features we want to be in the tool, We provide to where you want your work done.

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John Gilmartin | VMworld 2014


 

>> live from San Francisco, California It's the queue at PM World 2014 Brought to you by VM where Cisco, E M, C, H P and Nutanix. Now, here are your hosts John Courier and Dave Ilan. Take >> Okay. Welcome back when live in San Francisco, California v m World 2014. This is the Cube where we extract the signal in the noise. I'm John for day. Volante are 50 year here Of'em world broadcasting wall to wall. Three days of live coverage. Our next guest, John Gill Martin, GM and VP of the Supper defined Data center business unit. Welcome to the Cube. >> Thank you. Glad to be here. >> Yeah. So this is an area. That may be mean. Streams. Not on top of what we love to geek out stuffing. Find data center Two years ago. Maybe three years. Feels like 10 years ago. See your acquisition and Martine's been on multiple times. Suffer. Virtualization really has set the agenda for what's going on in the data center. And remember, it was very much a buzzword. Std. See some fun data center. But now it's becoming a reality. I want first question get your perspective. Is Where is the meat on the bone right now. This year with somebody find designer. What is materializing right now in market that's available in happening >> has been fantastic, because if you think about our customers, they're all trying to move to this notion of self service. Cloud help the developers be more agile, be more productive and soft, defined clearly the right architecture to go do that. And the last year has really brought us the last couple of pieces to go. Make that a reality, Obviously never. Fertilization is a huge component. Delivery of NSX is really brought us a kind of leaps and bounds forward around that. The adoption of that has been great and then now a virtual sand as well, just to bring soft defined into the storage space. We were seeing a tremendous amount of interest. You take all of that, you fully virtualized your infrastructure, and then you bring management on top of that automate on top of that and really, now we have the ability building self service files inside the enterprise. Start to meet the meeting with developers, and you have this kind of a self service agile idea. >> It's almost as if you change in the airplane engine out at 30,000 feet with summer defined data center, people said on the Q bond. It's very difficult, but I want to get your perspective of where the pressure points of innovation are coming from coming from the APS service containers show the app, sir, setting the agenda were close. Now diversities another variable. It used to be the infrastructure would enable on top of it. Now we seem to be rushing down from the top, and this dynamic provisioning environment seems to be this DEV ops requirement all that's in place. So how do you how do you How do we talk about the innovation of the pressure point? What are those pressure >> points? Yeah, well, as you point out, it's really about the applications and the requirements of applications. And pushing down on the infrastructure, and in particular, is you look a kind of new style cloud native applications, which tend to be a bit different than traditional laps. They asking different things the infrastructure, and that's asking. Your developers are asking to do different things than necessarily what kind of fish in a lapse of required developers are looking for portability. They're looking for agility. They're looking for a difference that a tooling really. And you know they want that experience where they go to a website that Newton A P I and programmatically spin up infrastructure. And so that's really what enterprise like the organization's now our challenge to go Dio is to go provide that type of investor, actually support that for the helpers. Technology today is fundamental to the business model of every company out there. Used to just be about back office operations. Now it's really about the marketing organization, the sales organization, product development organizations. Every part of the business depends on technology is changing business models, and therefore this is really what's asking Iike organizations to be much more responsive and to do a lot more than they initially ever have in the past to support the business, to move >> quickly. So in terms of network organization, So how much is that? A part of this new model >> in our virtual station? Cooley a critical component to this right and, you know, a super interesting. When we first brought out NSX last year, a lot of value proposition was around the speed agility. And if you look at the big cloud providers, you like the big financial firms. That was the kind of primary motivation. Initially, we still see that a lot. It's been interesting, though, the last year to start to see the value proposition for network organization really shift. And if you're looking more than mainstream now, it's really a lot about this notion of micro segmentation. This notion of how do I bring security from that used to just be in the perimeter and start to bring that inside the data center. And that's been driving a lot of the interest and be able to get security controls all way down to the PM and the application >> itself. Just on Fridays. Pregame crowd shot we had Steve Perrin chimed in, Gone. The security question. I were the big opportunity for start ups, and he said Security. Yep, and it's really not about perimeter security anymore. It's about something else. Could you describe what he means by that icy perimeter? Security was the old way. Secure the perimeter. But people are getting in. Protect the queen with a moat. What does he mean by that? And why do you say that opportunities there? >> Yeah, that's the traditional model of security. The data center is you put up this big as you said moat around the data center, and you hope that no one get over that The problem was, if someone did, then it's all exposed on the inside it. And so the notion now is how do we bring security inside the data center? Protect those applications. But in order to do that, you know that traditional models were doing that, or just two operationally complex or too expensive just can't do it. Physical systems. So the beauty of never quit realization use and start to bring that in inside the data center, bring those security controls the BM and do so in with enough automation and policy based on mation that it's operationally feasible to manage. >> Well, what about the flip side of that? When the queen wants to leave her castle, >> how do >> you secure that use case? If I'm making sense and >> I'm not sure I understand. >> So Okay, so you get queen being the data, let's say and the data by its very nature is distributed. Right? So, um, okay, protect the perimeter. That's that's not enough. Now I can go deeper inside the data center and provide tools to make it simpler to deploy. Or if Aiken, you know, find a problem faster toe to solve that problem. But it's the data starts to become dispersed. How do I create a security model on? Does this software defined data center Help me do that. Accommodate that dispersed data that distributed data model? >> Yeah, because I mean the great thing is as you bring security controls into software and set it in the hardware, then you can travel and be part of that application. And actually, as the application moves or the date of that application moves, you can tie the security policies. The application itself >> was an application centric data centers security model, >> and it's and it's a platform also that you know, an ecosystem is building on top of to go, bring even deeper set of security capabilities. And top of you talk about the startups you're talking about a second ago, you know, it's this whole platform doubted for innovation. On top of that, you could bring really interesting ways of thinking about new security. >> Two years ago, when Pat Gelsinger took over as the C E o m. C. Had a financial analyst meeting, and Pat was part of that of your new C C F O stood up and talked about tam on gave a really good Chris presentation run that. I'm sure you're seeing these slides a lot. We see them as analysts big, big opportunity for VM wear, and a huge part of that opportunity is the software to find data center. So I wanted to dig into that a little bit. Specifically, when I look at things like Tam, I say, Okay, what's the business case? Because the business case is gonna ultimately determine the degree of the rapidity of the adoption. So I want if you could talk about the business case for the software defined data center, maybe compare it to sort of phase one, which is, you know, virtualized compute. Yes, this case was enormous. It was a 10 X value proposition. Is this bigger? Similar, Smaller, twice as big when we could talk about a little bit. >> And when you say business case obviously thinking about from the customer perspective, >> Wellit's, either I'm gonna cut costs or I'm gonna create some other kind of incremental business value. Other. I'm gonna drive revenues. I'm gonna reduce cycle times or introduce the lap times timeto value, et cetera. >> Yes, that's the interesting thing is often find data centers really kind of hitting on all of those things where the key motivators is really moving faster and be able to reduce like a times instead of four weeks to deploy an application. Let's get it down to a couple of minutes. Let's be able to meet the needs of developers to do Dave off style soft development. So it's all about speed and kind of driving revenue from the back end. If you start to think about the operating expense and capital expense, so shoot with the infrastructure. You can start to address those pretty aggressively, you know, if you think about virtual sand, for example, it's all about a different operating model for deploying storage virtual machines, its applications centric and V M Central, and so you can reduce the amount of time that initiators of spending, managing infrastructure and get them focused on the energy and kind of applications. So, one way to address topics, or if you think about the capital expense, what we see now you've done quite a bit of analysis is by virtual izing network fertilizing storage you can actually get down to anywhere between I think it's 35 49% reduction in the total capital expense of building your data center. So really significant opportunities to reduce costs both on the operating expense side through automation, but also the capital expense side by moving more intelligence into the hardware itself so that just like with virtualization, if you go back, you know, 5 10 years virtualization was a very simple capital expense story here. Now, where we have a story that's well, much broader than that, but still inclusive all those kind of capital expense benefits. >> I gotta ask you about competition. Just chicken out. What's going on around the conversations? Um, obsolete VM where staking their claim out Amazon on one front. But Microsoft's a player in the enterprise. So what do you guys do? These of the Microsoft partner frenemy. They're in there and start stuff. Our players got plowed. So how do you guys look at those guys? You guys too far down S o. >> You know, with Microsoft? Yeah. At this point, we still are. Let's see ourselves. It's really kind of leading the way around sort of virtual ization. And that's really been the kind of core in the foundation which we started from, and we still have tremendous set of capabilities there. And so that's kind of a starting point. And then you build off on everything we're doing around network fertilization, everything you're doing around soft defined storage, really a very differentiated set of capabilities and your eyes really unique set of capabilities from be able to build that whole virtualized infrastructure, then your episode of management capabilities on that that are increasingly header genius in nature. And we have this ability to kind of extend the data center in unique ways, you know, managing automated here but extended after the cloud as well. So pretty powerful set of kind of technology. >> Car legend Box said that VM wears it is a data center automation company. Um, should he added orchestration to that, too, or talk about that. What is data center automation company mean? Because he's referring to the South to find a descent course cloud certainly is automation, orchestration and the cloud, but from your in your world What does that mean? >> Automation is really about taking a lot of the manual activities that United Administrator or anybody else who's spending time infrastructures does. And let's run that in software. And that's not tie ourselves to operations that are specific, proprietary pieces of hardware. Let's get to a model where everything could be automated through software. We could get the scalable models of deployments and operations naturally, what automation means. Automation then allows you to start to move at the speed of business rather than being tied to the kind of infrastructure in the hardware and everything else underneath. >> So the other quote from Carl was awesome, by the way. Great interview, he said. How glad the customers still on friend. Okay, I buy that you have a zillion customers, a lot of Amon prim. Why not private club or private cloud is today? Or his private cloud, the halfway house or a way station to the hybrid cloud? So talk about that dynamic. You know, summer defined data center at the end of the day could be software driven. The end of the day is still a data center. You still have a data center somewhere where the damn ploughed or on Prem talk about that on premise dynamic. Yeah, >> so, yeah. Ultimately, if you think about kind of hybrid Cloud hybrid Cloud is really the combination of assets that you own inside the data center, along with assets. They're sitting someplace else. And you know, the motivations for that are I want to be able to think about how do I optimized? I want to think about how Doe I optimize my choices, a placement for projects that are either short lived, etcetera. And so there's a set of applications or projects where makes sense to go rent capacity. But if you actually look at the total total cost of ownership inside the data center, you can actually get too much better economics by owning the assets yourself, building on top. So there's definitely a ongoing and continued rule for the private cloud. But there's a very clear you said the use cases for extending periodically into the hybrid cloud. So, really, you know, let's combine both of those that could boast best of both. So let's do that away that seamless. So we really treat the management. The operations of everything is the same, regardless of whether it's inside or outside, right? >> So I mean the buzzword. Bingos all getting resect is the new new new names Air coming out of that re naming convention? I gotta ask you about kind of specifically around the suite that Pat talks about talks with sweet. So I just don't understand how that parses out relative the hyper conversion and describe to the folks what is hyper converge. That's the new buzzword I know. I know. Hyper scale is a hyper scale with convergence. Is that Web scale? So what you guys to find hyper converged as hyper >> converged is, in our mind, really kind of the coming together of prescriptive hardware definition with software that's preinstalled on tightly integrated so that it's really easy to get to time to die So you could get up running virtual machines in less than 15 minutes and do that all with kind of a prescriptive design, guidance, prescriptive kind of price understanding and a single support organization that call and get support. If you need help on, that's really >> built definition right here, up and running with >> 15 minutes right and one of the key enabler. So that is the sphere and other key enablers virtual sand and really building all that and types of inside. One of these kind of off the show, >> called Converge, Prepackaged, converge on purpose, built, converged essentially. But that's where it's going, right? That would be me. That's >> where it's headed, right? And it's so it's really about making it easy for an organization to get up and running, get person machines deployed super quickly on, then be able to expand that in a building block way that's expand very quickly and easily. >> John Gill Martin is the V P and general manager. Somebody find business unit for the M. Where, um, tell the folks out there the last word he had in the segment. Um, what's the biggest misconception of summer defined data center in context? Of'em, where >> I think the biggest misconception is that it's something that's far into the future. The reality is this is something that people are doing today. Technology exists. We can build this, and you know this is the way in the architecture that everyone's headed down doors. >> And what's the one thing that you could share that they might not know about you guys? It's a very positive thing. >> Well, you know, I hopefully people saw all the announcements and work we're doing around open staff, for example, Really looking to bring these types of open a pea eye's been a neutral AP eyes on top of this soft to find platform. And yeah, that's a big news item for us. I wanna make sure that everybody saw that. It's a big part of Webber Head >> Open Stack and Dr Too Big Documents. Relevant news pieces exactly. Gives the app developers essentially access to infrastructure without being infrastructure. Guys. Right, that's fundamentally >> again helping enterprise guys set up in infrastructure that developers can access. Programmatically. That's >> John Gill Martin inside the Cube. We're here live in San Francisco for the emerald 2014. I'm John for what David wanted right back after this short break

Published Date : Aug 26 2014

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by VM where Cisco, E M, This is the Cube where we extract the signal Glad to be here. Virtualization really has set the agenda for what's going on in the data center. Start to meet the meeting with developers, and you have this kind of a self service agile idea. So how do you how do you How do we talk about the innovation of the pressure point? And pushing down on the infrastructure, and in particular, is you look a kind of new style cloud native applications, So in terms of network organization, So how much is that? And that's been driving a lot of the interest and be able to get security controls And why do you say that opportunities there? But in order to do that, you know that traditional models were doing that, or just two operationally complex or too expensive But it's the data starts to become dispersed. or the date of that application moves, you can tie the security policies. and it's and it's a platform also that you know, an ecosystem is building on top of to go, So I want if you could talk about the business case for the software defined data Wellit's, either I'm gonna cut costs or I'm gonna create some other kind of incremental business value. You can start to address those pretty aggressively, you know, if you think about virtual sand, for example, So how do you guys look at those guys? And that's really been the kind of core in the foundation which we course cloud certainly is automation, orchestration and the cloud, but from your in your world at the speed of business rather than being tied to the kind of infrastructure in the hardware and everything else underneath. So the other quote from Carl was awesome, by the way. the combination of assets that you own inside the data center, along with assets. how that parses out relative the hyper conversion and describe to the folks what is hyper to get to time to die So you could get up running virtual machines in less than 15 minutes and So that is the sphere and other key enablers virtual sand But that's where it's going, right? And it's so it's really about making it easy for an organization to get up and running, John Gill Martin is the V P and general manager. We can build this, and you know this is the way in the architecture And what's the one thing that you could share that they might not know about you guys? Well, you know, I hopefully people saw all the announcements and work we're doing around open staff, for example, Gives the app developers essentially access again helping enterprise guys set up in infrastructure that developers can access. John Gill Martin inside the Cube.

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