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Zeus Kerravala, ZK Research | DevNet Create 2019


 

>> Live from Mountain View, California it's theCUBE, covering DevNet Create 2019. Brought to you by Cisco. >> Okay welcome back everyone we're here live for day two coverage we're winding down at DevNet Create this is Cisco's, conferences theCUBE coverage I'm John Fourier, your host. Two days of coverage DevNet is the group the developer group DevNet Create in the never event that they bring together. We're here with Zeus Kerravala, principal analyst ZK research breaking it down with me we're going to do a debrief, break down what's happening at DevNet. Zeus great to see you thanks for coming on, let's wrap this up so what's going on with Cisco 'cause you know we've been following, I've known Susie Wee for many many years over a decade watching, what's happened is almost like I never would've thought this would have been possible almost like 10 years ago. Cisco the incumbent bought all these companies maybe lose grip on the networking, boom there's a renaissance with Cloud, they got their mojo, back developers repp in to the right a whole new changing of the guard. >> Well the network's certainly back and in fact I've been following Cisco a long time I was a customer Cisco section before I was an analyst and I've been following the developer initiatives at Cisco since 2001 the first time they tried and when Susie took this role I was as skeptical as they could be because I saw developer initiative failed developer initiative failed and I said it's not going to work the culture inside Cisco is not ready for it and behold, you know a few years later after all our hard work almost six hundred thousand members I'd say it's working I think one of the trends that's actually helping Cisco is that the IT in the world's kind of come to them I think they spend a lot of along time on the outside looking in that you know being a major strategic IT partner that was more the compute vendors the application partners but if you look today at the trends digital transformation the technology that are driving that are things like Internet of Things, Mobility, Cloud computing and Artificial Intelligence and those are all Network centric paradigms so in a way we you know we live in a world where everything's connected and think about it your own personal life John what can you do without the network, you can't watch movies, you can't play games, you can't read books, you can't do anything without the network and so the network has never been more important and Cisco's finally opened their network up to the point where developers can actually build things on top of it so you know they used to talk about the network being a platform and it was really just a platform other Cisco stuff but now it's truly a platform for others to create on it to add value. >> I mean I think it's one of you're totally right on that I think it's create analysis because it's like hey they didn't really screw it up there they didn't such a great strategic position as a supplier to the network's and it was like they wake up, oh my god we're in good position here why don't we just take advantage of the fact that everything's networked, network effect, social networks, network constructs you're totally right I think this is a game changer but then how do you explain the success now, I mean obviously new leadership, was it a leadership change, was it a realization, what's your analysis of the Susie as a team, she was a catalyst, what was the real turning point in your mind? >> Well I think leadership change was part of it and in fact part of the very first thing one of the very first things Chuck Robbins ever said to me when he took over as CEO, he promised me that Cisco would listen to customers and if there's something that's good for customers, Cisco wanted to lead that effort and you could argue that historically they weren't really on board with things that might have been bad Cisco but good for customers, now they are and one of the trends that in order for DevNet to work one of the things you have to do, is open up the network and conceptually you might think well if we open up the network now we might put ourselves in a competitively weaker position but ultimately that's good for customers you can build applications that add value to that network and so I think the big culture chip with Cisco came in with Chuck Robbins their new CEO it's not so new anymore, but a willingness to listen to customers be open and allow others to co-create on the network and that's really been the foundation for DevNet and Susie taken the ball and run with it. >> She's got the chops, technical chops MIT background understands tech knows research, knows how to make it real, she's done that but it's also the wave that they're on to, they've got some waves that are really in their favor, that's right in great position, I mean IoT you couldn't ask for the edge of the network exploding an opportunity now more than ever I mean it's been over, Cisco you always heard over the years we got to move up to the stack, there's now the full, got to go to the edge and push beyond the edge now you got power at the end you got tons of opportunity, OT, Operational Technologies, the software is kind of all built for hardware, you got IT connected devices in an IoT with GPUs on them, I mean come on, and then Wi-Fi sits over the top, >> I think one of things IoT done is its democratized the edge, if you think historically about the value of the network was commonly thought that the closer you get to the data center, the more value the network had, the branch edge less value more edge but now you've got a user edge, client access edge, an IoT edge, branch edge or wireless edge, there's is so many edges now and we're are creating data at every one of those points and what that means, we need to do analysis we need, you know to be able to do with Machine Learning at those points we need access to the data we need to be able to develop in those points and so the whole network has now been democratized where I feel there's not one part of the network that has more valuable it's all valuable and DevNet allows customers be able to tap into that. >> Can we just give it all those IoT names, called the network. >> Well that's what essentially what it is, that's a big shift for the industry to start thinking about the wireless network and the wired network and the data center network and you're right it is just one network and it needs to be treated that way. >> And on-prem Clouds still got to move packets from A to B, store stuff as well, states important all these things are coming back it's not really changing what distributed computing used to be so you know given that being said Cisco has a position. I want to get your thoughts on something that some we talk about here at the event not many people in mainstream might get this or not, I want to get your take on it. Having the portfolio of products all have api's is the potential game changer across the board what's your analysis of what that could possibly turn into because you know having things with api's on them every device is only going to create more connections of data to other devices to share and compose and create data what's the impact for the people watching that it might be in wall street saying what's the impact of having api's on every single product? >> Yeah I think it turns Cisco into a platform company and I think you're right it is a game-changer for the company. I think historically Cisco value was driven by the Cisco product, the product portfolio, it's like the routers the switches things like that, now that they've opened up their API is you're going to start seeing small software companies, large software companies systems integrators ISPs all building things to run the Cisco network and that creates a fantastic pull through effect the fact that was talking with one of the Cisco earlier today about when they do get pulled through, the cost to sale goes way down because the application partner that pulls them through so their cost to sale is really just whatever they pay out to the application vendors, it's very very low so their margins will go up you'll see them in bigger deal sizes and when you're part of that application ecosystem there's not as much tendency to pound the vendor for discounts right, so I think it puts this on a much more strategic position because now they're a part of something bigger, they're part of company transformation, they're part of application transformation and that will have a significant impact both on revenue but more important on margin company will start making more money. >> That's a great point on the pull through and sales cost impact a margin but also if you also factor in first of all great analysis but I want to get your thoughts on the ecosystem impact is the conscious i've been having with solution providers they're like, well hey I'm coming into retail and I'm coming into manufacturing in healthcare and I'm actually deploying solutions. I'm getting higher margins on my stuff. So you have contribution value going value contribution going to the partners as well not just on the Cisco. >> That's important 'cause Cisco company it's a partner led company of ninety percent of their sales go through their partner channel and for them they're always want to drive more value into that and I think for the resellers too, for their partners they need to understand that if they embrace DevNet, they embrace a lot of the applications, they are going to have more strategic relationships with their customers, their deal sizes will go up, they'll have better margins and it'll put them in a better position as well. So I think the loyalty that you see in Cisco's channel will continue to grow and frankly nobody's got the size, the install base that Cisco has so it's hard, it's really going to be hard to compete with them. >> Let me get your thoughts on as a study of the industry the horses on the track, you got other competitors you got good opportunities for expansion with Cloud Multi-Cloud, but I'm not sure that they might see the clear visibility yet into the financial impact of Multi-Cloud, so the question is what point do they start cannibalizing and eating their own to get that pole position as the battle ship of the big move happens with Cisco is that is they have this company transformation they have really huge revenue streams in other markets, Telco is that's disrupting, okay. Multi-class so when do they start cannibalizing and eating their own to bring in the new, is that on their minds, 'cause i just see there might be some antibodies that might be inside Cisco trying to say well this Cloud things not yet proven or let's see the revenue visibility into the Cloud. >> Yeah I think there's probably some of that inside Cisco and you'll have some fighting between groups. But I do think it's a net additive Cisco, I think you wind up what what the Cloud does is it makes you want network services and more places. I want, I need a network, I certainly can't get rid of my network if I'm connecting to the Cloud right they need to connect to it, but then I'm going to want to have the Cisco portfolio and network services available in Amazon or Google or Microsoft Azure and they have relationships with those companies, so I'm sitting away what it does is it takes what Cisco started on the company premise and it extends it up to the Cloud and so ultimately, what customers want almost every large enterprise they want, want some kind of hybrid environment, but the environment has to look the same on-prem in the Cloud and I think Cisco is a good position to be able to bridge that gap and so I you could look at it as cannibalizing, I don't really think it does. I think it's a net additive to Cisco, I think internally they may need to restructure things in order to get some of the business units that might be affected on board with that but ultimately it's-- >> Some tweaks basically not hardcore wholesale changes >> No they've already done a lot of tweaking. If you look the leadership team that some place now is completely different than five years ago. So they've done a lot of realignment and a lot of tweak and I think they're ready for this. >> Horses on the track, competition, Cisco's in good place Multi-Cloud seems like a great play, Multi-Cloud, internetworking was a big, Coax cables head hubs, you had subnets it sounds like Multi-Cloud might be a great similar trajectory of what internetworking was as a segment. Multi-Cloud might seem like a perfect fit for Cisco. >> Yeah well multi-Cloud extends the the current network out to the multiple Clouds and I think what what's important understand there is it does raise the bar on complexity a Multi-Cloud network is going to be more complicated to run than a plain simple On-premise network but Cisco's this is where a Cisco software business is important, DNA Center they've done a lot of work in that area to to mask a lot of complexity so if customers that use DNA center they're going to be able to use that software interface as a way to manage it and so now instead of having to configure every box one by one and I was a network engineer I do that now you do it in one central location and push it out everywhere, if I had that I would have had a lot more free times. >> Yeah, since you're a network engineer I used to do those wide area networks myself back in the day command line in telnet it into boxes all that good stuff, when you look at the vision of programmability of networks which I love that term by the way. I've always loved even when Juniper had Juno so originally that overlay love software mixing in. I love this notion of programmability not yet fully understood but it makes sense. How do you think that's going to play out? Looking back, are we going to look back in time saying hey you know 2019 this was a seminal moment or was it not seminal moment? How important is this programmability going to be for Cisco in the industry? >> Well it's extremely important as a way to be able to automate network functions and I talked a lot of the DevNet people here I think they're starting to warm up to automation, I think there's a little bit of trepidation at first that's hey it's going to take my job but I think what's happening to IT people today is there's so much to do that they simply don't have time to do a lot of what they did before you know what it's like if I'm running a legacy Network, I'm literally configuring every box one by one. So if I got a thousand branches, I'm going to make a change, I got to hit a thousand boxes right, that's not very efficient so now I can do it in one place and push it out across and so I think what programmability does is it lets me automate and orchestrate things better to the point where the network should be able to run itself and now as an IT person I can go focus on more strategic initiatives. I'll give me an anecdote from a CEO I talked a little while ago this is a few months ago. He said my IT department is becoming less and less relevant to me and I need them to become more relevant, I need them to help me innovate but they can't because they're busy running the day-to-day, I need them to find a way to offload that and that's what programmability does. It lets you offload the things that aren't strategic right my advice to IT people is if you're doing things today there aren't strategic to your resume or your company, don't do them find a way to automate them and that's where programming. >> And giving good cost structure in line but driving revenue is a great resume boost. (laughing) >> No one's going to hire you because you can configure that ACLS through that command line faster than the next guy, that's not a strategic way to drive your-- >> Are we're going to see you obviously at Cisco live as well? >> I'll be at Cisco live. >> Great love to get your perspective in summary, put a bow around DevNet, I'm a big fan of Susie and her team I've seen it from day one, yours as well, what are they going to do next I was they got a good success formula here. How do they scale it, how do you see them taking this inside Cisco and continuing to explode it internally as well as externally what's your view on what they what they should be doing? >> Well I think it's reached critical mass and I think there was a couple of things they had to do to get to this point. One was obviously build the user base but also get DevNet relevant across the portfolio and it is that everything from collab to data center security. I think looking at ahead what's next, is they got to find a way to get the general Cisco salesperson to be able to sell this to understand the value which I'm not so sure it's there and also they have a massive partner community as you talked about all the resellers, this has to now become part of that partner sale, the partners need to understand if I sell the concept of some of these advanced applications that run on top of it, I'm going to have better feel for myself and so I think now it's about the structures in place, now it's about executing to be able to get the kind of exponential value out of this. >> This is really operationalize it to the next level, is it on a startup budget, did it create success, thanks for sharing that great commentary. They're breaking it down here in the end of the game, games over, end of DevNet Create third year we've been cover the beginning while in Susie journey following Cisco as developers become more important in the modern era of new applications where network programmability will be an advantage, this is the future they're betting on Cloud computing, AI, GPUs on all devices, API is everywhere, this is the Cisco strategy it's theCUBE coverage signing off from Mountain View, thanks for watching. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Apr 26 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by Cisco. Zeus great to see you thanks for coming on, is that the IT in the world's kind of come to them for DevNet to work one of the things you have to do, done is its democratized the edge, if you think historically called the network. that's a big shift for the industry to start thinking across the board what's your analysis of the cost to sale goes way down going to the partners as well not just on the Cisco. it's really going to be hard to compete with them. and eating their own to bring in the new, but the environment has to look the same on-prem and I think they're ready for this. Horses on the track, competition, Cisco's and so now instead of having to configure every box one How important is this programmability going to the day-to-day, I need them to find a way but driving revenue is a great resume boost. Great love to get your perspective in summary, now it's about executing to be able to get the kind This is really operationalize it to the next level,

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Nik Kalyani, WhenHub & TryCrypto | DevNet Create 2019


 

(lively pop music) >> Live from Mountain View, California. It's the Cube covering DevNet Create 2019. Brought to you by Cisco. >> Okay welcome back everyone, we're here at day two coverage live of coverage at Mountain View, Cube coverage of Cisco's DevNet Create. I'm John Furrier, your host, where all the action is in the creation side of two communities, DevNet, Cisco developers and then the open cloud native world entrepreneurship coming together to create products. Our next guest is Nik Kalyani, co-founder of WhenHub and TryCrypto. He's a builder, he's a creator, he's an entrepreneur. Welcome to The Cube, thanks for coming on >> John, thanks for having me. >> You just gave a long talk so I'll let you breathe a little bit. You're an entrepreneur, you're an inventor, you see things early. You got a lot of your hands on lots of good stuff here. This is the perfect place for you to be giving talks and hanging out. >> Absolutely I love the fact that people are here to learn. They're here to find out about the new innovative things that they can experience hands-on. I just gave a workshop on smart contracts, on the blockchain and I loved the questions I got and the energy that's there. >> What sort of questions were you getting? What was the interest? Where are people going at it? Because networking's a supply chain problem you can almost imagine applying blockchain to networking constructs. >> Yeah absolutely, you know blockchain is one of those technologies that is misunderstood quite a bit and some of the questions I got really helped me, help reinforce that. Ultimately, what I was trying to do is make sure that people understand that blockchain is not a solution for everything. There are certain things where there are scenarios where there are multiple un-trusted parties where blockchain is great, but otherwise it's just a slow database. So you want to make sure that you use it in the right scenarios and supply chain is a very common example where it's used, especially private blockchains. >> If latency's not a concern blockchain might be a solution if other things line up. Great point, I'm glad you brought that up. I want to just ask you because your profile as a person you're a visionary, you see things early. The part of the show here that's interesting is it's not like there's this research kind of thinking, although researchers tends to think about the waves coming. It's about what's here and now and what's coming but it's also making things real and creating. So a lot of the conversations are fun, exploratory, discovery orientated but also there's a lot of reality kind of grounded in it. You know entrepreneurs make some mistakes if you're too early, you're misunderstood for a long time. It's got to be a little bit early at the right time, timing's everything. Talk about the dynamic of timing and building and creating with big waves that are coming. You got cloud, you got blockchain, you got AI, you got machine learning. Talk about this dynamic. >> Absolutely, yeah so timing is so important, especially when you have start-ups right? You could have the greatest technology and maybe the market's not ready for it and so yeah it fails. My first start up was like that. I created something that the market was not ready for but fortunately the stuff I'm working on the market is ready for. So I think one of the things that developers, engineers can do is really look at how not necessarily how a technology is being marketed but what the adoption rate is. If there are more people jumping on it, and a good way to look at that is to look at GitHub and see how many people are creating samples, boilerplates, how many people are writing blog posts et cetera. That I think is a better indicator of whether a technology is ready for prime time or if it's just all vaporware. >> Tell about what you're working on now you're working on some very interesting projects. Where are they? What's the status, size of the team, collaborative open source. What's going on? >> So I have two start-ups I'm working on. the first one is called WhenHub. So we have a product called Interface that allows anyone to be an expert on any topic, and promote themselves through the platform. And allows anyone who's looking for expertise on any topic to find them and then pay for them and do a video call, get their questions answered and the whole transaction is handled via blockchain with either our cryptocurrency or you can use Apple Pay or Google Pay. So we launched a few months ago, we have about 75,000 users, it's growing very fast. We are just at the point right now where we are trying to scale-up. Our crypto token is called WHEN token. It's listed on five different exchanges. So that's one thing. While building that product one thing became very clear to me. Mainstream users have a very challenging time with using anything blockchain or cryptocurrency related. And it's through no fault of theirs, the ecosystem has been created for developers by developers and the tools lack empathy for the users. And that lead me to create an open source project called TryCrypto. The mission is to create free open source content and tools to make blockchain and cryptocurrency more accessible to users. >> To mainstream not the killer dorks and the guys coding. >> Yeah we want it to be like non-technical folks >> Is it the wallet that's the problem or is it just overall too techy? >> You know what John, the very word wallet is the problem. (John laughs) Because it gives this idea that there's something within it. As we were talking earlier, you know about blockchain, there's nothing in a wallet. It's just a placeholder for all of your addresses, right? So in fact, I'm trying to solve that problem with a new tool I've created called Photoblock, where I use a photo and emoji's to replace that. Yes, wallets are problems. The fact that it requires you to have all these parts in place before you can do anything useful, that's a big problem also. People really need to step back and look at the user experience and say what are the friction points and how can we eliminate them and that needs to happen before blockchain and cryptocurrency can have mass adoption. >> Talk about the choice of smart contract language used. Ethereum which was the hottest development oriented the most traction. A lot of ICOs kind of watered that down, it's still under 300. Other ones are emerging, NEO, EO, a bunch of other ones. It seems to be kind of like a NASCAR race, one's in the lead, someone's coming up. How do you look at that marketplace as other developers start to kick the tires? As people start building these real-world apps is that important to have a selector? Does it matter? What's your thoughts on selection? >> That's a great question. I think going back to what I said about how to evaluate a technology. You can see that Ethereum is still continues to be the leader, by far. So while EO and other blockchains have what appears to be a lot of momentum, if you dig down below the surface you don't find as much. So I continue to remain a big fan of Ethereum. Which doesn't mean I don't care for the other blockchains but I find that right now Serenity and Ethereum are a good way to move forward. I think EO is also a good platform to build on but I think their developing tools need to reach some level of maturity. On Ethereum, the folks that have created the truffle stack, the truffle and ganache package, have done a great service for developers because they make them so simple and easy. Something like that needs to evolve. >> Yeah and your point earlier I think it's important to know for the developers out there don't confuse the protocol and the token selection on smart contracts with blockchain. Again, you don't have to anything on blockchain 'cause it's a slow database. You're doing smart contracts which doesn't really require a lot of overhead. I mean it's a contract, it does. You want to have it reliable, but you're not doing zillions of contracts per second. The IOPs are not that high. >> Yeah, actually smart contracts is also a very misunderstood term. In fact, someone asked me is it legal contracts or medical contracts, what is it? A smart contract is really just an application. A programming code that runs on the virtual machines on blockchain. They call it a contract because once it's out there it's immutable. Which means the rules are defined, known and fixed and can't be changed. So when you create a smart contract, really what you're doing is handling a very small amount of data that you want to persist forever that runs with some rules. >> And in a decentralized world, as we call it in our community, it's a digital handshake. You agreed that we would do this, there it is, it's un-hackable. What are the cool things you're working on? What else you got? Opensource project's awesome. You got a lot going on. Life's good. >> Life is good. As I mentioned, Photoblock is the thing that I'm really excited about. Another app that we are building is called Public Record. The problem we are solving there is that in areas where there is strife, or maybe there's dictators et cetera, sometimes when you have people who have photos of some crime occurring or some event occurring, they are reluctant to share it because it could be traced back and have adverse consequences. With Public Record we are building a smart contract driven blockchain app. Where you can just take a photo and it will push that photo on to IPFS. Which stands for the InterPlanetary File System, which is a decentralized file system. It will anonymize the photo. It will strip all the stuff that your camera puts on there like GPS, the camera model et cetera. It'll manipulate that photo and it will then put a hash of that on the blockchain and make it available by location. So you can go to any location look at all the photos that people have taken there that are completely anonymous and impossible to track back to the >> And what about tampering proof? You have origination data, you strip out the real origination data, that's really important for some of these countries where people get killed for sharing or trying to get the backdoor out of the country for political revolution or just simply I don't want anybody to know. How about tamper proof? >> It is, it's on IPFS, which is immutable file system. What we also do is we manipulate the colors and tones of the photo a little bit so it's impossible to even use AI to go back and reverse engineer and figure out who created the photo. The location, the time and the actual content of the photo is not tampered. So Public Record will do that. >> Just a little quick Q and A on your company. Did you do an ICO, did you finance it yourself? >> With WhenHub we did do an ICO, but it was at a time when the market was at its bare things so our ICO was moderately successful. In addition to the ICO funds, we are primarily funded by one of my co-founders, Scott Adams, the creator of the Dilbert comic strip. We are doing quite well. >> He's a cool guy to hang out with, huh? >> He is. >> Never a dull moment? >> Never a dull moment, I learn quite a bit. >> Congratulations. How do people find out how to hang out with you? You got some good things going on here. Where do you hang out? What do you do for fun? What events do you go to? What's going on with you? >> I'm on Twitter quite a bit. >> Say your Twitter handle. >> It's @techbubble. I'm there. I like to blog. on TryCrypto and also my own personal blog. I go to meet-up events here in Silicon Valley and I do make an effort to speak at least five to six conferences each year. >> Aim it forward. >> Yep. >> A lot more action going on in crypto and token economics not just from an ICO standpoint always been some negative scams out there and global fraud, but generally, blockchain and token economics is real and getting more traction and soon I think it will be clearer. Your thoughts on that, if you could share your perspective in terms of the opportunities around those two areas. >> Like any other new and exciting technology goes through the hype cycle, they've gone through that now. I think there's really two types of people in this ecosystem. The ones that are focused on the cryptocurrency and the pricing around it et cetera. But I'd really like to separate that from the blockchain aspect of it. Blockchain is a very real technology, it's a really different technology that the world has never seen before. Yes, it's very true that not everything is a good candidate for the blockchain. But there are many, many scenarios where there are multiple un-trusted parties that are excellent for blockchain. I think what needs to happen is persons in leadership position need to really evaluate: what are the scenarios where there are un-trusted entities involved? And limit their blockchain involvement, test pilots, all of that they're more likely to see more success. Versus just throwing blockchain into it, replace the database, 'cause that's guaranteed to be a fail. >> Nik, great to have you on. I totally agree with you. The team here we were in Puerto Rico, we've been in the Bahamas, we've been Toronto we've been to all the blockchain events. Consensus is coming up in New York. We might be there, May 14th. Patrick, getting ready to head down to New York. Maybe go down there. Great to have your perspective. Great to see the blockchain conversation coming in here as the emerging tech and the creation here at DevNet Create continues. Thanks for coming out. >> Thank you so much. I appreciate you having me here. >> More Cube coverage here coming live here at Mountain View after this short break. (pop music plays)

Published Date : Apr 26 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by Cisco. Welcome to The Cube, thanks for coming on This is the perfect place for you and the energy that's there. to networking constructs. that is misunderstood quite a bit and some of the questions So a lot of the conversations are fun, exploratory, I created something that the market was not ready for What's the status, size of the team, And that lead me to create an and the guys coding. and that needs to happen before is that important to have a selector? I think going back to what I said don't confuse the protocol and the token selection on the virtual machines on blockchain. What are the cool things you're working on? As I mentioned, Photoblock is the thing the backdoor out of the country for political revolution of the photo a little bit so it's impossible to even use AI Did you do an ICO, did you finance it yourself? In addition to the ICO funds, we are primarily funded How do people find out how to hang out with you? and I do make an effort to speak in terms of the opportunities around those two areas. replace the database, 'cause that's guaranteed to be a fail. Nik, great to have you on. I appreciate you having me here. after this short break.

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Darryl Sladden, Cisco | DevNet Create 2019


 

>> Live from Mountain View, California, it's theCUBE covering DevNet Create 2019 brought to you by Cisco. >> Hello everyone, welcome back to theCUBE's live coverage here in Mountain View, California for the theCUBE's coverage of Cisco DevNet Create. It's a small, intimate event where we're bringing the cloud native creation world with the DevNet community within Cisco and of course building applications, programming networks, that's the theme. I'm John Furrier, your host, our next guest is Darryl Sladden, senior technical product manager at Cisco, 20 year veteran, built voice over IP systems. He's a coder, he's a builder, he's a creator. Great to see you, thanks for coming on. >> Thank you so much, I'm glad to be here. >> And you're a fan? >> I love being on theCUBE. Because-- >> And the trivia behind that? Share the context, you had a product, you built one? >> Yes, the first product management job at Cisco was building the Cisco Unified Border Element and of course, that became the Cube, so any time you mention Cube inside of Cisco, that's going to be my product. >> The renaissance within Cisco theCUBE is back and we're embedded in there. Of course we're breaking all the borders down, getting the data. Tell us what's going on in your world? Obviously you've seen a lot of waves. I mean voice over IP that you were involved in? >> Yeah. >> That took, that old PBX telephone-- >> Right. >> Got digital, created massive innovation. That's an inflection point moment. We're seeing a few of those big waves happening now. One of them's an architectural changes around IoT, Wi-fi 6, 5G, cloud computing all coming together. This is an interesting opportunity. What's your focus? Where do you fit into all that? >> Yeah, where I fit in is this is a massive change and one of the problem sets that hasn't been solved yet is how do I understand where I am indoors? There's been great solutions that have unlocked huge amount of value with the GPS system outdoors. You always know where you are, a lot of way to find out exactly the right, it always amazes me at how accurate they are at how long it's going to take me to get to the Computer Museum. But how do I know once I've got into the museum that theCUBE is in the upstairs, in the back corner? That's where we need to solve that problem and I think we're at the crux of that. >> Waze is a great example because one of the things I'm amazed by with Waze is how fast they report the incidents that are going on. People are so actively rapid of adding, inputting the data. You got data junkies adding it and there's been some side effects. The side streets are always clogged. (laughing) >> Police always know-- >> So in physical locations where Wi-fi 6 for instance comes out? >> Yeah. >> You're going to have new capabilities in bandwidth and throughput and coverage areas, these dense areas. It's going to create a navigation opportunity for either machines to machines, machines to humans, humans to machines, humans to humans, within a physical construct. >> Yeah. >> How do you see that evolving? Use cases? What's the pattern? >> Right. What I really see evolving is taking advantage of some of the capabilities that have already existed in wi-fi, meaning ranging from individual IPs but some of the new things that are coming with Wi-fi 6 is Wi-fi 6 creates a great baseline but there are new things where, 802.11mc for example, which is an extension of Wi-fi 6, has what's called fine timing measurement. I can now, with these super accurate chip sets, know the speed of light is about one nanosecond to go about three feet. If I have an accurate clock, now I can know how far I am from the APs. >> Yeah. >> And I can solve that in indoor locations. >> So a lot of physics involved? >> A lot of rates of physics involved. >> Alright, so what products are you working on now to make all this happen. Take us through some of the things that are out there that you've got your fingers on. >> Yeah, so what I'm working on is Cisco's new location platform, it's called Cisco DNA Spaces and so what we're focusing on is digitizing that indoor space. So people spend of their economic activity are indoors. Whether it's in a hotel, where they're selling the rooms, or a restaurant where they're selling food inside the spaces, but what goes on in that physical space? People don't have that same level of knowledge that you do on the web, right? When I go to a webpage and I shop for outdoor furniture? The next two weeks I'm followed by ads about outdoor furniture. But if I go to Home Depot and I spend an hour in the outdoor furniture aisle, they don't know about that. Now, it allows you to digitize that indoor space and provide that context for other types of applications. >> So the value, I mean I'm not saying, now they're going to know you actually shopped at Home Depot, now your ad go to Home Depot. (laughing) But the value is not so much in the advertising. It's really in the efficiencies around work, play, office. These are the things that are going to be impacted because, you know, take healthcare for instance? Manufacturing? How people do work? How services are delivered? Just like in the consumer side, we all relate to the iPhone days when oh my god, I can have GPS on a phone. Now I do a mash up on a Google Map. >> Right. >> Are you saying the same thing for buildings? You're going to import like architectural drawings? How do you get all of this built out? What's the playbook? >> Yeah. The playbook really will be starting at the larger buildings that will be put into Google Maps or put into other places where it can start to get really accurate indoor locations and then never losing things, right? Be able to know where you are indoors. Being able to always find your stuff, not only where you are but maybe I put a tag on some of my assets and I always know where they are? The idea of nurses becoming more efficient because they're going to know where that wheelchair is if I need to find a wheelchair to move a patient out of an office. All of these things just become a little bit more efficient but that just builds on a huge scale when that happens at scale. >> Darryl, talk about the impact of this because you built and deployed disruptive technology in the past. For the folks watching, whether it's an enterprise architect or CIO or CEO or facilities manager, whoever, what is the impact of these new location based services to their business? How should they be thinking about it, holistically? >> Yeah. >> What's your view? >> My real view is that you want to look at it from a platform, so you're not going to have one company. Even at Cisco, we're not going to solve every application but what you do want to do is build a platform that's extensible, right? We'll take in data from multiple sources, whether it APs or video cameras, other things, create a platform that normalizes that location, and then opens that up. So that's what happened as the mainframes transitioned to client server computing. Once you start breaking things up? That's really the value and so I think the CIOS and architects out there, shouldn't be looking at point products as much as understanding that a location platform will help them unlock the value moving forward. >> Talk about the data. How is the data traversing through this? Because obviously you mentioned connecting things like cameras and other things? It could be medical equipment, it could be anything. IoT's going to be a tsunami of opportunity, applications that are going to create a lot of opportunity. How should I think about the data flow? And the role of machine learning and data in all of this? Is that going to be a key part of this? >> Absolutely, the way that we're looking at it is there's kind of two groups. There's the ones that are all in on the cloud, and we are offering this as a software as a subscription service so you buy it on a subscription basis and you let Cisco deal with the problems. Of course with a regulated environment of access to the data and backing it up and restoring it and making sure it's well curated. Or you can decide, yeah I want to run it on premises. If you want it on prem you have to understand you're going to have to deal with those same problems of back up, the data will get really large as you start to collect more and more location and how are you going to best extract value from that data? So I think you really want to look at that this is something that's going to continue to expand and do I want to make that a core competence by running it myself? Or maybe turn that over to cloud service? >> So in terms of what's real and not real or what's coming and what's real today? So you mentioned there's some location services as a SAS. Talk about what's available now from your customer standpoint. >> Yeah. >> What can they get going on and what's coming around the corner? >> Yeah, so what they can get going on today is that location services, Cisco DNA Spaces. So if you go to ciscodnaspaces.com there's free trials available, it's a great sort of application. But more importantly, it provides you that initial start, right? What's coming is more and more applications will take advantage of that, right? We got a great one for things like student success, so that you know a student is inside of a classroom and then if he doesn't come to class for a couple days in a row? Oh maybe he needs counseling? Maybe his car broke down? You can start to do these really interesting student success applications as an example of a vertical. So the vertical applications are starting to really proliferate, but what's available today is the platform. >> So you see verticals really booming on this? >> Yeah. >> They're going to take advantage of it? Alright, so just kind of zoom out and put your industry hat on, not your Cisco hat. When you look at wi-fi and 5G or other technologies that are out there, what's the big movement? What moves the ball down the field the most? Is it going to be wi-fi and 5G? Because it seems like, you know, inch by inch, unified communication seemed stalled, now it's got an uplift with cloud, with data, more great user experiences. SD-WAN's been around for a long time and getting a resurgence. I mean campus networking had been around for a long, long time. >> I know. (chuckling) >> People go to stadiums, want to do Instagram and do videos. What's the big technology lever here? What's the big tailwind for location based in-building stuff? >> What I start to see for this is improving standards and improving accuracy, right? Until you get to that point where it's reliable and replaceable and I can really depend on it? It's all a niche product. I think that's been happening for literally the last eight years in this industry. Lots of niche examples of things that have been successful but it hasn't exploded, until you build that platform where I can absolutely, with reliability say, this device is at this point at this time? >> Yeah. >> Then you can start to really expand but that's really-- >> The timing and the through put, to your point earlier? >> Yeah. >> Okay, thoughts on DevNet, just to wrap up. What's here? Going on in the show here? DevNet Create, Susie did a good job of bringing communities together. A lot of co-creation, they're creating new things. This is a new application environment, programmable. What's your thoughts on DevNet? >> Yeah, I love being around some of the smartest people in the world here. (laughing) It's great. Humbling just to be able to talk to some of these guys. But I do think that really creates the community that teaches everything from little things, like I learned a quick, great new little API trick that I hadn't learned and maybe I taught some people some of the stuff that we're doing about streaming APIs. What I really like about this is all these small little interactions build something really good. >> Yeah. And you build API into all the products that's only going to create more enablement. >> Yeah. >> More creativity. The creativity's flowing big time. >> Right. >> Darryl, thanks for coming on. >> Well thank you so much. >> Great to see you. Thanks, a CUBE fan. >> Right. (laughing) >> Author of the product called The Cube at Cisco back in the day. I'm John Furrier, back with more live coverage after this short break. (light digital music)

Published Date : Apr 25 2019

SUMMARY :

brought to you by Cisco. for the theCUBE's coverage of Cisco DevNet Create. I love being on theCUBE. and of course, that became the Cube, getting the data. Where do you fit into all that? and one of the problem sets that hasn't been solved yet Waze is a great example because one of the things It's going to create a navigation opportunity of some of the capabilities that have already existed Alright, so what products are you working on now that you do on the web, right? These are the things that are going to be impacted Be able to know where you are indoors. in the past. That's really the value and so I think the CIOS Is that going to be a key part of this? and how are you going to best extract value So you mentioned there's some location services as a SAS. so that you know a student is inside of a classroom Is it going to be wi-fi and 5G? I know. What's the big technology lever here? What I start to see for this Going on in the show here? and maybe I taught some people some of the stuff that's only going to create more enablement. The creativity's flowing big time. Great to see you. Right. Author of the product called The Cube at Cisco

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Paul Giblin, Presidio | DevNet Create 2019


 

>> live from Mountain View, California It's the queue covering definite create twenty nineteen. Brought to you by Cisco. >> Welcome to the Cubes Live coverage here in Mountain View, California Computer History Museum for Cisco's definite create on John for your host here with Lisa Martin, she's taking a break. Is out getting stories out around for our national Paul Giblin, who's an enterprise architect at Presidio, formerly on the Q Before Cube alumni. Great to see you again. Thanks for coming on. >> That's great. CIA's. Well, thank you for >> what? I was looking for this interview because last time we chat with all my cloud hybrid cloud. Now, as an enterprise architect, you're in the middle of all the conversations around how enterprises and commercial businesses are leveraging the cloud multi cloud hybrid cloud. A lot of hype, a lot of reality. But the one thing that's clear is the cloud Cos air blowing away the financial operating performances. Amazon released their earnings today. Amazing financial performance. Amazon Web services have the profit of all of Amazon Amazing. Since they only start in two thousand six, Microsoft change their business plan from being, you know, Hon premise solution software to cloud trillion dollar market cap. It goes on and on and on. But it's a tell sign of the wave that's happening in that is computing network architectures air all transforming an application. Modernization. Tsunami is coming. Renaissance of applications are happening. >> This is a big >> part of what you do when definite creates a Cisco's version of Hey, guys, we got to create the future. Sure, this is the reality. What's your take on all this thes big waves and activity? >> Yeah, I think you know, there's certainly a ton of activity going on around multi cloud, especially with, you know, Amazon. And as your GP uh definite is really a hub for it from the perspective of Cisco. So if you look at the things that people are talking about here this year is supposed to last year, it's It's totally different. Last year, people we're talking >> about Well, how >> do I D ?'Oh, my collaboration absent anyway. And how do I modernized my data center with answerable inscription? Things like that. And this year people are talking about blockchain. They're talking about multi cloud. They're talking about machine learning. There's their spokes over there talking about graft intense airflow and things like that. So what I really like about this event is the fact that it's people who are on the bleeding edge and are thinking about the new thing today before it becomes mainstream. >> Is a great point. Suzy We was on earlier. She's ahead of definite definite create and she had a great team. But one of the things that she said to me, and unless I get your reaction to this is you know she's had research roles in HP, but labs back in the day. So >> you have those research. It's the next big wave coming here. It's really >> people in the bleeding edge who were making it real. So it's not just, you know, some way that's coming. It's actually happening so far. This event really kind of points to what's really now. Your job is you make stuff real right. So you've got a kind of thread. The line between okay, bleeding edge hyper reality and kind of wire it up for customers with Presidio. So you're under a lot of pressure. You've got to do the right thing. You got architect it out. This is kind of where the game is right now. So what's the experience that you're seeing in the real world as this stuff start to become really, as customers want to create better APS better network architectures kind of retrenching happening? What's your What's your thoughts? Whats the key highlights. >> I think people are struggling with decisions around. You know what, what cloud do I put my work loads in? Do I put them in a cloud at all? What workloads do I keep on premise when I'm making these decisions, how do I get these APS to the different places they need to live? How do I have an app that might be stretched from my own premise data center to Azure or to a ws? How do I keep that secure? How doe I network that together? How do I make sure that I'm not the next big headline in the next big reach that comes around So those air, some of the challenges that are out there and they're all things that are difficult to navigate because every organizations a little bit different in terms of the skill sets that they have. So you've got some folks who are right at home. You know, doing a twelve fact, their app on going full on cloud, native and, you know, putting stuff all out on Amazon and not think twice about it. And then you've got a lot of organizations who maybe don't have mature depth shops and have a lot of legacy infrastructure. Folks who still need to retool Enrique it to get up to speed, to bring everything together. >> So skilled gap big time. >> Oh, yeah, >> that's for you guys. Come in. I want to get caught before we came on to talk here live. We're talking off camera around the Gerson Enterprise and a commercial business and the distinction between their needs Enterprise. I was in more complex, you know, multi campus multinational, potentially to commercial businesses. I won't say small music, but people were like pretty much smaller scale. Can you just par set out and talk about what we chatted about the distance between the commercial and the teens and challenging opportunities they have? Visa VI Say it. Enterprise. >> I think it comes down to a lot of the things that we do today are designed to make things simpler. That's not always the case. Sometimes, in order to make it simple. You have to do a very hard thing under the covers to get it that way in the first place. And for a small commercial organization, that's not always the easiest thing in the world. They're typically resource constrained, and their business is not running. Their business is generating revenue through whatever it is that they do now. On enterprise is a little bit different, and enterprise has multiple different revenue streams coming in from multiple different businesses. And they're typically much more invested in a much larger IT staff and have folks who are multi discipline, you know, interface with their peers. Have enough resource is to really, truly adopt a dead mobster. >> Got network team security teams the whole nine yards, I think Chief data officer, all that stuff, commercial organizations Now again, Great opportunity for cloud on both fronts, right? You got enterprises. It kind of would have nicked mixed of public cloud for cloud native work clothes, maybe clean sheet of paper brand new use case hybrid where they won't have operating on premise and then multi cloud that might have azure for three sixty five office and then run Amazon for this or they're so multi cloud seems to be a reality. On one front, commercial organizations seemed tohave cloud on their mind. But legacy apse that they've written software for that might have been written in order, entry system or, you know, some sort of work flow that's tailored for, say, the revenue. How do you advise those two scenarios? >> Yeah, I mean, if you've got a legacy app that you need to contend with, one of the first things you need to do is understand the APP itself. We're having a conversation earlier on what we talked about wass. There's organizations out there who have these applications, and the people who wrote those applications have long ago left. So you've got some new software developers who were coming in. They don't have contextual history, and then you've got infrastructure. People who are keeping the ship afloat but don't know how it floats. They don't understand displacement. >> So you've got these new folks coming in, and then we write our own. We get new ABS higher team. What do we hire ex A. You know, exactly exactly. So you know, there's a decision that >> needs to be made to do. We continue to run this on Prem, Do we consider re platforming in trying to move it out to the cloud Tio? We start fresh and try and re factor. Do we do this in the house? Do we pull in an external third party that try and do that for us? So all the challenges >> so about the relation with Cisco also your party with them you're here a definite create your also a participant in the community. They got definite, which is their core developer. Coming a couple years old. Definite create five years old, Definite creates kind of like brings in the creator's side of it. A za practitioner. Pardon Francisco here to learn and then bring that home to apply to Presidio. How does that work? Explain the folks. How does Presidio were? Francisco. How do you take stuff from definite definite create? How do you commercialize that for your business? And what's the impact of the customer? Sure. >> So it's It's more organic than you might think. So we've got a whole contention of folks here, especially, and I'm going to give a big shout out to our women intact. You were here on DH. These folks are going in there checking out the things that they're into. Is it in? And like I said, there's a diverse group of sessions that are out there spanning machine, learning to blockchain to wish there's somebody right behind us here, I think talking about, >> uh, >> hioki >> it's not a security >> threat somewhere way, air gap, That thing. Yeah, >> So these things folks are sitting in on the sessions that are of interest to them and they're going back to Presidio. And we've got internal WebEx team spaces where all of our folks who are interested in any kind of depth sit down to collaborate. And we are also, you know, maintaining our own internal code repositories where anybody who wants to go take a look at some of the intellectual property we're developing. I can go pull that asset, communicate with the person who's working on it, manipulate it, put it back all that way, also have, you know, sponsorship from the top on down. So from Thomas all the way down it, it's We know that the next generation of engineers need to understand on some level program ability, concepts, and this is a great way to adjust that, >> and this is this is a strategic and parent management behind it. Program ability gives off for some advantages. What's your take on it? I know you. You talk about in the last Cuban. If you want to just come back to the automation opportunity because, you know, let's just face it. Command line interface is how we ran things in networks over the years. But now, with program ability, that's more higher yield activities that architects and network guys and developers can work on. Then the mundane tasks go on. Now if you can program things, certainly with WiFi six and MURAKI, it's all one network. So why not have that visibility to the data? Why not program stuff to make life easier? Your thoughts on this and how it's playing out? >> I think it's, uh, it's playing out slowly and in pockets. I think there's a lot of folks who are working on these kinds of concepts, but they tend to be isolated. So from a network engineer and I come to an event like this, I'm probably going to go back to whatever my day job is, and I might write some of my own code. But unless you have some of those facilities in place that I talked about us having in Presidio, it's difficult to share what you're doing with others on. If it's difficult to share what you're doing with others, she's kind of out on an island, right, so you might have efficiencies that you're gaining. But if you are not taking that and sharing it with other people, your company may not be arriving the full benefit. Now. I think as an individual you could do a lot of good by automating things that you do, which enables you as an individual to focus on even more. But when you look at some of the cool stuff that's out there that could be shared, like the Iraqi demo for the A R looking at access points, that's just phenomenal capability That brings great benefit to a lot of different people. >> So you guys had success with a lot of sharing the collaboration internally, absolute with with the tools you've built. What's the the verdict you guys mentioned? You have some divers, folks here, women in tech, What's the president's here for city like a definite create this year what some of the key highlights from you guys. >> So I think we've got a couple of presenters way have one new definite creator, Mabel. And so she's Ah, believe second female definite creator and the first for Presidio. Jeff and I had taken those down last year and you know, she's she's fantastic. She's running weekly courses for the women and organization to teach them on these concepts. And she's a powerhouse Amazing s o way. Like I said, we have that whole contingent of women in Tech who are here. We've got a handful of gentlemen who are here as well, including Jeff eleven sailor, who you interviewed yesterday, and Greg and use Ellie, both of whom have multiple presentation's going on all standing room only s O. We're definitely invested in different >> directions on the women Tech thing. I think that's huge. I think that's the inclusion thing, that we'd love to see it again. You know, numbers, air still with the percentages, need a lot more work. I mean, just bring in more women and breathes more action. Mohr capabilities. More results. >> Absolutely. I'm all in on women in tech. I have three daughters, so I mean, naturally invested. I'm tryingto help create the world Anyway, I can where they can grow up. And I walked right into a meeting and not have Tio contend with some of the >> democratization of technology is really what it's all about. And, you know, you're not really anything in this community. Let's getem Iraqi, huh? But your house running all your surveillance cameras >> you got in fact are a camera >> app that identifies sexual predators. So I'm gonna have those hanging over my front door now. Nobody's coming anywhere near that. >> That's better than ring. Certainly go in the shark tank pitch that maybe ***. Paul, Thanks for coming on. Great to see you again and congratulate you. Sex distinct, distinct success. Distinguished engineer Now for Ciccio Great company. Give a quick point for the coming. What's going on? Presidio? What do you guys are doing? What kind of work you doing? And how'd people contact you? >> I >> need to be a formal marketeer to do any of this stuff. So, you know >> video is >> authentic and it's real. >> We're We're a three billion dollar organization. We've got three thousand some odd individuals, over half of whom are are certified engineers way. Do everything from cloud Teo I ot to traditional infrastructure collaboration. We've got a huge security practice manage services practice. We do financing s so we really try to be a one stop shop for just about anything. I related a >> lot of creation going on the community here, and I think one of the things that's great is this all about making it really taking the way. That's everyone's riding, getting it, really making it work. Congratulations. >> Thank you very much. >> Cube coverage here, here in Mountain View. I'm John Forward the Cube with Lisa Martin here covering Day two of definite create stay with more live coverage after this short break.

Published Date : Apr 25 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by Cisco. Great to see you again. Well, thank you for six, Microsoft change their business plan from being, you know, Hon premise solution software part of what you do when definite creates a Cisco's version of Hey, guys, So if you look at the things that people are talking about So what I really like about this event is the fact that it's people who are on the bleeding But one of the things that she said to me, and unless I get your reaction to this is you know she's had research roles in HP, you have those research. So it's not just, you know, some way that's coming. air, some of the challenges that are out there and they're all things that are difficult to navigate I was in more complex, you know, multi campus multinational, I think it comes down to a lot of the things that we do today are designed to How do you advise those two scenarios? one of the first things you need to do is understand the APP itself. So you know, there's a decision that So all the challenges How do you commercialize that for your business? So it's It's more organic than you might think. Yeah, it, it's We know that the next generation of engineers need to understand because, you know, let's just face it. So from a network engineer and I come to an event like this, I'm probably going to go back to whatever my day What's the the verdict you guys mentioned? who are here as well, including Jeff eleven sailor, who you interviewed yesterday, directions on the women Tech thing. And I walked right into a And, you know, you're not really anything in this community. So I'm gonna have those hanging over my front door now. Great to see you again and congratulate you. So, you know Teo I ot to traditional infrastructure collaboration. lot of creation going on the community here, and I think one of the things that's great is this all about making it really taking I'm John Forward the Cube with Lisa Martin here covering Day two

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Susie Wee, Cisco DevNet | DevNet Create 2019


 

>> Live, from Mountain View, California, it's theCUBE! Covering DevNet Create 2019, brought to you by Cisco. >> Hey, welcome back to theCUBE, Lisa Martin with John Furrier covering day two of Cisco DevNet Create 2019, and guess who we're here with? Susie Wee SVP and CTO of Cisco DevNet. Susie thank you so much for having theCUBE here and for joining John and me today. >> Oh thank you for being here. >> So this event, there were so many bodies in here yesterday, it was pretty toasty, it's getting toasty now, this is the third DevNet Create, this community John and I have been hearing that and feeling it and seeing it, see it, learn it, code it, kind of all on your theme there the last day and a half. This is a really inspiring, really national sharing community that you guys have built here. >> It is, it's amazing, I mean just the energy here as you bring together folks. Everybody wants to learn, there's so many new technologies out there, but new technologies that can turn into business advantage, and the attendees here they all feel it, and it's a different mixture of people because there's app developers, there's infrastructure and networkers, and just bringing these folks together to see what they can achieve is amazing. So that's the energy that you can really feel here. >> And the thing that's interesting and that I'd like to perspective on where this all started from, is DevNet Create is interesting, you know Amazon's Andy Jassy, the CEO of Amazon Web Services, uses the term builders. So you hear builders, maker culture, create. But creation is a critical part of your ethos here, and with cloud computing, Microsoft's earnings came out they were a trillion dollar market cap now, Amazon crushes their earnings again, you're seeing what cloud is doing that's enabling these creators, a new class of developer, but it's not like a new breed, it's just a new kind of orientation. This is part of your vision to share the story. >> Well and kind of the whole thing is that, you know I'm all about innovation and creation. And I believe that people just want to create. My four year old, she just wants to create. It's just in people's blood, but to now get out there and to do it, you need a catalyst. You can't just sit in a room and then create, and sometimes it's about how you bring new fields together, how you bring new technologies together, how you bring non-technologies together, how you just bring different types of people and perspectives together, and that's really what DevNet Create is all about. So, we started DevNet five years ago, just with the idea that the network is going become programmable. The infrastructure is going to provide more resources, and it's going to be programmable and provide more power to applications, so from then to now, last summer we hit half a million developers, now we're at 590 thousand developser, and we're growing. >> Well we're lucky to be part of it and thank you for including theCUBE in DevNet Create, and bringing something to the DevNet community. It's been fun and inspirational, but to be practical in the industry, you need to have a wind at your back, you need to have a wave to ride on, and creation is also about momentum. And if you look at the marketplace today, there's some big waves happening. Cloud computing is obvious, one everyone looks at, that's already changed the nature of companies, Cisco's multi-cloud looking at a bigger vision there. But new waves are coming, I mean Wifi Six is a game changer, you've got 5G. So you talked about this in the keynote, I want you to take a minute to explain that the big waves that you outlined, because with big waves there's more fun, there's more creation. There's wealth creation, there's economic vitalizations, a new vibe. Share the waves. >> Inside of the whole thing is that we say there's the infrastructure. You get your networking, you get your compute, it evolves to cloud computing and all of that, but on top of that are these applications. And this amazing set of applications, and we know that those are creating entirely new and disruptive businesses and business models, and there's a lot of growth in all of that. Now traditionally what happens is that with every wave of infrastructure advancement, comes a new set of applications and businesses, so going back to our olden days but, there was a time where you started to get a converged IP network, or you put data and voice together on an IP network, and then came voice over IP. Then came cloud computing. And you can do internet search, and you know, we're old enough to remember before then. Then you got 3G, and instead of just having the cell phone, you could do mobile apps on cell phones, so you had mobile apps. And then with 4G, you could do mobile video, and now you just expect it. Now you could think, okay the infrastructure is done, but no there's more, so some of the things that are happening right now that's really exciting is that, is I kind of talked about it in three areas. In networking we a have a couple really big things going on, which is Wifi Six and 5G. And so there's a whole site and we'll talk more about that. In computing there's the fact that actually GPU's are everywhere, and with that you can do AIML everywhere. So AI and machine learning. And then the third one is just an advancement in architecture. We knew that we'd move to mobile, we knew that we moved to compute, but now what becomes real is the edge. Edge computing. And so when you bring these things together you have new capabilities in network with Wifi Six and 5G, you have new capabilities in computing because GPU's are everywhere so you can do AI and ML, and then you actually have a spot at the edge where you can do edge processing, and then all of a sudden there's this whole new world of applications just waiting to be built, and we want to let developers know that. Because you kind of develop and you build from what you know, like oh this is just how good I can do, but there's a whole new capability coming. >> Well first of all, let's unpack those talk chats, because one of the things that I, as an entrepreneur, you know we've always talked about this, the creativity that comes from entrepreneurial thinking, whether your a true entrepreneur starting a company, or within a company doing that inside a company, takes creative juices, you got to have that catalyst as you mentioned, but also you got to imagine new ideas, right. And so by enabling, say Wifi for instance, everyone knows what Wifi is, but when you think about the new advances of Wifi and having connectivity with wireless and wired networks, with new data access, it just opens up this creative outlet. This is going to be the tsunami or the renaissance of applications. And you've been talking about it. >> It is, it is. And so like if we kind of geek out, because I was working on HD TV before it really became HD TV and their doing things like OFDM, and you know, we're so excited, spread spectrum technologies, but right now with Wifi Six, we can really geek out again. So OFDM is moving to OFDMA, OFDM multiple access. That means like, an access point usually talks to one client at a time, but now it can split up and talk to multiple clients at a time. And with that you can actually get much higher capacity, right so you can actually really use your kind of, network more efficiently, and then you can actually now also do scheduling. And then you can actually guarantee that a client is going to be scheduled in and get transmissions. That changes what you can do with Wifi and the way you think about it. And then there's this power savings, because now we can tell a device the time to wake up, so you kind of sleep sleep sleep sleep sleep, here's your target wake up time. Sleep sleep sleep sleep sleep, here's your target wake up time, that extends battery life, so you can have sensors that'll be out there for one year, five years, ten years, doing its thing. And so that takes all those IoT applications you've always wanted to build, but makes them real. Because someone has to go up and install that sensor, and the battery life matters. >> And so the second wave is the GPU anywhere which I like, because when you think of GPUS, Nvidia, you're thinking of graphics, you're thinking of gaming, but it's actually a processor for machine learning, so what are your thoughts on this because if you put GPUs in devices everywhere, and the data that you're now accessing across the network brings more intelligence. What's the impact of this GPU anywhere? Is it just IoT, is it just applications, what's the net net? >> So kind of, the most important thing about it is that before, you kind of needed to have a PhD to do AI and machine learning, right? And we have friends who are experts at that and they're continuing to push the envelope in there. I was just back at MIT and just the advances in AL and ML is amazing. But the other thing that's happening is that this is just getting wrapped up so developers can just use it. So you can actually have a TensorFlow.js library that'll just sit on your mobile device. You can actually just using your browser, you can actually write a web app that uses that and then uses the GPU, which just means right there you can write a little web app, with like five lines of code, you can say, find all the people in this picture. Find the bottles in this picture. Right so just be like, doing that on the fly, and you don't have to have a PhD in machine learning, you can actually, developers can just use this capability. And so that's kind of what unlocks it, is just because it's accessible to everyone and now you'll get that mixed wave of innovation when people can just use it and find the right applications for it. >> So looking at these three big changes that you've talked about, network, compute, architectural, did you leverage these big waves to design this years Create? Because we're hearing all about the three technologies tracks. Tell us a little bit about that. >> It is, well so first of all we have Wifi Six here, live, and people know there's the idea of it, we've done some performance tests around it and we're like it screams. You know, it just, it really does scream, and you're used to not counting on that, right? And so it opened up peoples' eyes and they're thinking differently now about what they can do here. >> What sort of reactions of the geeks at Cisco when they look at the data of Wifi Six, what's some of the anecdotal reactions that they're saying? >> People are surprised, cause everybody's kind of cynical about it. Cause, quite honestly, even getting ready for it, it just like guys we're going to jump on Wifi Six. And they're like eh, yeah, well, whatever. And then one of my guys Oshitosha went off and did the speed test and he started working with it and he came back into my office, his eyes were popped out of his head, (gasp), that's fast. >> And you showed that yesterday, all the cameras came in like, whoa! >> Because you don't have that expectation, but once you know it, it's going to really unleash this whole new set of things. There's actually something else interesting we did with the edge processing with the GPUs which is the idea of edge computing, not a new idea, the reality of it, is still coming into play. Now what happens is Cisco just announced some new products. These industrial routers, it's an industrial gateway, it means that you can like put it up on the telephone pole, you can put it into a manufacturing plant, you know at high temperatures, and it's the gateway that will connect all of your devices and senors, and be the networking conduit to get everything back. So that's an awesome product, the mass product actually hosts applications. And what matters is the deployment of these infrastructures, right? So Cisco's partners will get out there, they're going to sell and kind of install this networking equipment in manufacturing companies, but now it can host applications so developers can actually reach it. And so now that's a place for developers, but we're doing something new here, which is that we have a prototype of taking that product, we have a prototype GPU, a Nvidia Jetson that we've put on top of it, and we're letting developers hack at it. And say, would you use this? Like, tell us some of your best ideas, try it out. Because we still need to figure out the market and what's there, and we're doing it with developers. >> And where do they go with the creativity there? Because obviously one's a gateway so they're used to gateways, and they understand edge devices. What are some of the ideas that are going to come out of hacking a GPU? Is it running data analytics on the edge? Is it hosting an application and managing edge devices themselves? What are some of the cool things? >> I mean things like video sensing. So now like at your edge you have lots of cameras and because you can do GPU processing, you can actually take these multi-camera inputs, do video sensing algorithms, you know things that you kind of dreamed about before, but now just doing that for real. You know, finding construction workers, finding the hard hats, in the images to make sure that you can actually have people be safe. One thing that we know about AI and machine learning, is like a lot of times people say, okay I'm going to hire a data scientist, a data scientist comes in, and they can't really get the data. Like they don't have anything to work on until there's a good data set to work on. Well actually as you connect up these environments, that's one data set coming in. So you connect up like transportation systems, like SCADA, like utilities protocols, you're actually talking to manufacturing equipment. >> Real time data from traffic, Teslas. >> Exactly. And so that stuff comes in, but then you need to kind of munch on that data to know, when should I be looking, how can I get it into a form that I can do some AI and machine learning on it. >> So new use cases, you expect new use cases to emerge? >> They are, and it's really cool because there was a time when there was all of this stuff you could do on the web, and in the cloud, and with our applications, but it's coming back to the physical world. >> And that's what you mean by the edge, is then this architectural thing, that's really the edge. The new architecture of having these kinds of capabilities is going to create sets of applications that we've never seen before. New startups, new applications. >> It is and really the kind of thing with DevNet Create is bringing in the community of people who do install infrastructure, knowing that this infrastructure is becoming programmable, and having that able to host the applications and the innovations that are coming from the developers, it's like, it just unlocks entirely new business models. And I think here these two communities are meeting and mixing, and I think that's the energy that we're seeing out here. Because they didn't expect to talk to each other. When we started DevNet Create, we knew that it was coming, we didn't know how the people would mix, and this has evolved to where people are mixing in entirely new ways and making connections, and someone who's written an app is like, oh, you're a partner, you can deploy this in all different countries, that's a new kind of deployment model for my app. >> We talked a little bit about that yesterday, with our guest as well as Mandy, and you've got these kind of different worlds colliding, but one of the things that John pointed out, is that this is not a marketing driven event, this is not for lead generation, this is a truly collaborative event, and you're getting clearly developers and infrastructure guys and girls from clearly, very probably, computing companies who are sharing. So I can imagine the cultural change that this can bring to, born in the cloud, traditional enterprise, maybe something that wasn't originally planned, but I can just imagine these worlds colliding and seeing how much better they can work together. >> And that is something that with DevNet, if you even go to the world of networking and IT and you know, just enterprises, there's a new model. So things become programmable, people's biggest problem is automation, doing things at scale, like how do I go ahead and deploy my networks across all these sites around the world? You can automate that. How do I take machinery and get business insights from that so I can actually use it for more, you know, you want to do that in software. And so you have to change your mindset cause then it is about collaboration, it's about sharing software and everyone knows that they can get there faster by sharing code and ending up with a code repository, we have code exchange, that we've created in DevNet, we've just opened it up last year, we now have over 400 repos, we just crossed over 400 on there. >> You guys are changing the way people are doing work within your own community, both DevNet and DevNet Create, bringing those worlds together. And it's working, it's magical so congratulations on all the success you've had. I got to ask you about your journey because we've talked years before you even joined Cisco and we've been following and talking to you since you've been here, and I was saying on our opening yesterday, Cisco as a company is like a big aircraft carrier, it's making the big move right, and you're seeing Chuck Robinson, the CEO, cloud, everything has APIs on, every portfolio project got APIs, so he's the pulling company into telemove, which is let's get cloudified, let's figure out our role in cloud computing and beyond, and you're mentioning some of those things, as you continue to show progress in the growth of DevNet and the community, it's changing Cisco. And we're seeing as we cover with theCUBE, and Chuck's called you out publicly and said Susie, great job, so this is a recognition that DevNet and the work that you and your team are doing is changing the face of Cisco internally and externally. How is that going, as the battleship starts to move, and by the way, data center is still more important than ever before with fibrated multicloud, things are lining up for Cisco, and you're a big part of it. What's going on in the company, and what's Chuck Robinson saying to you in your meetings with him, like hey, good job, or let's double down. >> Yeah, no Chuck is an amazing leader. And Chuck completely understands the vision, and that's why he's been supporting DevNet. So he's been supporting DevNet, not just because oh, he likes Susie or anything like that, it's because he understands the importance of programmability he understands what it means for starting new businesses and creating new business models. What it means for the ecosystem to grow into it, what that opportunity is. So he's always understood it, and I'm super lucky because he's been supporting these efforts. But now what's happening is of course he wants more. And I just presented to Chuck and his executive leadership team last week, about the plans that we have going forward. We've actually just kind of, what I would say is that, we've done the MVP of DevNet, so I know that you know, we've got the half a million members, actually almost 600 thousand >> Product market fit, it's all there >> We know have like, real assets, we have a real community, we have companies that are changing how they work, using our assets and really forming in this community, and now to get it to the next level, he's actually really kind of, sponsoring and working with us to develop it to the next level. And really the team is all coming together. The engineering team, the customer experience teams, sales and marketing, and then how we work externally with all of our communities. And so we're really growing into the next level. >> And you've got a great team, you know we've worked with all of you team, a lot of your team, but one of things that I like about what you've done here, is that, and you said it yesterday on stage at closing keynote, you feel like a star, you used the word MVP, minimum viable product. That's a startup word. So you have this startup culture, and you're in a big company so it's working. Is it contagious, are people, are there antibodies coming at you, are there people joining you, what's going on because how do you keep that startup vibe going. >> Yeah, I think that I'm just very fortunate because my team all has that attitude, they're very externally driven, so they're like, how do I help our developers, how do we help our community, how do bring them along, and we totally drive ourselves by that. And then we're constantly asking them how can we help you more, what do you want from us, and they say if we're doing something that's not useful to you, tell us now so we can stop, so we can build something else. And so we continue to evolve. And so we actually listen and then we really figure out how to go to that next level. Now what's really fun is that also though, we work with all of the other organizations, right, so you know I'm not going to replicate the sales force, we work with them, I'm not going to replicate the SEs that are out on the field. They're using DevNet, and they're running their own DevNet express events in their countries for their partners and customers. So we've really built out, really collaboratively and we've gotten so much support. And the first days, everyone was like, hey, guys you have a software strategy, you need to look at developers, you need APIs, and they're like nice job Susie, yes. Keep on going. >> You're bringing the Dev Ops ethos to the culture. DevNet's an API to all the other organizations. >> Well and now that we are where we are, it's just, it's the partnerships like our product teams are investing and improving their APIs. We advocate for the developers viewpoint into those, and it's a collaboration. Like so I don't make the products, our product teams make the products. I don't sell the products, our sales team sells the products. Right, so we've really brought together the forces and we're fortunate because everyone is joining in. >> Well it sounds to me like what DevNet is doing, is really driving this organic cultural evolution within Cisco. Is it, would you say, and maybe I'm making a leap here, it sounds to me, like what I've seen, and this is my first DevNet as well, is that DevNet seems to be an accelerator of Cisco's evolution. >> I would it's an accelerator, and you know, what I want to say is that we have great efforts going on across the company, and people are trying to figure it out. So I can't say I'm the one driving it, that would just be too much to say. But we are trying to accelerate each other's efforts and now that we've grown a community, we've provided a platform. Like, we do get more than a million eyeballs a month onto our site. And we use that as a channel, so we really working to accelerate and kind of catalyze each other's efforts. >> And if you step out and zoom out, you can see how it all hangs together. You've got APIs in all the products, so that's an enabler. You have developer onboarding of new kinds of customers and existing ones melting together, kind of in the same melting pot of developers, and you got the cloud wave behind you, and Ad Gen AI. And then you can see Cisco becoming multicloud, it's almost like it's feeding and turning in the right spot, where, I mean you don't have a cloud, but I mean you have connectivity, you have data, you have Dev Ops, Net Dev, so it seems like a nice positioning for the future. But you have all this other revenue and customers, so it's going to take some time. >> We have great products. Our products five years ago, we had handful of products with APIs. Now, our whole portfolio is programmable. So that's not my efforts, those are the product teams building great products, and entering this world of programmability. We're bringing in the community and giving them the tools so they can use them, right? So otherwise you can't just make a product and have it sit there, you need to help it come along. >> Okay, what was your presentation to Chuck? What's the vision? Where do you go next? You've got some great momentum, congratulations on the success, we love being a part of this, a lot of action. It's very inspiring and intoxicating at the same time, what's next, what's the vision? >> Yeah, so really if we, and I love the way that we've built up DevNet, is because we started with our developers, and the communities that needed to become developers, or power users of software. So, we've done the technical enablement, like we have documented APIs, we have learning labs, we have sandboxes so people can just code. So we've really been focusing on enabling them and providing all that technical enablement. And now what happens is people are asking us, how do I make this real, how do I spread this across my organization, how do I bring these solutions to my customers and then to the world? And in order to do that I need to change how I do manufacturing, in order to do this, I need to change how we build solutions, and so help us with that fuller solution, so we're really stepping up to go beyond the technical enablement, to just bringing it to reality, and to real solutions that are in operational environments, and so it's just really exciting to be working together on all that. And then we'll have a bunch more new stuff coming that we'll talk about at Cisco Live. >> And you have a great party at Cisco Live, you also have those social club event, you got to keep that going, right? >> Of course, we'll keep the social club going and we'll have a bunch of new things to announce at Cisco Live as well. >> It's starting in just a few weeks from now, so last question, your takeaway from this, some of the anecdotes that you've heard the last day and a half of DevNet Create 3. >> Yeah, so you know, kind of the vision that we had set forward. And it's one that we've been thinking about it, it's just that the infrastructure really enables a new set of applications and business models. And we had the idea of it, but again with these advances that we talked about, with Wifi Six and 5G, with GPUs enabling AI and machine learning, and with edge computing, is that people get it. And people know that it's not like some day you will have this, and some day you will have that, which I've been in research, I know that view. But it's actually like right here and right now. >> Making it real. >> Making it real, and it's available for people to use, like this next one to two years is going to be super exciting for the industry, cause it's not just theoretical, it's not just what it could do, but there's real goals that are right out there for people to develop exciting new things. >> I wish I was younger, I wish I was in my 20s, I mean like. >> It's okay, we take old people and young people all together, diversity, yes. >> More inclusion, young and old. It's so exciting because it's such an enablement, and knowing what's the megatrends that are the real waves, it's actually real, it's happening. >> And I actually want to, while we do talk about diversity and inclusion and enablement, what's really exciting is I just brought us that, we have some of our partners who are transforming themselves, and we actually have some women in tech initiatives that have started out. >> I love that, tell us about it. >> Okay so, Presidio, Verizon, they've invested in helping the women in their organizations, well they're helping everybody evolve to embrace programmability and automation to understand the application, you know the opportunities there. So they are fully, kind of, taking this paradigm and transforming their workforces to embrace it. But in addition we've partnered to also provide extra support, and call out for the women who are making the journey, and who have to, you know, face maybe some additional challenges, or just ensuring that they have the opportunity and they get the visibility, and they've both sponsored, so Presidio, Verizon, have both sponsored bringing some of their women to DevNet Create. >> I loved how you brought them on stage this morning, without telling them. They endeavor you, and you just had this genuinely enormous smile of pride. >> I'm so proud of them. >> And you should be. But that's amazing that Cisco and DevNet is also making that investment in women in technology. >> And we're doing it together with them and I'm just proud of what their doing, and this is the workforce. You saw the women up on stage if you guys watched the keynote, you'll see that it's out there. These are the people you want to hire, and why would you not use that workforce. >> Exactly, why would you not? >> And get them all young too, like you mentioned your daughter, when she starts putting the Meraki switch at home, you know you've made it. She's almost ready. >> Yes she's handling a computer for me already, she's like mommy you have two, how come I don't have one? >> She says mommy why are you using command line? >> That's next! Susie, you're an inspiration, an inspirational female in technology, we all often gravitate towards Sheryl Sandberg. I think we should start including Susie Wee in that. Thank you so much, >> No thank you very much. For having us at DevNet, it's been a pleasure to meet you, and have the chance to interview you, and we can't wait to see where do you go from here. >> We will continue to change the world together, thank you. >> I love it. Awesome. For John Furrier, I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching theCUBE live, from Cisco DevNet Create 2019. Thanks for watching. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Apr 25 2019

SUMMARY :

Covering DevNet Create 2019, brought to you by Cisco. Susie thank you so much for having theCUBE here sharing community that you guys have built here. So that's the energy that you can really feel here. and that I'd like to perspective on where this and sometimes it's about how you bring new fields together, that the big waves that you outlined, and then you actually have a spot at the edge but when you think about the new advances of Wifi and the way you think about it. and the data that you're now accessing and you don't have to have a PhD in machine learning, did you leverage these big waves and we're like it screams. and did the speed test and he started working with it it means that you can like put it up on the telephone pole, that are going to come out of hacking a GPU? to make sure that you can actually have people be safe. but then you need to kind of munch on that data to know, all of this stuff you could do on the web, and in the cloud, And that's what you mean by the edge, and having that able to host the applications and seeing how much better they can work together. And so you have to change your mindset that DevNet and the work that you and your team are doing so I know that you know, and now to get it to the next level, and you said it yesterday on stage at closing keynote, so you know I'm not going to replicate the sales force, You're bringing the Dev Ops ethos to the culture. Well and now that we are where we are, it's just, is that DevNet seems to be an and now that we've grown a community, and you got the cloud wave behind you, and Ad Gen AI. and have it sit there, you need to help it come along. Where do you go next? and the communities that needed to become developers, and we'll have a bunch of new things some of the anecdotes that you've heard Yeah, so you know, kind of the vision is going to be super exciting for the industry, and young people all together, diversity, yes. and knowing what's the megatrends that are the real waves, and we actually have some women and who have to, you know, I loved how you brought them on stage this morning, And you should be. and why would you not use that workforce. like you mentioned your daughter, Thank you so much, and we can't wait to see where do you go from here. I love it.

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Prashanth Shenoy, Cisco | DevNet Create 2019


 

(techno music) >> Live from Mountain View California, it's the Cube covering DEVNET CREATE 2019, brought to you by CISCO. >> Hey, welcome back to the Cube. Lisa Martin with John Furrier covering, day two covering I should say, CISCO DEVNET CREATE 2019, at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View California. We're please to welcome Prashanth Shenoy, the VP of Product Marketing, Enterprise Networks and DEVNET at CISCO. Prashanth it's great to have you join John and me this afternoon. >> Great to be here. >> So, this event is growing year after year. John and I have been talking about this very strong sense of collaboration and community with the attendees that are here in person. One of the big things yesterday that Susie was talking about was this, What's coming in Wi-Fi? Talk to us about this next-gen Wi-Fi and how it's going to be so impactful to everyone. >> Yeah it's, it's a phenomenal technology inflection point this year, I feel. We can't believe it, but you know, when was the first Wi-Fi that got started? >> 2001. >> Pretty close, 1999. So this is the 20th Anniversary of Wi-Fi. It's come to be life, right? so it's now in its fourteenth. >> I'm off by two years. >> Right, so yeah, I know. (laughter) But, 802.11A was the first Wi-Fi technology, and the speeds were ... promised speeds were 54-megabits, okay? Ah, but the real speeds were, like, 6-mega or something, right? And now, this is the sixth generation of Wi-Fi, so we've come a long way and we take it for granted in our daily life. >> Absolutely, we do. >> I don't think I can think a day without having Wi-Fi. >> Everyone talks about Wi-Fi. The kids, What's the Wi-Fi password? (laughter) I change it all the time, kids, this ... parents, pro tip. Change the password. >> Yes. You got to listen. They'll call you, your kids will call you back. It's an important tip. >> Full-on security, yeah. >> But distance is been an issue, distance, and >> Yeah. >> Radio Frequency has certain >> Yeah propagation technique so, >> Yeah. >> Are you close to the router? That room doesn't have, this doesn't have it. So there's always been distance. And throughput. >> latency, throughput, capacity. >> Most people say who's streaming Netflix, Wi-Fi is down, so again people know this they experience it everyday. >> Exactly. >> What's the big hubbub about Wi-Fi 6? What's different? I got a little preview from Todd so I'll let you explain it but >> Yeah. >> What is the notable bullet points of why it's different? >> Yeah. >> And, Why it's a game changer? >> So it's, as with every technology, three things that it always brings up, better experiences, better capacity, increase capacity, and better battery savings, which I think is very important for users but more importantly useful for IOT applications, which is ... I'm very very excited on what its going to unleash when it comes to IOT. It's been in the fringe side of IOT, like oil and gas mining utilities is what we think when we think of IOT. And now we're going to think IOT in corporate space like this, right? Each one these devices are IOT devices now, like your HVAC systems, your lighting system, air conditioning systems, physical surveillance cameras. Everything with the Wi-Fi is IOT. And because of this increased capacity, an increase density, high density environment where this capacity becomes really critical, imagine 20 devices simultaneously using Wi-Fi to communicate high Bandwidth intensive application. That's when Wi-Fi 6 becomes really critical and powerful and that opens up a huge - >> So more coverage area. >> Yeah. >> With the Antenna. It's MIMO Antenna. >> Yeah. >> And Bandwidth, right? >> Capacity and Bandwidth, like compare to .11A, and even .11AX, right it's up to 4X better capacity, 4X better battery savings and the promised throughput of like six gigabits, right, so, But the key part here is simultaneously talking to multiple devices at the same time. And that is very very crucial because of technologies ... I don't want to geek out here, like OFDMA and all this etc. >> Well let's all ... architectural because one thing Susie brought up was, architectural shifts are going to be the big game, One of the game changes you brought up and you know Wi-Fi ... and I have seen it grow from the beginning, I remember when they first came out was a revelation and you know the battery power was an issue but it always was viewed as a peripheral to the network. >> Yeah. >> You bolt on Wi-Fi and just basically extend your land - >> Yeah. >> To use network parlance and now you're seeing people working on making it much more Core 1 Network. >> Absolutely. And Meraki kind of shows the benefit of having wireless and wired - >> Yeah. work together as one. >> Yeah, absolutely >> This seems to be the thesis behind Wi-Fi six. One core thing. >> Yeah. >> Not a bolt-on extension. >> No, absolutely. I think there's a saying which is the reality, behind every wireless there are tons of wires, right. So, 'cause everything that's connected to the wire infrastructure, and with the Wi-Fi 6 now having increased capacity and increased density, it's causing a cascading effect into the rest of the network infrastructure so it becomes highly, highly crucial when you architect your network infrastructure not just to think about wireless but what happens to the access switch, to the core, to the distribution, to the aggregation. And that has a compounding effect, like multi gig speeds in the access to 10 gig to 40 gig in the core going all the way to 100 gig, right, so, the whole performance and reliability to have that immersive experience that Wi-Fi six needs to bring in, needs to be there. >> so for developers and entrepreneurs out there who always look for the white space, CISCO is a big Multi-Billion dollar company. You guys got big market share, whenever there's big moves like this it causes a new change in the order, the pecking order - >> Yeah >> of companies, it changes the landscape. This is going to be a game changer because it's going to create the new opportunities to create new things. >> Yeah, absolutely. >> What are some of the things that you see out there you could share for people watching who are you know hacking around creating things who say, I want to create something big. What's the enablement? What are some of the things that you see happening that are going to be emerging out of this? >> Yeah, a lot of Fringe technologies that are fringe right now are going to be mainstream, like imagine 2006, When iPhone came in, right so and we were just having the discussion, like, that came in at the heels of major shift in connectivity, that's when 3G came in, right, at that point and multi-megabit capacity, and you saw new applications come in. Now Uber, Lyft, all these kind of applications were possible because of the connectivity. And now, Wi-Fi 6 along with 5G will unleash the next wave of applications. So, first thing is immersive applications, things that are VR, AR, it's used for gaming right now, and kids use this, you're going to see that come in hospitals, where surgeons can do remote surgeries, they can have high-density imagery of your brain, for example, as you're operating, being sent to a remote expert and on the fly, make decisions, right? Like, that is going to be pretty normal and standard, in fact, quite a few of our customers are testing this out, right? VR learning, for students, like, if I were to go ... Like, imagine if you are at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, August 1963, right, listening to MLK "I Have A Dream" speech, and you're in the crowd, immersed in the VR, like, which student wouldn't have more recollection and really connect with that, right? >> I'm sorry, wait - >> You're going to see more and more of these, so it's a better way of learning, and really getting that learning sticking in your brain, you're going to see more of that happening. And the same goes with retail experience, you're shopping, it's going to completely change the way, because of all these immersive experiences. And then, because of the higher density, you're going to see entertainment venues like stadiums where everybody now wants to share their experience to the outside world, and livestream it, right? And I was talking to Carnival Cruise Line, who's one of our customers, and they call themselves City On The Sea, which means, a cruise ship is nothing but it has entertainment, casinos, hotels - >> Lots of food. (laughs) >> Lots of food, swimming pools Concerts happening, and when people took vacation they just wanted to disconnect from everything in the world, right? Now, it's completely reversed. They want to connect full-on, and share their experience in the land, right? And they want to stream it live, 4K. And, these cruise ships are transforming themselves to provide this always-on, fully-on immersive digital experience, and they're creating things like a mobile app to order pizza no matter where you are on the ship. Within five minutes they're going to find the exact location of where you are on the ship and deliver pizza to you, right? These kind of experiences will happen! >> And you know, the perfect storm in all this too, is that the Cloud earnings are coming out, we saw Microsoft's earnings yesterday, Amazon Web Series' earning >> Yeah. do proud of Amazon today, the Cloud stocks are up, the Clouds are growing at a massive scale, they're a power source for these application developers. >> Yeah. >> As well as the on-premise business. So you have, you now have the perfect developer environment - >> A hundred percent. >> To create these new wacky ideas that will be standard. I mean, what was once ... what we take as standard as you mentioned, was a wacky idea in 2006. >> Yeah. >> Location services, checking into a hotel with my phone and having - >> Yeah. >> Cars being delivered to me, what? Who does that? >> And this, this becomes a reality, and Cloud really increased the pace of innovation, right? Now it's kind of cheaper, you don't need to get your own server, you can kind of swipe your credit card, get a bunch of VM, start building applications, and now you have the required bandwidth capacity and density in your infrastructure, and you have the right devices right now to bring that experiences to you, right? So, now it's this trifecta of things, awesome devices, the network ready to deliver those experiences, and Cloud being able to scale out to build those experiences. >> Prashanth, I know you've got a big announcement coming up on the 29th, it's a virtual event, I think Cisco.com, they can probably find out with the URL where the event is, without revealing all the secret sauce, I know you guys had Wi-Fi 6 inside Cisco, >> Yeah. >> testing it out, I heard people in the hallway here, >> Yeah. >> Talking about it, um, and they're pretty animated in their commentary. Can you share the vibe and what's it like when the engineers look at the data, when they say, we just deployed the Wi-Fi 6, what was the reactions, um - >> Yeah. >> Were they blown away, was it mediocre, was it - >> Yeah. >> What were some of the things that they were saying, what was the feedback? >> We were piloting that, and the best way to look at it is, if you go to the wireless dev center on DevNet, you're going to see that we compared a 4K video running with Wi-Fi 6 and without Wi-Fi 6. I think the results speak for themselves. Like, the kind of experience that you're going to see, it's going to be beautiful, and when employees look at those things, and I talked about a few experiences, last week we had a thing called Cisco Beat which is internal employees that we rally around and talk about technology, but more importantly, what it means to us as human beings in a personal way, and what it means to our customers, and they were blown away with some of the applications that are going to be mainstream in all of the industries that I talked about, right? Like Healthcare, hospitality, education, entertainment venues, et cetera. >> What's the low-hanging fruit use cases? What's the things that are going to be right obvious, right out of the gate for companies to implement, in terms of deploying Wi-Fi 6 and seeing immediate benefits? >> Immediate benefits is high-density environment, period. Like student lecture halls, convention centers, areas like this, where everybody wants, like, understand what's going on, but be digitally and visually connected, right? It's not only about email checking anymore, That happens automatically. But if you're here and you want to watch Susie's keynote livestream right now, with high density, and 20 other people want to watch with you, on their devices, it's possible, without a hitch. So that seamless, always-on experience becomes a reality that people can easily test out in small environments, right? Not in their entire environment, where there are high-density of people, accessing multi-media applications or high-bandwidth applications, so I feel that's a low-hanging fruit. And then it's going to go more and more towards IOT applications where sensors are getting connected, like some of our customers are brewers, have hundreds and thousands of sensors in their farms, in brewing machines, and they want all of their data to come and look at that simultaneously for quality control, right? Beer, no matter where it's made, should taste consistent, right? So you can see that coming to life, because now all of these can be connected, and because of better density and better capacity and better battery savings for these IOT devices that Wi-Fi 6 provides, you make these applications possible. So you're going to see very vertical-specific applications coming more and more with Wi-Fi 6. >> Vertical-specific, because you mentioned a number of different customer examples, you know, ranging from retailer, to - >> Yeah. >> Carnival Cruise Line, it's now this connected city - >> Yeah. >> Are there any verticals you see where, when you're talking with customers they're not quite there yet? >> Yeah, that's an interesting thing, it's ... for a change, you always have these early adopters but there is a lot of laggers who are just watching, waiting on the sidelines saying, mm, that's not for me. With Wi-Fi 6, there's been a lot of industry excitement, I would say, like manufacturing full-on, right, just coming on board. Retail, higher education, are always in the early-adopter phase, because for them, and there has been studies shown to say this directly impacts their brand - >> Yes. >> like customer experience defines brand. >> Oh, absolutely. >> And Wi-Fi, equals customer experience these days, right? So, you're going to see all of these industries really, I think I haven't seen much in maybe financial services, if you will, I think that's the only thing that I can remember, transportation, big on, like, machine to machine communication, autonomous driving is possible now because of 5G and Wi-Fi 6, right? So, and you are seeing more and more of this industry - >> This is right in your wheelhouse, and you guys have been pushing the edge for a long time, SD Wind, campus networking This is not new to Cisco. >> Yeah. >> But now with Wi-Fi 6, it literally lights that up. >> Yeah. Yup. >> Pun intended. >> I mean, you can now enable those environments to be completely robust, fully addressable, data-driven - >> Yeah. I think data that you mentioned becomes very, very crucial in this, because, especially now when you have so many more users, so many more devices, so many more applications getting on the network, people are really trying to figure out, what do I do with this? How do I get visibility into ... am I delivering the right experience? Am I providing the right security, et cetera, right? So, data becomes extremely crucial, and you'll see emergence of ML and AI technology because it's going to be humanly impossible to look at all of the data and make sense. So you've got to do machines, do their job, figure out patterns, air on dwell time, foot traffic, predictive ways of saying things may break, the experience may change, and predicting that even before they happen, and giving the right insight to the IT in the line of business, so Wi-Fi 6 is going to open up a whole new slew of ML and AI-driven operations and management capability too, so that's pretty exciting. >> When are they going to pull up a GPU on the Wi-Fi 6 devices? >> (laughs) Oh, it's happening. >> It's ready? >> It is going to happen, because you can run Edge computing applications right on Wi-Fi 6 devices, so you're going to see all of that, so, application hosting capabilities with GPU powered applications are going to be there. >> Just a network connection, right? >> Yeah. So you are going to see that, and frankly even I don't know what some of the Edge computing applications with Wi-Fi 6 will be, but we are seeing more and more of these coming ... DevNet buying tech, yeah. >> Well we did some research, we keep on a part of our SiliconANGLES team, where we prove that it's easier and more cost-effective, rather than moving data around, you move compute to the Edge - >> Edge. >> And then you use the backhaul, 'cause it costs money to send data around the network. It's costly. >> Yeah, absolutely. Yeah, and the autonomous cars was one great example, right? Like, it's a life-and-death situation when you are letting the car drive itself, right? So, you can't send all the data to the Cloud and say, analyze it for me. There are instantaneous decisions to be made, in milli-micro- nanoseconds, that need to be done on the Edge. So I think autonomous cars are a great example of Edge computing that needs to happen right on the Edge. The learning can then start happening in the Cloud, right? As in when these things get more and more smarter, you send all this data, you correlate all the intelligence there, you send it back to the machines. So you're going to see these kind of Edge computing applications. >> So you're excited by Wi-Fi 6? >> Nah. >> (laughter) >> Wi-Fi 6, so that's an even number, is that to be odd numbers, or lucky, I mean, the naming convention? >> No! >> Is there a - >> We want to be better than 5G. (laughter) So 5G is fifth generation of cellular, >> Okay. >> Wi-Fi 6 is sixth generation of Wi-Fi, right? I mean it's - >> So you're going to trump the 5G with the 6, >> Yeah. >> Kind of get ahead of it. >> Because it is truly the sixth generation of Wi-Fi. >> Okay, that's what it is. >> If we were to go back in time we would call 802.11ac, Wi-Fi 5. Right? It's kind of not that easy to say, but yeah, so Wi-Fi 5 happened like three or four years back, and now it's Wi-Fi sixth gen, so. >> We'll have to do a deep dive in the studio sometime, >> Oh, absolutely. >> on getting into all the spectrum issues, you know, the channels - >> Yeah. >> And the antennas and chains and all that good stuff. >> Yeah. There's a lot to geek out on that. (laughs) >> Yeah, it's going to be fun. >> So you talked about, kind of before we wrap up here, you talked about, you know, everything really kind of being related to, or how this can help companies with brand, and brand is everything to any type of company - >> Yeah. >> We talk at every event we go to about how it's all about customer experience. >> Yeah. >> So my last question for you is, how is Wi-Fi 6 and some of these new technologies that clearly you're excited about, how do you think that's going to change the experience for your internal customers, and from being able to get things out faster, to your external Cisco customers? >> Yeah, when you say internal, our own employees - >> Yes. >> Our R and D? >> Yes, exactly. >> Absolutely. So I think, and one of the examples was shown right here, right, so, and I'm connecting the two answers that you had, like, there's a lot of technology details behind what we do, right, we spend tons of money doing R and D, but we wanted to expose that to our own customers, to our channel partners, and to our developers, right? So, this is something that Wi-Fi 6 brings a lot to our customers. So, all the goodness, the intelligence that we have hidden in our network, now gets exposed, through these APIs, to our developers, and to our own customers. So the internal customers of ours, which are engineers, Cisco IT, are tremendously excited to see what that unveils to us, right? And DevNet provides that platform where you can expose this through APIs, whether it's for security, whether it's for application experience, whether it's for better operations, and have new co-creation of applications that we haven't envisioned, new ways of ecosystem partners coming up and building new applications that we haven't envisioned. So, for our own R and D teams, it's pretty exciting. Because - >> Big catalyst. >> Yeah, just, exactly. You're just providing the platform, it's the catalyst for innovations, and that's what the internet was when we created that, right? We didn't know the internet of 20 years back is going to be the internet of today, and we didn't envision that, but here we are. >> Well the ETI's going to open up your market, because you're going to create an enablement to pass that forward, the opportunities to other developers to come up with the ideas. >> Yeah, absolutely. And that's the whole idea, is to provide them a platform to come up with innovations and ideas, and help share these ideas to other folks, right, because when the minds meld, it gets better and better. >> Build some good apps, make ... get it distributed on Wi-Fi 6, make some money, build a business, create a great app - >> Runs on your feet. It's step by step. >> It's a big inflection point. >> That's a pretty good motto. >> It's an inflection point. >> It is. It is truly, I believe, an inflection point. Mainly because, frankly, Wi-Fi 6 and 5G coming together, truly, because me and you as a user really don't care whether I'm on Wi-Fi or cellular, and we shouldn't, right, all I expect is no matter what I do, where I go, and I use my device, I should get the same consistent seamless experience. >> It works. >> Well I don't have the unlimited plan, so I'd love to have it - >> You would with that. on the Wi-Fi. (laughter) >> So you've got this virtual event next week on the 29th - >> Yeah. >> Is that going to tee up anything, any exciting things we're going to hear at Cisco Live a few weeks later? >> Oh yeah. Big time. Big time. (laughs) >> Any teasers you can give us? >> Without getting fired? Yeah, it's going to be tough. (laughter) No, yeah, I think things that we talked today are what we're going to explain more, and we're going to give more flavor on what Cisco's actually is actually doing from our products perspective, solutions, partnership perspective, to bring it to life, right? So, that's really exciting, so I highly encourage the folks that are watching this to register for this on Cisco.com Go Wired For Wireless event, so it's fun, because we've got a lot of industry experts, customers because that's where rubber meets the road - >> Absolutely. >> And that's where the top good applications, how far along they are, what are they testing, what are they trying out, and then we can geek out on all the technology, right? But it always starts with why, and why does it matter. So ... and that's why I'm excited, yeah. >> It sounds exciting. My cheeks are hurting from smiling. Prashanth, thank you so much ... right? ... for sharing your enthusiasm, your energy and expertise, it's been fun. We look forward to, uh, the virtual event next week, and hearing more about what's going on at Cisco Live. >> Thanks Lisa, thanks John. >> Well, our pleasure. For John Furrier, I'm Lisa Martin, you're watching The Cube live from day two of our coverage, of Cisco DevNet Create 2019. Thanks for watching. (techno music)

Published Date : Apr 25 2019

SUMMARY :

brought to you by CISCO. Prashanth it's great to have you join and how it's going to be so impactful to everyone. but you know, when was the first Wi-Fi It's come to be life, right? and the speeds were ... promised speeds were (laughter) I change it all the time, You got to listen. Are you close to the router? so again people know this they experience it everyday. It's been in the fringe side of IOT, like oil and gas But the key part here is simultaneously talking to multiple One of the game changes you brought up and now you're seeing people working on making it much And Meraki kind of shows the benefit of having Yeah. This seems to be the thesis behind Wi-Fi six. like multi gig speeds in the access to 10 gig it causes a new change in the order, the new opportunities to create new things. What are some of the things that you see out and on the fly, make decisions, right? And the same goes with retail experience, you're shopping, Lots of food. like a mobile app to order pizza no matter where you are on the Clouds are growing at a massive scale, they're a power So you have, I mean, what was once ... what we take as standard as you that experiences to you, right? is, without revealing all the secret sauce, I know you guys the vibe and what's it like when the engineers look at the are going to be mainstream in all of the industries that to watch Susie's keynote livestream right now, with high because for them, and there has been studies shown to say This is not new to Cisco. of ML and AI technology because it's going to be humanly It is going to happen, because you can run Edge computing of these coming ... to send data around the network. nanoseconds, that need to be done on the Edge. (laughter) So 5G is fifth generation It's kind of not that easy to say, but yeah, (laughs) go to about how it's all about customer experience. so, and I'm connecting the two answers that you had, like, it's the catalyst for innovations, and that's what the the opportunities to other developers to come up with the and help share these ideas to other folks, right, because Wi-Fi 6, make some money, build a business, Runs on your feet. my device, I should get the same consistent seamless on the Wi-Fi. Big time. Yeah, it's going to be tough. So ... and that's why I'm excited, yeah. Prashanth, thank you so much ... right? of Cisco DevNet Create 2019.

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Taylor Barnett, Stoplight | DevNet Create 2019


 

>> live from Mountain View, California It's the queue covering definite create twenty nineteen. Brought to you by Cisco. >> Hi. Lisa Martin for the Cube, Live at Cisco Definite. Create twenty nineteen. This is Day two of our coverage here. We're excited to welcome Taylor Barnett, a speaker tech talk speaker for this event. Lead community engineer at Stoplight Taylor. It's great to have you on the Cube. I'm glad to be here. So first, inform us before we talk about your tech talk that you can yesterday here, adept that create tell us a little bit about Stop like, >> yeah, So stoplight is a platform. Teo, build test and design web ap eyes specifically, we focus right now on recipe eyes, but we're really encouraging design first principles when people are building out there a prize for very much preproduction And what we have found was so many guys out there are not documented. They're not tested, they're not designed well And so we wanted to build tooling the help users be able to do that. >> So that documentation we've heard yeah, yesterday and today is absolutely >> essential. Yeah, And so a lot of what we're doing is we're actually using the Open A P I specifications, which a lot of teams at Cisco are now using. And so we can auto generate documentation from that. But also, we can auto generate instant mock >> servers. >> Um, do different types of testing all from that, because it's both human and machine readable. You're taking advantage of that. >> So you gave a tech talk yesterday, so I like the title going to Infinity and beyond Documentation with open FBI. Tell us our audience, like basically kind of an overview of what you presented in the three takeaways that your audience left with. >> Yeah, so historically open a P I specification has been known to be an auto generating reference documentation. So what people are like, Yeah, I know it for documentation, but they don't know it for all the other things. So the things that helped them do design first principles, the things that helped them mock and get feedback about their AP eyes and also how to test. And so I say, the three takeaways, that's what I focus on, was, how does this design first really benefit us? And why is it worth spending that time? Because a lot of engineers. It kind of feels like a friction point. Like you're making me do something else before I can start coding on DSO helping them see those benefits and then also being ableto use the feedback through They get through mach ap eyes so that they don't have tio code all the p I and then get the feedback. They could do it before that process. So much, master. Yeah, totally. And just better testing to actually make sure that we once we designed the A that we actually implementing it to what the design says. Uh, >> so I'm not design front. You mentioned design first telling you before we met. Lied that we've heard that. Yeah, I did what I had yesterday and today. This's design first approach and it sounds like from what you're saying for developers, it's not necessarily the first thing they want to do. They want to get their hands on start coding. So yeah, tell may tell us what design first means and actually how it can really make the developers job better. >> Yeah, Yes. Oh, Design First is really just being able to take a step back before that code and like describe what the is on a lower like endpoint level for us that's doing it in a visual editor at Stoplight. We actually have a visual editor to help people do that so that it's not like writing things from scratch. So even then, that makes it faster than having to write on a blank document that nobody wants to like right in. And it might be a mess. And decisions are hard to make around that document because it's a mess and all this stuff and then being able to take that and then start doing the mocking and all the other things. So for developers, it's a lot about getting to see what those other benefits are to convince them that it's worth it. And that's going to save some time overall versus like having toe wait. One great example of that is actually with being ableto Ma K P IIs friend and engineers could go ahead and start implementing the guy before the development process of actually implement thing is even done so that traditional, like waterfall development process. You just cut that out because they can start doing in a parallel on DH so it can really make teams a lot more efficient. >> Did you Were you happy with the reaction yesterday? This is a This is the definite communities. God. Five hundred eighty five thousand plus people. There's been about four hundred here in person. What was the reaction? Especially from developers who may have been around a while and are very used to the waterfall upload where they like. Taylor. This is amazing. Or girl, this is like a whole cultural change. Yeah, you know, I mean, we we work well, >> actually, a lot of enterprise companies that stoplight. And it is it is a little bit of a cultural change. You talk, there's this whole bigger idea of, like, a P I transformation. Even just moving to having a pee ice first is a bigger change. And then, you know, then the design part. But I have found that once, if you're introducing somebody to a prize first, it's easy to sneak in design. So then you don't have to Then teach Oh, let's design the first and do decide. It's all part of the same package s o. A lot of enterprises what They're like transformations to moving toe, like in a very FBI focused infrastructures. They then are just more receptacle to design >> first. That's good. Especially if you're able to show them that the obvious benefits. Yeah, there getting things done faster like this is actually taking this new approach. Is that going to be better for you? And do you find that that developers are adjusting quickly to this new? Yeah. I mean, there's definitely >> pain points. The tooling is still catching up. Uh, so the industry is for recipe eyes has kind of centered around open FBI specifications. But there were others before that Ramel for a specifically and I'd use it for anybody. Also open a p. I used to be called swagger specification. Some people might know it by that, but a lot of it is like, Yeah, the tooling is still maturing, but it's in a lot better place than it used to be. So when I was a back end FBI engineer about four five years ago, I was introduced through a P I blueprint, which is another justification, and it was very painful tohave to document in a p I with it. And now it's just gotten so much better with the tooling mature >> you can see massive differences alone just by asking. >> Totally. Yeah, just like the last four years, actually. >> So this is your first definite create and your speaker at your very first one. That's pretty cool, Taylor. Yeah? Yeah. How long have you been involved in the definite community? And how is it impacted what you do for stuff like, >> Yeah. So I was kind of introduced through it. I knew people that worked on definite and like Mandy. And And so then I kind of got introduced that that, you know, it's been really interesting to see how they built up this community of people sharing code. And it's different then, like, get hub type community. And so it's kind of interesting. It was just like it's ah, you know, you don't see a lot of communities that are run by companies that necessarily >> there they're >> not in the code repository business, but they see the value in people sharing things and collaborating and stuff like that. And so it's kind of different of a community, but also very interesting tow. Have watching grab >> the sharing in the collaboration you walk in yesterday. People are eager to do that Yeah, and other types of conferences that we covered the Cube, especially if there's cooperative Shin Partners there. It's a different vibe has been very, very much one that's been refreshing on and to your point. The difference between what Cisco's built here in the lost, very organically bio away in the last five years with Suzie and Mandy have done that opened nous and that excitability to share things and learn from each other, even though there's got to be developers here from competing companies. Yeah, that's a very cool spirit. Yeah, and something that I think they've done a very good job fostering that they also I kind of wonder if it's chicken and egg. How much has definite. And this, you know, over half a million strong community been sort of forcing function or an accelerator of Cisco's evolution? If you look at Cisco's been around for such a long time, not on a P I first company Yeah, big enterprise. This is a big all of their products and with GPS ***, been really >> awesome to see all the talks that are focused on Cisco's a prize being designed first like I don't see a lot of enterprises that feel like they've really taken it toe heart as much. I've talked to some people and they say, Yeah, I mean, you know, there's been some pain points, but I'm like, Yeah, but there's companies that are envious of the Y .'All done this. Yes, and they've really, like, probably improved the developer experience that they're a piece so much because of having that design first >> approach. So one other thing that I think it's very cool about definite and create is that yesterday morning it was kicked off by two really strong technologists. You don't mention we had Mandy really on yesterday is a senior director of developer experience. Right after you. I've got Susie Leon, the SPP in CTO, and I go to a lot of events. The Cube covers a lot of events every year, and it's very important to us to be able to highlight women and technology because it's still an unresolved, you know, gap there. But it's also really unusual to see an event kicked off both days. No females. You've been a stem since you were a kid. How does that impact you? Do you see that is inspiring. You that is. I wish it wasn't an issue. >> Yeah, no. Yeah. I wish it was an issue, but no, but it's really awesome. So, like, when I was trying to decide if I accept my when they asked me to come speak, I totally looked at that. That was something when I saw their faces on them that they were going to be key notes and stuff, you know, it gave me already, like, a whole different feeling of how the conference >> was going to be >> so it was really exciting to see that. Yeah, >> that's good. And when I first got into tech a long time ago, I was just not aware of what was not monitor in a technical role. But I didn't notice. I mean, they noticed the difference and the disparity, but I didn't feel it. Yeah, And so it wasn't until I started going to more and more events where I sell >> theirs. So, yeah, sometimes you're at events where it's just the sea of people that don't look like you. And it's a lot different here. >> Yeah, until I imagine I appreciated it this morning. I'm sure. Well, when Susie called onto stage the young girls from Verizon and those from Presidio that are Cisco's clearly making a concerted effort to recognize and help this diversity in thought. I mean, imagine designing AP eyes with, you know, many different perspective is better products and services and company, and will be we just have more thought divers in and of itself. >> Oh, yeah, I think about it a lot with developer experience. So one of the things is there's this idea of beginner's mind failure that sometimes if if you think you're a p, I is like, great. But you don't approach it with the beginner's mind, you might actually be failing a lot of your users. So, you know, your, uh, your veteran developer, you're, you know, super skilled and you you don't fail in the somewhere areas that someone who's newer to development might fail. And so then you just lost a bunch of customers and right up front without even them getting deeper into the FBI. And so being ableto have, like more diverse perspectives around, designing a prize could definitely help prevent that. That's a >> really important point so that you make there because it's like if this is really everything that's designed these days. Whatever it is a on iPad. But sticker a piece of clothing. It's all designed for a consumer. Yeah, to consume whatever the product of services. And, you know, in technology, so much conversation goes around delivering an outstanding customer experience. And you're saying, you know, we have to think about that. Probably worked design, thinking, coming play right about designing with that sort of a day bers perspective of approach. That paper you gonna lose customers here were >> actually gets to the bottom line. Yeah, versus just being like a nice benefit kinds. >> Yeah, well, Taylor has been so fun having you on the Cube. Thank you so much. Now you have a flight to catch back in Austin. So thank you so much for doing this afternoon and rats on being a speaker at first. And it will seem Thanks for having me. My pleasure. I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching to keep live from Cisco. Definite. Create twenty nineteen. Thanks for watching

Published Date : Apr 25 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by Cisco. It's great to have you on the Cube. much preproduction And what we have found was so many guys out there are not Yeah, And so a lot of what we're doing is we're actually using the Open A P I specifications, Um, do different types of testing all from that, because it's both human and machine readable. So you gave a tech talk yesterday, so I like the title going to Infinity and beyond Documentation And so I say, the three takeaways, that's what I focus on, was, how does this design first for developers, it's not necessarily the first thing they want to do. So for developers, it's a lot about getting to see what those other benefits are to convince them Yeah, you know, I mean, we we work well, And then, you know, then the design part. And do you find that that developers are adjusting but a lot of it is like, Yeah, the tooling is still maturing, but it's in a lot better place than it used to be. Yeah, just like the last four years, actually. what you do for stuff like, And And so then I kind of got introduced that that, you know, And so it's kind of different of a community, And this, you know, over half a million strong community I've talked to some people and they say, Yeah, I mean, you know, there's been some pain points, but I'm like, Yeah, but there's companies that are envious I've got Susie Leon, the SPP in CTO, and I go to a lot of events. on them that they were going to be key notes and stuff, you know, it gave me already, like, a whole different feeling of how so it was really exciting to see that. Yeah, And so it wasn't until I started going to more and more events where I sell And it's a lot different here. I mean, imagine designing AP eyes with, you know, many different perspective And so then you just lost a bunch of customers and right up front without even them getting really important point so that you make there because it's like if this is really everything that's designed these actually gets to the bottom line. Yeah, well, Taylor has been so fun having you on the Cube.

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Andra Ehlert, Dimension Data | DevNet Create 2019


 

>> live from Mountain View, California. It's the queue covering definite create twenty nineteen. Brought to you by Cisco. >> Hi. Welcome to the Qi of Lisa Martin. John Barrier. Day two of our coverage on the Cube. Cisco Definite create twenty nineteen. Very excited to welcome to the Cube, one of this year's definite creator awards way. Have Andhra Alert Digital automation practice manager from Dimension Data under It's wonderful to have you join us. >> Hi. Thanks for having me. >> So, congratulations. This is breaking news for everybody, including you. You had just won the Definite Creator Award. Tell us about now you're feeling since you just got that news. >> Well, in the same time, I feel excited. I feel honored and I feel so humble. It's a bigger word to win. And I'm very proud that I can bring this. There's a way back home to my my company. >> Did they tell you this is only the second year that they've given out these awards? Did it tell you some of the criteria? Because obviously you were selected and were surprised. Just learned up today. Pretty cool surprise to happen. Did they give you in context about who they're looking for you, Like your activity in the definite community and things like that. It's a little bit about that >> exactly. So they're looking for the people who are having a great impact and more great advocates of definite outside of the Siskel world. So when they're going to clients and where they're going to the developer community in the different countries so they're looking for advocates, they're also looking for people who are great contributors to the network. So if you have some very nice code examples and you're posting them on the Codex and so they had a couple of pretty is that they're following. >> And how long have you been an active member of the definite community? >> I'm quite the veteran. I've been there since the very beginning of the definite. So I before even the release, I already got reviewed the information that something in this direction we'LL come. And then I was there from the very beginning, The journey continued with being there at the first definite express event being now, for example, here definite create a last year, I've organized the first different express event at the partner so together in my company with the mission. Later, we're organized the first definite expressive end in the front foot where we have invited clients but also a lot of people from our engineering teams. So quite the fantastic journeys. And now with with definite and I'm happy >> that time there since so early what's been the >> reaction so far too definite growth and change? What's the biggest surprise or notable change with definite community? >> There are a couple of things were changing. So inside the company, for example, with the adoption of definite and with people going very often on definitely have seen a different style of learning. So engineers now have a different way of how do I approach learning? Where do I go if I need to find something and another change is related to how people interact with each other? Because, yeah, you know, like the network engineer was there, he was doing very cool. His staff, maybe sometimes he was also sharing, but definite the entire opened. This is now standard, so people are sharing between them. Colleagues are also taking on in even internal social media like yammer and the posting. Hey, look, I've done this cool stuff and it's only like a lot of it. It's also thanks to definite, because it brought a little bit a new style of things. >> And they bring definite create, which is gonna cloud native kind of mindset. How has that gone over with network engineers being coding? Python machine learning, Iraqi new things are coming. >> So they're all on the transformation path, and our company's doing a lot of activities in this direction. We've had, For example, last year, our, um Wei have ah, very good advocate for coding on the mission leader. His name is Anthony Shaw. He had last year an entire initiative running learned to code on. So we had colleagues from all over the company independently of the department you work from, which started to code, right? So we had way had them learning how to code. And then this is basically the very bay a fundament on you can refuse. Start afterwards with learning pets in the definite. So it's quite a transformation. And I would say that it's a nice joining Toby. And >> how have you guys? The gentleman that you just mentioned on yourself is, as you described a veteran of the definite community. How have you guys may be influenced to mention data to really fully embrace Death Net and the path >> I think that are, too, too big ways in which this has been done. So on one hand, Anthony show with his very successful initiative, this has brought the transformation from the learning side. And on the other hand, by starting to have skills, we have brought out the news through our clients. And so this has impacted the business. And when the business is impacting and when you show a business value by using automation by using the net or program ability, then the entire company is aware. And this is how afterwards way started to okay. We really embraced >> the challenge, really sort of changing the culture of dimension data in a good way. >> Yes, I wouldn't say it's It's totally changing, but we see that way are very easily adapting to the new way. Talk about >> the automation peace. What do you do in your day to day job? Take us through a day in the life of what you're doing with the cool things you do. Struggles, challenges, opportunities. What's the fun stuff? What's the not so fun stuff that software's automating away. >> Okay, very nice. So on one hand, on the day to day basis, we analyzed with our clients what they're doing, and we are coming with suggestions where they could be faster. And also we're coming with suggestions where they could reduce errors and someone. So basically, we go. We talkto our clients. We're coming back with the problems they have with prepare for them a solution, then afterwards. The solution. It's mainly based on using AP eyes. Scrapie eyes are also amongst our favorite. Once we are presenting the solution than the clients are saying, Yes, it's something I would like to have in my network or no, it's something I don't want. Then, once the clients are happy with the solution that we're proposing them, then we start developing were developing in the Angel methodology, so very close touch with the client failed fast and improved and have a very inter way of doing things afterwards. Once the project is done, you know, we continue improving what we have with the customer with the clients and continuing are joining from there. This is part of what a day in a software engineering department looks like or like in a native ox engineering department looks on top of this. We need all the time to take care of best practices. How do we called? We need to take care of being security compliance, like working in Europe. You know, we have a lot of rules regulations that we need to respect, and we are of some of these rules and tradition. We have very proud that they are there and they're there to protect us and to protect the data which somethings belongs to us. So this is also a topic that way are working on day today. Afterwards were also working a lot and improving our skills. We're having a weekly making learn, for example, where someone is waiting to take someone else's. Presenting the technical topic. So it's it's an entire process and these are all the people that were running on the day today. >> You know, one of the big trends wass going back ten years, Dev Ups Infrastructure is code Great great great trend now Net Dev ups you mentioned that term is about Dev ops applied networking. That's a big theme of definite definite creators. Programmable networks. What does that mean to you? People say Net devil. >> It means a lot. It's very close to my heart. It's also the topic of my presentation later. Today. I have a speaker's not a tech talk in another works A lot of people might think. OK, it's just network continuous. We're writing something. One script in the network. Well, it's not just that. It's a lot of components. It's also about the culture. It's about the people. It's about the process. You're involving. It's about what tools you're using me. The entire net evolves is really close to my heart because it's an entire mindset, which is which needs >> to learn about it. What they where should they go to learn about? Net Dev ops. Sorry, Where should people go to learn about Do Net? De Bob's what it is. >> It's a very, very good entry point. It's the definite right. You have there a lot off learning labs you have the sandbox is yours. Have tracks can go from there and of course you can. You go online, you have a lot of courses. You have a lot of bloggers. You have a lot of you for answers. Were posting about what's what's going on and what you should adapt in your network. Uh, then, yes, you can also use some books. There are also some nice books there, of course, and tow the attention because by the time a book is released, maybe that information could be different. Created, you know, like it runs quite fast. Definitely, definitely. One of the sexual >> organ is your personal question. What's the coolest thing that's going on here? A definite create or within the industry that you're excited about? >> Um, machine learning and artificial intelligence is definitely something that I want Teo to keep an eye on it where I'm running a couple of small tests. It will definitely change the way we see the world. And it'LL also define what our kids will further learn because now you see, like we, we are used to a certain way of learning, which is their since maybe two hundred years, this will have, like motion learning and artificial intelligence. We have such a big impact on everything with you that it will maybe be overwhelming. So it's a very interesting point that I'm following here. The difference Creator. Very nice talks, >> and you've got to get the data to get the machine learning any data? Murat, He's got great wireless WiFi sixes here. I ot looking good. A lot of activity. >> Yes, it is indeed a lot of activity, and I'd like to believe that data is somehow. Then you go though the new petroleo s o having a handle, the data and something that valuable indeed. >> How you found if we look at you know that the participants that air here, we've got, you know, developers, infrastructure, folks who were moving towards adopting De Bob's kind of connecting them with the app developers. How have you seen people change? Job roles change as, uh, these other folks are adopting develops. Especially now that you're talking about bringing in the network. That's how Have you seen roles change and how has your job in particular changed and advance and evolved with practice of Net Dev >> ops. So I was starting the first part of your question. Rolls have indeed changed a lot. And this also I can see in the moment when we try to recruit because there is no profile out there that say okay, I want to recruit another bobs. You will not find on the market native ops of already built as a professor, you need thio recruit people when you see the potential and try to bring thiss new colleagues into the Net evolves journey. So this is one part on how Rosa revolving and then very direct to myself on my career has evolved. I think it's very linked to how the entire definite community has evolved. I've started five years ago the mission it and it was my first. A big job in Germany on my career has evolved in a very rapid way. So I went from technology associate system Engineer is an engineer leading a team off softer with leather box engineers. And now I'm since a couple of weeks speaking for the Europe region, a dimension data to advocate and to create a strategy for Ned a box a za practice. >> So what would you recommend to the younger generation gets your saying that we can't hire for someone that has no develops experience. What are some of the skills, maybe even some of the softer skills, like being a good collaborator, being a good communicator, that you would recommend that the younger generation really fine tune in addition to their technology expertise that you think this is going to make someone really gets this this role and can help really transform it. >> So I think outside of all the technical skills so they can acquire in terms of OK, programming, networking and someone, there are two big soft skills that they should have. And in my opinion, it's something very important, something I'm looking at, every person I'm interviewing, thiss to our curiosity. You need to be curious about what's out there. If you're not serious, you cannot evolve. And the second one is learning ability. Even if you don't know something, you still you say Okay, I don't know when, but I will Girl go and learn about it, you know, like wear learning every day, something like what was there five years ago and what is there to years ago? It's different to what we have now. So learn ability and curious. It's yours, too. Two main topics for me >> Fantastic. Well, under again, Congratulations on winning. The definite Freedom Warrior is here twenty nineteen. It's been a pleasure talking to you, well, producing more great things that you do in the definite community in the next year. Thank you very much. Thanks for having our pleasure for John Ferrier. I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching us live on the cubes. Saturday of coverage. Francisco Definite. Create twenty nineteen. Thanks for watching.

Published Date : Apr 25 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by Cisco. automation practice manager from Dimension Data under It's wonderful to have you join us. You had just won the Definite Creator Award. Well, in the same time, I feel excited. Did they give you in context about who they're looking for you, So if you have some very nice So I before even the release, I already got reviewed the information that something So inside the company, And they bring definite create, which is gonna cloud native kind of mindset. independently of the department you work from, which started to code, right? The gentleman that you just mentioned on yourself is, as you described a veteran And on the other hand, by starting to have skills, very easily adapting to the new way. doing with the cool things you do. on the day to day basis, we analyzed with our clients what they're doing, You know, one of the big trends wass going back ten years, Dev Ups Infrastructure is code Great It's also the topic of my presentation later. Where should people go to learn about Do Net? You have a lot of you for answers. What's the coolest thing that's going on here? We have such a big impact on everything with you that it will maybe A lot of activity. Yes, it is indeed a lot of activity, and I'd like to believe that data is somehow. How have you seen people change? you need thio recruit people when you see the potential and try to bring So what would you recommend to the younger generation gets your saying that we can't hire for And the second one is learning ability. It's been a pleasure talking to you, well, producing more great things that you do in the definite community in the next year.

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Jeff Levensailor, Presidio | DevNet Create 2019


 

>> live from Mountain View, California. It's the queue covering definite create twenty nineteen. Brought to You by Cisco >> Welcome back to the cave. Lisa Martin with John Fourier. Live at Cisco Definite Create twenty nineteen at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California John Mayer, please to welcome to the Cube Jeff Levin, sailor collaboration Engineer from Presidio Jeff, It's great to have you joining us today. >> Yes, great to be here. >> So lots of energy. You can hear all this noise behind us. We heard this morning in the key note that the definite community is now well over half a million strong. You mentioned before we went line. This is your second definite creates before we get into our city and Cisco. Tell me a little bit about your involvement in the definite community. >> Uh, so I got >> started just looking for support, and it's not like it's a supported product. This is a new venture for everybody. So you go out and you find these little avenues to get questions answered. And WebEx teams has a great community support and just ask a question ended up answering more questions than I was asking, and, you know, that kind of like got me started down this path of, you know, people bounce ideas off each other So really, this is Ah, homecoming. And it's just people inspiring each other If you really want to learn And deep dive Obviously I'm a self learner, so I'll just sit down and really get into it. But I come here to get inspired and the Kino just >> Will you wait? Yeah. What was the key? What was the highlight for you on the Kino? What was >> anything Ashutosh has to talk about? Ashutosh is on the I guess, the incubator side. He comes up with these things, and his job is to get people excited about the FBI's. So today he had an augmented reality app with his phone and he would go around and show network coverage of a WiFi hot spot. You can go up to an access point and troubleshoot network of problems by seeing if on access, points registered or not. So my mind, I'm thinking how many times I go in the data center and look, I have to plug in a laptop to look to see what the lands on a port. Now, Aiken take that same approach too, you know, put my phone out in a data center, and okay, this witch has ah, this V lands here. I could plug it. Antonito even need to plug my laptop. >> I mean, he first introduced the beginning of that demo at Cisco Live in Barcelona. Totally blown away. He's a demo. God first. Yeah, he's amazing. But it shows the automation right and also shows the new kind of experiences. I think to me what is inspiring to me about this community. I'd love to get your reaction. This is that It kind of shows a new way to do work. And it's all about making life easier, But it's also more capability. You can see all the configurations and then ultimately writing new apse. That seems to be the theme. Create definite curiosity with all these capabilities. Is that kind of something that you're seeing as well? What's your reaction to that? That kind of this new way of doing things. >> Wow. I mean, it's we have a code competition are Presidio called Shark Tank, and it's really just to inspire people. Uh, tell me a business use case for this Use cases really ninety percent of it. You confined help you confined mentors your work. But, uh, really Just finding a use case and stuff like this coming here just thinking about new ways to do things and do things to create >> in collaboration What? Some of the things that you see that are low hanging fruit use cases of either mundane tasks or stuff that just needs to be kind of like, abstracted away. What are some of the things >> I have a ton of those s o. Somebody came to me, a law firm that had these attorney's secretary assignments, and they wanted Secretary is to be able to schedule meetings for attorneys. You could do that in a gooey, but we're seeing more and more is away from the buoy. And it's becoming this FBI first. So anything that's not in the gooey, it's in the AP, I So that's where our values integrators has really become. This gap between the jury and the FBI. So what we did, or what I did is going active directory, have some fields filled out because they're already populated. One thing for this I read from that, and then I goto WebEx a p I and I populated, and that runs a nightly basis. >> You automate thataway. Yeah, piece of cake. But this is the trend. This is kind of what we're seeing happening with Cloud the question that comes up in the enterprises. Look, att. Hey, you know, we've been doing this thing for long times the way we do it. We, You know, ten years ago we built out this system. Don't touch it. But I love the new stuff. How do I get the new stuff in? How do I deal the old stuff, The legacy. And we got containers. Got some news stuff. A p. I's a big part of this integration fabric composing APS. I think you have to show >> that the business value it's it's saving time. It's saving people ours, and it's really checking code into get is something you wouldn't think about. Checking network config. Thing to get is something you wouldn't really think about, Uh, just a year ago. But that's really becoming the trend and having a testable code and, uh, you know, kind of Ah, if something goes wrong, I have a backup. You have somebody you know exactly who did what before it was just people hacking away. >> So let's talk about unlocking value for a second. When you were talking with John about what some of the things that blew your mind during this morning's keynote one I was hearing from you and one senses how how much easier certain functions of yourjob are going to be because of this? What value are you seeing that even just a few things that we were announced this morning is going to bring, too? Not just you and your business, but for city and Cisco's customers? >> Well, I mean So, for instance, the Iraqi thing, uh, they released bulk actions. So AP eyes. Typically, if you write the code one of the time, that's goingto limit your ability to do certain functions. Having all these AP eyes in one and point immediately, I'm thinking cloud formation templates. Name is on but ism Iraqi solution, so you could take this entire network and copy and paste. It is one slice of code. That's tremendous. >> What's the community vibe here? Definite. I mean big invention. >> It's a homecoming. I know all these people have met so many people from other areas and people competitors. We're all friends here, you know, And it's not a marketing ventured all you don't see a lot of people you know, scanning badges and bugging you on email later. This is all about just people hurting out about What they've done >> is we're getting >> the show until >> I like >> that. It's not just the hacker fond, you know, Hey, revenue event. They throw a hackathon over it and it turns out the most these events trees, a marketing event. It's completely eyes that >> unorganized as I would want it to be. There's conversations just passing by in the hallway, and I get just as much out of that as I do in a workshop. >> So you're giving a breakout session later today. Contact center. A eye for more efficient governments. >> Yes, that's a twenty minute lightning talk on just a recent project I did and taking an arm from a solution and be able to do Mohr by moving it up to the cloud. This's Amazon connect could be another one, but just basically enabling through the cloud different functionalities we're using Alexe pot, reason, elastic search, reason Landa and we're we're taking the top ten tickets this help desk would receive and trying to automate this. So I need to reset my pen. I need to transfer me to this person that was an operator before in an Excel spreadsheet. So what we did was completely not change your workflow. They're going to upload it, excels for a cheat and has three. It's going to take a Landau function to separate that spread she into a dynamo database Elastic search, going to read that database. And then Lex Boss is goingto interact with elastic search >> and his all in real time. >> It's all in real time. >> And they thought, this all natural language talking together you're working together, >> working together >> to solve those customer problems or get well that And I guess, get the customer that the ticket routed appropriately. >> Yeah, so there's take a look ups to get creation to get clothes and anything that you would typically anything that you can automate. We've done it within the ivy are and we've measured containment rates. So >> yeah, this is exactly why we've been covering. This is our third year, but here in the beginning, at the creation of the event, because what you just described is so valuable and so kind of basic. If you think about it, the number one tickets that everyone that stack ranked haven't over and over again. But breaking towns this going database for this? I got a database for this. I got a database for this. The old world. You have a waterfall process, you have a product. Project manager. People would go in a round trip meeting after meeting, arguing aboutthe ski mus and databases. And I mean, what would it be like in the old days, if you like, went through the traditional models versus his agile? Hey, let's just put it together. Hackett string up. So maybe eyes sling the FBI's rolling up, wiring up >> siding. Me, you're moving from a static ivy are too self service. And then even more what I think you forget who coined the term. But selfie service. You know more about a user you're able to predictably say, I see you have a ticket open or go a step further and say, I see have email on this phone and we're having active sync issues and only alert those people of issues and not bother everybody else. I see you work out of this office and you're calling in. Are you calling about, uh, you know, your office closure? Because we have a temporary office for you over here, So being able to get ahead of anything and predict that's the next thing >> I know. This really also highlights when we tend to talk about us when these data conferences, where the underlying value being here is the creation and stitching together with solutions. But it's the data that's driving it right. The tickets that ranking the the task getting if these reasoning aspect of reasoning with the data predictive are prescriptive, is a personalization benefit thes air. The things that are exposed on this new way of creating >> there's there's some real exciting, very consumable AP eyes out there. One of them all name is in dico io, and this is something that you could just plug in some data. Then I'll make a prediction using just a bunch of learned data set that it already has, and I'LL give you an example WebEx team space way just chat away, and for months and months, I funnel that data to a simple FBI and it comes back and tells me Who's the angriest person who's the happiest person? There's an f b I for Who's a conservative who's a liberal. There's an A p I. For the Myers Briggs test. >> I'LL get all of this. You are the girl. What's the emiko dot io? Indeed, In dico dico i n d >> i c e o dot io >> Awesome. Well, thanks for sharing that on the AP. I think I want to get your expert opinion on this because this comes up a lot recently. At these conferences, we go to where some oh new way to develop modern applications. Blah, blah, blah, waterfalls going away. Fiber Clavell. That's good stuff. Check, check, Check. At the end of the day that the key ingredient all this is AP AP Eyes are becoming the centre point for one data sharing integration coding Middle, where a new kind of middleware evolving? What's your view on this? Because this is an essential part of integration to like If someone wants to adopt a new product, I want to bring it in. It's really >> recognizing that your use case isn't everybody's used case, so you come from a static, fully functioning product to an FBI first approach, you build the FBI, then you build things around it. So when WebEx teams is released, for instance, it had certain functionality there and certain functionality wasn't there. But you could do it to the FBI. So it's partners and Cisco kind of competing at the same time to come up with a better solution. Any time you compete, you know it's good in any time something is open. It's good. So you have these Open A P I's and you have a community trying to come up with the best solution on DH. It's >> and that's really where communities of shining too right now, because you're going to community. They're great at giving feedback. If something something's not right, raise their hand. Appoint honest >> feedback, right? >> Yeah, competition. So Cisco telling Cisco something's not working. You know, you bring in some other people that maybe they're mohr AP to tell you when something's not working. They don't have any dog in the fight. You know, they'LL tell you if something's not working, they'LL give you feedback, and it really enables a better in product and a product that's more form to tailor fit for that user. That use case, >> which is exactly how it should be. Right? So last question, Jeff, before we wrap up, you already talked about how excited you were with some of the things in the Kino was day one of to >> me >> kind of expectations or hopes and dreams for what you're going to learn the rest of today and tomorrow that will help evolve the Presidio Cisco partnership. >> I mean, one thing is just making connections out here, Uh, but learning? I think so. I'm a collab guy and I'm getting to be more of a developer, and that's making me more of a generalist again. Because as a developer, yu have to interact with more than just collab FBI's. I'm getting into wireless and enterprise and everything security. So what I get out of combat is like, this is going around seeing what's happening and other technologies and other verticals and once again, competitive ideas seeing what other people are doing. Adding to that telling them what I'm doing A >> lot of collaboration pun intended. >> Yeah, You like it If you like puns. The keynote tomorrow is gonna be amazing. >> Is it way watching? Excellent. Jeff, Thanks so much for joining. Joining me on the Cube today. We appreciate your time for Joe inferior. I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching the Cube live from Cisco Dove Net. Create twenty nineteen. Thanks for watching.

Published Date : Apr 25 2019

SUMMARY :

It's the queue covering Jeff Levin, sailor collaboration Engineer from Presidio Jeff, It's great to have you joining us today. in the definite community. So you go out and you find these little avenues What was the highlight for you on the Kino? Aiken take that same approach too, you know, put my phone out in a data center, I think to me what is inspiring You confined help you confined mentors your work. Some of the things that you see that are low hanging fruit use cases of either So anything that's not in the gooey, But I love the new stuff. Thing to get is something you wouldn't really think about, Uh, just a year ago. of the things that blew your mind during this morning's keynote one I was hearing from you and Name is on but ism Iraqi solution, so you could take this entire What's the community vibe here? people you know, scanning badges and bugging you on email later. It's not just the hacker fond, you know, Hey, revenue event. There's conversations just passing by in the hallway, So you're giving a breakout session later today. I need to transfer me to this person that to solve those customer problems or get well that And I guess, get the customer that the ticket routed that you would typically anything that you can automate. You have a waterfall process, you have a product. I see you work out of this office and you're calling in. being here is the creation and stitching together with solutions. One of them all name is in dico io, and this is something that you could just plug in some data. You are the girl. At the end of the day that the key ingredient all this is AP AP Eyes are becoming it's partners and Cisco kind of competing at the same time to come up with a better solution. and that's really where communities of shining too right now, because you're going to community. mohr AP to tell you when something's not working. So last question, Jeff, before we wrap up, you already talked about how kind of expectations or hopes and dreams for what you're going to learn the rest of today and tomorrow I'm a collab guy and I'm getting to be more of a developer, Yeah, You like it If you like puns. Joining me on the Cube today.

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Tony Cuevas, Liberty Technology | DevNet Create 2019


 

>> live from Mountain View, California. It's the queue covering definite create twenty nineteen. Brought to you by Cisco. >> Welcome back to the cave. Lisa Martin with John Barrier on our first day of two days of coverage of Cisco Definite Create twenty nineteen at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California. John Eyre. Please welcome to iniquitous and directors solutions, architecture and Devil Box from Liberty Technology. Tony, Welcome. >> How are you? >> Good, thanks for Thanks for having us tell our audience a little bit about liberty technology before we get into the community. What you doing your breakout session? >> Not a problem. The re technology is a company. Where? MSP company down in Griffin, Georgia. And so we handle a lot of a lot of clients are either public sector cities, all different types of all the different verticals. So well. And so do you have a client? A customer out there that needs needs an extra arm into it. We're there for them. >> So your basement of Georgia, Which means that how warm it is in here today Outside should be nothing for you right >> now. Tell me about >> well outside >> now, since there is no humanity I like it back home in few minutes, >> Californians were babies. >> Yeah, Joni, Public Sector. We've done a lot of interviews of public sector folks with their towns and cities, air, ground rules, municipalities, cities, their I t light. And then they don't have the Dev ops expertise, but clouds a perfect fit for them. But they have a lot of certain characters. Whether it's email is very ephemeral. People come and go, So getting people collaborating in these distinct user groups that have different roles and responsibilities is a challenge. How are you guys solving that? Because there's something I know you guys have worked on. There's a challenge that's only Republicans for enterprises do. How do you bring people that are distinct user populations that have an application or roll or use case into a collaborative, horizontally scaleable >> system? We show Be honest way. Go in there and we go in there and we discover as to what they're doing now, what are their pain points? What do they want? Change where they want to go and then we show them the collaboration started. We shone like what makes team's way? Show him all of the, uh, meetings room devices, things like that. And then not just on the collaboration side, but also if there helping with three, six, five their security than Rocky. That's how we bring. That's how we bring collaboration intothe public >> about the Cisco dynamic we've been covering definite create since it started. Definite. Now it's just go live couple years, seeing kind of a new vibe and new mojo going on with that within the Cisco ecosystem of actually coding stuff up, whether it's slinging AP eyes together or creating new ones. New capabilities. How is it changed the delivery in performance of the customers? Because this is not just your old school Cisco networking company. Yeah, they got APS. Things are connected. Date is moving from Point A to point B. All right, but he's kind of integration challenges. Kind of seamless program ability is the core theme here. What's your reaction? Thoughts on all this? >> No. >> Well, first off, this is my first definite create. I've been to other Siskel lives have not been too. Don't think great yet so so far, I'm enjoying this a lot. It's I like the tight niche, the community style of this of this event I'm sorry. Go back, >> Tio. Go live a little creations that are going on here. Very community already. Kind of be open source projects. Yeah, people talking to each other, a lot of hallway conversations. But it's a kind of a new kind of collaborative model that customers are now getting exposed to write. This is something >> new. I mean, it is. It's new, and I'm finding a lot times where a lot of customers and clients they've heard about it, but they don't know yet. So it's our job to actually get them to adopt to it and and also adapt to it as well. So it's almost like how we have our own like community here. For definite. It's almost how can we take that structure and show it to our clients >> and translation involved Kind of kind of taper down the excitement, maybe, or keeping up questions for you people watching that aren't here. A definite what's that? What's the vibe here? Like, what's some of the cools? Things you've seen and heard are something Well, the keynote was >> great either. Was amazing Kino how they actually showed how, especially with the Iraqi had when Mandy went while I was out there talking about from the small campus to the festival and to an actual >> there's a radio >> that was a great use of incredible, especially with like big Stadium and how John McDonough came out and showed about how there was a fight on the field with you. Yet no one saw it, but yet then, when they went through the actual demonstrate, the actual video were like, Oh, yeah, this's amazing how it's almost like it was like the minority report way. You're already >> exactly Dan. Yes, the data out there, >> all that data and they just machine learning A I just watching people, seeing what they're doing, kind of almost like predicting what they're going to do >> and every little bit, actually, a little bit. I agree with you. I thought they did a great job with that, Especially coming off the heels of Coachella and showing how they can enable Cisco enable developers for social folks to set up secure networks of different sizes and also be able to use in real time machine learning a eye to evaluate what's going on the offensive. And that was a very cool, real world example of what they showed. Leveraging machine learning, identifying. There's there's an issue here. There's an altercation. They surprised at a sports event, right? And deploying those. It has a lot security, many sports events, though I thought it was all that the security was just casually walking up to fight. That's another thing >> that you would slow >> down. But you don't know what >> you're right. >> And it is so many more etiquette rules now at events, whether it's, you know, hate crimes or just, you know, just violent language fights. Also, everyone sees those that write that events. But this actual now, surveillance tech out there. You know, you could tell the guys that how many beers he's had kicks in, You know, >> we're gonna have something where they can actually check out someone like Heat signature. They can't tell how >> much he's going to explode. Is the Red Sox going to blow the lead again? A. Having a good year? Well, you know, they wanted last year Yankee fans, so you would be off the charts now. Philly fans, a whole other story. I don't. Okay. My digress. You've >> got a breakout session. Sorry, John. A lightning session that's tomorrow Any time tomorrow. Tell us the title and what you're going to be talking about. >> Keisha, my title is orchestrate forty five percent. So >> we'LL just read the forty five percent correct Alright, Digging >> again tonight a little >> bit. I have a sly where we was actually Suzy. We actually did a presentation awhile back where she put up a slider, says where she talked about how fifty five percent of partners are creating APS and developing their own naps. So, way of liberty we saw that we were like, OK, what about the other forty five percent? So that's where that the idea came out too. Okay, let's I'll do a talk about how we orchestrate forty, forty five, forty five percent. So entails What I'm doing with that is that we actually have a platform called Consulate. Where there were that platform has the ability to integrate with multiple business processes. So we're connecting. We're integrating with connect allies with Iraqi doing eight about and so that I have it where that there'll be a trigger or Web hook from one my rocky cameras like emotion which will trigger which will create a ticket and connect allies so they can help out some help tasks service desk and then that which will also they get thrown into teams and click on the ticket and then also run commands and grab a snapshot from the camera. The right of the team's six teams >> fell by the Iraqi for a minute because we get a lot of hearing a lot of buzz about Muraki. It's not just wireless. It's not just what you might think it is, it seems to be connected tissue you meant. There's a great demo that added to she's showing around. They are with looking at network configuration. We're obviously to be connecting all of this together. What's your view on this? What's that? >> I for one, I love muraki. I run Rocky at home, so five the viol. Although the wireless is switching cameras and just that, it's it's one. Really. They have, like their own room platform that connects has all their devices connecting into the dashboard, and you could do so much with it that they're actually they're open up Now. The eyes, the web hooks this so much things that you can actually integrate with it. It's it's great, and it's the analytics that you get from it. >> And this is what you're talking about really about bringing these teams together through Webb Hooks for AP, eyes in through Morocco, the connected to direct and then allow the APS to be valuable, cross different groups >> very valuable, but then so that then you don't have it on. Engineer doesn't have have to touch different applications or devices. They get it all from one and from that one application, click and go to where you need to get got. >> So we're only on halfway through Day one of your first up that crate. But it sounds like you've already been exposed to so many things that I could see the wheels turning us without anticipating that you're going to be able to bring back to liberty. And that will really help drive. What you guys doing driving forward toward that customer engagement only, eh? Educate >> well, since it is, you know, it's like half day already on day one. There's still so much to see here. There's so much to see about Coyote. There's a bunch of workshops here about form Iraqi and the AP ice, which I want to join in and see what I can take out of that and bring it back. Um, you know, there's a bunch of stuff get on. So I want to gather all that and just be a sponge and then bring it back to liberty and say, Hey, this is what we can do. How can they fit into our business model? >> Awesome. Well, Tony, thank you so much for stopping by and talking with Jonah me on the program this afternoon. We appreciate it. Best of luck in your lightning session tomorrow as well. >> Thank you so much >> for John Ferrier. I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching us on the Cube. Live from Cisco. Definite great. Twenty nineteen. Thanks for watching. >> No.

Published Date : Apr 25 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by Cisco. Welcome back to the cave. What you doing your breakout session? And so do you have a client? now. How are you guys solving and we discover as to what they're doing now, what are their pain points? How is it changed the It's I like the tight niche, But it's a kind of a new kind of collaborative model that customers are now getting exposed So it's our job to actually get them to adopt to it and and also adapt to for you people watching that aren't here. the festival and to an actual that was a great use of incredible, especially with like big Stadium and how in real time machine learning a eye to evaluate what's going on the offensive. But you don't know what And it is so many more etiquette rules now at events, whether it's, you know, hate crimes or just, we're gonna have something where they can actually check out someone like Heat signature. Is the Red Sox going to blow the lead again? Tell us the title and what you're going to be talking about. So to integrate with multiple business processes. It's not just what you might think it is, it seems to be connected tissue It's it's great, and it's the analytics that you get from it. click and go to where you need to get got. What you guys doing driving forward toward that customer engagement only, eh? There's so much to see about Coyote. Best of luck in your lightning session tomorrow as well. Thanks for watching.

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Devnet Create Analysis | Devnet Create 2019


 

>> Live from Mountain View, California. It's The Cube. Covering, DevNet Create 2019. Brought to you by Cisco. >> Hi welcome to The Cube. Lisa Martin with John Furrier. We are live, at Cisco DevNet Create 2019 in Mountain View at Computer History Museum. John this is the third DevNet Create, but DevNet started as this ground, small sort of grass roots out of Cisco Live, about five years ago now. You and I just came from the keynote, which I think is really awesome to highlight that it was kicked off by two, strong female leaders in technology, who will be on our program this week. I'd love to get your perspectives on what you saw and heard today, knowing the history of DevNet as you do. >> Yeah you mentioned strong leaders, Susie Wee has been promoted to Senior Vice President and CTO of DevNet and DevNet Create. Two communities and that's been a really an interesting ride because she's gotten real technical jobs but adds a good business acumen and saw the wave early on. I remember I met Susie Wee at I'd say almost seven years ago, in and around Palo Alto. She always had that energy, but she's super technical, great business mind. She saw the open source wave and cloud connecting. And then when she came to Cisco with DevNet, she took that open source kind of mojo, and took the developer communities, which were very centric, Cisco, plumbing, moving packets from point a to point b, configuring large scale networks to much more of a developer focus. And she's evolved that program and started DevNet create three years ago to bring in the cloud native, used to be called the hoodie crowd, you know the people who are coding in the cloud. Cloud first, and she she wanted to cross pollinate them together with DevNet. And the result of that experiment or that that kind of mechanism and community collaboration has changed the face of CisCo. >> Absolutely. >> You can see Chuck Robbins as the Ceo and others within Cisco, seeing that they're on this new wave and it's actually paying off dividens for them, it's changed their strategy, customers like it, the community has grown, the metrics are all kind of up in to the right, on terms of adoption. So, success from that experiment, their doubling down and their bringing real technology, real workshops, a real co-creation, a real community vibe and it's working. So again don't fix what's not broken. >> In terms of their community, one of the things that Susie mentioned this morning is that the DevNet community's now over 585 000 members strong. They talk about this, yes it's a conference but it's also, it's a strong community, it's hands on learning. It's code and the theme of the event: See it. Learn it. Code it. They did a great job only in the first hour of the keynote about actually showing some great examples and also how to your point, Cisco is evolving. Digitally, IT transformation and how they are really staying quite far ahead of their competition. >> It's interesting because you know, one of the things that we've been doing in theCUBE for 10 years, we seen a lot of trends come and go. This one we like a lot. We use the term builders creators, Andy Jassy used that term builders. That's what they talk about this new era of this renaissance of value creators. They're building stuff and with now Cloud Computing and with now AI and other things coming to the table, there's an unlimited tool set out there and platforms with and computing cloud cloud computing, you can now build things faster. So conceiving it, understanding and building it is critical. Now what's interesting about DevNet Create is that they're bringing in that again, that community vibe where, it's not just a bunch of hackathons and a bunch of rah rah, use our code and get developers locked into a platform. It's authentically and genuinely ripe, meaningful to the developers because they do it in a group setting. They do it with community. So the have, they do have hackathons, they've got creation tools, they've got different stations and they roll out the toys if you will. Meraki has things going on here, there's all this new technology. So Cisco's bringing the goods to the party. It's like I always say, when someone brings beer to the party, you know and we're going to have some good times. So they're bringing the technology and the tools in to the community without kind of jamming it down their throat. That creates a good vibe. That's cross-pollinating to the core Cisco with DevNet, and every year that DevNet's section within Cisco Live becomes the number one place everyone goes to because that's where the feedback is and the company's listening. And this is part of their fly wheel. So this is a game changer for Cisco because their culture was pretty much build networks, run them, lock'em down, highly secure. Everything's good but now the world's changed. They want programmability and this again, changes the culture of Cisco. So I think it's a great move and I love this, I love the vibe here and this event's popular because, there's engineers here. So you have people who are savvy with code, savvy with community and savvy with building and creating and being creators. So design thinking to hackathons to any workshop you can imagine. >> And there's engineers here to your point of all, and Susie's point to have all levels of all ages. And I'm always curious about the engineers and the folks who've been in an institution for a very long time and are very use to working in that traditional model. How do they get access to the right education tools, to start shifting their own mindset, because really, in this day and age, they don't have a choice. Whether they want to continue working at a company like a Cisco or any other company these days that has to be a tech company. So you see all levels of coding experience here. They provide education for that. You also see all levels of of the veterans, those in their early stages of their career. Those in their mid-careers. So a lot of collaboration in this community. >> And the CEO Chuck Robbins points out and always kind of gives Susie Wee call outs, because even though developer.cisco.com is the destination that you can go to learn. Go to developer.cisco.com to get kind of the goods. That's from Cisco's perspective. But what Susie and Chuck have recognized is that, the real action is out in the organic community. So the co-creation, the learnings. This is where the canary and the coal mines are. This is where, companies are getting early feedback on products. This is where peers are starting to figure out what's right. So if companies listen to their community, not just provide the goods and have, some destination urls to go to, to get onboarded. The action is in the organic communities. That's where people are developing friendships. That's where discovery's happening. People are learning and that's where the action's at. So Cisco's actually listening. So this is an interesting change for Cisco. >> And it seems like, to your point on the listening, it's almost becoming the lifeblood of Cisco and really giving them this fuel and momentum >> Yeah >> To allow any type of industry. The SVP and CT, I think CTO of Meraki was saying, we don't build specific solutions for specific verticals. This is for all types of verticals, because every industry has to transform and become a tech company. But this community really seems like it's, I don't want to say a rebirth of Cisco but it almost feels somewhat something similar, but really that lifeblood of this transforming organization. >> Well one of the things that's not going to be on, on the financial analysis in the, when you look at the 10 k's and all the Wall Street guys are going to go sprint got the numbers and look at the, the financial analysis. Try to figure out where the stock's going to be. But if you at what's going on with Cisco. If they can continue to do what they're doing. If they convert their core developers in DevNet and allow this cross-pollination and with cloud computing. You're going to start to see product transformations happen faster. You're going to start to see business results that aren't reflected at any kind of performer or forecasted financial analysis. And this is going to put pressure on Cisco. Cisco is under a lot of pressure and this old school guard managers at Cisco, are like 'no the data center, we got to hold down' and so, if you don't, if Cisco doesn't cannabilize itself by bringing in the new, faster. That's the trick of the management. This is Chuck Robbin's hardest job as the CEO. It's to understand when to start cannabilizing pre-existing businesses like data center servers, UCS and have them change over to a scalable revenue model on the cloud side. So they're in a transition. I think they're in good shape. The wave they're on is positive, but the real upside to this is, if they can convert those network engineers into coders. They would have an army of awesome, talented people setting and building out the next generation data centers to cloud computing architecture and serp. Strategic strike if they can pull it off and they continue to do it. That's what we're going to be watching. >> Well we're about six weeks or so I think, before Cisco Live, which is down in San Diego. The Cube will be there. >> Yeah. >> What are you thinking, you gave a pretty good, kind of your perspectives and what you're thinking. What are some of things that you think we're going to hear and see and feel and learn from Cisco Live ? >> I think we'll hear some more of the same of what we're seeing and hearing when we start Cisco Live. I still think that Cisco's got some internal re-organizations to do to get on this wave. There's an article in Fortune magazine this week, talking about the rise and fall of Kleiner Perkins. And the thesis was there on the wrong way, missed two generations of investments. Cisco right now has to decide what wave they're going to be riding in to the future. That's Chuck Robbins' strategic imperative, and I think we're going to start to see more and more of the Cisco ship turning to get on the wave of cloud, cloud native, hybrid cloud and I think multi-cloud is probably the biggest opportunity that Cisco has and I think in bringing multi-cloud as a multiple network, multiple programmable network. That to me is a wave worth riding. The question is, when doe he time the revenue? When doe the whole ship just go full steam ahead? I think it's still going to be in transition, but we'll probably hear more, more DevNet. More DevNet Create, more programmable networks, more use of data. A lot of multi-cloud. >> Yeah and there's, this year there are three tech tracks. One on Enterprise Transformation which is, something that we'll talk about with our guests over the next two days. And then we've got, businesses have real-time data access. AI, machine learning, infrastructures that are programmable. Now how are, what are the tools and the trends, that enterprises are using to generate business insights that actually drive outcomes. >> Yeah so I think that all these tracks kind of point to big high level pillar trends that I think Cisco has to really nail and I think, they have clear sight for this. They just got to put the wheels on the bus and get the bus rolling. And that is three areas. Application modernization. So renaissance and application development. So you're seeing a new kind of app developer emerging. We hear about that all the time. You know these guys want infrastructure's code. Those app developers are going to be coming in to the enterprise in a large scale, and they can either be hybrid and multi-cloud orient. So application modernization. A renaissance in applications. Cisco has to be on that and they got AppDynamics for that and a variety of other cool things. Hybrid and multi-cloud, absolutely is going to be the architecture for enterprises and third area is security. Those are the things I think, if Cisco could nail those three things. They would be well positioned. And they got to bring the tech to the table and their product leadership. So that to me I think that's, I think we're going to see a lot of that at Cisco Live and that's I think the core plan. >> Well we'll be listening for that over the course of the next two days. John and I are fortunate to be here for today and tomorrow with a spectrum of guests, from Cisco folks, DevNet folks, partners, users of the technology and members of, active members of the DevNet community. So John looking forward to being here the next two days. >> It's been great. >> Sick around >> John and I are going to be right back from Cisco DevNet Create 2019 with our first guest. (soft upbeat music)

Published Date : Apr 25 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by Cisco. You and I just came from the keynote, and saw the wave early on. and it's actually paying off dividens for them, one of the things that Susie mentioned this morning So Cisco's bringing the goods to the party. and Susie's point to have all levels is the destination that you can go to learn. The SVP and CT, and they continue to do it. The Cube will be there. and see and feel and learn and I think we're going to start to see more and more Yeah and there's, and get the bus rolling. John and I are fortunate to be here John and I are going to be right back from

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Ash Seddeek, Executive Greatness Institute | DevNet Create 2019


 

>> Live from Mountain View, California It's theCUBE covering DevNet Create 2019, brought to you by Cisco. >> Hi, welcome back to theCUBE's continuing coverage, day one at CISCO DEVNET CREATE 2019, I'm Lisa Martin with John Furrier, we are at The Computer History Museum at Mountain View. We're pleased to welcome to theCUBE Ash Seddeek, strategic business consultant and story telling coach. >> Yes. >> This is an interesting combination, story telling coach with a bunch of developers. So first of all, talk to us about what it is that you, who do you help learn how to tell stories and then what your work is with Cisco. >> Fantastic. So, primarily at Cisco, I work with a lot of leaders in a coaching environment where we are looking at what they are trying to achieve with the organization and how they can articulate that message in an energetic and inspiring way. And we find stories are the best way to engage the audience. I'm working with one leader, he keeps telling me, the last talk he gave, the one thing people remember is the story. So, everyone is sort of realizing that if I want to tell them something about how we're transitioning from one technology platform to another, if I can find a metaphor, an analogy, a story, I have much better luck connecting with them and giving them something that they can remember. >> Is this like a personal story that they need to share and kind of open up some some vulnerability? Or just some other metaphor that everybody would understand? >> Yes, we actually sometimes use one or the other. Like in one case, we're using the car racing metaphor to talk about how teams come together to create amazing results. So then in that case, it's not about just the driver of that car or the team at the pit changing the tires and how fast they do that, but how they collectively then, have that success at the end of the race. Or, maybe to your point, maybe it's a personal story that then shows them, hey, I went through a lot of challenges and I know as engineers, you're going through a lot of challenges, and I can see us getting past it. So we also try to tap into what they've been able to achieve in the past. So then he can actually call on their memory, we've been able to produce these products for Cisco. Now, the customer expectations are changing and we need to get them to the market sooner, therefore, we need to figure ways where we can build some high preforming teams and get these products to the market much sooner. >> You know Ash, since hearing about your story telling here on theCUBE, as we do a lot of story telling, is that in the tech world, designed thinking has been a big part of the discipline around building products. >> Yes. >> How has some of the things that you're bringing to this kind of design story telling, >> Yes. >> Kind of ethos and thinking, >> Yes. >> Into the story telling creation process, not just, like hey I created this thing, now let's go bolt a story onto it. Is there an integration point inside the construction of the creative process, >> Yes. >> That might feed that. Can you take us through your state of the art thinking around this? >> Absolutely. It's actually, it was very comforting to find that the very first step in designed thinking is empathize, which essentially means, you have a particular target audience that you're trying to serve with a particular solution. We actually use the word hero to think about that audience and then we basically say, if she's a mom walking into the hospital lobby with her baby, what is the experience for that mother? Can we really empathize? Can we find out what the story is? What's been happening at home? The way she's going into the hospital, now she's driving into the lobby, how is she being received in that lobby, in the service level. And then we basically describe the story again of where things are today, which we can call experience number one. And then we basically talk to them about how can we envision a beautiful, delightful, experience for that mom? That becomes experience number two, and we use these stories between one and two to really energize us, to really help people understand we need to come up with a much better solution. >> I want to get your thoughts on Steve Jobs always said story telling was critical. It was his mantra before he passed away. I had a chance to interview John Chambers at his house recently. >> Yes. >> He's got a new book coming out and he's always been about trends and being on the right wave, so between the two, you had one product leader with Steve Jobs, you have a trend seer with John Chambers. How much of the DNA of the person you are coaching, that their natural talent shapes how you engage with how they could be a better story teller? >> Yeah, what I'm finding a lot, especially also with technical leaders, a lot of the time they are very sort of reserved. They sort of walk in the building a all of a sudden have this sort of character where I am not as, you know, charging ahead as I should be and a lot of the time I basically say, hey, can we get this voice to have a little bit of character? Can we get some vocal variety in here? Can we actually tell a story? Can you actually get up, stand up, and open up and really you know, tell us something about who you are and why you want to do this project to lead this team forward. So to your point, I really help them find out that they're actually like any other average citizen, they have so much energy and power within them, they just come into the corporate office and think, oh, I need to have a corporate character, then I come back and say, you know what, I actually need you, I need John to be here, in person, with all the stories that you can tell. And I tell them, go back into your old child and let's figure out some of those stories so that when you're talking about those stories, you remember the excitement, you remember the people that were there. And then all of a sudden, there's a bit of life in them, you know, so that's sort of, what I help them discover is that actually they have these stories. And they are engaging, they are inspiring, if they actually let them come out. >> I imagine that's got to be easier with some guys and girls than others. Some of those who really, maybe don't like public speaking or having to explain something that can be quite (inaudible) to certain audiences. >> Yes. >> What are some of the things that you've learned about working with some of these technologists that have helped kind of refine your methodology for cracking that surface and unleashing this energy and this sort of, natural passion. >> Yes. >> That's hidden inside. >> Absolutely and you know what's happening here at Cisco, especially at Cisco, where you see technology being used to do a lot of communication, a lot of them are realizing, if I don't articulate my message, I'm not going to get the funding. I'm not going to get the best resources. So they realize that communication became part of how do I influence up and make sure that my stakeholders understand that we have a critical project, so there is part of it where they know that there is a lot on the line if they don't speak up. And then they come to someone like me and say, Ash, how can we do this? So we then talk through what are you trying to accomplish with this team? What's that vision and how can we build it, a case for change and that becomes the thing that energizes them first and then we energize their teams and we think about, how do you take this message to executives that can give you the funding that you're looking for. >> So you talked about, before we went live, this program at Cisco, this sort of shark tank-like program, >> Yes. >> Where you're working with very technical men and women. >> Exactly, yeah. >> Who might have a brilliant idea, but in terms of articulating that to be able to get, like you said for, get funding or sponsorship for programs, Can you give us, maybe, one of your favorite examples of a, when you started with experience one or phase one, where it took you about a half an hour to figure out, that's the goal. To getting to the ah, there's the story. >> Yes, that's a good question. >> Tell us something that really sticks with you. >> YGreat question, so the program is called Hack It IT and it's an incubator program, as I mentioned. And one example, a team in China actually, was working on the idea of how do we reduce the number of customers that could be thinking about walking away from Cisco? So the technical term for that is customer churn. So I got on the phone with them, and of course, there are some challenges when it comes to speaking English by a lot of our Chinese colleagues. But then I listened in and I paid attention and then I started asking them, what got you interested in this idea? But we started to really kind of break down the fact that they have figured out that there is a way to listen into the data within Cisco and figure out that once they actually identify certain signals, they can help the sales teams realize they need to go talk to John, because John, if he doesn't have someone talking to him very soon, he or she might actually shift and go to another company, and then I said, well, what percentage do you think that churn is right now? And we found out that maybe like about 7% and with the technology they are building, we could bring it down to three 3%. I was like ding, ding, ding, ding! Earnings per share, number of customers, dollars per quarter, it was just an amazing opportunity and once they came out and communicated clearly, it was the winning idea at the end of the day. >> So you're helping take these technical folks, start to understand the business impact, >> Absolutely, yeah. >> And communicate-- >> And how big it is. >> Right. >> And how big it is. >> That can be pretty transformative for I think anybody in any field, right? >> And I remember on the call, I said, guys did we take a look at the industry averages on the churn? You know, what's the situation at Juniper? What's the situation at HPE? How does Cisco compare? How can we make sure that Cisco is much better off? Phenomenal opportunity for Cisco to listen in and catch things before they happen. >> What would be your advice to folks watching around? How to be a better story teller? Because you can really reel people in, get their attention and then deliver the pay load, whether it's venture funding, >> Yes. >> Or getting a project funded inside a corporation. There's always people interested in how they could be better story tellers, what's your playbook? >> Absolutely. So, the reason I talk about what I do is, I help people become chief excitement officers, which means we need to find the excitement, once we find the excitement, it's like finding gold in a very, very tough mountain and once we find the gold, then we can extract it out and then we can showcase it, right? So I think a lot of the time we're having difficulty finding out where the gold is. And that's one of the things that I help them with, but if they sit with their teams and really brainstorm what opportunities do we have? What are the sizes? How can we get some of these ideas out? Then all of a sudden that idea, that gold starts to show up and they are much more equipped to talk about it. And I have on the executivegreatness.com/storytelling, there is a nice cheat sheet that people can download and use to start really crafting these stories by first using a template in the beginning and then once they do it once, twice, three times it gets easier and better and if they can build a culture around story telling, it makes life so much easier. >> So you've got the, I think you mentioned it, but I want to make sure our viewers heard it. The executive greatness institute is something that you've created. >> Yes. >> And that people could go to that and find that template that you were just mentioning. >> Exactly, so executivegreatness.com/storytelling and they can download that template, it should be a very easy fill-in process in the beginning and it's a fantastic experience to really get that visual story. >> Find that gold, make some fine jewelry make some bars. >> Yes. Its amazing, there's so much potential because-- >> So this must be for anybody, and sorry to interrupt, in any industry. >> Absolutely yes. >> Anybody who can learn to find a way to connect with whomever, whatever, but it sounds like a lot of, kind of, horizontal benefits for anybody. >> Absolutely. >> And any level of their career. >> Totally because what we're finding is the clarity of the message once people get it, then you can actually ask them to do things for you or with you, but until then, there's a huge divide. People sit in these, in all hands meetings, the executive speaks, he or she speaks, they're not really catching on, you know, it's not so clear. >> It's about connecting. >> It's about connecting and clarity is the passage and story becomes the fantastic bridge. >> Yeah. >> To really do that connection. >> And really making it about being part of the same story, >> Yes, exactly. >> That connection creates more retention, success, one proposal versus the other. >> Exactly. >> Could be a swing, the swing could be the story. >> Yes, exactly, 'cause what, when we're working with these teams, we found out that if they can't communicate it, we could be losing out on a multi billion dollar idea. >> You know one thing I want to hear your thoughts on while your here because, >> Sure. >> It's as if I feel like I'm in a counseling session 'cause all we have to try to do is figure out how to tell our story better and our customers who come on theCUBE, they have social media channels, they have more channels. >> Yes. >> The story is broken down into little highlights and small video clips, so companies are challenged, not just individuals, to have a brand. >> Exactly. >> In social media. >> Absolutely. >> How do you take the gold, that excitement, and break it up, >> Yes, into a branding story-- >> Share the story in all channels possible. >> Absolutely. >> Do you have any opinion on that, or? >> It's a lot of tough work, but to your point, we need to find what that brand story is and make sure that everybody's actually clear on it 'cause a lot of times to your point, when you bring them together, each one has a different story. >> Absolutely. >> You know, so I think part of it is to really come together and say, let's get the story, let's honor it, by then, spreading it across the organization, >> And in a consistent way. >> And then we use it on the website, we use it in our marketing and our sales conversations. And if you started with that story with customers, you have something that's a whole lot more engaging, >> Get that story out there in a digital footprint. >> Exactly, yeah, exactly. >> Awesome. >> And I wonder if even what you're talking about in terms of you're right, it's about connection, is even more important as the world gets more and more and more connective with devices, and we get so focused on talking to a device, we've got to kind of come back to your sort of, bringing people back to the basic communication. >> With the human connection, so yeah. >> Exactly, which is, thankfully still needed and to your point, I think, what you were able to show your customers is a tremendous business impact, >> Yes. >> That this connection, this basic human connection in story telling can make. >> Absolutely. And the fact that you are really talking about human beings at the end, those experiences at the very end are touching somebody and we need to get excited, we basically, one of the executives from GE basically said, we need people who can go to the future and then get so excited and then come back, kind of keep that excitement on their face and walk around the organization, keep telling them, you know, when we get to Yosemite, you're going to see these waterfalls, the fresh air is amazing, I've been there, I saw it. I can't wait to get you guys there. And that's what they do on a daily basis, they're just walking around with that bug inside of them, they can see what it's like, and they can't wait to get everybody there. >> This is also somebody that can really breed and foster cultural transformation within a GE, an organization that has been around and has so many moving parts. >> Yes. >> Cultural transformation is essential for any company to transform digitally and that's a hard thing to do. >> Yeah, exactly. >> But it sounds like if, you know, you can, I like-- >> It's a big part of it. >> I like chief excitement officer, I think my dog is my chief excitement officer. But being able to maintain that and sustain it from a cultural transformation perspective is huge. >> Absolutely, 'cause all the digital transformation efforts are about that vision of the future, whether it's healthcare, to your point, or automotive industry or any other industry. It's about what kind of experience, much better experience are we going to create? >> Ash, great talking with you, exciting topic. >> Yes. >> Thank you for giving some time to John and me today at DevNet. >> Absolutely, thank you so much. >> We appreciate it. >> Thank, John, thank you so much. For John Furrier, I am Lisa Martin, you're watching theCUBE live at Cisco DevNet Create 2019. Thanks for watching. (outro music)

Published Date : Apr 25 2019

SUMMARY :

brought to you by Cisco. We're pleased to welcome to theCUBE Ash Seddeek, and then what your work is with Cisco. and how they can articulate that message of that car or the team at the pit is that in the tech world, designed thinking of the creative process, Can you take us through and then we basically say, if she's a mom walking I had a chance to interview John Chambers How much of the DNA of the person you are coaching, So to your point, I really help them find out I imagine that's got to be easier What are some of the things that you've learned and we think about, how do you take this message with very technical men and women. but in terms of articulating that to be able to get, and then I said, well, what percentage do you think that And I remember on the call, I said, guys did we they could be better story tellers, and they are much more equipped to talk about it. that you've created. and find that template that you were just mentioning. and it's a fantastic experience to really get Find that gold, Yes. So this must be for anybody, and sorry to interrupt, to connect with whomever, whatever, but it sounds like And any level then you can actually ask them to do things for you and story becomes the fantastic bridge. That connection if they can't communicate it, we could be losing out how to tell our story better and our customers to have a brand. we need to find what that brand story is and make sure And then we use it on the website, bringing people back to the basic communication. in story telling can make. And the fact that you are really talking about and has so many moving parts. a hard thing to do. But being able to maintain that and sustain it Absolutely, 'cause all the digital transformation efforts some time to John and me today at DevNet. thank you so much.

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Anne Gentle, Cisco DevNet | DevNet Create 2019


 

>> Live from Mountain View, California, it's theCUBE! Covering DevNet Create 2019, brought to you by Cisco. >> Hi, welcome to theCUBE's coverage of Cisco DevNet Create 2019, Lisa Martin with John Furrier, we've been here all day, talking about lots of very inspiring, educational, collaborative folks, and we're pleased to welcome to theCUBE Anne Gentle, developer experience manager for Cisco DevNet, Anne, thank you so much for joining us on theCUBE today. >> Thank you so much for having me. >> So this event, everything's like, rockstar start this morning with Susie, Mandy, and the team with the keynotes, standing room only, I know when I was walking out. >> I loved it, yes. >> Yes, there's a lot of bodies in here, it's pretty toasty. >> Yeah. >> The momentum that you guys have created, pun intended. >> Oh, yes. >> No, I can't take credit for that, is really, you can feel it, there's a tremendous amount of collaboration, this is your second create? >> Second create, yeah, so I've been with DevNet itself for about year and a half, and started at Cisco about three years ago this month, but I feel like developer experience is one of my first loves, when I really started to understand how to advocate for the developer experience. So DevNet just does a great job of not only advocating within Cisco, but outside of Cisco as well, so we make sure that their voice is heard, if there's some oddity with an API, which, you know, I'm really into API design, API style, we can kind of look at that first, and kind of look at it sideways and then talk to the teams, okay is there a better way to think about this from a developer standpoint. >> It's great, I love the API love there, it's going around a lot here. DevNet create a cloud native vibe that's kind of integrating and cross-pollinating into DevNet, Cisco proper. You're no stranger to cloud computing early days, and ecosystems that have formed naturally and grown, some morph, some go different directions, so you're involved in OpenStack, we know that, we've talked before about OpenStack, just some great successes as restarts, restarts with OpenStack ultimately settled in what it did, the CNCF, the Cloud Native Computing Foundation, is kind of the cloud native OpenStack model. >> Yeah, yeah. >> You've seen the communities grow, and the market's maturing. >> Definitely, definitely. >> So what's your take on this, because it creates kind of a, the creator builder side of it, we hear builder from Amazon. >> Yeah, I feel like we're able to bring together the standards, one of the interesting things about OpenStack was okay, can we do open standards, that's an interesting idea, right? And so, I think that's partially what we're able to do here, which is share, open up about our experiences, you know, I just went to a talk recently where the SendGrid former advocate is now working more on the SDK side, and he's like, yeah the travel is brutal, and so I just kind of graduated into maintaining seven SDKs. So, that's kind of wandering from where you were originally talking, but it's like, we can share with each other not only our hardships, but also our wins as well, so. >> API marketplaces is not a new concept, Apache was acquired-- >> Yes. >> By a big company, we know that name, Google. But now it's not just application programming interface marketplaces, with containers and server space, and microservices. >> Right. >> The role of APIs growing up on a whole other level is happening. >> Exactly. >> This is where you hear Cisco, and frankly I'm blown away by this, at the Cisco Live, that all the portfolio (mumbles) has APIs. >> True, yes, exactly. >> This is just a whole changeover, so, APIs, I just feel a whole other 2.0 or 3.0 level is coming. >> Absolutely. >> What's your take on this, because-- >> So, yeah, in OpenStack we documented like, two APIs to start, and then suddenly we had 15 APIs to document, right, so, learn quick, get in there and do the work, and I think that that's what's magical about APIs, is, we're learning from our designs in the beginning, we're bringing our users along with us, and then, okay, what's next? So, James Higginbotham, I saw one of his talks today, he's really big in the API education community, and really looking towards what's next, so he's talking about different architectures, and event-driven things that are going to happen, and so even talking about, well what's after APIs, and I think that's where we're going to start to be enabled, even as end users, so, sure, I can consume APIs, I'm pretty good at that now, but what are companies building on top of it, right? So like GitHub is going even further where you can have GitHub actions, and this is what James is talking about, where it's like, well the API enabled it, but then there's these event-driven things that go past that. So I think that's what we're starting to get into, is like, APIs blew up, right? And we're beyond just the create read. >> So, user experience, developer experience, back to what you do, and what Mandy was talking about. You can always make it easier, right? And so, as tools change, there's more tools, there's more workloads, there's more tools, there's more this, more APIs, so there's more of everything coming. >> Yeah. >> It's a tsunami to the developer, what are some of the trends that you see to either abstract away complexities, and, or, standardize or reduce the toolchains? >> Love where you're going with this, so, the thing is, I really feel like in the last, even, since 2010 or so, people are starting to understand that REST APIs are really just HTTP protocol, we can all understand it, there's very simple verbs to memorize. So I'm actually starting to see that the documentation is a huge part of this, like a huge part of the developer experience, because if, for one, there are APIs that are designed enough that you can memorize the entire API, that blows me away when people have memorized an API, but at the same time, if you look at it from like, they come to your documentation every day, they're reading the exact information they can give, they're looking at your examples, of course they're going to start to just have it at their fingertips with muscle memory, so I think that's, you know, we're starting to see more with OpenAPI, which is originally called Swagger, so now the tools are Swagger, and OpenAPI is the specification, and there's just, we can get more done with our documentation if we're able to use tools like that, that start to become industry-wide, with really good tools around them, and so one of the things that I'm really excited about, what we do at DevNet, is that we can, so, we have a documentation tool system, that lets us not only publish the reference information from the OpenAPI, like very boring, JSON, blah blah blah, machines can read it, but then you can publish it in these beautiful ways that are easy to read, easy to follow, and we can also give people tutorials, code examples, like everything's integrated into the docs and the site, and we do it all from GitHub, so I don't know if you guys know that's how we do our site from the back side, it's about 1000 or 2000 GitHub repos, is how we build that documentation. >> Everything's going to GitHub, the network configurations are going to GitHub, it's programmable, it's got to be in GitHub. >> Yes, it's true, and everything's Git-based right? >> So, back to the API question, because I think I'm connecting some dots from some of the conversations we had, we heard from some of the community members, there's a lot of integration touchpoints. Oh, a call center app on their collaboration talks to another database, which talks to another database, so these disparate systems can be connected through APIs, which has been around for a while, whether it's an old school SOAP interface, to, you know, HTTP and REST APIs, to full form, cooler stuff now. But it's also more of a business model opportunity, because the point is, if your API is your connection point-- >> Yes. >> There's potential business deals that could go on, but if you don't have good documentation, it's like not having a good business model. >> Right, and the best documentation really understands a user's task, and so that's why API design is so important, because if you need to make sure that your API looks like someone's daily work, get the wording right, get the actual task right, make sure that whatever workflow you've built into your API can be shown through in any tutorial I can write, right? So yeah, it's really important. >> What's the best practice, where should I go? I want to learn about APIs, so then I'm going to have a couple beers, hockey's over, it's coming back, Sharks are going to the next round, Bruins are going to the next round, I want to dig into APIs tonight. Where do I go, what are some best practices, what should I do? >> Yeah, alright, so we have DevNet learning labs, and I'm telling you because I see the web stats, like, the most popular ones are GitHub, REST API and Python, so you're in good company. Lots of people sitting on their couches, and a lot of them are like 20 minutes at a time, and if you want to do like an entire set that we've kind of curated for you all together, you should go to developer.cisco.com/startnow, and that's basically everything from your one-on-ones, all the way up to, like, really deep dive into products, what they're meant to do, the best use cases. >> Okay, I got to ask you, and I'll put you on the spot, pick your favorite child. Gold standard, what's the best APIs that you like, do you think are the cleanest, tightest? >> Oh, best APIs I like, >> Best documented? >> So in the technical writing world, the gold standard that everyone talks about is the Stripe documentation, so that's in financial tech, and it's very clean, we actually can do something like it with a three column layout-- >> Stripe (mumbles) payment gateway-- >> Stripe is, yeah, the API, and so apparently, from a documentation standpoint, they're just, people just go gaga for their docs, and really try to emulate them, so yeah. And as far as an API I use, so I have a son with type one diabetes, I don't know if I've shared this before, but he has a continuous glucose monitor that's on his arm, and the neat thing is, we can use a REST API to get the data every five minutes on how his blood sugar is doing. So when you're monitoring this, to me that's my favorite right now, because I have it on my watch, I have it on my phone, I know he's safe at school, I know he's safe if he goes anywhere. So it's like, there's so many use cases of APIs, you know? >> He's got the policy-based program, yeah. >> He does, yes, yes. >> Based upon where's he's at, okay, drink some orange juice now, or, you know-- >> Yes, get some juice. >> Get some juice, so, really convenient real-time. >> Yes, definitely, and he, you know, he can see it at school too, and just kind of, not let his friends know too much, but kind of keep an eye on it, you know? >> Automation. >> Yeah, exactly, exactly. >> Sounds like great cloud native, cool. You have a Meraki hub in your house? >> I don't have one at home. >> Okay. >> Yeah, I need to set one up, so yeah, we're terrible net nannies and we monitor everything, so I think I need Meraki at home. (laughing) >> It's a status symbol now-- >> It is now! >> We're hearing in the community. Here in the community of DevNet, you got to have a Meraki hub in your, switch in your house. >> It's true, it's true. >> So if you look back at last year's Create versus, I know we're just through almost day one, what are some of the things that really excite you about where this community of now, what did they say this morning, 585,000 strong? Where this is going, the potential that's just waiting to be unlocked? >> So I'm super excited for our Creator awards, we actually just started that last year, and so it's really neat to see, someone who won a Creator award last year, then give a talk about the kind of things he did in the coming year. And so I think that's what's most exciting about looking a year ahead for the next Create, is like, not only what do the people on stage do, but what do the people sitting next to me in the talks do? Where are they being inspired? What kind of things are they going to invent based on seeing Susie's talk about Wi-Fi 6? I was like, someone invent the thing so that when I go to a hotel, and my kids' devices take all the Wi-Fi first, and then I don't have any, someone do that, you know what I mean, yeah? >> Parental rights. >> So like, because you're on vacation and like, everybody has two devices, well, with a family of four-- [John] - They're streaming Netflix, Amazon Prime-- >> Yeah, yeah! >> Hey, where's my video? >> Like, somebody fix this, right? >> Maybe we'll hear that next year. >> That's what I'm saying, someone invent it, please. >> And thank you so much for joining John and me on theCUBE this afternoon, and bringing your wisdom and your energy and enthusiasm, we appreciate your time. >> Thank you. >> Thank you. >> For John Furrier, I am Lisa Martin, you're watching theCUBE live from Cisco DevNet Create 2019. Thanks for watching. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Apr 25 2019

SUMMARY :

Covering DevNet Create 2019, brought to you by Cisco. Anne, thank you so much for joining us on theCUBE today. and the team with the keynotes, Yes, there's a lot of bodies in here, The momentum that you guys have created, and kind of look at it sideways and then talk to the teams, is kind of the cloud native OpenStack model. and the market's maturing. the creator builder side of it, but it's like, we can share with each other By a big company, we know that name, Google. APIs growing up on a whole other level is happening. This is where you hear Cisco, This is just a whole changeover, and event-driven things that are going to happen, back to what you do, and what Mandy was talking about. and so one of the things that I'm really excited about, the network configurations are going to GitHub, from some of the conversations we had, but if you don't have good documentation, Right, and the best documentation so then I'm going to have a couple beers, and if you want to do like an entire set Gold standard, what's the best APIs that you like, of APIs, you know? He's got the policy-based so, really convenient real-time. You have a Meraki hub in your house? Yeah, I need to set one up, so yeah, We're hearing in the community. and so it's really neat to see, And thank you so much for joining John and me you're watching theCUBE live from Cisco DevNet Create 2019.

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Mathieu Gerard, Mapwize | Devnet Create 2019


 

>> Live from Mountain View, California, it's the Cube! Covering Devnet Create 2019. Brought to you by Cisco. >> Welcome back to the Cube's coverage, day one, Cisco Devnet Create 2019 at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California. Lisa Martin with John Furrier, pleased to welcome to the Cube for the first time, Mathieu Gerard, the co-founder and CTO of Mapwize. Mathieu, it's lovely to have you on the program. >> Thank you. >> So Mapwize and Cisco are partners, but first, give our audience an idea of Mapwize. What you are, what you deliver, where you're located. >> Yeah, Mapwize is a startup company, we are based in France. And so we want to bring digital services inside buildings. We feel that a lot of our life has been digitalized, but that there are still a lot of services that can be brought inside those buildings. And one of the key elements, when you speak about digital services in buildings, is to have a map. A map where you can show all the different details about the buildings, the live data that is generating from all the sensors that's in the building. That's where the partnership with Cisco actually comes in to bring all those infrastructure sensors that you get, bring that to be displayed on the map as well and bring services to the user. >> So one of the hot announcements is the Wi-Fi 6. I'm jazzed about. It was 802.11 something A or B, I forget what it was. But you're now calling it Wi-Fi 6, thank God. Although even numbers, I'm skeptical of that. You know, odds tend to be better, bug-free, going back to our old days as you know. But Wi-Fi 6 changes the game at many levels. What are some of the things that will help you guys? Because we've all been in the buildings where, concrete, bounces RF, you can't get through certain things, we've all been in stadiums where it's kind of like a nightmare with bandwidth. Wi-Fi's like, you know, part of Maslow's hierarchy of needs now. We want our Wi-Fi. Businesses want Wi-Fi, so new things are happening. What's your take on Wi-Fi 6? >> So our take is that we really want to bring all those services. Of course bandwidth is something, but for us it's not necessarilly the critical part. For us it's really the kind of data that you can get from the Wi-Fi. Making sure that all the IOT devices can be deployed in more and more of those buildings. Everybody now wants to know if a meeting room is available or not. So what's the best way of doing that, and just having a small sensor that detects presence, and can be broadcasted back to the cloud and then displayed on the map. So there are so many sensors, that's one of them. But in terms of pollution of temperature, if you have those in the building, can bring new services around all those mapping. >> So bandwidth is not an issue, obviously this is like gig ethernet now, just helps with the signaling. What about range and coverage area, antenna chains? These are the kind of things we're hearing about, some of the benefits. Does that help you guys at all? Does that help the maps and get more range? >> Yeah, and at the same time the challenge we are facing when we look at the Wi-Fi is to be able to use it to locate people and to know where I am so that I can be provided services around me. And so that usually came with a need for more density of access points because the more density you have the better you can access the location of a user. And so what we see is a lot of evolution in the Wi-Fi in the kind of capabilities that they have in positioning people. So we hope to see that as well in Wi-Fi 6. >> What's your vision on location services inside an enterprise? Because we saw that movie play out on the consumer side with mobile, iPhones and Androids now everywhere. We've all seen it, we know when art was showing up, all the things that were happening on the maps, map mashups back in the old web 2.0 days. What's the new sets of things that will come out that you see? What's your vision? >> What we see is that, as you were mentioning, mapping and wave finding is something we are using everyday. And nobody would even imagine how it was back in the time when we had paper maps. And so we believe that that is also coming into all the office and industry environments. For example the possibility of seeing live, what's available, what's going on in my building, what's available as services where are the people that I need to interact with, where are the assets I need to actually go grab? That's something that today, seems like complicated to do, and I'm pretty convinced that in a few years from now, it's going to be natural, like waze is natural everyday for everybody. >> And this is the opportunity for Mapwize and with Cisco as well, to convert existing structures into these smart buildings. Are you seeing that as well as with the development of new buildings that are kind of built natively smart? >> Yeah, of course the new buildings are built more smart. And with new infrastructure, that allows a lot more. But the new buildings are still a very small percentage of the buildings that are out there. And so the great thing is that all the infrastructure that already exists is already capable of a lot. And so even with the updates that are being done there, there is a lot of data that today are totally not used, that we believe still can bring a lot of new services and a lot of potential. >> Is there any industries in particular where you and Cisco are working together where this is a really, they're right for this type of transformation. I can think of hospitals as one thing that comes to mind with being able to identify where everything is, censor services. Especially in life and death situations. >> Yeah, so what we see is that everybody that works in a hospital has the same reaction. It's like, where is everything? It's the kind of campuses where it's really easy to get lost. And so, whenever you get there, you need to get to your appointment, and if you don't find it, what're you going to do is to ask the medical staff. So you ask people that are actually saving life, how to get to your next appointment, which we feel is kind of a waste. >> Huge efficiencies. Not just asset tracking, which is low-hanging fruit. IOT devices in terms of instrumentation, but just supply chain services. It's a tsunami of new things. Limited by a lot of old school, either technical limitations on connectivity at the edge or just software. >> You know that in health care, there is a lot of time where a surgery room is ready with all the surgeons and the staff and the patient is not there because the person who is supposed to go get him in his room and bring to the surgery is actually late. And so we think that that's such a waste of time and money. >> Absolutely. >> Could be much better utilized. >> You could bring surge pricing in to the surgery room. (laughing) We're backed up, or hey I got low pricing, I got a price line ... But all joking aside, this is really important. This is like real value. High priced resources, idle in a hospital. There's probably a zillion examples of those. Okay, what's the low-hanging fruit that you guys see? When you start rolling out Mapwize. Is it just getting a physical footprint of it? Is it just a graphic rendering? Is the mashup piece? Is it visualization? What are some of the key things that you guys are doing, or have done to remove the blockers for adoption and create more movement towards that value? >> So what we see is really the first step is bring some wave finding, helping people navigate around the buildings. And so basically taking the old stock of technical floor plans that everybody has, that usually just a few architects use in a company. And being able to drag and drop that into a web platform. And from one day to another, making it available to a hundred percent of the people that actually live in that building on a daily basis. So that's really the first step we see. And then together with Cisco, being able to bring the location of the users. So that I have the same experience outside of the GPS as I have inside the building with the Wi-Fi infrastructure. >> It'd be great to know too, there's a lot of people streaming video around one access point. Might want to add another one. These kinds of things just are natural ideas that people would do. >> Yeah and where the bandwidth is the best, where the noise is the lowest, where potentially is the temperature higher, lower. Today in the flex office, people can choose to sit wherever they want. So what are the key reasons to choose one spot or the other? And I think there are a lot more value that we can bring to those as occupants. >> So you have here at Devnet Create 2019, you have a breakout, or had today a breakout and a workshop. Tell us about the workshop first in terms of the title, the conversations and some of the interesting conversations that you had with some of the participants. >> The workshop was about how to bring the link between the map and the more key infrastructure that you have. So potentially, even before anyone connects to a Wi-Fi, we're actually already showing him usually a portal, a captive portal where he can look in. And how we can add in that captive portal, already services. Like showing him, where is, on a map, how to get to any destination, potentially services that are around him. So that was the goal of the workshop. And it was great because everybody was saying directly in his industry. I had somebody from a university say this is exactly what we need as well for our campus. So I think it's something we can bring to much more industries. >> There's much more of a horizontal opportunity like you said, across industries. And you also had a breakout session. What did that dive into? >> The breakout session was specifically around location analytics. So it's completely different world, but it's about them using the location of the crow of every single device in the building and see how people move. Where do they go. And to understand the behavior of the people that are there. Just to give you an example, if you look at an event like this one, maybe the organizers would like to understand how much time people spend looking at the talk, looking at the workshop, getting around. So basically using all the data that's collected by the Wi-Fi, we can get a lot of analytics and numbers to better assess if the spaces are well organized. >> Making sure people are at their desks doing their job. (laughing) >> Oh no, no. No big brother. >> That's potentially the downside around it. It's something we need to be careful about. >> Innovation versus creepiness. It's always a trade off, privacy. >> It is a trade off and I think we need to be aware of when we allow it. When there is somebody working alone in a building, you actually do want to know where he is, because it's good for his safety. >> It's all over. We all have privacy problems. The GPS knows everything I'm doing here. Get over it, people. >> I think it's good to know which cases and to have opt-in. Like sometimes I want people to know where I am exactly, because that can actually help me. And I've other cases where I do not want it. So I think it's important that any developer who is building application with that data, is aware of that privacy issue and can know when to anonymize data, when not. >> Great stuff. >> Mathieu, thank you so much for joining John and me talking about Mapwize, what you're doing with Cisco. Really, really interesting technology. Maybe next year at Devnet Create you can tell us all of the analytic from this year. >> Yeah, absolutely. >> All right, we appreciate your time. >> Thank you so much. >> Thank you. >> For John Furrier, I'm Lisa Martin, live on the Cube from Cisco Devnet Create 2019. Thanks for watching.

Published Date : Apr 25 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by Cisco. Mathieu, it's lovely to have you on the program. What you are, what you deliver, where you're located. bring that to be displayed on the map as well What are some of the things that will help you guys? Making sure that all the IOT devices can be deployed Does that help the maps and get more range? of access points because the more density you have that you see? What we see is that, as you were mentioning, of new buildings that are kind of built natively smart? And so the great thing is that all the infrastructure where you and Cisco are working together It's the kind of campuses where on connectivity at the edge or just software. and the staff and the patient is not there What are some of the key things that you guys are doing, So that I have the same experience outside of the GPS It'd be great to know too, there's a lot of people Today in the flex office, people can choose conversations that you had with some of the participants. key infrastructure that you have. And you also had a breakout session. Just to give you an example, Making sure people are at their desks That's potentially the downside around it. It's always a trade off, privacy. you actually do want to know where he is, It's all over. is aware of that privacy issue and can know when all of the analytic from this year. live on the Cube from Cisco Devnet Create 2019.

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Marty Jain, NVIDIA | DevNet Create 2019


 

>> live from Mountain View, California It's the queue covering definite create twenty nineteen. Brought to You by Cisco >> Welcome back to the Cube. Elisa Martin with Set Cisco Definite Create twenty nineteen at the Computer History Museum, but here all day, talking with some really great innovative folks excited to welcome to the Cube. Marty Jane, senior director of this Cisco Global Partnership and Video. Marty, It's great to have you here. >> Thank you. Good to be here. >> So I always love talking about partnerships Where what Day One of Dev. Net. Tomorrow's day to. There's been a lot of a lot of community spirit is here, so I just kind of in the spirit of partnerships, lot of collaboration that community is is really strong. Uh, before we get into kind of the details of this Cisco in video partnership first kind of thing, I wonder is all right. This is the developer community. Why the developer community within video? >> That's a great question. So if you think about way, make GP use, which is a piece of silicon graphics processing unit, and it is really only a piece of silicon until a developer comes along and develops a cool app on it. So if you think about how we go to market our large conferences called GTC, it's really developer. Focus. We have a little over a million developers in our ecosystem, and I find it very synergistic with Cisco. If you think about Suzy, we's vision. I think it's the same idea. You look at over half a million developers in their ecosystem and they want to develop collapse, and that's how your platform becomes relevant. So if you think of all the modern innovation that's coming from developers, so these are the folks that we should be talking to on a daily basis. I see a lot of commonality, a lot of synergies. In fact, we had Sisko definite come over to our conference GTC, and they they appeal to our developers. And now we're here talking to their developers and also developing some joint platforms which the the folks can use for. Like I said, the more modern *** with all the new data that's coming, whether the coyote with a machine learning automotive, smart cities, you name it, we need to be able to provide the platform to the developers >> and a number of those topics came up today, even during the keynote, Smart cities being able to utilize and accelerate work leads with a I and machine learning. They gave some great examples during the keynote of how developers can build networks. They give this cool example of I think it right off the hills of Coachella of designing a secure network for an indoor concert, designing it for an outdoor festival, Coachella and then designing it for a massive stadium like a big football game like the Super Bowl, for example. And they showed it that higher end. They showed how they're using machine, learning to zoom in on. For example, they had this little red box and you see people and what's actually in there than the machines detected was a fight and in real time, analysing this data and thence, dispatching the appropriate security to come and obviously probably take the drinks out of their hands first. But it was a really interesting, great real world example. So you guys have been partners a long time. Our you've been actually working at various companies with Cisco for a long time, but I think of Cisco and video coming together. How are you great? Something to accelerate these? Aye. Aye. And machine weren't were machine learning workloads that we're starting to see in every industry. >> You bet. Great question. So let me first comment on what you said about smart cities. I like to think of it as smart and safe cities. So actually, the first set of application will be around public safety. What the example you were giving his spot on? If you have large crowds gathering, it makes sense for us to be able to look at those clouds. Crowds? We call it intelligent video analytics or idea. In fact, we have a platform here. The Sisko i R eleven o one with a GPU added to it. So now I can wash the crowds. And if there's a fight breaking out or somebody's carrying in a weapon, you want to know somebody walks in carrying a backpack and drops it and moves on. You want to know one? Inform somebody. So what is happening is way of these millions and millions of bites of video data, >> and >> that data is not being really used today. So what we're doing is saying you know what? Let's find those pieces of intelligence and the video data and do something with it. And public safety is absolutely the highest priority. So smartest, safe city makes a lot of sense. So what we're doing is we're going to market with partners at Cisco. So what we're doing is we're saying Okay, let's design these GPS into the servers, which are connected to cameras and think about how many cameras are deployed today, probably a billion. And a lot of the video data can now be used for public safety purposes, and we basically go out and talk to large companies. We talked to governments. We talked to cities along with Sisko to go even open their eyes to what is possible today. >> Right? Because of that data is dark for so long, they don't know what they don't know. >> While most cases, what happens is you record four days of video and until something happens, nobody goes back and takes a look at it. But now we have the ability to look at the real time and cities and government's desire that very much so, >> sir example, that's such a relevant topic. I mean, they know. There's also the issue of privacy. But to your point about not just a smart city but a smart, safe city. I like that. I think it's absolutely imperative. How do you have this conversations with cities with governments about All right, this is what we want. Do we want to actually apply machine learning? So the machines are taught What that line is with privacy with those boundaries are so that a person, I'd say a lay person not in technology. Maybe is a city government official who doesn't understand the technology or need Teo will go. I get it. >> Yes. So our conversations are really about what we call you cases. So think of enterprise. A good use case would be. In fact, we work with Cisco on developing use case. You know, you always badge in into an enterprise. You have your badge, you walk in. But you also have some cases. People follow you, following you in what stops you from following me into a building. And usually people are too polite to say no, you can walk in, but we've >> all had the video training or read the manual. We know we're not >> we're not supposed to bite, but >> then you're like, I >> don't just cultural, exactly. We just can't you know that. So now we have the ability. So we trained a in a network to say, Look, if Marty's badging in, only he's allowed to walk in. And if there's a second person walks in, I want to take put Little Red Square on that face and inform security that we have had more than one person walking. So these are some of the ways. So we talk about use cases. This is one use case crowd behavior. Analytics is another use case. You know, people were walking in the backpack, dropping it. Other use case would be something like Bar to Bart loses millions of dollars year because people jumped the turnstiles and Bart didn't really have a good way of of monitoring, measuring the losses until we put a camera and captured the number of people that were jumping. The turnstiles are going in through the handicap access, okay? They were losing ten times the dollar value of what we had thought. Wow. So this is how we start the conversation with use cases, you know? And what would you like to do? Being able to count the number of cars in intersection begin with counter number of pedestrians, so you could do traffic management better. That's the language we would use with cities and governments. And then we go deeper as you go through the implementation process. >> Well, that makes perfect sense going in the use case route, because you can clearly see in that example that you mentioned with Bart a massive business outcome and an opportunity to regain a tremendous amount of resource is that they could redeploy for whether it it's new trains, new trucks, etcetera than them, not realizing we're losing how much money. I think anybody when you could put the useless in that context of this is what you can expect as an outcome. They get it >> Absolutely. That's the really the only way to start the conversation than starting from bits and bytes. And this is the This is usually the case across industries. If you think about retail, for example, you know you go to a safe way to start talking about GPS and servers. That's not the great way to start, but they do have issues with shoplifting, for example. So how do you know a person is walking in, you know, through the checkout. And they have one item. Then there's a small item right here and they walk out with this. How do you monitor that? So now you can do that with the right kind of cameras that can capture. Look there Two items, not one. How do you know where shop are stopping Which aisle is the most popular? I'Ll How do you know that? Well, now you can have cameras would say, Look, we have red zones and Green Zone so you could do those kinds of things with modern ways of doing. I >> so interesting because it's so. I mean, the examples that you gave are so disparate, but yet they make so much sense was how how you're describing it rather than going into, you know, a grocery store in talking about GPS, which they might fall over with their eyes. Doing this >> right. >> You're actually putting in the context of a real world problem they've been experiencing since the beginning of time. Don't you understand? Only goodness and this is how we can use technology. It's the safe way becomes a technology company. They don't know it. What actually started packing their bottom line. >> That's right, And so even now, you know. So I have to take that and you extend that into How do you go to market? And it's something you wanted Teo Touch on. How do you go to market with Cisco's? How does ingredients is? Could do it together, right? So think of Cisco's sales teams who are talking to all these customers every day where their retailers, financial services, federal government, health care, you name it. So what we've done is we basically sort of taking all these industries and created the top three or four use cases we know are relevant to that industry, either for safety or for saving money's. For variety of their operational reason, we have narrowed it down to three or four five use cases and each of those target industries. So what we do now with Cisco teams that we would bring them into our facility or go to them and really talkto all those use cases and train them on Hey, look, this is what we do jointly, and that makes the conversation much easier. Then they will go and present to the customer and what's the customer gets an idea far this all possible. Now that starts a deeper level technology and server and GPU engagement. So this is one way we go up and talk to different customers. What's the school's >> second? About a bit. Marcus. Cisco is so enormous, they have a billion different. I'm slightly exaggerating products with but a lot of different technologies that form many different solutions. So I imagine your Cisco expertise over many years of working with Cisco's a partner for other companies. How do you once you get to that deeper level conversation, how do you bring this different groups within Cisco together? So that that solution conversation is one that really aligns to that use case and the customer doesn't get it? >> Yeah, that's a difficult question to answer. That's like, you know your work. It's just cause a large company. But I think I also think they're also very cells driven, and that's what drives the different groups to come together. In fact, some people called me the Connector because I've been working. Cisco's so long. I know people and definite I know people in sales. I know people in the server. BU, in fact, if you think about the The platform was talking about the i r eleven o one with the jets and GPU that came as a result. I was talking to the i o t bu result talking to Dev net our situation the definite he said. You know what? This is cool are gonna do this. Then we take that to the IOC Guys is Oh, this is cool. We can take that. Put it in this platform, and then I'm next. Actually, next week I'm talking to a sale. Seaman Cisco. They cover utilities. And this platform was profit for utilities. Even think about fire monitoring in a forest. How do you do, boy thousand? The people to just watch what happens. We can take a platform like that now and really deploy it in hundreds of places which could monitor fires or the starting off a fire. But yes, bringing them together. It is no easy task. It's fun >> where you are smiling. I like that. Marty the connector. Jane, thank you >> so much for >> joining me on the kid this afternoon. Fun conversation. I enjoyed it. >> Ofcourse. Thank you. Likewise. Thank >> you, Lisa Martin for the Cube. you're watching us live, Francisco Definite. Create twenty nineteen. This is the end of day one. Stick around, John. Failure on I will be back tomorrow to cover day too. Thanks for watching.

Published Date : Apr 25 2019

SUMMARY :

live from Mountain View, California It's the queue covering Marty, It's great to have you here. Good to be here. So I always love talking about partnerships Where what Day One of Dev. So if you think about how we go to market our large conferences called GTC, So you So let me first comment on what you said about smart cities. So what we're doing is we're going to market with partners at Cisco. Because of that data is dark for so long, they don't know what they don't know. While most cases, what happens is you record four days of video and until something happens, How do you have this conversations with But you also have some cases. all had the video training or read the manual. And then we go deeper as you go through the implementation process. Well, that makes perfect sense going in the use case route, because you can clearly see in that example that you mentioned So now you can do that with the right I mean, the examples that you gave are so disparate, Don't you understand? So I have to take that and you extend that into How do you go to market? How do you once you get to that in fact, if you think about the The platform was talking about the i r eleven o one with the jets where you are smiling. joining me on the kid this afternoon. Thank This is the end of day one.

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Mandy Whaley, Cisco DevNet | DevNet Create 2019


 

>> live from Mountain View, California It's the queue covering definite create twenty nineteen. Brought to You by Cisco >> Hi, Lisa Martin With the Cube. We're live at the Computer History Museum for Cisco. Definite Create twenty nineteen John for years my co host, and we're pleased to welcome back to the Cube. Mandy Whaley, senior director of developer experience for Definite Mandy. This event is bursting at the seams. This is the third definite create, but you've been involved for the last five years or so from the beginning, when this was really groundswell talk. Before we're going to talk about a history of Devon, tell our audience what definite is. What definite create is as well, >> Absolutely definite is Cisco's developer community so anywhere that Cisco has a P iis rst case anywhere that people can build on top of our platforms. Definite is the community that enables those developers. So we do. You know a lot of connecting of people within the community way also do a lot of developer enablement Sample code Documentation Blog's Learning Resource is in person workshops, online workshops. I lead our developer experienced team, which is our developer advocates who are you know being the voice of developer, helping the developers get inspired in buildings also are definite. Sandbox teams hosted labs. If you want to use some networking FBI's you may not have extra network playing around that you can program against an experiment. So we offer reserved hosted labs that anyone can use free by becoming a definite remember and then the other part is our our developer content and support. So really getting the information out there and supporting the developers so definite is our community that enables everyone to build on top of Cisco. >> And this community is now sorry, John. We're both very excited, Assistant Suzy was announcing this morning over five hundred eighty five thousand members strong and the energy and the excitement in the room this morning with the Kino people are jumping at the bid. When you guys talked about WiFi six, I loved the examples that you gave this community is it is engaged. That is one of >> the things that's really exciting. Teo, about working with the definite community is that I feel like the energy that we put in, we get back multiple fold from the community, right, and it's great to see people who started with us maybe five years ago who have, you know, made their first AP I call started down this path, and now they're building full applications and they're here sharing that information by presenting with the community and giving back and that excitement that engagement is really one of the funnest parts of my job. >> Man, you talk about the evolution of definite create definite, pretty good background on that. Tell the story. I know I've been there with you guys since the beginning of the Cube. I know little about, but I want you to tell the story because it was a genesis that came out of what you guys we're seeing in the definite community where Cloud was really becoming part of it. Tell the where the definite created portion came on. And what it means for the definite community and developers at large. >> Yes, absolutely. So I started working with Emmet before Devon. It had a name so before it was actually definite. That was five years ago and way started building the community. We have a developer event within Sisqo live. So we have the definite zone, and it's we offer a lot of our constant and classes and workshops. Their way started getting requests from that audience, saying WAY would like a smaller events with more ability, tohave, you know, deeper conversations more, one on one and just focused on the developer community. And this was when multi Cloud was really starting to become a big piece of the Cisco strategy. Are developers were trying to figure out howto work in that space. Cloud native was taking King off, and that was the first definite create on, which was three years ago. It was a very small venue in San Francisco, and it was our very closest and, you know, deepest engage set of members that came to that first year and then. But we had such great engagement. Some of that energy that you mentioned and everyone who helped build it towards the second year, which we had last year at the Computer History Museum, says same same than you. And what special, definite create. As we really try to get the two parts of our definite community together, the application developers and our infrastructure automation Dev ops teams right, and we try to bring them together. This one event where they can really exchange ideas, you know, get to be talking the same language. This morning we had conversations around WiFi six from the application Developer side Like what does that enable for the application developers and new things you could build? And then, you know, how is that also interesting? Teo, the networking site >> of any demos, are a big part of it. You got the hack a thon camp. Get the camp experience. You can create great tools, but the the events, not your classic event. It's not like that's Get the numbers up. Let's get tennis. Let's make some money. It's not about that vibe. This is a different vibe. It's more of let's make it intimate, somewhat structured, but disorganized enough to be collaborative. >> Yes, it's definitely collaborative, and it's definitely a community focused event over. I think over seventy five percent of the content this year came from the community, so they're here giving back and presenting their workshops. It's also very hands on. Hands on is actually kind of a core definite value. We, like Teo, always give people the ability Teo code something. Try something, build something So you mentioned can't create that is our it's >> it's We call it a build a thon because it's a little more structure >> than a free form hackathon. We start with some use cases. We make the technology available, and they actually started yesterday before the conference even began. Those teams started building solutions, and they'LL be presenting them on Thursday and then >> in the >> conference. We have hands on workshops in small groups with eight people, so you can really, you know, take the time to actually get in, run the code, do the work, ask questions right to the presenter on. And we really want that collaborative. You know, sharing ideas feels very intentional part of building this conference. >> So I'd love to ask you some probing questions around the future of where you see this going because you have the key ingredients are coming together. You mentioned them, so scaling this up it's going to be a challenge because you have definite. You have Definite Zone and Sisqo live, which is the Cisco proper. Then you kind of have this elite community as my words. I guess it's, you know, the best of the best, but it's really a cross section of unique profile of persona is the intention to have these guys then go back to their communities are within the communities. Is that the scale point? Because how do you run these intimate events right and not lose the spirit of the ethos. >> So that's something we're, you know, putting specific thought into because we do want to keep the spirit. We've actually heard that from some of our, you know, kind of core community members that they really want to keep that aspect. So couple of things that we are planning tto help with that one is you may have seen this morning we gave the definite Creator awards. So those air awards for people who contribute to the community and a lot of those are people who have come and learn skills, taken aback to their organizations and been able to scale that out to their organizations. That's something that we're really actively working with people to do and do that in a very organic and community lead way. Um, the other thing that we have been working with is a program called Definite Express. So this is actually where we take a small part of our definite content. We kind of package it up and make it available for anyone to run in their region. Jin so they can have it. You know, in a different country they can have some of the same feeling that we have here some of these same workshops we've had those in. It was about two hundred fifty of those events in forty nine countries. >> So wait, man kind of thing. Yes, it's a physical events. It's not just sass on site services. >> That's right. >> Portable portal >> event and they do workshops just like they are here way. Inject some of the fun, same fun kind of activities. And then we provide all the infrastructure. There are sandbox, >> you hologram in there. I mean, you're so popular you can't attend all of them. >> No, I cannot. >> But I love >> to see on Twitter you can look up definite express and see one's happening, you know, all over the world at the same time, which is really fun. >> And how did those folks that are doing these definite expressed events How are they able to collaborate with you guys provide feedback from what they're experiencing in the field to help create Maur no pun intended helped create more. Definitely more, exactly more opportunities, you know, and really help you guys with this larger event so that they feel like they were in this community. And five hundred eighty five thousand. There's only about four hundred here that can fit in Russian. What's that somebody else? It's like So one of the things >> we do is while we're here at definite create, we do live stream a lot of the content. So it was really fun today. When we finished the keynote, I heard from some people that told me I was in the keynote. I was watching and I started texting my friends. Hey, you got to get on the live stream And that's a great thing to hear from the community because you're giving away for this people to join in. We also have on definite our community chat room. It's on every page, chat with us definite. It gets you right into a room with the developer advocates on our team and other community members, and we see the community there, you know, answering each other's questions, giving us feedback, letting us know what they need to move ahead in their careers and their projects. So that community chat room is really key. >> Give some highlights on what change since just go live Barcelona. What? Some of the important notable successes and work areas that you guys are doing a definite and definite create. >> Right. So we, as we mentioned in the Kino, our community growth, we've reached five hundred eighty five thousand. So that registered Dove nut members, that is, it's great to see that growing. And then we also see those members you know, growing their engagement with them, not going deeper into the material, building, more content, taking it back to their organizations and things like that. Right now we are building up to Cisco Live Us, which is coming up in San Diego in June, will have our full definite zone there. So a lot of exciting activities that were planning for their We hope everybody can come and see us there, and then another thing is, could exchange. So could exchange. We actually announced it a definite create last year and launched it a little bit after definite create code exchanges the place for the community to share their projects so they can anything that is open source. They can share it by sending us there. Have link way curate that end Tio Francisco relevant sort of catalog. If you're looking for a sample to use DNA center and you want to see it in Python, you Khun, go search for exactly that. Get back some projects that the community have submitted. So we're excited to announce this week that we've reached over four hundred projects in code exchange of those curated, you know, projects that have gone to the process and been posted there. That was a really exciting milestone, looking back to create from LA >> So it's working. Yeah. So what's the vibe in? Certainly Cisco. I know Suzy has and Team have been kind of getting a lot of press and praise press externally, praise internally it Cisco, as the big battleship of Cisco, kind of gets on that cloud wave coming multi cloud hot area. >> It is so one of the things that is really exciting as we are seeing a p, I be available across our whole portfolio. So in every area that Cisco has products and up and down the stack at the device layer at the controller layer at the cloud layer. So that's very exciting from a definite perspective, because it gives us more for our community to work with more opportunity for developers. And that changes Ciscos very palpable. It's very exciting. And we're, you know, bringing the definite community into that as much as >> it's from creativity to we saw the demo for a fish about the virtual realities cable first peek in Barcelona. But here, amplifying that with with five six to you could just with virtual reality look at a devices. They see all the staff see with network coverage. Yeah, WeII to do work. >> Yeah, exactly. And >> me, that demo is a great you know, example of this applications meaning infrastructure message, which is really what definite create is about. We wrote an augmented reality application running on a mobile device, but you can check literally seeing the signal strength from all your access points on. So that's just a great example of those two things coming together. >> Speaking of coming together, one of the things that you touched on this a minute ago. But what in the keynote this morning, when I was looking at in the Mirror Rocky demo of the other things that you guys were doing and the evolution of Cisco. I just thought, What CART horse which ones, which was It has definite been really kind of fueling Cisco's evolution. Looking at all of the available, as you mentioned across the product portfolio has been around a long time. Is it is it fair to say that definite has kind of been a fuel for that? And Cisco's going Wow, we've got this phenomenal community were evolving because our customers are we need Teo. Yeah, I think it is. It is very much >> hand in hand. We worked really closely with our product teams and we worked hard to be that voice of the developer with our product teams and Cisco. And it's been a journey that started, you know, five years ago where we knew that the guys were going to come, we knew that there would be a prize across the portfolio and within definite. We really believed in that and are definite community believed in it. And you know, we've been building it very step wise and very intentionally since then. So it's really been a great partnership and a really exciting time to be it Cisco and being a part of that transition. >> Well, I just signed up to chat with you guys since you brought it up earlier. Developer dot cisco dot com That little chat with us on every page signing I signed with my get hub handles >> you can log in with. You're having >> your chair stealing the code and check it into the >> codex scene. >> We're gonna blow something for one. So many exciting has been great to watch. You guys, you got the Moroccan green jacket off. >> It's very Rocky demo today. >> Meraki has been a big part of definite success, and within the community's been the reaction's been very positive. It's not in the classic portfolio of collaboration. It's really going to a different What is muraki mean for the development? What? What has it done? What has enabled Why is it important? >> Yeah, so, um, a Rocky has been great because it's one. As Todd mentioned today, they really have this mission of simplifying their experience, and they've done that in there. You I and they've brought that to their developer experience as well, which is really exciting for me. Rocky is Cloud Managed Network Club managed WiFi, and then they have a very happy I'd driven approach where you can automate almost everything you could do through the eyes. And then there's additional services that you could get from Iraqi, like indoor location data and things like that. So it really opens up opportunities for both of our parts of our definite audience application developers who might be writing an indoor location based application or doing something with the cameras that we saw today on DH, then the infrastructure automation side who can very, very efficiently, you know, manage and deploy their networks. >> It's nice connective tissue for the developers kind of gives you best table two worlds, wireless on the front end, back and network connections. So it really becomes a big part than seems like >> it is. It is. And that's another reason why we were so excited about the new MURAKI developer hub that Todd adults today on Definite because it really is a place where we can show that connective aspect of it. I have all the code and use cases that really connects this to audience. >> We'LL talk will be very excited to know that some of your community members actually have Iraqi devices at their house. They way, they're running their cameras at their homes and everything's >> that's right. >> So being I think it's on the Web, one of the, if not the on ly conference community that brings together the APP developers, those girls and guys thie infrastructure, folks, What's one of your favorite stories that really shows thes two worlds coming together, understanding each other, communicating anything that really sticks out of the last few years for you? Gosh, there's >> many and a lot of them are just hallway conversations that I might stop by and hear people connecting and kind of learning about. You know what each person works on and learning to kind of speak the same language and get together. One story that I think really stands out as a big success is around a partner that we work with who does indoor location applications. And there's pure software company right. They write mobile applications that do indoor location, and but they they need a network underneath that, and so we have had a great coming together of some of our main Cisco loyal people who go out and stall the network's connecting with partners like that who come from the pier software side. We've written applications on DSO. That's that's a great one. And that is really something that we see replicating in many places. And I feel like some of the hallway conversations here are, you know, starting the next stories that happened like that. >> This is one of some of the best cause they're natural. Organic conversations are not scripted. It's not reading slides. Well, I wish we had more time, but we'll have to see you back at dusk alive. All right? What about six weeks or so? Yes, it's coming out coming, kid. And Oh, Mandy, congratulations on this success bursting at the seams. And we appreciate you taking some time to talk with John and me today. Absolutely. Thank you so much. Our pleasure for John, for your I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching the Cube live from Cisco. Definite. Create twenty nineteen. Thanks for watching. >> Yeah,

Published Date : Apr 24 2019

SUMMARY :

live from Mountain View, California It's the queue covering This is the third definite create, but you've been involved for the last So really getting the information out there and supporting the developers so definite is When you guys talked about WiFi six, I loved the examples that you gave this community that I feel like the energy that we put in, we get back multiple fold from the community, I know I've been there with you guys since the beginning of the Cube. and it was our very closest and, you know, deepest engage set of members that came to that first It's not like that's Get the numbers up. you mentioned can't create that is our it's the technology available, and they actually started yesterday before the conference even began. so you can really, you know, take the time to actually get in, run the code, So I'd love to ask you some probing questions around the future of where you see this going because you have the key ingredients We've actually heard that from some of our, you know, kind of core community members that So wait, man kind of thing. And then we provide all the infrastructure. you hologram in there. to see on Twitter you can look up definite express and see one's happening, you know, all over the world at the able to collaborate with you guys provide feedback from what they're experiencing in the field to help and other community members, and we see the community there, you know, answering each other's questions, Some of the important notable successes and work areas that you guys are doing a definite And then we also see those members you praise internally it Cisco, as the big battleship of Cisco, kind of gets on that cloud wave coming And we're, you know, bringing the definite community into But here, amplifying that with with five six to you And me, that demo is a great you know, example of this applications Speaking of coming together, one of the things that you touched on this a minute ago. And you know, we've been building it Well, I just signed up to chat with you guys since you brought it up earlier. you can log in with. You guys, you got the Moroccan green jacket off. It's not in the classic portfolio of collaboration. and then they have a very happy I'd driven approach where you can automate almost everything It's nice connective tissue for the developers kind of gives you best table two worlds, wireless on the front end, that really connects this to audience. We'LL talk will be very excited to know that some of your community members actually have Iraqi devices at their house. And I feel like some of the hallway conversations here are, you know, starting the next stories that happened And we appreciate you taking some time to talk with John and me today.

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Joyce Lin, Postman | DevNet Create 2019


 

>> live from Mountain View, California It's the queue covering definite create twenty nineteen Brought to you by Cisco >> Hey, welcome back to the cave, Lisa Martin with John Barrier. We're coming to you Live from the Computer System Museum at the third annual Cisco Definite Create twenty nineteen Excited to be joined by Joycelyn Developer Advocate from Postman Joyce Welcome to the Q Thank you. So you are a developer advocate. But postman is a tool that helps the community learn about Cisco ap eyes Postman is a Cisco was a customer of yours but a little bit about your experience at definite cry Because you have an interesting story from last year, which was your first year of this event >> Exactly last year. We just happen to stop by. And as I was walking through this very room you hear all these workshops going on behind us My ears perked up cause I heard somebody say python in postman or two of most powerful tools And I was like, Hey, I >> work a postman >> So I like, stopped in to see and I slapped my team back immediately at the office there, really using postman to teach Cisco Technology here. >> That was surprising to you. And here you are now here a year later. Tell us some of the things that you're expecting to learn and hear and feel and see from twenty nineteen. Create. >> So this year I hear about all these people learning postman learning about tech through postman. So I'm actually giving to talks this afternoon The first talks talking about building the community because a lot of people use postman in the second talk is about using mock servers. Had a fake an AP I until you actually coded and deploy it. >> Take a minute to explain. Postman. Why is it so popular? Why Francisco jazzed about it? What are they using it for? How they bring that in take a minute to talk about what you guys do >> Well, several years ago, when postman started as a side project was primarily for developers and help developers do their day to day jobs. But we found a lot more People are interacting with technology or working at tech companies where they might not have the setup to initiate a request. AP I request, and so postman allows them tio on their desktop be able. Teo interact with the tech in a way that normally they wouldn't have the whole set up to do it. >> So So in terms of developers, what's is a freemium model? They do have a free hand leads >> premium. And I think within the last year we've scooch almost anything that used to be a paid feature down to free so you can try it out. And in fact, if you have a small business or a side project, it's it's free. >> And what's the talk track? You're gonna have to get to talks. One on community, one on serve servers. Monster. >> Yeah, So Mock service is something that I thought might be interesting to this crowd. But a lot of these people have are in charge of managing the infrastructure or supporting existing AP eyes or services that are out in the cloud. And so mock servers are a way that you can essentially mock an FBI for parallel development or to build a prototype put into >> you. And so this helps develop, get faster app up and running. And then what happens when they have to get rid of mock server and put a real server on there? They had built out the re p I. Is that what happens? >> Typically, they're spinning Oppa marks over first, and then they're building out their own servers. So, yeah, they would swap out the mock with their own. >> And what's the other talk on community? Just how did do a community open sores? What's the aspects of the community talk? >> It's kind of on >> odd topic for this kind of crowd, but a lot of people work for companies that are or work for teams where they're just trying to build, like, a sense of community or foster some sort of mission. And so just telling the Postman story and Postman was free for absolutely free for a super long time in growth has just been astronomical. >> You're six million developers on the planet working on that, but I can't say on the company's one hundred thirty million plus AP eyes. And that's all. Just since the company was established in twenty fourteen after this sort of side project that you talked about so pretty, >> pretty quick >> growth trajectory that you guys are on >> and a lot of it was word of mouth. I mean, until I came here last year and heard all the system people talking about how they're using postman. We did not know that. >> So how have how has Postman actually evolved your technology in the last year? Just since you stumbled upon? Wow, this we're actually really hot here. We are really facilitator of developers. This community that's now what five hundred eighty five thousand members strong Learn about Cisco AP eyes. I'd love to know how that has sort of catalyzed growth for postman. Well, back in the >> day, Postman started as developer first. So here's an individual developer. How can they work more effectively? But teams like Cisco you'll be lucky if you find a team of ten people these air hundreds and thousands of developers coming together to work together. So postman as a tool has shifted from focusing on on ly the developer to how do you support developers working in larger teams? >> So what? The community angle? Because one of the things that Lise and I were just talking about you she does a lot of women in tech interviews with Cube and we're building out these communities ourselves and in Silicon Valley, the old expression fake it till you make it. It's kind of a startup buzzword, but people try to fake community or by community. You really can't get away with that. In communities, communities are very fickle. A successful open source projects you've gotta contribute. You've gotta have presence. You've got to show your work to get you to the bad actors. It's >> pretty >> efficient. But things air new now in communities this modern era coming into slag, you got tools. How is community evolving? That's your perspective on this. >> That's an interesting question. I think the community you never wanted fake community absolutely agree, and something that Postman is kind of lagged on is the community's been huge, but we haven't really been involved. So around the world we have people giving workshops that we don't even know about, like around the world. And how can we support them and allow them to tell, teach things consistently and teach best practices? So I wouldn't say unfortunately, well or fortunately, we're not in the position where we have to encourage the growth, but rather just support the people that are already doing this. This >> is the pure ingredient Teo Community development, because you're enabling other people to be relevant with their communities. So you're not so much like just trying to be a community player. You're just your product enables community growth. >> Absolutely. Yeah. >> You just gotta come feed >> postman as a tool. And then postman, the seeds >> of community. >> Yeah, we're healthy. >> So talk about some of the where you guys locate. How many people in your company? What's this? What numbers >> were headquartered in San Francisco. We have a huge engineering department in Bangalore where our founders air from. And I think just a few months ago, we started having distributed people. So now we're everywhere. I think we're about a hundred head count. Uh, fifty five percent of that is engineering. So where? I don't know where a >> start off. I mean, they were started hunting with number two hundred thousand companies using the technologies. We said over six million developers. How do you get a handle on to your point earlier supporting all of these groups that are out there enabling us Johnson enabling and fueling communities like Deb. Nanny? How do you start that with a one hundred person organization? >> Yeah. I'm so glad you're like, Wow, that doesn't seem like a huge organization because other people are like I thought you are way bigger than that. One thing is that we do listen to our community. And so if they're having a pain point way, try to aggregate all those voices and then come out with a cohesive road map because what might be the loudest voice for even a lot of voices might not be what's right for the tool. The other thing is, we're not open source company, but we have a ton of open source projects. So the community has again developed converters, integrations all these open source tools that for their specific workflow works for them. And actually, they're sharing with the community. >> How did you get into all this? How did you join the company? What attracted you and what's what story? >> Well, I'm in San Francisco, so I work for a tech company. I have a hodgepodge background, but I won't go into because it just sounds confusing. Some people call me the Wolverine at work. >> That's a nickname. >> Um, hopefully it's not because I'm so Harry, but because I've had many lives, so I I kind of bring a little bit of that, too. My developer advocate role, a little bit of product, A little bit of marketing, little bit of the business side. >> It's good versatility, lot of versatility. Yeah, let me ask a question. One of the things we've been covering is actually we love cloud nated. We've been covering cloud in the early days. Oh, wait. Oh, seven All the way through Love Cloud native We get that check enterprises Ha! You see Cisco using your stuff. Enterprise developers are hot right now. People are fast filling applications has got a cloud native flare to a definite create. It's also gotta integrate into the classic enterprise. What's the difference in your view and your experience, your observations between enterprise developers and then your classic You know, hard core cloud native developer >> I would say that's something that postman, as an organization is dealing with right now because we started developer first. Now we're finding Oh, it's a different person making these decisions. What tools should we use? Sometimes it's top down, but at the end of the day, it's always the developer that is going to support a top down decision. A developer that's going to find the utility out of certain tool. So we're shifting our focus. But not necessarily by that much. Because long as you focus developer first, it's still >> so enterprise. Kind of taking more of a classic cloud developer or native cloud native developer. You think that kind of profile you in your mind? >> Well, again, you have an enterprise developer. But what? Where's that enterprise developer going to be in two years? So we're not hanging our hat too much on Enterprise? Only now >> what do you want? The Ciscos measures of programming. The network. I mean, infrastructure is code. That's kind of a nice value proposition. Take the complexity away. What's your take on reaction toe that vision? >> I don't know what you're talking >> about. I don't know what part. >> What part of tell you are. >> Well, they're saying developers shouldn't have to configure hardware. You know, abstract the network capabilities out and make it code. So the developers just it just happens. >> Got it? Yeah, And if you think about how you Khun scale, can you scale linearly or exponentially? Enabling every developer or team to deploy their own code at their own pace with their own tools is something that allows you to scale exponentially. So things like mock servers that were talking about earlier. If I'm relying on somebody, that's my bottleneck. To spin this up with the normal workflow for the organization, that's a bottleneck. Spin up your own mock server. >> Find mock servers were great. Resource because remember the old days and mobile the emulators kind of had to have an emulator to kind of get going. Okay, that was, like five years, but similar model like, Hey, I don't need I can't build that out now. But I need to know what it's gonna look like so I can get this done. >> And that allows you to iterated at the fastest >> level at the local >> developer level. >> We've been covering the old days here in the Cube world. >> Throwback. Joyce, thanks so much for your time joining us on the cue program this morning. It a definite creed. Best of luck in your two sessions later on today. We look forward to seeing you next time. Great. Thank you. Nice to meet you for John Ferrier. I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching to keep live from Cisco Definite create twenty nineteen. Thanks for watching

Published Date : Apr 24 2019

SUMMARY :

We're coming to you Live from the Computer System Museum And as I was walking through this very room you So I like, stopped in to see and I slapped my team back immediately at the office there, really using postman to teach And here you are now here a year later. So I'm actually giving to talks this afternoon The first talks talking about building the community because How they bring that in take a minute to talk about what you guys do and help developers do their day to day jobs. down to free so you can try it out. You're gonna have to get to talks. And so mock servers are a way that you can essentially They had built out the re p I. Is that what happens? Typically, they're spinning Oppa marks over first, and then they're building out their own servers. And so just telling the Postman story and Postman was free for absolutely Just since the company was established in twenty fourteen after and a lot of it was word of mouth. Well, back in the you support developers working in larger teams? Because one of the things that Lise and I were just talking about you she does a lot of women in tech interviews you got tools. I think the community you never wanted fake community absolutely is the pure ingredient Teo Community development, because you're enabling other people Yeah. And then postman, the seeds So talk about some of the where you guys locate. And I think just a few months ago, we started having distributed people. you get a handle on to your point earlier supporting all of these groups that are So the community has again developed the Wolverine at work. a little bit of product, A little bit of marketing, little bit of the business side. One of the things we've been covering is actually we love cloud nated. Because long as you focus developer You think that kind of profile you in your mind? Well, again, you have an enterprise developer. what do you want? I don't know what part. So the developers just it just at their own pace with their own tools is something that allows you to scale exponentially. But I need to know what it's gonna look like so I can get this We look forward to seeing you next time.

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