Image Title

Search Results for E. R. P.:

Breaking Analysis: Grading our 2022 Enterprise Technology Predictions


 

>>From the Cube Studios in Palo Alto in Boston, bringing you data-driven insights from the cube and E T R. This is breaking analysis with Dave Valante. >>Making technology predictions in 2022 was tricky business, especially if you were projecting the performance of markets or identifying I P O prospects and making binary forecast on data AI and the macro spending climate and other related topics in enterprise tech 2022, of course was characterized by a seesaw economy where central banks were restructuring their balance sheets. The war on Ukraine fueled inflation supply chains were a mess. And the unintended consequences of of forced march to digital and the acceleration still being sorted out. Hello and welcome to this week's weekly on Cube Insights powered by E T R. In this breaking analysis, we continue our annual tradition of transparently grading last year's enterprise tech predictions. And you may or may not agree with our self grading system, but look, we're gonna give you the data and you can draw your own conclusions and tell you what, tell us what you think. >>All right, let's get right to it. So our first prediction was tech spending increases by 8% in 2022. And as we exited 2021 CIOs, they were optimistic about their digital transformation plans. You know, they rushed to make changes to their business and were eager to sharpen their focus and continue to iterate on their digital business models and plug the holes that they, the, in the learnings that they had. And so we predicted that 8% rise in enterprise tech spending, which looked pretty good until Ukraine and the Fed decided that, you know, had to rush and make up for lost time. We kind of nailed the momentum in the energy sector, but we can't give ourselves too much credit for that layup. And as of October, Gartner had it spending growing at just over 5%. I think it was 5.1%. So we're gonna take a C plus on this one and, and move on. >>Our next prediction was basically kind of a slow ground ball. The second base, if I have to be honest, but we felt it was important to highlight that security would remain front and center as the number one priority for organizations in 2022. As is our tradition, you know, we try to up the degree of difficulty by specifically identifying companies that are gonna benefit from these trends. So we highlighted some possible I P O candidates, which of course didn't pan out. S NQ was on our radar. The company had just had to do another raise and they recently took a valuation hit and it was a down round. They raised 196 million. So good chunk of cash, but, but not the i p O that we had predicted Aqua Securities focus on containers and cloud native. That was a trendy call and we thought maybe an M SS P or multiple managed security service providers like Arctic Wolf would I p o, but no way that was happening in the crummy market. >>Nonetheless, we think these types of companies, they're still faring well as the talent shortage in security remains really acute, particularly in the sort of mid-size and small businesses that often don't have a sock Lacework laid off 20% of its workforce in 2022. And CO C e o Dave Hatfield left the company. So that I p o didn't, didn't happen. It was probably too early for Lacework. Anyway, meanwhile you got Netscope, which we've cited as strong in the E T R data as particularly in the emerging technology survey. And then, you know, I lumia holding its own, you know, we never liked that 7 billion price tag that Okta paid for auth zero, but we loved the TAM expansion strategy to target developers beyond sort of Okta's enterprise strength. But we gotta take some points off of the failure thus far of, of Okta to really nail the integration and the go to market model with azero and build, you know, bring that into the, the, the core Okta. >>So the focus on endpoint security that was a winner in 2022 is CrowdStrike led that charge with others holding their own, not the least of which was Palo Alto Networks as it continued to expand beyond its core network security and firewall business, you know, through acquisition. So overall we're gonna give ourselves an A minus for this relatively easy call, but again, we had some specifics associated with it to make it a little tougher. And of course we're watching ve very closely this this coming year in 2023. The vendor consolidation trend. You know, according to a recent Palo Alto network survey with 1300 SecOps pros on average organizations have more than 30 tools to manage security tools. So this is a logical way to optimize cost consolidating vendors and consolidating redundant vendors. The E T R data shows that's clearly a trend that's on the upswing. >>Now moving on, a big theme of 2020 and 2021 of course was remote work and hybrid work and new ways to work and return to work. So we predicted in 2022 that hybrid work models would become the dominant protocol, which clearly is the case. We predicted that about 33% of the workforce would come back to the office in 2022 in September. The E T R data showed that figure was at 29%, but organizations expected that 32% would be in the office, you know, pretty much full-time by year end. That hasn't quite happened, but we were pretty close with the projection, so we're gonna take an A minus on this one. Now, supply chain disruption was another big theme that we felt would carry through 2022. And sure that sounds like another easy one, but as is our tradition, again we try to put some binary metrics around our predictions to put some meat in the bone, so to speak, and and allow us than you to say, okay, did it come true or not? >>So we had some data that we presented last year and supply chain issues impacting hardware spend. We said at the time, you can see this on the left hand side of this chart, the PC laptop demand would remain above pre covid levels, which would reverse a decade of year on year declines, which I think started in around 2011, 2012. Now, while demand is down this year pretty substantially relative to 2021, I D C has worldwide unit shipments for PCs at just over 300 million for 22. If you go back to 2019 and you're looking at around let's say 260 million units shipped globally, you know, roughly, so, you know, pretty good call there. Definitely much higher than pre covid levels. But so what you might be asking why the B, well, we projected that 30% of customers would replace security appliances with cloud-based services and that more than a third would replace their internal data center server and storage hardware with cloud services like 30 and 40% respectively. >>And we don't have explicit survey data on exactly these metrics, but anecdotally we see this happening in earnest. And we do have some data that we're showing here on cloud adoption from ET R'S October survey where the midpoint of workloads running in the cloud is around 34% and forecast, as you can see, to grow steadily over the next three years. So this, well look, this is not, we understand it's not a one-to-one correlation with our prediction, but it's a pretty good bet that we were right, but we gotta take some points off, we think for the lack of unequivocal proof. Cause again, we always strive to make our predictions in ways that can be measured as accurate or not. Is it binary? Did it happen, did it not? Kind of like an O K R and you know, we strive to provide data as proof and in this case it's a bit fuzzy. >>We have to admit that although we're pretty comfortable that the prediction was accurate. And look, when you make an hard forecast, sometimes you gotta pay the price. All right, next, we said in 2022 that the big four cloud players would generate 167 billion in IS and PaaS revenue combining for 38% market growth. And our current forecasts are shown here with a comparison to our January, 2022 figures. So coming into this year now where we are today, so currently we expect 162 billion in total revenue and a 33% growth rate. Still very healthy, but not on our mark. So we think a w s is gonna miss our predictions by about a billion dollars, not, you know, not bad for an 80 billion company. So they're not gonna hit that expectation though of getting really close to a hundred billion run rate. We thought they'd exit the year, you know, closer to, you know, 25 billion a quarter and we don't think they're gonna get there. >>Look, we pretty much nailed Azure even though our prediction W was was correct about g Google Cloud platform surpassing Alibaba, Alibaba, we way overestimated the performance of both of those companies. So we're gonna give ourselves a C plus here and we think, yeah, you might think it's a little bit harsh, we could argue for a B minus to the professor, but the misses on GCP and Alibaba we think warrant a a self penalty on this one. All right, let's move on to our prediction about Supercloud. We said it becomes a thing in 2022 and we think by many accounts it has, despite the naysayers, we're seeing clear evidence that the concept of a layer of value add that sits above and across clouds is taking shape. And on this slide we showed just some of the pickup in the industry. I mean one of the most interesting is CloudFlare, the biggest supercloud antagonist. >>Charles Fitzgerald even predicted that no vendor would ever use the term in their marketing. And that would be proof if that happened that Supercloud was a thing and he said it would never happen. Well CloudFlare has, and they launched their version of Supercloud at their developer week. Chris Miller of the register put out a Supercloud block diagram, something else that Charles Fitzgerald was, it was was pushing us for, which is rightly so, it was a good call on his part. And Chris Miller actually came up with one that's pretty good at David Linthicum also has produced a a a A block diagram, kind of similar, David uses the term metacloud and he uses the term supercloud kind of interchangeably to describe that trend. And so we we're aligned on that front. Brian Gracely has covered the concept on the popular cloud podcast. Berkeley launched the Sky computing initiative. >>You read through that white paper and many of the concepts highlighted in the Supercloud 3.0 community developed definition align with that. Walmart launched a platform with many of the supercloud salient attributes. So did Goldman Sachs, so did Capital One, so did nasdaq. So you know, sorry you can hate the term, but very clearly the evidence is gathering for the super cloud storm. We're gonna take an a plus on this one. Sorry, haters. Alright, let's talk about data mesh in our 21 predictions posts. We said that in the 2020s, 75% of large organizations are gonna re-architect their big data platforms. So kind of a decade long prediction. We don't like to do that always, but sometimes it's warranted. And because it was a longer term prediction, we, at the time in, in coming into 22 when we were evaluating our 21 predictions, we took a grade of incomplete because the sort of decade long or majority of the decade better part of the decade prediction. >>So last year, earlier this year, we said our number seven prediction was data mesh gains momentum in 22. But it's largely confined and narrow data problems with limited scope as you can see here with some of the key bullets. So there's a lot of discussion in the data community about data mesh and while there are an increasing number of examples, JP Morgan Chase, Intuit, H S P C, HelloFresh, and others that are completely rearchitecting parts of their data platform completely rearchitecting entire data platforms is non-trivial. There are organizational challenges, there're data, data ownership, debates, technical considerations, and in particular two of the four fundamental data mesh principles that the, the need for a self-service infrastructure and federated computational governance are challenging. Look, democratizing data and facilitating data sharing creates conflicts with regulatory requirements around data privacy. As such many organizations are being really selective with their data mesh implementations and hence our prediction of narrowing the scope of data mesh initiatives. >>I think that was right on J P M C is a good example of this, where you got a single group within a, within a division narrowly implementing the data mesh architecture. They're using a w s, they're using data lakes, they're using Amazon Glue, creating a catalog and a variety of other techniques to meet their objectives. They kind of automating data quality and it was pretty well thought out and interesting approach and I think it's gonna be made easier by some of the announcements that Amazon made at the recent, you know, reinvent, particularly trying to eliminate ET t l, better connections between Aurora and Redshift and, and, and better data sharing the data clean room. So a lot of that is gonna help. Of course, snowflake has been on this for a while now. Many other companies are facing, you know, limitations as we said here and this slide with their Hadoop data platforms. They need to do new, some new thinking around that to scale. HelloFresh is a really good example of this. Look, the bottom line is that organizations want to get more value from data and having a centralized, highly specialized teams that own the data problem, it's been a barrier and a blocker to success. The data mesh starts with organizational considerations as described in great detail by Ash Nair of Warner Brothers. So take a listen to this clip. >>Yeah, so when people think of Warner Brothers, you always think of like the movie studio, but we're more than that, right? I mean, you think of H B O, you think of t n t, you think of C N N. We have 30 plus brands in our portfolio and each have their own needs. So the, the idea of a data mesh really helps us because what we can do is we can federate access across the company so that, you know, CNN can work at their own pace. You know, when there's election season, they can ingest their own data and they don't have to, you know, bump up against, as an example, HBO if Game of Thrones is going on. >>So it's often the case that data mesh is in the eyes of the implementer. And while a company's implementation may not strictly adhere to Jamma Dani's vision of data mesh, and that's okay, the goal is to use data more effectively. And despite Gartner's attempts to deposition data mesh in favor of the somewhat confusing or frankly far more confusing data fabric concept that they stole from NetApp data mesh is taking hold in organizations globally today. So we're gonna take a B on this one. The prediction is shaping up the way we envision, but as we previously reported, it's gonna take some time. The better part of a decade in our view, new standards have to emerge to make this vision become reality and they'll come in the form of both open and de facto approaches. Okay, our eighth prediction last year focused on the face off between Snowflake and Databricks. >>And we realized this popular topic, and maybe one that's getting a little overplayed, but these are two companies that initially, you know, looked like they were shaping up as partners and they, by the way, they are still partnering in the field. But you go back a couple years ago, the idea of using an AW w s infrastructure, Databricks machine intelligence and applying that on top of Snowflake as a facile data warehouse, still very viable. But both of these companies, they have much larger ambitions. They got big total available markets to chase and large valuations that they have to justify. So what's happening is, as we've previously reported, each of these companies is moving toward the other firm's core domain and they're building out an ecosystem that'll be critical for their future. So as part of that effort, we said each is gonna become aggressive investors and maybe start doing some m and a and they have in various companies. >>And on this chart that we produced last year, we studied some of the companies that were targets and we've added some recent investments of both Snowflake and Databricks. As you can see, they've both, for example, invested in elation snowflake's, put money into Lacework, the Secur security firm, ThoughtSpot, which is trying to democratize data with ai. Collibra is a governance platform and you can see Databricks investments in data transformation with D B T labs, Matillion doing simplified business intelligence hunters. So that's, you know, they're security investment and so forth. So other than our thought that we'd see Databricks I p o last year, this prediction been pretty spot on. So we'll give ourselves an A on that one. Now observability has been a hot topic and we've been covering it for a while with our friends at E T R, particularly Eric Bradley. Our number nine prediction last year was basically that if you're not cloud native and observability, you are gonna be in big trouble. >>So everything guys gotta go cloud native. And that's clearly been the case. Splunk, the big player in the space has been transitioning to the cloud, hasn't always been pretty, as we reported, Datadog real momentum, the elk stack, that's open source model. You got new entrants that we've cited before, like observe, honeycomb, chaos search and others that we've, we've reported on, they're all born in the cloud. So we're gonna take another a on this one, admittedly, yeah, it's a re reasonably easy call, but you gotta have a few of those in the mix. Okay, our last prediction, our number 10 was around events. Something the cube knows a little bit about. We said that a new category of events would emerge as hybrid and that for the most part is happened. So that's gonna be the mainstay is what we said. That pure play virtual events are gonna give way to hi hybrid. >>And the narrative is that virtual only events are, you know, they're good for quick hits, but lousy replacements for in-person events. And you know that said, organizations of all shapes and sizes, they learn how to create better virtual content and support remote audiences during the pandemic. So when we set at pure play is gonna give way to hybrid, we said we, we i we implied or specific or specified that the physical event that v i p experience is going defined. That overall experience and those v i p events would create a little fomo, fear of, of missing out in a virtual component would overlay that serves an audience 10 x the size of the physical. We saw that really two really good examples. Red Hat Summit in Boston, small event, couple thousand people served tens of thousands, you know, online. Second was Google Cloud next v i p event in, in New York City. >>Everything else was, was, was, was virtual. You know, even examples of our prediction of metaverse like immersion have popped up and, and and, and you know, other companies are doing roadshow as we predicted like a lot of companies are doing it. You're seeing that as a major trend where organizations are going with their sales teams out into the regions and doing a little belly to belly action as opposed to the big giant event. That's a definitely a, a trend that we're seeing. So in reviewing this prediction, the grade we gave ourselves is, you know, maybe a bit unfair, it should be, you could argue for a higher grade, but the, but the organization still haven't figured it out. They have hybrid experiences but they generally do a really poor job of leveraging the afterglow and of event of an event. It still tends to be one and done, let's move on to the next event or the next city. >>Let the sales team pick up the pieces if they were paying attention. So because of that, we're only taking a B plus on this one. Okay, so that's the review of last year's predictions. You know, overall if you average out our grade on the 10 predictions that come out to a b plus, I dunno why we can't seem to get that elusive a, but we're gonna keep trying our friends at E T R and we are starting to look at the data for 2023 from the surveys and all the work that we've done on the cube and our, our analysis and we're gonna put together our predictions. We've had literally hundreds of inbounds from PR pros pitching us. We've got this huge thick folder that we've started to review with our yellow highlighter. And our plan is to review it this month, take a look at all the data, get some ideas from the inbounds and then the e t R of January surveys in the field. >>It's probably got a little over a thousand responses right now. You know, they'll get up to, you know, 1400 or so. And once we've digested all that, we're gonna go back and publish our predictions for 2023 sometime in January. So stay tuned for that. All right, we're gonna leave it there for today. You wanna thank Alex Myerson who's on production and he manages the podcast, Ken Schiffman as well out of our, our Boston studio. I gotta really heartfelt thank you to Kristen Martin and Cheryl Knight and their team. They helped get the word out on social and in our newsletters. Rob Ho is our editor in chief over at Silicon Angle who does some great editing for us. Thank you all. Remember all these podcasts are available or all these episodes are available is podcasts. Wherever you listen, just all you do Search Breaking analysis podcast, really getting some great traction there. Appreciate you guys subscribing. I published each week on wikibon.com, silicon angle.com or you can email me directly at david dot valante silicon angle.com or dm me Dante, or you can comment on my LinkedIn post. And please check out ETR AI for the very best survey data in the enterprise tech business. Some awesome stuff in there. This is Dante for the Cube Insights powered by etr. Thanks for watching and we'll see you next time on breaking analysis.

Published Date : Dec 18 2022

SUMMARY :

From the Cube Studios in Palo Alto in Boston, bringing you data-driven insights from self grading system, but look, we're gonna give you the data and you can draw your own conclusions and tell you what, We kind of nailed the momentum in the energy but not the i p O that we had predicted Aqua Securities focus on And then, you know, I lumia holding its own, you So the focus on endpoint security that was a winner in 2022 is CrowdStrike led that charge put some meat in the bone, so to speak, and and allow us than you to say, okay, We said at the time, you can see this on the left hand side of this chart, the PC laptop demand would remain Kind of like an O K R and you know, we strive to provide data We thought they'd exit the year, you know, closer to, you know, 25 billion a quarter and we don't think they're we think, yeah, you might think it's a little bit harsh, we could argue for a B minus to the professor, Chris Miller of the register put out a Supercloud block diagram, something else that So you know, sorry you can hate the term, but very clearly the evidence is gathering for the super cloud But it's largely confined and narrow data problems with limited scope as you can see here with some of the announcements that Amazon made at the recent, you know, reinvent, particularly trying to the company so that, you know, CNN can work at their own pace. So it's often the case that data mesh is in the eyes of the implementer. but these are two companies that initially, you know, looked like they were shaping up as partners and they, So that's, you know, they're security investment and so forth. So that's gonna be the mainstay is what we And the narrative is that virtual only events are, you know, they're good for quick hits, the grade we gave ourselves is, you know, maybe a bit unfair, it should be, you could argue for a higher grade, You know, overall if you average out our grade on the 10 predictions that come out to a b plus, You know, they'll get up to, you know,

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
Alex MyersonPERSON

0.99+

Cheryl KnightPERSON

0.99+

Ken SchiffmanPERSON

0.99+

Chris MillerPERSON

0.99+

CNNORGANIZATION

0.99+

Rob HoPERSON

0.99+

AlibabaORGANIZATION

0.99+

Dave ValantePERSON

0.99+

AmazonORGANIZATION

0.99+

5.1%QUANTITY

0.99+

2022DATE

0.99+

Charles FitzgeraldPERSON

0.99+

Dave HatfieldPERSON

0.99+

Brian GracelyPERSON

0.99+

2019DATE

0.99+

LaceworkORGANIZATION

0.99+

twoQUANTITY

0.99+

GCPORGANIZATION

0.99+

33%QUANTITY

0.99+

WalmartORGANIZATION

0.99+

DavidPERSON

0.99+

2021DATE

0.99+

20%QUANTITY

0.99+

Kristen MartinPERSON

0.99+

Palo AltoLOCATION

0.99+

2020DATE

0.99+

Ash NairPERSON

0.99+

Goldman SachsORGANIZATION

0.99+

162 billionQUANTITY

0.99+

New York CityLOCATION

0.99+

DatabricksORGANIZATION

0.99+

OctoberDATE

0.99+

last yearDATE

0.99+

Arctic WolfORGANIZATION

0.99+

two companiesQUANTITY

0.99+

38%QUANTITY

0.99+

SeptemberDATE

0.99+

FedORGANIZATION

0.99+

JP Morgan ChaseORGANIZATION

0.99+

80 billionQUANTITY

0.99+

29%QUANTITY

0.99+

32%QUANTITY

0.99+

21 predictionsQUANTITY

0.99+

30%QUANTITY

0.99+

HBOORGANIZATION

0.99+

75%QUANTITY

0.99+

Game of ThronesTITLE

0.99+

JanuaryDATE

0.99+

2023DATE

0.99+

10 predictionsQUANTITY

0.99+

bothQUANTITY

0.99+

22QUANTITY

0.99+

ThoughtSpotORGANIZATION

0.99+

196 millionQUANTITY

0.99+

30QUANTITY

0.99+

eachQUANTITY

0.99+

last yearDATE

0.99+

Palo Alto NetworksORGANIZATION

0.99+

2020sDATE

0.99+

167 billionQUANTITY

0.99+

OktaORGANIZATION

0.99+

SecondQUANTITY

0.99+

GartnerORGANIZATION

0.99+

Eric BradleyPERSON

0.99+

Aqua SecuritiesORGANIZATION

0.99+

DantePERSON

0.99+

8%QUANTITY

0.99+

Warner BrothersORGANIZATION

0.99+

IntuitORGANIZATION

0.99+

Cube StudiosORGANIZATION

0.99+

each weekQUANTITY

0.99+

7 billionQUANTITY

0.99+

40%QUANTITY

0.99+

SnowflakeORGANIZATION

0.99+

Breaking Analysis: Even the Cloud Is Not Immune to the Seesaw Economy


 

>>From the Cube Studios in Palo Alto in Boston, bringing you data driven insights from the cube and etr. This is breaking analysis with Dave Ante. >>Have you ever been driving on the highway and traffic suddenly slows way down and then after a little while it picks up again and you're cruising along and you're thinking, Okay, hey, that was weird. But it's clear sailing now. Off we go, only to find out in a bit that the traffic is building up ahead again, forcing you to pump the brakes as the traffic pattern ebbs and flows well. Welcome to the Seesaw economy. The fed induced fire that prompted an unprecedented rally in tech is being purposefully extinguished now by that same fed. And virtually every sector of the tech industry is having to reset its expectations, including the cloud segment. Hello and welcome to this week's Wikibon Cube Insights powered by etr. In this breaking analysis will review the implications of the earnings announcements from the big three cloud players, Amazon, Microsoft, and Google who announced this week. >>And we'll update you on our quarterly IAS forecast and share the latest from ETR with a focus on cloud computing. Now, before we get into the new data, we wanna review something we shared with you on October 14th, just a couple weeks back, this is sort of a, we told you it was coming slide. It's an XY graph that shows ET R'S proprietary net score methodology on the vertical axis. That's a measure of spending momentum, spending velocity, and an overlap or presence in the dataset that's on the X axis. That's really a measure of pervasiveness. In the survey, the table, you see that table insert there that shows Wiki Bond's Q2 estimates of IAS revenue for the big four hyperscalers with their year on year growth rates. Now we told you at the time, this is data from the July TW 22 ETR survey and the ETR hadn't released its October survey results at that time. >>This was just a couple weeks ago. And while we couldn't share the specific data from the October survey, we were able to get a glimpse and we depicted the slowdown that we saw in the October data with those dotted arrows kind of down into the right, we said at the time that we were seeing and across the board slowdown even for the big three cloud vendors. Now, fast forward to this past week and we saw earnings releases from Alphabet, Microsoft, and just last night Amazon. Now you may be thinking, okay, big deal. The ETR survey data didn't really tell us anything we didn't already know. But judging from the negative reaction in the stock market to these earnings announcements, the degree of softness surprised a lot of investors. Now, at the time we didn't update our forecast, it doesn't make sense for us to do that when we're that close to earning season. >>And now that all the big three ha with all the big four with the exception of Alibaba have announced we've, we've updated. And so here's that data. This chart lays out our view of the IS and PAs worldwide revenue. Basically it's cloud infrastructure with an attempt to exclude any SaaS revenue so we can make an apples to apples comparison across all the clouds. Now the reason that actual is in quotes is because Microsoft and Google don't report IAS revenue, but they do give us clues and kind of directional commentary, which we then triangulate with other data that we have from the channel and ETR surveys and just our own intelligence. Now the second column there after the vendor name shows our previous estimates for q3, and then next to that we show our actuals. Same with the growth rates. And then we round out the chart with that lighter blue color highlights, the full year estimates for revenue and growth. >>So the key takeaways are that we shaved about $4 billion in revenue and roughly 300 basis points of growth off of our full year estimates. AWS had a strong July but exited Q3 in the mid 20% growth rate year over year. So we're using that guidance, you know, for our Q4 estimates. Azure came in below our earlier estimates, but Google actually exceeded our expectations. Now the compression in the numbers is in our view of function of the macro demand climate, we've made every attempt to adjust for constant currency. So FX should not be a factor in this data, but it's sure you know that that ma the the, the currency effects are weighing on those companies income statements. And so look, this is the fundamental dynamic of a cloud model where you can dial down consumption when you need to and dial it up when you need to. >>Now you may be thinking that many big cloud customers have a committed level of spending in order to get better discounts. And that's true. But what's happening we think is they'll reallocate that spend toward, let's say for example, lower cost storage tiers or they may take advantage of better price performance processors like Graviton for example. That is a clear trend that we're seeing and smaller companies that were perhaps paying by the drink just on demand, they're moving to reserve instance models to lower their monthly bill. So instead of taking the easy way out and just spending more companies are reallocating their reserve capacity toward lower cost. So those sort of lower cost services, so they're spending time and effort optimizing to get more for, for less whereas, or get more for the same is really how we should, should, should phrase it. Whereas during the pandemic, many companies were, you know, they perhaps were not as focused on doing that because business was booming and they had a response. >>So they just, you know, spend more dial it up. So in general, as they say, customers are are doing more with, with the same. Now let's look at the growth dynamic and spend some time on that. I think this is important. This data shows worldwide quarterly revenue growth rates back to Q1 2019 for the big four. So a couple of interesting things. The data tells us during the pandemic, you saw both AWS and Azure, but the law of large numbers and actually accelerate growth. AWS especially saw progressively increasing growth rates throughout 2021 for each quarter. Now that trend, as you can see is reversed in 2022 for aws. Now we saw Azure come down a bit, but it's still in the low forties in terms of percentage growth. While Google actually saw an uptick in growth this last quarter for GCP by our estimates as GCP is becoming an increasingly large portion of Google's overall cloud business. >>Now, unfortunately Google Cloud continues to lose north of 850 million per quarter, whereas AWS and Azure are profitable cloud businesses even though Alibaba is suffering its woes from China. And we'll see how they come in when they report in mid-November. The overall hyperscale market grew at 32% in Q3 in terms of worldwide revenue. So the slowdown isn't due to the repatriation or competition from on-prem vendors in our view, it's a macro related trend. And cloud will continue to significantly outperform other sectors despite its massive size. You know, on the repatriation point, it just still doesn't show up in the data. The A 16 Z article from Sarah Wong and Martin Martin Kasa claiming that repatriation was inevitable as a means to lower cost of good sold for SaaS companies. You know, while that was thought provoking, it hasn't shown up in the numbers. And if you read the financial statements of both AWS and its partners like Snowflake and you dig into the, to the, to the quarterly reports, you'll see little notes and comments with their ongoing negotiations to lower cloud costs for customers. >>AWS and no doubt execs at Azure and GCP understand that the lifetime value of a customer is worth much more than near term gross margin. And you can expect the cloud vendors to strike a balance between profitability, near term profitability anyway and customer attention. Now, even though Google Cloud platform saw accelerated growth, we need to put that in context for you. So GCP, by our estimate, has now crossed over the $3 billion for quarter market actually did so last quarter, but its growth rate accelerated to 42% this quarter. And so that's a good sign in our view. But let's do a quick little comparison with when AWS and Azure crossed the $3 billion mark and compare their growth rates at the time. So if you go back to to Q2 2016, as we're showing in this chart, that's around the time that AWS hit 3 billion per quarter and at the same time was growing at 58%. >>Azure by our estimates crossed that mark in Q4 2018 and at that time was growing at 67%. Again, compare that to Google's 42%. So one would expect Google's growth rate would be higher than its competitors at this point in the MO in the maturity of its cloud, which it's, you know, it's really not when you compared to to Azure. I mean they're kind of con, you know, comparable now but today, but, but you'll go back, you know, to that $3 billion mark. But more so looking at history, you'd like to see its growth rate at this point of a maturity model at least over 50%, which we don't believe it is. And one other point on this topic, you know, my business friend Matt Baker from Dell often says it's not a zero sum game, meaning there's plenty of opportunity exists to build value on top of hyperscalers. >>And I would totally agree it's not a dollar for dollar swap if you can continue to innovate. But history will show that the first company in makes the most money. Number two can do really well and number three tends to break even. Now maybe cloud is different because you have Microsoft software estate and the power behind that and that's driving its IAS business and Google ads are funding technology buildouts for, for for Google and gcp. So you know, we'll see how that plays out. But right now by this one measurement, Google is four years behind Microsoft in six years behind aws. Now to the point that cloud will continue to outpace other markets, let's, let's break this down a bit in spending terms and see why this claim holds water. This is data from ET r's latest October survey that shows the granularity of its net score or spending velocity metric. >>The lime green is new adoptions, so they're adding the platform, the forest green is spending more 6% or more. The gray bars spending is flat plus or minus, you know, 5%. The pinkish colors represent spending less down 6% or worse. And the bright red shows defections or churn of the platform. You subtract the reds from the greens and you get what's called net score, which is that blue dot that you can see on each of the bars. So what you see in the table insert is that all three have net scores above 40%, which is a highly elevated measure. Microsoft's net scores above 60% AWS well into the fifties and GCP in the mid forties. So all good. Now what's happening with all three is more customers are keep keeping their spending flat. So a higher percentage of customers are saying, our spending is now flat than it was in previous quarters and that's what's accounting for the compression. >>But the churn of all three, even gcp, which we reported, you know, last quarter from last quarter survey was was five x. The other two is actually very low in the single digits. So that might have been an anomaly. So that's a very good sign in our view. You know, again, customers aren't repatriating in droves, it's just not a trend that we would bet on, maybe makes for a FUD or you know, good marketing head, but it's just not a big deal. And you can't help but be impressed with both Microsoft and AWS's performance in the survey. And as we mentioned before, these companies aren't going to give up customers to try and preserve a little bit of gross margin. They'll do what it takes to keep people on their platforms cuz they'll make up for it over time with added services and improved offerings. >>Now, once these companies acquire a customer, they'll be very aggressive about keeping them. So customers take note, you have negotiating leverage, so use it. Okay, let's look at another cut at the cloud market from the ETR data set. Here's the two dimensional view, again, it's back, it's one of our favorites. Net score or spending momentum plotted against presence. And the data set, that's the x axis net score on the, on the vertical axis, this is a view of et r's cloud computing sector sector. You can see we put that magic 40% dotted red line in the table showing and, and then that the table inserts shows how the data are plotted with net score against presence. I e n in the survey, notably only the big three are above the 40% line of the names that we're showing here. The oth there, there are others. >>I mean if you put Snowflake on there, it'd be higher than any of these names, but we'll dig into that name in a later breaking analysis episode. Now this is just another way of quantifying the dominance of AWS and Azure, not only relative to Google, but the other cloud platforms out there. So we've, we've taken the opportunity here to plot IBM and Oracle, which both own a public cloud. Their performance is largely a reflection of them migrating their install bases to their respective public clouds and or hybrid clouds. And you know, that's fine, they're in the game. That's a point that we've made, you know, a number of times they're able to make it through the cloud, not whole and they at least have one, but they simply don't have the business momentum of AWS and Azure, which is actually quite impressive because AWS and Azure are now as large or larger than IBM and Oracle. >>And to show this type of continued growth that that that Azure and AWS show at their size is quite remarkable and customers are starting to recognize the viability of on-prem hi, you know, hybrid clouds like HPE GreenLake and Dell's apex. You know, you may say, well that's not cloud, but if the customer thinks it is and it was reporting in the survey that it is, we're gonna continue to report this view. You know, I don't know what's happening with H P E, They had a big down tick this quarter and I, and I don't read too much into that because their end is still pretty small at 53. So big fluctuations are not uncommon with those types of smaller ends, but it's over 50. So, you know, we did notice a a a negative within a giant public and private sector, which is often a, a bellwether giant public private is big public companies and large private companies like, like a Mars for example. >>So it, you know, it looks like for HPE it could be an outlier. We saw within the Fortune 1000 HPE E'S cloud looked actually really good and it had good spending momentum in that sector. When you di dig into the industry data within ETR dataset, obviously we're not showing that here, but we'll continue to monitor that. Okay, so where's this Leave us. Well look, this is really a tactical story of currency and macro headwinds as you can see. You know, we've laid out some of the points on this slide. The action in the stock market today, which is Friday after some of the soft earnings reports is really robust. You know, we'll see how it ends up in the day. So maybe this is a sign that the worst is over, but we don't think so. The visibility from tech companies is murky right now as most are guiding down, which indicates that their conservative outlook last quarter was still too optimistic. >>But as it relates to cloud, that platform is not going anywhere anytime soon. Sure, there are potential disruptors on the horizon, especially at the edge, but we're still a long ways off from, from the possibility that a new economic model emerges from the edge to disrupt the cloud and the opportunities in the cloud remain strong. I mean, what other path is there? Really private cloud. It was kind of a bandaid until the on-prem guys could get their a as a service models rolled out, which is just now happening. The hybrid thing is real, but it's, you know, defensive for the incumbents until they can get their super cloud investments going. Super cloud implying, capturing value above the hyperscaler CapEx, you know, call it what you want multi what multi-cloud should have been, the metacloud, the Uber cloud, whatever you like. But there are opportunities to play offense and that's clearly happening in the cloud ecosystem with the likes of Snowflake, Mongo, Hashi Corp. >>Hammer Spaces is a startup in this area. Aviatrix, CrowdStrike, Zeke Scaler, Okta, many, many more. And even the projects we see coming out of enterprise players like Dell, like with Project Alpine and what Pure Storage is doing along with a number of other of the backup vendors. So Q4 should be really interesting, but the real story is the investments that that companies are making now to leverage the cloud for digital transformations will be paying off down the road. This is not 1999. We had, you know, May might have had some good ideas and admittedly at a lot of bad ones too, but you didn't have the infrastructure to service customers at a low enough cost like you do today. The cloud is that infrastructure and so far it's been transformative, but it's likely the best is yet to come. Okay, let's call this a rap. >>Many thanks to Alex Morrison who does production and manages the podcast. Also Can Schiffman is our newest edition to the Boston Studio. Kristin Martin and Cheryl Knight helped get the word out on social media and in our newsletters. And Rob Ho is our editor in chief over@siliconangle.com, who does some wonderful editing for us. Thank you. Remember, all these episodes are available as podcasts. Wherever you listen, just search breaking analysis podcast. I publish each week on wiki bond.com at silicon angle.com. And you can email me at David dot valante@siliconangle.com or DM me at Dante or comment on my LinkedIn posts. And please do checkout etr.ai. They got the best survey data in the enterprise tech business. This is Dave Valante for the Cube Insights powered by etr. Thanks for watching and we'll see you next time on breaking analysis.

Published Date : Oct 29 2022

SUMMARY :

From the Cube Studios in Palo Alto in Boston, bringing you data driven insights from Have you ever been driving on the highway and traffic suddenly slows way down and then after In the survey, the table, you see that table insert there that Now, at the time we didn't update our forecast, it doesn't make sense for us And now that all the big three ha with all the big four with the exception of Alibaba have announced So we're using that guidance, you know, for our Q4 estimates. Whereas during the pandemic, many companies were, you know, they perhaps were not as focused So they just, you know, spend more dial it up. So the slowdown isn't due to the repatriation or And you can expect the cloud And one other point on this topic, you know, my business friend Matt Baker from Dell often says it's not a And I would totally agree it's not a dollar for dollar swap if you can continue to So what you see in the table insert is that all three have net scores But the churn of all three, even gcp, which we reported, you know, And the data set, that's the x axis net score on the, That's a point that we've made, you know, a number of times they're able to make it through the cloud, the viability of on-prem hi, you know, hybrid clouds like HPE GreenLake and Dell's So it, you know, it looks like for HPE it could be an outlier. off from, from the possibility that a new economic model emerges from the edge to And even the projects we see coming out of enterprise And you can email me at David dot valante@siliconangle.com or DM me at Dante

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
Alex MorrisonPERSON

0.99+

MicrosoftORGANIZATION

0.99+

AWSORGANIZATION

0.99+

AmazonORGANIZATION

0.99+

AlibabaORGANIZATION

0.99+

IBMORGANIZATION

0.99+

AlphabetORGANIZATION

0.99+

GoogleORGANIZATION

0.99+

Rob HoPERSON

0.99+

Cheryl KnightPERSON

0.99+

Matt BakerPERSON

0.99+

October 14thDATE

0.99+

DellORGANIZATION

0.99+

OracleORGANIZATION

0.99+

Dave ValantePERSON

0.99+

OctoberDATE

0.99+

$3 billionQUANTITY

0.99+

Sarah WongPERSON

0.99+

Palo AltoLOCATION

0.99+

42%QUANTITY

0.99+

32%QUANTITY

0.99+

FridayDATE

0.99+

1999DATE

0.99+

40%QUANTITY

0.99+

SnowflakeORGANIZATION

0.99+

5%QUANTITY

0.99+

six yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

3 billionQUANTITY

0.99+

2022DATE

0.99+

MongoORGANIZATION

0.99+

last quarterDATE

0.99+

67%QUANTITY

0.99+

Martin Martin KasaPERSON

0.99+

Kristin MartinPERSON

0.99+

AviatrixORGANIZATION

0.99+

JulyDATE

0.99+

CrowdStrikeORGANIZATION

0.99+

58%QUANTITY

0.99+

four yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

OktaORGANIZATION

0.99+

second columnQUANTITY

0.99+

Zeke ScalerORGANIZATION

0.99+

2021DATE

0.99+

last quarterDATE

0.99+

each weekQUANTITY

0.99+

over@siliconangle.comOTHER

0.99+

Dave AntePERSON

0.99+

Project AlpineORGANIZATION

0.99+

Wiki BondORGANIZATION

0.99+

mid fortiesDATE

0.99+

Hashi Corp.ORGANIZATION

0.99+

oneQUANTITY

0.99+

mid-NovemberDATE

0.99+

todayDATE

0.99+

eachQUANTITY

0.99+

AzureORGANIZATION

0.99+

about $4 billionQUANTITY

0.98+

Platform9, Cloud Native at Scale


 

>>Everyone, welcome to the cube here in Palo Alto, California for a special presentation on Cloud native at scale, enabling super cloud modern applications with Platform nine. I'm John Furry, your host of The Cube. We've got a great lineup of three interviews we're streaming today. Mattor Makki, who's the co-founder and VP of Product of Platform nine. She's gonna go into detail around Arlon, the open source products, and also the value of what this means for infrastructure as code and for cloud native at scale. Bickley the chief architect of Platform nine Cube alumni. Going back to the OpenStack days. He's gonna go into why Arlon, why this infrastructure as code implication, what it means for customers and the implications in the open source community and where that value is. Really great wide ranging conversation there. And of course, Vascar, Gort, the CEO of Platform nine, is gonna talk with me about his views on Super Cloud and why Platform nine has a scalable solutions to bring cloud native at scale. So enjoy the program, see you soon. Hello and welcome to the cube here in Palo Alto, California for a special program on cloud native at scale, enabling next generation cloud or super cloud for modern application cloud native developers. I'm John Forry, host of the Cube. Pleasure to have here me Makowski, co-founder and VP of product at Platform nine. Thanks for coming in today for this Cloudnative at scale conversation. >>Thank you for having >>Me. So Cloudnative at scale, something that we're talking about because we're seeing the, the next level of mainstream success of containers Kubernetes and cloud native develop, basically DevOps in the C I C D pipeline. It's changing the landscape of infrastructure as code, it's accelerating the value proposition and the super cloud as we call it, has been getting a lot of traction because this next generation cloud is looking a lot different, but kind of the same as the first generation. What's your view on Super cloud as it fits to cloud native as scales up? >>Yeah, you know, I think what's interesting, and I think the reason why Super Cloud is a really good and a really fit term for this, and I think, I know my CEO was chatting with you as well, and he was mentioning this as well, but I think there needs to be a different term than just multi-cloud or cloud. And the reason is because as cloud native and cloud deployments have scaled, I think we've reached a point now where instead of having the traditional data center style model, where you have a few large distributors of infrastructure and workload at a few locations, I think the model is kind of flipped around, right? Where you have a large number of micro sites. These micro sites could be your public cloud deployment, your private on-prem infrastructure deployments, or it could be your edge environment, right? And every single enterprise, every single industry is moving in that direction. And so you gotta rougher that with a terminology that, that, that indicates the scale and complexity of it. And so I think super cloud is a, is an appropriate term for >>That. So you brought a couple things I want to dig into. You mentioned Edge Notes. We're seeing not only edge nodes being the next kind of area of innovation, mainly because it's just popping up everywhere. And that's just the beginning. Wouldn't even know what's around the corner. You got buildings, you got iot, o ot, and it kind of coming together, but you also got this idea of regions, global infrastructures, big part of it. I just saw some news around cloud flare shutting down a site here, there's policies being made at scale. These new challenges there. Can you share because you can have edge. So hybrid cloud is a winning formula. Everybody knows that it's a steady state. Yeah. But across multiple clouds brings in this new un engineered area, yet it hasn't been done yet. Spanning clouds. People say they're doing it, but you start to see the toe in the water, it's happening, it's gonna happen. It's only gonna get accelerated with the edge and beyond globally. So I have to ask you, what is the technical challenges in doing this? Because it's something business consequences as well, but there are technical challenge. Can you share your view on what the technical challenges are for the super cloud across multiple edges and >>Regions? Yeah, absolutely. So I think, you know, in in the context of this, the, this, this term of super cloud, I think it's sometimes easier to visualize things in terms of two access, right? I think on one end you can think of the scale in terms of just pure number of nodes that you have, deploy number of clusters in the Kubernetes space. And then on the other access you would have your distribution factor, right? Which is, do you have these tens of thousands of nodes in one site or do you have them distributed across tens of thousands of sites with one node at each site? Right? And if you have just one flavor of this, there is enough complexity, but potentially manageable. But when you are expanding on both these access, you really get to a point where that skill really needs some well thought out, well-structured solutions to address it, right? A combination of homegrown tooling along with your, you know, favorite distribution of Kubernetes is not a strategy that can help you in this environment. It may help you when you have one of this or when you, when you scale, is not at the level. >>Can you scope the complexity? Because I mean, I hear a lot of moving parts going on there, the technology's also getting better. We we're seeing cloud native become successful. There's a lot to configure, there's a lot to install. Can you scope the scale of the problem? Because we're talking about at scale Yep. Challenges here. >>Yeah, absolutely. And I think, you know, I I like to call it, you know, the, the, the problem that the scale creates, you know, there's various problems, but I think one, one problem, one way to think about it is, is, you know, it works on my cluster problem, right? So, you know, I come from engineering background and there's a, you know, there's a famous saying between engineers and QA and the support folks, right? Which is, it works on my laptop, which is I tested this change, everything was fantastic, it worked flawlessly on my machine, on production, It's not working. The exact same problem now happens and these distributed environments, but at massive scale, right? Which is that, you know, developers test their applications, et cetera within the sanctity of their sandbox environments. But once you expose that change in the wild world of your production deployment, right? >>And the production deployment could be going at the radio cell tower at the edge location where a cluster is running there, or it could be sending, you know, these applications and having them run at my customer's site where they might not have configured that cluster exactly the same way as I configured it, or they configured the cluster, right? But maybe they didn't deploy the security policies or they didn't deploy the other infrastructure plugins that my app relies on all of these various factors at their own layer of complexity. And there really isn't a simple way to solve that today. And that is just, you know, one example of an issue that happens. I think another, you know, whole new ball game of issues come in the context of security, right? Because when you are deploying applications at scale in a distributed manner, you gotta make sure someone's job is on the line to ensure that the right security policies are enforced regardless of that scale factor. So I think that's another example of problems that occur. >>Okay. So I have to ask about scale because there are a lot of multiple steps involved when you see the success cloud native, you know, you see some, you know, some experimentation. They set up a cluster, say it's containers and Kubernetes, and then you say, Okay, we got this, we can configure it. And then they do it again and again, they call it day two. Some people call it day one, day two operation, whatever you call it. Once you get past the first initial thing, then you gotta scale it. Then you're seeing security breaches, you're seeing configuration errors. This seems to be where the hotpot is. And when companies transition from, I got this to, Oh no, it's harder than I thought at scale. Can you share your reaction to that and how you see this playing out? >>Yeah, so, you know, I think it's interesting. There's multiple problems that occur when, you know, the, the two factors of scale is we talked about start expanding. I think one of them is what I like to call the, you know, it, it works fine on my cluster problem, which is back in, when I was a developer, we used to call this, it works on my laptop problem, which is, you know, you have your perfectly written code that is operating just fine on your machine, your sandbox environment. But the moment it runs production, it comes back with p zeros and POS from support teams, et cetera. And those issues can be really difficult to try us, right? And so in the Kubernetes environment, this problem kind of multi folds, it goes, you know, escalates to a higher degree because yeah, you have your sandbox developer environments, they have their clusters and things work perfectly fine in those clusters because these clusters are typically handcrafted or a combination of some scripting and handcrafting. >>And so as you give that change to then run at your production edge location, like say you radio sell tower site, or you hand it over to a customer to run it on their cluster, they might not have not have configured that cluster exactly how you did it, or they might not have configured some of the infrastructure plugins. And so the things don't work. And when things don't work, triaging them becomes like ishly hard, right? It's just one of the examples of the problem. Another whole bucket of issues is security, which is, is you have these distributed clusters at scale, you gotta ensure someone's job is on the line to make sure that these security policies are configured properly. >>So this is a huge problem. I love that comment. That's not not happening on my system. It's the classic, you know, debugging mentality. Yeah. But at scale it's hard to do that with error prone. I can see that being a problem. And you guys have a solution you're launching, Can you share what our lawn is, this new product, What is it all about? Talk about this new introduction. >>Yeah, absolutely. I'm very, very excited. You know, it's one of the projects that we've been working on for some time now because we are very passionate about this problem and just solving problems at scale in on-prem or at in the cloud or at edge environments. And what arwan is, it's an open source project and it is a tool, it's a Kubernetes native tool for complete end to end management of not just your clusters, but your clusters. All of the infrastructure that goes within and along the sites of those clusters, security policies, your middleware plugins, and finally your applications. So what alarm lets you do in a nutshell is in a declarative way, it lets you handle the configuration and management of all of these components in at scale. >>So what's the elevator pitch simply put for what this solves in, in terms of the chaos you guys are reigning in. What's the, what's the bumper sticker? Yeah, >>What would it do? There's a perfect analogy that I love to reference in this context, which is think of your assembly line, you know, in a traditional, let's say, you know, an auto manufacturing factory or et cetera, and the level of efficiency at scale that that assembly line brings, right online. And if you look at the logo we've designed, it's this funny little robot. And it's because when we think of online, we, we think of these enterprise large scale environments, you know, sprawling at scale creating chaos because there isn't necessarily a well thought through, well structured solution that's similar to an assembly line, which is taking each components, you know, addressing them, manufacturing, processing them in a standardized way, then handing to the next stage. But again, it gets, you know, processed in a standardized way. And that's what Arlon really does. That's like the I pitch. If you have problems of scale of managing your infrastructure, you know, that is distributed. Arlon brings the assembly line level of efficiency and consistency >>For those. So keeping it smooth, the assembly on things are flowing. C C I CD pipelining. Exactly. So that's what you're trying to simplify that ops piece for the developer. I mean, it's not really ops, it's their ops, it's coding. >>Yeah. Not just developer, the ops, the operations folks as well, right? Because developers, you know, there is, the developers are responsible for one picture of that layer, which is my apps, and then maybe that middleware of application that they interface with, but then they hand it over to someone else who's then responsible to ensure that these apps are secure properly, that they are logging, logs are being collected properly, monitoring and observability integrated. And so it solves problems for both those >>Teams. Yeah. It's DevOps. So the DevOps is the cloud native developer. The OP teams have to kind of set policies. Is that where the declarative piece comes in? Is that why that's important? >>Absolutely. Yeah. And, and, and, and you know, Kubernetes really in introduced or elevated this declarative management, right? Because, you know, c communities clusters are Yeah. Or your, yeah, you know, specifications of components that go in Kubernetes are defined in a declarative way. And Kubernetes always keeps that state consistent with your defined state. But when you go outside of that world of a single cluster, and when you actually talk about defining the clusters or defining everything that's around it, there really isn't a solution that does that today. And so online addresses that problem at the heart of it, and it does that using existing open source well known solutions. >>Ed, do I wanna get into the benefits? What's in it for me as the customer developer? But I want to finish this out real quick and get your thoughts. You mentioned open source. Why open source? What's the, what's the current state of the product? You run the product group over at platform nine, is it open source? And you guys have a product that's commercial? Can you explain the open source dynamic? And first of all, why open source? Yeah. And what is the consumption? I mean, open source is great, People want open source, they can download it, look up the code, but maybe wanna buy the commercial. So I'm assuming you have that thought through, can you share open source and commercial relationship? >>Yeah, I think, you know, starting with why open source? I think it's, you know, we as a company, we have, you know, one of the things that's absolutely critical to us is that we take mainstream open source technologies components and then we, you know, make them available to our customers at scale through either a SaaS model on from model, right? But, so as we are a company or startup or a company that benefits, you know, in a massive way by this open source economy, it's only right, I think in my mind that we do our part of the duty, right? And contribute back to the community that feeds us. And so, you know, we have always held that strongly as one of our principles. And we have, you know, created and built independent products starting all the way with fi, which was a serverless product, you know, that we had built to various other, you know, examples that I can give. But that's one of the main reasons why opensource and also opensource because we want the community to really firsthand engage with us on this problem, which is very difficult to achieve if your product is behind a wall, you know, behind, behind a block box. >>Well, and that's, that's what the developers want too. I mean, what we're seeing in reporting with Super Cloud is the new model of consumption is I wanna look at the code and see what's in there. That's right. And then also, if I want to use it, I, I'll do it. Great. That's open source, that's the value. But then at the end of the day, if I wanna move fast, that's when people buy in. So it's a new kind of freemium, I guess, business model. I guess that's the way that, Well, but that's, that's the benefit. Open source. This is why standards and open source is growing so fast. You have that confluence of, you know, a way for helpers to try before they buy, but also actually kind of date the application, if you will. We, you know, Adrian Karo uses the dating me metaphor, you know, Hey, you know, I wanna check it out first before I get married. Right? And that's what open source, So this is the new, this is how people are selling. This is not just open source, this is how companies are selling. >>Absolutely. Yeah. Yeah. You know, I think, and you know, two things. I think one is just, you know, this, this, this cloud native space is so vast that if you, if you're building a close flow solution, sometimes there's also a risk that it may not apply to every single enterprises use cases. And so having it open source gives them an opportunity to extend it, expand it, to make it proper to their use case if they choose to do so, right? But at the same time, what's also critical to us is we are able to provide a supported version of it with an SLA that we, you know, that's backed by us, a SAS hosted version of it as well, for those customers who choose to go that route, you know, once they have used the open source version and loved it and want to take it at scale and in production and need, need, need a partner to collaborate with, who can, you know, support them for that production >>Environment. I have to ask you now, let's get into what's in it for the customer. I'm a customer, why should I be enthused about Arlo? What's in it for me? You know? Cause if I'm not enthused about it, I'm not gonna be confident and it's gonna be hard for me to get behind this. Can you share your enthusiastic view of, you know, why I should be enthused about Arlo customer? >>Yeah, absolutely. And so, and there's multiple, you know, enterprises that we talk to, many of them, you know, our customers, where this is a very kind of typical story that you hear, which is we have, you know, a Kubernetes distribution. It could be on premise, it could be public clouds, native es, and then we have our C I CD pipelines that are automating the deployment of applications, et cetera. And then there's this gray zone. And the gray zone is well before you can you, your CS CD pipelines can deploy the apps. Somebody needs to do all of their groundwork of, you know, defining those clusters and yeah. You know, properly configuring them. And as these things, these things start by being done hand grown. And then as the, as you scale, what typically enterprises would do today is they will have their home homegrown DIY solutions for this. >>I mean, the number of folks that I talk to that have built Terra from automation, and then, you know, some of those key developers leave. So it's a typical open source or typical, you know, DIY challenge. And the reason that they're writing it themselves is not because they want to. I mean, of course technology is always interesting to everybody, but it's because they can't find a solution that's out there that perfectly fits the problem. And so that's that pitch. I think Spico would be delighted. The folks that we've talked, you know, spoken with, have been absolutely excited and have, you know, shared that this is a major challenge we have today because we have, you know, few hundreds of clusters on s Amazon and we wanna scale them to few thousands, but we don't think we are ready to do that. And this will give us >>Stability. Yeah, I think people are scared, not sc I won't say scare, that's a bad word. Maybe I should say that they feel nervous because, you know, at scale small mistakes can become large mistakes. This is something that is concerning to enterprises. And, and I think this is gonna come up at co con this year where enterprises are gonna say, Okay, I need to see SLAs. I wanna see track record, I wanna see other companies that have used it. Yeah. How would you answer that question to, or, or challenge, you know, Hey, I love this, but is there any guarantees? Is there any, what's the SLAs? I'm an enterprise, I got tight, you know, I love the open source trying to free fast and loose, but I need hardened code. >>Yeah, absolutely. So, so two parts to that, right? One is Arlan leverages existing open source components, products that are extremely popular. Two specifically. One is Lon uses Argo cd, which is probably one of the highest rated and used CD open source tools that's out there, right? It's created by folks that are as part of Intuit team now, you know, really brilliant team. And it's used at scale across enterprises. That's one. Second is arlon also makes use of cluster api capi, which is a ES sub-component, right? For lifecycle management of clusters. So there is enough of, you know, community users, et cetera, around these two products, right? Or, or, or open source projects that will find Arlan to be right up in their alley because they're already comfortable, familiar with algo cd. Now Arlan just extends the scope of what Algo CD can do. And so that's one. And then the second part is going back to a point of the comfort. And that's where, you know, Platform nine has a role to play, which is when you are ready to deploy Alon at scale, because you've been, you know, playing with it in your DEF test environments, you're happy with what you get with it, then Platform nine will stand behind it and provide that sla. >>And what's been the reaction from customers you've talked to Platform nine customers with, with, that are familiar with, with Argo and then Arlo? What's been some of the feedback? >>Yeah, I, I, I think the feedback's been fantastic. I mean, I can give you examples of customers where, you know, initially, you know, when you are, when you're telling them about your entire portfolio of solutions, it might not strike a card right away. But then we start talking about Arlan and, and we talk about the fact that it uses Argo CD and they start opening up, they say, We have standardized on Argo and we have built these components, homegrown, we would be very interested. Can we co-develop? Does it support these use cases? So we've had that kind of validation. We've had validation all the way at the beginning of our line before we even wrote a single line of code saying this is something we plan on doing. And the customer said, If you had it today, I would've purchased it. So it's been really great validation. >>All right. So next question is, what is the solution to the customer? If I asked you, Look it, I have, I'm so busy, my team's overworked. I got a skills gap. I don't need another project that's, I'm so tied up right now and I'm just chasing my tail. How does Platform nine help me? >>Yeah, absolutely. So I think, you know, one of the core tenets of Platform nine has always been that we try to bring that public cloud like simplicity by hosting, you know, this in a lot of such similar tools in a SaaS hosted manner for our customers, right? So our goal behind doing that is taking away or trying to take away all of that complexity from customer's hands and offloading it to our hands, right? And giving them that full white glove treatment as we call it. And so from a customer's perspective, one, something like arlon will integrate with what they have so they don't have to rip and replace anything. In fact, it will, even in the next versions, it may even discover your clusters that you have today and, you know, give you an inventory and that, >>So customers have clusters that are growing, that's a sign correct call you guys. >>Absolutely. Either they're, they have massive large clusters, right? That they wanna split into smaller clusters, but they're not comfortable doing that today, or they've done that already on say, public cloud or otherwise. And now they have management challenges. So >>Especially operationalizing the clusters, whether they want to kind of reset everything and remove things around and reconfigure Yeah. And or scale out. >>That's right. Exactly. >>And you provide that layer of policy. >>Absolutely. >>Yes. That's the key value >>Here. That's right. >>So policy based configuration for cluster scale up >>Profile and policy based declarative configuration and life cycle management for clusters. >>If I asked you how this enables Super club, what would you say to that? >>I think this is one of the key ingredients to super cloud, right? If you think about a super cloud environment, there's at least few key ingredients that that come to my mind that are really critical. Like they are, you know, life saving ingredients at that scale. One is having a really good strategy for managing that scale, you know, in a, going back to assembly line in a very consistent, predictable way so that our lot solves then you, you need to compliment that with the right kind of observability and monitoring tools at scale, right? Because ultimately issues are gonna happen and you're gonna have to figure out, you know, how to solve them fast. And alon by the way, also helps in that direction, but you also need observability tools. And then especially if you're running it on the public cloud, you need some cost management tools. In my mind, these three things are like the most necessary ingredients to make Super Cloud successful. And, you know, alarm flows >>In one. Okay, so now the next level is, Okay, that makes sense. There's under the covers kind of speak under the hood. Yeah. How does that impact the app developers and the cloud native modern application workflows? Because the impact to me, seems the apps are gonna be impacted. Are they gonna be faster, stronger? I mean, what's the impact if you do all those things, as you mentioned, what's the impact of the apps? >>Yeah, the impact is that your apps are more likely to operate in production the way you expect them to, because the right checks and balances have gone through, and any discrepancies have been identified prior to those apps, prior to your customer running into them, right? Because developers run into this challenge to their, where there's a split responsibility, right? I'm responsible for my code, I'm responsible for some of these other plugins, but I don't own the stack end to end. I have to rely on my ops counterpart to do their part, right? And so this really gives them, you know, the right tooling for >>That. So this is actually a great kind of relevant point, you know, as cloud becomes more scalable, you're starting to see this fragmentation gone of the days of the full stack developer to the more specialized role. But this is a key point, and I have to ask you because if this Arlo solution takes place, as you say, and the apps are gonna be stupid, there's designed to do, the question is, what did, does the current pain look like of the apps breaking? What does the signals to the customer Yeah. That they should be calling you guys up into implementing Arlo, Argo, and, and, and on all the other goodness to automate, What are some of the signals? Is it downtime? Is it, is it failed apps, Is it latency? What are some of the things that Yeah, absolutely would be in indications of things are effed up a little bit. >>Yeah. More frequent down times, down times that are, that take longer to triage. And so you are, you know, the, you know, your mean times on resolution, et cetera, are escalating or growing larger, right? Like we have environments of customers where they, they have a number of folks on in the field that have to take these apps and run them at customer sites. And that's one of our partners. And they're extremely interested in this because the, the rate of failures they're encountering for this, you know, the field when they're running these apps on site, because the field is automating their clusters that are running on sites using their own script. So these are the kinds of challenges, and those are the pain points, which is, you know, if you're looking to reduce your, your meantime to resolution, if you're looking to reduce the number of failures that occur on your production site, that's one. And second, if you are looking to manage these at scale environments with a relatively small, focused, nimble ops team, which has an immediate impact on your, So those are, those are the >>Signals. This is the cloud native at scale situation, the innovation going on. Final thought is your reaction to the idea that if the world goes digital, which it is, and the confluence of physical and digital coming together, and cloud continues to do its thing, the company becomes the application, not where it used to be supporting the business, you know, the back office and the IIA terminals and some PCs and handhelds. Now if technology's running, the business is the business. Yeah. The company's the application. Yeah. So it can't be down. So there's a lot of pressure on, on CSOs and CIOs now and see, and boards is saying, how is technology driving the top line revenue? That's the number one conversation. Yeah. Do you see that same thing? >>Yeah. It's interesting. I think there's multiple pressures at the CXO CIO level, right? One is that there needs to be that visibility and clarity and guarantee almost that, you know, that the, the technology that's, you know, that's gonna drive your top line is gonna drive that in a consistent, reliable, predictable manner. And then second, there is the constant pressure to do that while always lowering your costs of doing it, right? Especially when you're talking about, let's say retailers or those kinds of large scale vendors, they many times make money by lowering the amount that they spend on, you know, providing those goods to their end customers. So I think those, both those factors kind of come into play and the solution to all of them is usually in a very structured strategy around automation. >>Final question. What does cloudnative at scale look like to you? If all the things happen the way we want 'em to happen, The magic wand, the magic dust, what does it look like? >>What that looks like to me is a CIO sipping at his desk on coffee production is running absolutely smooth. And his, he's running that at a nimble, nimble team size of at the most, a handful of folks that are just looking after things with things. So just >>Taking care of, and the CIO doesn't exist. There's no CSO there at the beach. >>Yeah. >>Thank you for coming on, sharing the cloud native at scale here on the cube. Thank you for your time. >>Fantastic. Thanks for having >>Me. Okay. I'm John Fur here for special program presentation, special programming cloud native at scale, enabling super cloud modern applications with Platform nine. Thanks for watching. Welcome back everyone to the special presentation of cloud native at scale, the cube and platform nine special presentation going in and digging into the next generation super cloud infrastructure as code and the future of application development. We're here at Bickley, who's the chief architect and co-founder of Platform nine b. Great to see you Cube alumni. We, we met at an OpenStack event in about eight years ago, or well later, earlier when opens Stack was going. Great to see you and great to see congratulations on the success of platform nine. >>Thank you very much. >>Yeah. You guys have been at this for a while and this is really the, the, the year we're seeing the, the crossover of Kubernetes because of what happens with containers. Everyone now was realized, and you've seen what Docker's doing with the new docker, the open source Docker now just a success Exactly. Of containerization, right? And now the Kubernetes layer that we've been working on for years is coming, bearing fruit. This is huge. >>Exactly. Yes. >>And so as infrastructure's code comes in, we talked to Bacar talking about Super Cloud, I met her about, you know, the new Arlon, our R lawn you guys just launched, the infrastructure's code is going to another level. And then it's always been DevOps infrastructure is code. That's been the ethos that's been like from day one, developers just code. Then you saw the rise of serverless and you see now multi-cloud or on the horizon, connect the dots for us. What is the state of infrastructures code today? >>So I think, I think I'm, I'm glad you mentioned it, everybody or most people know about infrastructures code. But with Kubernetes, I think that project has evolved at the concept even further. And these dates, it's infrastructure as configuration, right? So, which is an evolution of infrastructure as code. So instead of telling the system, here's how I want my infrastructure by telling it, you know, do step A, B, C, and D instead with Kubernetes, you can describe your desired state declaratively using things called manifest resources. And then the system kind of magically figures it out and tries to converge the state towards the one that you specify. So I think it's, it's a even better version of infrastructures code. >>Yeah, yeah. And, and that really means it's developer just accessing resources. Okay. Not declaring, Okay, give me some compute, stand me up some, turn the lights on, turn 'em off, turn 'em on. That's kind of where we see this going. And I like the configuration piece. Some people say composability, I mean now with open source, so popular, you don't have to have to write a lot of code. It's code being developed. And so it's into integration, it's configuration. These are areas that we're starting to see computer science principles around automation, machine learning, assisting open source. Cuz you got a lot of code that's right in hearing software, supply chain issues. So infrastructure as code has to factor in these new, new dynamics. Can you share your opinion on these new dynamics of, as open source grows, the glue layers, the configurations, the integration, what are the core issues? >>I think one of the major core issues is with all that power comes complexity, right? So, you know, despite its expressive power systems like Kubernetes and declarative APIs let you express a lot of complicated and complex stacks, right? But you're dealing with hundreds if not thousands of these yamo files or resources. And so I think, you know, the emergence of systems and layers to help you manage that complexity is becoming a key challenge and opportunity in, in this space that, >>That's, I wrote a LinkedIn post today was comments about, you know, hey, enterprise is the new breed, the trend of SaaS companies moving our consumer comp consumer-like thinking into the enterprise has been happening for a long time, but now more than ever, you're seeing it the old way used to be solve complexity with more complexity and then lock the customer in. Now with open source, it's speed, simplification and integration, right? These are the new dynamic power dynamics for developers. Yeah. So as companies are starting to now deploy and look at Kubernetes, what are the things that need to be in place? Because you have some, I won't say technical debt, but maybe some shortcuts, some scripts here that make it look like infrastructure is code. People have done some things to simulate or or make infrastructure as code happen. Yes. But to do it at scale Yes. Is harder. What's your take on this? What's your >>View? It's hard because there's a per proliferation of methods, tools, technologies. So for example, today it's very common for DevOps and platform engineering tools, I mean, sorry, teams to have to deploy a large number of Kubernetes clusters, but then apply the applications and configurations on top of those clusters. And they're using a wide range of tools to do this, right? For example, maybe Ansible or Terraform or bash scripts to bring up the infrastructure and then the clusters. And then they may use a different set of tools such as Argo CD or other tools to apply configurations and applications on top of the clusters. So you have this sprawl of tools. You, you also have this sprawl of configurations and files because the more objects you're dealing with, the more resources you have to manage. And there's a risk of drift that people call that where, you know, you think you have things under control, but some people from various teams will make changes here and there and then before the end of the day systems break and you have no idea of tracking them. So I think there's real need to kind of unify, simplify, and try to solve these problems using a smaller, more unified set of tools and methodologies. And that's something that we try to do with this new project. Arlon. >>Yeah. So, so we're gonna get into Arlan in a second. I wanna get into the why Arlon. You guys announced that at our GoCon, which was put on here in Silicon Valley at the, at the by intu. They had their own little day over there at their headquarters. But before we get there, Vascar, your CEO came on and he talked about Super Cloud at our inaugural event. What's your definition of super cloud? If you had to kind of explain that to someone at a cocktail party or someone in the industry technical, how would you look at the super cloud trend that's emerging? It's become a thing. What's your, what would be your contribution to that definition or the narrative? >>Well, it's, it's, it's funny because I've actually heard of the term for the first time today, speaking to you earlier today. But I think based on what you said, I I already get kind of some of the, the gist and the, the main concepts. It seems like super cloud, the way I interpret that is, you know, clouds and infrastructure, programmable infrastructure, all of those things are becoming commodity in a way. And everyone's got their own flavor, but there's a real opportunity for people to solve real business problems by perhaps trying to abstract away, you know, all of those various implementations and then building better abstractions that are perhaps business or application specific to help companies and businesses solve real business problems. >>Yeah, I remember that's a great, great definition. I remember, not to date myself, but back in the old days, you know, IBM had a proprietary network operating system, so to deck for the mini computer vendors, deck net and SNA respectively. But T C P I P came out of the osi, the open systems interconnect and remember, ethernet beat token ring out. So not to get all nerdy for all the young kids out there, look, just look up token ring, you'll see, you've probably never heard of it. It's IBM's, you know, connection for the internet at the, the layer too is Amazon, the ethernet, right? So if T C P I P could be the Kubernetes and the container abstraction that made the industry completely change at that point in history. So at every major inflection point where there's been serious industry change and wealth creation and business value, there's been an abstraction Yes. Somewhere. Yes. What's your reaction to that? >>I think this is, I think a saying that's been heard many times in this industry and, and I forgot who originated it, but I think the saying goes like, there's no problem that can't be solved with another layer of indirection, right? And we've seen this over and over and over again where Amazon and its peers have inserted this layer that has simplified, you know, computing and, and infrastructure management. And I believe this trend is going to continue, right? The next set of problems are going to be solved with these insertions of additional abstraction layers. I think that that's really a, yeah, it's gonna continue. >>It's interesting. I just really wrote another post today on LinkedIn called the Silicon Wars AMD Stock is down arm has been on rise, we've remember pointing for many years now, that arm's gonna be hugely, it has become true. If you look at the success of the infrastructure as a service layer across the clouds, Azure, aws, Amazon's clearly way ahead of everybody. The stuff that they're doing with the silicon and the physics and the, the atoms, the pro, you know, this is where the innovation, they're going so deep and so strong at ISAs, the more that they get that gets come on, they have more performance. So if you're an app developer, wouldn't you want the best performance and you'd wanna have the best abstraction layer that gives you the most ability to do infrastructures, code or infrastructure for configuration, for provisioning, for managing services. And you're seeing that today with service MeSHs, a lot of action going on in the service mesh area in, in this community of co con, which will be a covering. So that brings up the whole what's next? You guys just announced our lawn at ar GoCon, which came out of Intuit. We've had Maria Teel at our super cloud event, She's a cto, you know, they're all in the cloud. So they contributed that project. Where did Arlon come from? What was the origination? What's the purpose? Why our lawn, why this announcement? Yeah, >>So the, the inception of the project, this was the result of us realizing that problem that we spoke about earlier, which is complexity, right? With all of this, these clouds, these infrastructure, all the variations around and you know, compute storage networks and the proliferation of tools we talked about the Ansibles and Terraforms and Kubernetes itself, you can think of that as another tool, right? We saw a need to solve that complexity problem, and especially for people and users who use Kubernetes at scale. So when you have, you know, hundreds of clusters, thousands of applications, thousands of users spread out over many, many locations, there, there needs to be a system that helps simplify that management, right? So that means fewer tools, more expressive ways of describing the state that you want and more consistency. And, and that's why, you know, we built AR lawn and we built it recognizing that many of these problems or sub problems have already been solved. So Arlon doesn't try to reinvent the wheel, it instead rests on the shoulders of several giants, right? So for example, Kubernetes is one building block, GI ops, and Argo CD is another one, which provides a very structured way of applying configuration. And then we have projects like cluster API and cross plane, which provide APIs for describing infrastructure. So arlon takes all of those building blocks and builds a thin layer, which gives users a very expressive way of defining configuration and desired state. So that's, that's kind of the inception of, And >>What's the benefit of that? What does that give the, what does that give the developer, the user, in this case, >>The developers, the, the platform engineer, team members, the DevOps engineers, they get a a ways to provision not just infrastructure and clusters, but also applications and configurations. They get a way, a system for provisioning, configuring, deploying, and doing life cycle management in a, in a much simpler way. Okay. Especially as I said, if you're dealing with a large number of applications. >>So it's like an operating fabric, if you will. Yes. For them. Okay, so let's get into what that means for up above and below the, the, this abstraction or thin layer below the infrastructure. We talked a lot about what's going on below that. Yeah. Above our workloads at the end of the day, and I talk to CXOs and IT folks that, that are now DevOps engineers. They care about the workloads and they want the infrastructure's code to work. They wanna spend their time getting in the weeds, figuring out what happened when someone made a push that that happened or something happened. They need observability and they need to, to know that it's working. That's right. And here's my workloads running effectively. So how do you guys look at the workload side of it? Cuz now you have multiple workloads on these fabric, right? >>So workloads, so Kubernetes has defined kind of a standard way to describe workloads and you can, you know, tell Kubernetes, I want to run this container this particular way, or you can use other projects that are in the Kubernetes cloud native ecosystem, like K native, where you can express your application in more at a higher level, right? But what's also happening is in addition to the workloads, DevOps and platform engineering teams, they need to very often deploy the applications with the clusters themselves. Clusters are becoming this commodity. It's, it's becoming this host for the application and it kind of comes bundled with it. In many cases it is like an appliance, right? So DevOps teams have to provision clusters at a really incredible rate and they need to tear them down. Clusters are becoming more, >>It's coming like an EC two instance, spin up a cluster. We've heard people used words like that. That's >>Right. And before arlon you kind of had to do all of that using a different set of tools as, as I explained. So with AR loan you can kind of express everything together. You can say I want a cluster with a health monitoring stack and a logging stack and this ingress controller and I want these applications and these security policies. You can describe all of that using something we call the profile. And then you can stamp out your app, your applications and your clusters and manage them in a very, So >>It's essentially standard, like creates a mechanism. Exactly. Standardized, declarative kind of configurations. And it's like a playbook, just deploy it. Now what there is between say a script like I'm, I have scripts, I can just automate scripts >>Or yes, this is where that declarative API and infrastructure as configuration comes in, right? Because scripts, yes you can automate scripts, but the order in which they run matters, right? They can break, things can break in the middle and, and sometimes you need to debug them. Whereas the declarative way is much more expressive and powerful. You just tell the system what you want and then the system kind of figures it out. And there are these things are controllers which will in the background reconcile all the state to converge towards your desire. It's a much more powerful, expressive and reliable way of getting things done. >>So infrastructure as configuration is built kind of on, it's a super set of infrastructures code because it's >>An evolution. >>You need edge's code, but then you can configure the code by just saying do it. You basically declaring saying Go, go do that. That's right. Okay, so, alright, so cloud native at scale, take me through your vision of what that means. Someone says, Hey, what does cloud native at scale mean? What's success look like? How does it roll out in the future as you, not future next couple years. I mean people are now starting to figure out, okay, it's not as easy as it sounds. Kubernetes has value. We're gonna hear this year at CubeCon a lot of this, what does cloud native at scale >>Mean? Yeah, there are different interpretations, but if you ask me, when people think of scale, they think of a large number of deployments, right? Geographies, many, you know, supporting thousands or tens or millions of, of users there, there's that aspect to scale. There's also an equally important a aspect of scale, which is also something that we try to address with Arran. And that is just complexity for the people operating this or configuring this, right? So in order to describe that desired state, and in order to perform things like maybe upgrades or updates on a very large scale, you want the humans behind that to be able to express and direct the system to do that in, in relatively simple terms, right? And so we want the tools and the abstractions and the mechanisms available to the user to be as powerful but as simple as possible. So there's, I think there's gonna be a number and there have been a number of CNCF and cloud native projects that are trying to attack that complexity problem as well. And Arlon kind of falls in in that >>Category. Okay, so I'll put you on the spot rogue, that CubeCon coming up and now this'll be shipping this segment series out before. What do you expect to see at this year? It's the big story this year. What's the, what's the most important thing happening? Is it in the open source community and also within a lot of the, the people jockeying for leadership. I know there's a lot of projects and still there's some white space in the overall systems map about the different areas get run time and there's ability in all these different areas. What's the, where's the action? Where, where's the smoke? Where's the fire? Where's the piece? Where's the tension? >>Yeah, so I think one thing that has been happening over the past couple of coupon and I expect to continue and, and that is the, the word on the street is Kubernetes is getting boring, right? Which is good, right? >>Boring means simple. >>Well, well >>Maybe, >>Yeah, >>Invisible, >>No drama, right? So, so the, the rate of change of the Kubernetes features and, and all that has slowed but in, in a, in a positive way. But there's still a general sentiment and feeling that there's just too much stuff. If you look at a stack necessary for hosting applications based on Kubernetes, there are just still too many moving parts, too many components, right? Too much complexity. I go, I keep going back to the complexity problem. So I expect Cube Con and all the vendors and the players and the startups and the people there to continue to focus on that complexity problem and introduce further simplifications to, to the stack. >>Yeah. Vic, you've had an storied career VMware over decades with them within 12 years with 14 years or something like that. Big number co-founder here a platform. I you's been around for a while at this game, man. We talked about OpenStack, that project we interviewed at one of their events. So OpenStack was the beginning of that, this new revolution. I remember the early days it was, it wasn't supposed to be an alternative to Amazon, but it was a way to do more cloud cloud native. I think we had a Cloud Aati team at that time. We would joke we, you know, about, about the dream. It's happening now, now at Platform nine. You guys have been doing this for a while. What's the, what are you most excited about as the chief architect? What did you guys double down on? What did you guys pivot from or two, did you do any pivots? Did you extend out certain areas? Cuz you guys are in a good position right now, a lot of DNA in Cloud native. What are you most excited about and what does Platform Nine bring to the table for customers and for people in the industry watching this? >>Yeah, so I think our mission really hasn't changed over the years, right? It's been always about taking complex open source software because open source software, it's powerful. It solves new problems, you know, every year and you have new things coming out all the time, right? Opens Stack was an example and then Kubernetes took the world by storm. But there's always that complexity of, you know, just configuring it, deploying it, running it, operating it. And our mission has always been that we will take all that complexity and just make it, you know, easy for users to consume regardless of the technology, right? So the successor to Kubernetes, you know, I don't have a crystal ball, but you know, you have some indications that people are coming up of new and simpler ways of running applications. There are many projects around there who knows what's coming next year or the year after that. But platform will a, platform nine will be there and we will, you know, take the innovations from the the community. We will contribute our own innovations and make all of those things very consumable to customers. >>Simpler, faster, cheaper. Exactly. Always a good business model technically to make that happen. Yes. Yeah, I think the, the reigning in the chaos is key, you know, Now we have now visibility into the scale. Final question before we depart this segment. What is at scale, how many clusters do you see that would be a watermark for an at scale conversation around an enterprise? Is it workloads we're looking at or, or clusters? How would you, Yeah, how would you describe that? When people try to squint through and evaluate what's a scale, what's the at scale kind of threshold? >>Yeah. And, and the number of clusters doesn't tell the whole story because clusters can be small in terms of the number of nodes or they can be large. But roughly speaking when we say, you know, large scale cluster deployments, we're talking about maybe hundreds, two thousands. >>Yeah. And final final question, what's the role of the hyperscalers? You got AWS continuing to do well, but they got their core ias, they got a PAs, they're not too too much putting a SaaS out there. They have some SaaS apps, but mostly it's the ecosystem. They have marketplaces doing, doing over $2 billion billions of transactions a year and, and it's just like, just sitting there. It hasn't really, they're now innovating on it, but that's gonna change ecosystems. What's the role the cloud play in the cloud need of its scale? >>The, the hyper squares? >>Yeah, yeah. A's Azure Google, >>You mean from a business perspective, they're, they have their own interests that, you know, that they're, they will keep catering to, they, they will continue to find ways to lock their users into their ecosystem of services and, and APIs. So I don't think that's gonna change, right? They're just gonna keep well, >>They got great performance. I mean, from a, from a hardware standpoint, yes. That's gonna be key, >>Right? Yes. I think the, the move from X 86 being the dominant way and platform to run workloads is changing, right? That, that, that, that, and I think the, the hyper skaters really want to be in the game in terms of, you know, the, the new risk and arm ecosystems, the platforms. >>Yeah. Not joking aside, Paul Morritz, when he was the CEO of VMware, when he took over once said, I remember our first year doing the cube. Oh the cloud is one big distributed computer. It's, it's hardware and you got software and you got middleware and he kinda over, well he's kind of tongue in cheek, but really you're talking about large compute and sets of services that is essentially a distributed computer. Yes, >>Exactly. >>It's, we're back in the same game. Thank you for coming on the segment. Appreciate your time. This is cloud native at scale special presentation with Platform nine. Really unpacking super cloud Arlon open source and how to run large scale applications on the cloud, cloud native develop for developers. And John Furrier with the cube. Thanks for Washington. We'll stay tuned for another great segment coming right up. Hey, welcome back everyone to Super Cloud 22. I'm John Fur, host of the Cuba here all day talking about the future of cloud. Where's it all going? Making it super multi-cloud is around the corner and public cloud is winning. Got the private cloud on premise and Edge. Got a great guest here, Vascar Gorde, CEO of Platform nine, just on the panel on Kubernetes. An enabler blocker. Welcome back. Great to have you on. >>Good to see you >>Again. So Kubernetes is a blocker enabler by, with a question mark I put on on there. Panel was really to discuss the role of Kubernetes. Now great conversation operations is impacted. What's just thing about what you guys are doing at Platform nine? Is your role there as CEO and the company's position, kind of like the world spun into the direction of Platform nine while you're at the helm, right? >>Absolutely. In fact, things are moving very well and since they came to us, it was an insight to call ourselves the platform company eight years ago, right? So absolutely whether you are doing it in public clouds or private clouds, you know, the application world is moving very fast in trying to become digital and cloud native. There are many options for you to run the infrastructure. The biggest blocking factor now is having a unified platform. And that's what where we come into >>Patrick, we were talking before we came on stage here about your background and we were kind of talking about the glory days in 2000, 2001 when the first ASPs application service providers came out. Kind of a SaaS vibe, but that was kind of all kind of cloud-like >>It wasn't, >>And web services started then too. So you saw that whole growth. Now, fast forward 20 years later, 22 years later, where we are now, when you look back then to here and all the different cycles, >>In fact, you know, as we were talking offline, I was in one of those ASPs in the year 2000 where it was a novel concept of saying we are providing a software and a capability as a service, right? You sign up and start using it. I think a lot has changed since then. The tooling, the tools, the technology has really skyrocketed. The app development environment has really taken off exceptionally well. There are many, many choices of infrastructure now, right? So I think things are in a way the same but also extremely different. But more importantly now for any company, regardless of size, to be a digital native, to become a digital company is extremely mission critical. It's no longer a nice to have everybody's in the journey somewhere. >>Everyone is going digital transformation here. Even on a so-called downturn recession that's upcoming inflations sea year. It's interesting. This is the first downturn, the history of the world where the hyperscale clouds have been pumping on all cylinders as an economic input. And if you look at the tech trends, GDPs down, but not tech. Nope. Cause pandemic showed everyone digital transformation is here and more spend and more growth is coming even in, in tech. So this is a unique factor which proves that that digital transformation's happening and company, every company will need a super cloud. >>Everyone, every company, regardless of size, regardless of location, has to become modernize their infrastructure. And modernizing infrastructure is not just some, you know, new servers and new application tools. It's your approach, how you're serving your customers, how you're bringing agility in your organization. I think that is becoming a necessity for every enterprise to survive. >>I wanna get your thoughts on Super Cloud because one of the things Dave Alon and I want to do with Super Cloud and calling it that was we, I, I personally, and I know Dave as well, he can, I'll speak from, he can speak for himself. We didn't like multi-cloud. I mean not because Amazon said don't call things multi-cloud, it just didn't feel right. I mean everyone has multiple clouds by default. If you're running productivity software, you have Azure and Office 365. But it wasn't truly distributed. It wasn't truly decentralized, it wasn't truly cloud enabled. It didn't, it felt like they're not ready for a market yet. Yet public clouds booming on premise. Private cloud and Edge is much more on, you know, more, More dynamic, more unreal. >>Yeah. I think the reason why we think Super cloud is a better term than multi-cloud. Multi-cloud are more than one cloud, but they're disconnected. Okay, you have a productivity cloud, you have a Salesforce cloud, you may have, everyone has an internal cloud, right? So, but they're not connected. So you can say, okay, it's more than one cloud. So it's, you know, multi-cloud. But super cloud is where you are actually trying to look at this holistically. Whether it is on-prem, whether it is public, whether it's at the edge, it's a store at the branch. You are looking at this as one unit. And that's where we see the term super cloud is more applicable because what are the qualities that you require if you're in a super cloud, right? You need choice of infrastructure, you need, but at the same time you need a single pan or a single platform for you to build your innovations on, regardless of which cloud you're doing it on, right? So I think Super Cloud is actually a more tightly integrated orchestrated management philosophy we think. >>So let's get into some of the super cloud type trends that we've been reporting on. Again, the purpose of this event is as a pilot to get the conversations flowing with, with the influencers like yourselves who are running companies and building products and the builders, Amazon and Azure are doing extremely well. Google's coming up in third Cloudworks in public cloud. We see the use cases on premises use cases. Kubernetes has been an interesting phenomenon because it's become from the developer side a little bit, but a lot of ops people love Kubernetes. It's really more of an ops thing. You mentioned OpenStack earlier. Kubernetes kind of came out of that open stack. We need an orchestration. And then containers had a good shot with, with Docker. They re pivoted the company. Now they're all in an open source. So you got containers booming and Kubernetes as a new layer there. >>What's, >>What's the take on that? What does that really mean? Is that a new defacto enabler? It >>Is here. It's for here for sure. Every enterprise somewhere in the journey is going on. And you know, most companies are, 70 plus percent of them have 1, 2, 3 container based, Kubernetes based applications now being rolled out. So it's very much here. It is in production at scale by many customers. And it, the beauty of it is yes, open source, but the biggest gating factor is the skill set. And that's where we have a phenomenal engineering team, right? So it's, it's one thing to buy a tool and >>Just be clear, you're a managed service for Kubernetes. >>We provide, provide a software platform for cloud acceleration as a service and it can run anywhere. It can run in public private. We have customers who do it in truly multi-cloud environments. It runs on the edge, it runs at this in stores about thousands of stores in a retailer. So we provide that and also for specific segments where data sovereignty and data residency are key regulatory reasons. We also un on-prem as an air gap version. Can >>You give an example on how you guys are deploying your platform to enable a super cloud experience for your customer? Right. >>So I'll give you two different examples. One is a very large networking company, public networking company. They have hundreds of products, hundreds of r and d teams that are building different, different products. And if you look at few years back, each one was doing it on a different platforms, but they really needed to bring the agility. And they worked with us now over three years where we are their build test dev pro platform where all their products are built on, right? And it has dramatically increased their agility to release new products. Number two, it actually is a light out operation. In fact, the customer says like, like the Maytag service person, cuz we provide it as a service and it barely takes one or two people to maintain it for them. >>So it's kinda like an SRE vibe. One person managing a >>Large 4,000 engineers building infrastructure >>On their tools, >>Whatever they want on their tools. They're using whatever app development tools they use, but they use our platform. What >>Benefits are they seeing? Are they seeing speed? >>Speed, definitely. Okay. Definitely they're speeding. Speed uniformity because now they're building able to build, so their customers who are using product A and product B are seeing a similar set of tools that are being used. >>So a big problem that's coming outta this super cloud event that we're, we're seeing and we heard it all here, ops and security teams. Cause they're kind of part of one thing, but option security specifically need to catch up speed wise. Are you delivering that value to ops and security? Right? >>So we, we work with ops and security teams and infrastructure teams and we layer on top of that. We have like a platform team. If you think about it, depending on where you have data centers, where you have infrastructure, you have multiple teams, okay, but you need a unified platform. Who's your buyer? Our buyer is usually, you know, the product divisions of companies that are looking at or the CTO would be a buyer for us functionally cio definitely. So it it's, it's somewhere in the DevOps to infrastructure. But the ideal one we are beginning to see now many large corporations are really looking at it as a platform and saying we have a platform group on which any app can be developed and it is run on any infrastructure. So the platform engineering teams. So >>You working two sides to that coin. You've got the dev side and then >>And then infrastructure >>Side. >>Okay. Another customer that I give an example, which I would say is kind of the edge of the store. So they have thousands of stores. Retail, retail, you know food retailer, right? They have thousands of stores that are on the globe, 50,000, 60,000. And they really want to enhance the customer experience that happens when you either order the product or go into the store and pick up your product or buy or browse or sit there. They have applications that were written in the nineties and then they have very modern AIML applications today. They want something that will not have to send an IT person to install a rack in the store or they can't move everything to the cloud because the store operations has to be local. The menu changes based on it's classic edge. It's classic edge, yeah. Right? They can't send it people to go install rack access servers then they can't sell software people to go install the software and any change you wanna put through that, you know, truck roll. So they've been working with us where all they do is they ship, depending on the size of the store, one or two or three little servers with instructions that >>You, you say little servers like how big one like a box, like a small little box, >>Right? And all the person in the store has to do like what you and I do at home and we get a, you know, a router is connect the power, connect the internet and turn the switch on. And from there we pick it up. >>Yep. >>We provide the operating system, everything and then the applications are put on it. And so that dramatically brings the velocity for them. They manage thousands of >>Them. True plug and play >>Two, plug and play thousands of stores. They manage it centrally. We do it for them, right? So, so that's another example where on the edge then we have some customers who have both a large private presence and one of the public clouds. Okay. But they want to have the same platform layer of orchestration and management that they can use regardless of the locations. >>So you guys got some success. Congratulations. Got some traction there. It's awesome. The question I want to ask you is that's come up is what is truly cloud native? Cuz there's lift and shift of the cloud >>That's not cloud native. >>Then there's cloud native. Cloud native seems to be the driver for the super cloud. How do you talk to customers? How do you explain when someone says what's cloud native, what isn't cloud native? >>Right. Look, I think first of all, the best place to look at what is the definition and what are the attributes and characteristics of what is truly a cloud native, is CNC foundation. And I think it's very well documented, very well. >>Tucan, of course Detroit's >>Coming so, so it's already there, right? So we follow that very closely, right? I think just lifting and shifting your 20 year old application onto a data center somewhere is not cloud native. Okay? You can't put to cloud, not you have to rewrite and redevelop your application in business logic using modern tools. Hopefully more open source and, and I think that's what Cloudnative is and we are seeing a lot of our customers in that journey. Now everybody wants to be cloudnative, but it's not that easy, okay? Because it's, I think it's first of all, skill set is very important. Uniformity of tools that there's so many tools there. Thousands and thousands of tools you could spend your time figuring out which tool to use. Okay? So I think the complexity is there, but the business benefits of agility and uniformity and customer experience are truly being done. >>And I'll give you an example, I don't know how clear native they are, right? And they're not a customer of ours, but you order pizzas, you do, right? If you just watch the pizza industry, how dominoes actually increase their share and mind share and wallet share was not because they were making better pizzas or not, I don't know anything about that, but the whole experience of how you order, how you watch what's happening, how it's delivered. There were a pioneer in it. To me, those are the kinds of customer experiences that cloud native can provide. >>Being agility and having that flow to the application changes what the expectations >>Are >>For the customer. Customer, >>The customer's expectations change, right? Once you get used to a better customer experience, you learn. >>That's to wrap it up. I wanna just get your perspective again. One of the benefits of chatting with you here and having you part of the Super Cloud 22 is you've seen many cycles, you have a lot of insights. I want to ask you, given your career where you've been and what you've done and now let's CEO platform nine, how would you compare what's happening now with other inflection points in the industry? And you've been, again, you've been an entrepreneur, you sold your company to Oracle, you've been seeing the big companies, you've seen the different waves. What's going on right now put into context this moment in time around Super Cloud. >>Sure. I think as you said, a lot of battles. CARSs being been in an asb, being in a real time software company, being in large enterprise software houses and a transformation. I've been on the app side, I did the infrastructure right and then tried to build our own platforms. I've gone through all of this myself with lot of lessons learned in there. I think this is an event which is happening now for companies to go through to become cloud native and digitalize. If I were to look back and look at some parallels of the tsunami that's going on is a couple of paddles come to me. One is, think of it, which was forced to honors like y2k. Everybody around the world had to have a plan, a strategy, and an execution for y2k. I would say the next big thing was e-commerce. I think e-commerce has been pervasive right across all industries. >>And disruptive. >>And disruptive, extremely disruptive. If you did not adapt and adapt and accelerate your e-commerce initiative, you were, it was an existence question. Yeah. I think we are at that pivotal moment now in companies trying to become digital and cloudnative. You know, that is what I see >>Happening there. I think that that e-commerce is interesting and I think just to riff with you on that is that it's disrupting and refactoring the business models. I think that is something that's coming out of this is that it's not just completely changing the gain, it's just changing how you operate, >>How you think and how you operate. See, if you think about the early days of e-commerce, just putting up a shopping cart that made you an e-commerce or e retailer or an e e e customer, right? Or so. I think it's the same thing now is I think this is a fundamental shift on how you're thinking about your business. How are you gonna operate? How are you gonna service your customers? I think it requires that just lift and shift is not gonna work. >>Nascar, thank you for coming on, spending the time to come in and share with our community and being part of Super Cloud 22. We really appreciate, we're gonna keep this open. We're gonna keep this conversation going even after the event, to open up and look at the structural changes happening now and continue to look at it in the open in the community. And we're gonna keep this going for, for a long, long time as we get answers to the problems that customers are looking for with cloud cloud computing. I'm Sean Fur with Super Cloud 22 in the Cube. Thanks for watching. >>Thank you. Thank you. >>Hello and welcome back. This is the end of our program, our special presentation with Platform nine on cloud native at scale, enabling the super cloud. We're continuing the theme here. You heard the interviews Super Cloud and its challenges, new opportunities around solutions around like Platform nine and others with Arlon. This is really about the edge situations on the internet and managing the edge multiple regions, avoiding vendor lock in. This is what this new super cloud is all about. The business consequences we heard and and the wide ranging conversations around what it means for open source and the complexity problem all being solved. I hope you enjoyed this program. There's a lot of moving pieces and things to configure with cloud native install, all making it easier for you here with Super Cloud and of course Platform nine contributing to that. Thank you for watching.

Published Date : Oct 19 2022

SUMMARY :

So enjoy the program, see you soon. a lot different, but kind of the same as the first generation. And so you gotta rougher and it kind of coming together, but you also got this idea of regions, So I think, you know, in in the context of this, the, Can you scope the scale of the problem? And I think, you know, I I like to call it, you know, And that is just, you know, one example of an issue that happens. you know, you see some, you know, some experimentation. which is, you know, you have your perfectly written code that is operating just fine on your And so as you give that change to then run at your production edge location, And you guys have a solution you're launching, Can you share what So what alarm lets you do in a in terms of the chaos you guys are reigning in. And if you look at the logo we've designed, So keeping it smooth, the assembly on things are flowing. Because developers, you know, there is, the developers are responsible for one picture of So the DevOps is the cloud native developer. And so online addresses that problem at the heart of it, and it does that using So I'm assuming you have that thought through, can you share open source and commercial relationship? products starting all the way with fi, which was a serverless product, you know, that we had built to buy, but also actually kind of date the application, if you will. I think one is just, you know, this, this, this cloud native space is so vast I have to ask you now, let's get into what's in it for the customer. And so, and there's multiple, you know, enterprises that we talk to, shared that this is a major challenge we have today because we have, you know, I'm an enterprise, I got tight, you know, I love the open source trying to It's created by folks that are as part of Intuit team now, you know, And the customer said, If you had it today, I would've purchased it. So next question is, what is the solution to the customer? So I think, you know, one of the core tenets of Platform nine has always been that And now they have management challenges. Especially operationalizing the clusters, whether they want to kind of reset everything and remove things around and reconfigure That's right. And alon by the way, also helps in that direction, but you also need I mean, what's the impact if you do all those things, as you mentioned, what's the impact of the apps? And so this really gives them, you know, the right tooling for But this is a key point, and I have to ask you because if this Arlo solution of challenges, and those are the pain points, which is, you know, if you're looking to reduce your, not where it used to be supporting the business, you know, that, you know, that the, the technology that's, you know, that's gonna drive your top line is If all the things happen the way we want 'em to happen, The magic wand, the magic dust, he's running that at a nimble, nimble team size of at the most, Taking care of, and the CIO doesn't exist. Thank you for your time. Thanks for having of Platform nine b. Great to see you Cube alumni. And now the Kubernetes layer that we've been working on for years is Exactly. you know, the new Arlon, our R lawn you guys just launched, you know, do step A, B, C, and D instead with Kubernetes, I mean now with open source, so popular, you don't have to have to write a lot of code. you know, the emergence of systems and layers to help you manage that complexity is becoming That's, I wrote a LinkedIn post today was comments about, you know, hey, enterprise is the new breed, the trend of SaaS you know, you think you have things under control, but some people from various teams will make changes here in the industry technical, how would you look at the super cloud trend that's emerging? the way I interpret that is, you know, clouds and infrastructure, It's IBM's, you know, connection for the internet at the, this layer that has simplified, you know, computing and, the physics and the, the atoms, the pro, you know, this is where the innovation, all the variations around and you know, compute storage networks the DevOps engineers, they get a a ways to So how do you guys look at the workload side of it? like K native, where you can express your application in more at a higher level, It's coming like an EC two instance, spin up a cluster. And then you can stamp out your app, your applications and your clusters and manage them And it's like a playbook, just deploy it. You just tell the system what you want and then You need edge's code, but then you can configure the code by just saying do it. And that is just complexity for the people operating this or configuring this, What do you expect to see at this year? If you look at a stack necessary for hosting We would joke we, you know, about, about the dream. So the successor to Kubernetes, you know, I don't Yeah, I think the, the reigning in the chaos is key, you know, Now we have now visibility into But roughly speaking when we say, you know, They have some SaaS apps, but mostly it's the ecosystem. you know, that they're, they will keep catering to, they, they will continue to find I mean, from a, from a hardware standpoint, yes. terms of, you know, the, the new risk and arm ecosystems, It's, it's hardware and you got software and you got middleware and he kinda over, Great to have you on. What's just thing about what you guys are doing at Platform nine? clouds, you know, the application world is moving very fast in trying to Patrick, we were talking before we came on stage here about your background and we were kind of talking about the glory days So you saw that whole growth. In fact, you know, as we were talking offline, I was in one of those And if you look at the tech trends, GDPs down, but not tech. some, you know, new servers and new application tools. you know, more, More dynamic, more unreal. So it's, you know, multi-cloud. the purpose of this event is as a pilot to get the conversations flowing with, with the influencers like yourselves And you know, most companies are, 70 plus percent of them have 1, 2, 3 container It runs on the edge, You give an example on how you guys are deploying your platform to enable a super And if you look at few years back, each one was doing So it's kinda like an SRE vibe. Whatever they want on their tools. to build, so their customers who are using product A and product B are seeing a similar set Are you delivering that value to ops and security? Our buyer is usually, you know, the product divisions of companies You've got the dev side and then enhance the customer experience that happens when you either order the product or go into And all the person in the store has to do like And so that dramatically brings the velocity for them. of the public clouds. So you guys got some success. How do you explain when someone says what's cloud native, what isn't cloud native? is the definition and what are the attributes and characteristics of what is truly a cloud native, Thousands and thousands of tools you could spend your time figuring I don't know anything about that, but the whole experience of how you order, For the customer. Once you get used to a better customer experience, One of the benefits of chatting with you here and been on the app side, I did the infrastructure right and then tried to build our If you did not adapt and adapt and accelerate I think that that e-commerce is interesting and I think just to riff with you on that is that it's disrupting How are you gonna service your Nascar, thank you for coming on, spending the time to come in and share with our community and being part of Thank you. I hope you enjoyed this program.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
VascarPERSON

0.99+

Mattor MakkiPERSON

0.99+

DavePERSON

0.99+

AmazonORGANIZATION

0.99+

Paul MorritzPERSON

0.99+

Sean FurPERSON

0.99+

IBMORGANIZATION

0.99+

PatrickPERSON

0.99+

Vascar GordePERSON

0.99+

Adrian KaroPERSON

0.99+

John ForryPERSON

0.99+

John FurryPERSON

0.99+

John FurPERSON

0.99+

oneQUANTITY

0.99+

Silicon ValleyLOCATION

0.99+

50,000QUANTITY

0.99+

Dave AlonPERSON

0.99+

2000DATE

0.99+

Maria TeelPERSON

0.99+

14 yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

thousandsQUANTITY

0.99+

OracleORGANIZATION

0.99+

tensQUANTITY

0.99+

millionsQUANTITY

0.99+

GortPERSON

0.99+

AWSORGANIZATION

0.99+

twoQUANTITY

0.99+

NascarPERSON

0.99+

2001DATE

0.99+

Palo Alto, CaliforniaLOCATION

0.99+

OneQUANTITY

0.99+

4,000 engineersQUANTITY

0.99+

one siteQUANTITY

0.99+

TwoQUANTITY

0.99+

second partQUANTITY

0.99+

VMwareORGANIZATION

0.99+

two peopleQUANTITY

0.99+

ArlonORGANIZATION

0.99+

hundredsQUANTITY

0.99+

Office 365TITLE

0.99+

MakowskiPERSON

0.99+

GoogleORGANIZATION

0.99+

todayDATE

0.99+

ArloORGANIZATION

0.99+

two sidesQUANTITY

0.99+

John FurrierPERSON

0.99+

two partsQUANTITY

0.99+

LinkedInORGANIZATION

0.99+

bothQUANTITY

0.99+

next yearDATE

0.99+

first generationQUANTITY

0.99+

22 years laterDATE

0.99+

1QUANTITY

0.99+

first downturnQUANTITY

0.99+

Platform nineORGANIZATION

0.99+

one unitQUANTITY

0.99+

two thingsQUANTITY

0.99+

firstQUANTITY

0.98+

one flavorQUANTITY

0.98+

more than one cloudQUANTITY

0.98+

two thousandsQUANTITY

0.98+

One personQUANTITY

0.98+

BickleyPERSON

0.98+

BacarPERSON

0.98+

12 yearsQUANTITY

0.98+

first timeQUANTITY

0.98+

GoConEVENT

0.98+

each siteQUANTITY

0.98+

thousands of storesQUANTITY

0.98+

AzureTITLE

0.98+

20 years laterDATE

0.98+

Platform9, Cloud Native at Scale


 

>>Hello, welcome to the Cube here in Palo Alto, California for a special presentation on Cloud native at scale, enabling super cloud modern applications with Platform nine. I'm John Furr, your host of The Cube. We had a great lineup of three interviews we're streaming today. Meor Ma Makowski, who's the co-founder and VP of Product of Platform nine. She's gonna go into detail around Arlon, the open source products, and also the value of what this means for infrastructure as code and for cloud native at scale. Bickley the chief architect of Platform nine Cube alumni. Going back to the OpenStack days. He's gonna go into why Arlon, why this infrastructure as code implication, what it means for customers and the implications in the open source community and where that value is. Really great wide ranging conversation there. And of course, Vascar, Gort, the CEO of Platform nine, is gonna talk with me about his views on Super Cloud and why Platform nine has a scalable solutions to bring cloudnative at scale. So enjoy the program. See you soon. Hello everyone. Welcome to the cube here in Palo Alto, California for special program on cloud native at scale, enabling next generation cloud or super cloud for modern application cloud native developers. I'm John Furry, host of the Cube. A pleasure to have here, me Makoski, co-founder and VP of product at Platform nine. Thanks for coming in today for this Cloudnative at scale conversation. Thank >>You for having me. >>So Cloudnative at scale, something that we're talking about because we're seeing the, the next level of mainstream success of containers Kubernetes and cloud native develop, basically DevOps in the C I C D pipeline. It's changing the landscape of infrastructure as code, it's accelerating the value proposition and the super cloud as we call it, has been getting a lot of traction because this next generation cloud is looking a lot different, but kind of the same as the first generation. What's your view on super cloud as it fits to cloud native as scales up? >>Yeah, you know, I think what's interesting, and I think the reason why Super Cloud is a really good, in a really fit term for this, and I think, I know my CEO was chatting with you as well, and he was mentioning this as well, but I think there needs to be a different term than just multi-cloud or cloud. And the reason is because as cloud native and cloud deployments have scaled, I think we've reached a point now where instead of having the traditional data center style model where you have a few large distributions of infrastructure and workload at a few locations, I think the model is kind of flipped around, right? Where you have a large number of microsites, these microsites could be your public cloud deployment, your private on-prem infrastructure deployments, or it could be your edge environment, right? And every single enterprise, every single industry is moving in that direction. And so you gotta rougher that with a terminology that, that, that indicates the scale and complexity of it. And so I think supercloud is a, is an appropriate term for that. >>So you brought a couple of things I want to dig into. You mentioned edge nodes. We're seeing not only edge nodes being the next kind of area of innovation, mainly because it's just popping up everywhere. And that's just the beginning. Wouldn't even know what's around the corner. You got buildings, you got iot, ot, and IT kind of coming together, but you also got this idea of regions, global infras infrastructures, big part of it. I just saw some news around CloudFlare shutting down a site here. There's policies being made at scale, These new challenges there. Can you share because you can have edge. So hybrid cloud is a winning formula. Everybody knows that it's a steady state. Yeah. But across multiple clouds brings in this new un engineered area, yet it hasn't been done yet. Spanning clouds. People say they're doing it, but you start to see the toe in the water, it's happening, it's gonna happen. It's only gonna get accelerated with the edge and beyond globally. So I have to ask you, what is the technical challenges in doing this? Because there's something business consequences as well, but there are technical challenges. Can you share your view on what the technical challenges are for the super cloud or across multiple edges and regions? >>Yeah, absolutely. So I think, you know, in in the context of this, the, this, this term of super cloud, I think it's sometimes easier to visualize things in terms of two access, right? I think on one end you can think of the scale in terms of just pure number of nodes that you have deploy a number of clusters in the Kubernetes space. And then on the other axis you would have your distribution factor, right? Which is, do you have these tens of thousands of nodes in one site or do you have them distributed across tens of thousands of sites with one node at each site? Right? And if you have just one flavor of this, there is enough complexity, but potentially manageable. But when you are expanding on both these access, you really get to a point where that scale really needs some well thought out, well structured solutions to address it, right? A combination of homegrown tooling along with your, you know, favorite distribution of Kubernetes is not a strategy that can help you in this environment. It may help you when you have one of this or when you, when you scale, is not at the level. >>Can you scope the complexity? Because I mean, I hear a lot of moving parts going on there, the technology's also getting better. We we're seeing cloud native become successful. There's a lot to configure, there's a lot to install. Can you scope the scale of the problem? Because we're talking about at scale Yep. Challenges here. Yeah, >>Absolutely. And I think, you know, I I like to call it, you know, the, the, the problem that the scale creates, you know, there's various problems, but I think one, one problem, one way to think about it is, is, you know, it works on my cluster problem, right? So I, you know, I come from engineering background and there's a, you know, there's a famous saying between engineers and QA and the support folks, right? Which is, it works on my laptop, which is I tested this chain, everything was fantastic, it worked flawlessly on my machine, on production, It's not working. The exact same problem now happens and these distributed environments, but at massive scale, right? Which is that, you know, developers test their applications, et cetera within the sanctity of their sandbox environments. But once you expose that change in the wild world of your production deployment, right? >>And the production deployment could be going at the radio cell tower at the edge location where a cluster is running there, or it could be sending, you know, these applications and having them run at my customer site where they might not have configured that cluster exactly the same way as I configured it, or they configured the cluster, right? But maybe they didn't deploy the security policies, or they didn't deploy the other infrastructure plugins that my app relies on. All of these various factors are their own layer of complexity. And there really isn't a simple way to solve that today. And that is just, you know, one example of an issue that happens. I think another, you know, whole new ball game of issues come in the context of security, right? Because when you are deploying applications at scale in a distributed manner, you gotta make sure someone's job is on the line to ensure that the right security policies are enforced regardless of that scale factor. So I think that's another example of problems that occur. >>Okay. So I have to ask about scale, because there are a lot of multiple steps involved when you see the success of cloud native. You know, you see some, you know, some experimentation. They set up a cluster, say it's containers and Kubernetes, and then you say, Okay, we got this, we can figure it. And then they do it again and again, they call it day two. Some people call it day one, day two operation, whatever you call it. Once you get past the first initial thing, then you gotta scale it. Then you're seeing security breaches, you're seeing configuration errors. This seems to be where the hotspot is in when companies transition from, I got this to, Oh no, it's harder than I thought at scale. Can you share your reaction to that and how you see this playing out? >>Yeah, so, you know, I think it's interesting. There's multiple problems that occur when, you know, the two factors of scale, as we talked about, start expanding. I think one of them is what I like to call the, you know, it, it works fine on my cluster problem, which is back in, when I was a developer, we used to call this, it works on my laptop problem, which is, you know, you have your perfectly written code that is operating just fine on your machine, your sandbox environment. But the moment it runs production, it comes back with p zeros and pos from support teams, et cetera. And those issues can be really difficult to triage us, right? And so in the Kubernetes environment, this problem kind of multi folds, it goes, you know, escalates to a higher degree because you have your sandbox developer environments, they have their clusters and things work perfectly fine in those clusters because these clusters are typically handcrafted or a combination of some scripting and handcrafting. >>And so as you give that change to then run at your production edge location, like say your radio cell tower site, or you hand it over to a customer to run it on their cluster, they might not have not have configured that cluster exactly how you did, or they might not have configured some of the infrastructure plugins. And so the things don't work. And when things don't work, triaging them becomes nightmarishly hard, right? It's just one of the examples of the problem, another whole bucket of issues is security, which is, is you have these distributed clusters at scale, you gotta ensure someone's job is on the line to make sure that these security policies are configured properly. >>So this is a huge problem. I love that comment. That's not not happening on my system. It's the classic, you know, debugging mentality. Yeah. But at scale it's hard to do that with error prone. I can see that being a problem. And you guys have a solution you're launching. Can you share what Arlon is this new product? What is it all about? Talk about this new introduction. >>Yeah, absolutely. Very, very excited. You know, it's one of the projects that we've been working on for some time now because we are very passionate about this problem and just solving problems at scale in on-prem or at in the cloud or at edge environments. And what arlon is, it's an open source project, and it is a tool, it's a Kubernetes native tool for complete end to end management of not just your clusters, but your clusters. All of the infrastructure that goes within and along the site of those clusters, security policies, your middleware, plug-ins, and finally your applications. So what our LA you do in a nutshell is in a declarative way, it lets you handle the configuration and management of all of these components in at scale. >>So what's the elevator pitch simply put for what dissolves in, in terms of the chaos you guys are reigning in, what's the, what's the bumper sticker? Yeah, what >>Would it do? There's a perfect analogy that I love to reference in this context, which is think of your assembly line, you know, in a traditional, let's say, you know, an auto manufacturing factory or et cetera, and the level of efficiency at scale that that assembly line brings, right? Our line, and if you look at the logo we've designed, it's this funny little robot. And it's because when we think of online, we think of these enterprise large scale environments, you know, sprawling at scale, creating chaos because there isn't necessarily a well thought through, well structured solution that's similar to an assembly line, which is taking each component, you know, addressing them, manufacturing, processing them in a standardized way, then handing to the next stage. But again, it gets, you know, processed in a standardized way. And that's what arlon really does. That's like the deliver pitch. If you have problems of scale of managing your infrastructure, you know, that is distributed. Arlon brings the assembly line level of efficiency and consistency for >>Those. So keeping it smooth, the assembly on things are flowing. See c i CD pipe pipelining. Exactly. So that's what you're trying to simplify that ops piece for the developer. I mean, it's not really ops, it's their ops, it's coding. >>Yeah. Not just developer, the ops, the operations folks as well, right? Because developers, you know, there is, developers are responsible for one picture of that layer, which is my apps, and then maybe that middleware of applications that they interface with, but then they hand it over to someone else who's then responsible to ensure that these apps are secure properly, that they are logging, logs are being collected properly, monitoring and observability integrated. And so it solves problems for both >>Those teams. Yeah. It's DevOps. So the DevOps is the cloud needed developer's. That's right. The option teams have to kind of set policies. Is that where the declarative piece comes in? Is that why that's important? >>Absolutely. Yeah. And, and, and, and you know, ES really in introduced or elevated this declarative management, right? Because, you know, s clusters are Yeah. Or your, yeah, you know, specifications of components that go in Kubernetes are defined a declarative way, and Kubernetes always keeps that state consistent with your defined state. But when you go outside of that world of a single cluster, and when you actually talk about defining the clusters or defining everything that's around it, there really isn't a solution that does that today. And so Arlon addresses that problem at the heart of it, and it does that using existing open source well known solutions. >>And do I want to get into the benefits? What's in it for me as the customer developer? But I want to finish this out real quick and get your thoughts. You mentioned open source. Why open source? What's the, what's the current state of the product? You run the product group over at Platform nine, is it open source? And you guys have a product that's commercial? Can you explain the open source dynamic? And first of all, why open source? Yeah. And what is the consumption? I mean, open source is great, People want open source, they can download it, look up the code, but maybe wanna buy the commercial. So I'm assuming you have that thought through, can you share open source and commercial relationship? >>Yeah, I think, you know, starting with why open source? I think it's, you know, we as a company, we have, you know, one of the things that's absolutely critical to us is that we take mainstream open source technologies components and then we, you know, make them available to our customers at scale through either a SaaS model or on-prem model, right? But, so as we are a company or startup or a company that benefits, you know, in a massive way by this open source economy, it's only right, I think in my mind that we do our part of the duty, right? And contribute back to the community that feeds us. And so, you know, we have always held that strongly as one of our principles. And we have, you know, created and built independent products starting all the way with fision, which was a serverless product, you know, that we had built to various other, you know, examples that I can give. But that's one of the main reasons why opensource and also open source, because we want the community to really firsthand engage with us on this problem, which is very difficult to achieve if your product is behind a wall, you know, behind, behind a block box. >>Well, and that's, that's what the developers want too. And what we're seeing in reporting with Super Cloud is the new model of consumption is I wanna look at the code and see what's in there. That's right. And then also, if I want to use it, I'll do it. Great. That's open source, that's the value. But then at the end of the day, if I wanna move fast, that's when people buy in. So it's a new kind of freemium, I guess, business model. I guess that's the way that long. But that's, that's the benefit. Open source. This is why standards and open source is growing so fast. You have that confluence of, you know, a way for developers to try before they buy, but also actually kind of date the application, if you will. We, you know, Adrian Karo uses the dating met metaphor, you know, Hey, you know, I wanna check it out first before I get married. Right? And that's what open source, So this is the new, this is how people are selling. This is not just open source, this is how companies are selling. >>Absolutely. Yeah. Yeah. You know, I think, and you know, two things. I think one is just, you know, this, this, this cloud native space is so vast that if you, if you're building a close flow solution, sometimes there's also a risk that it may not apply to every single enterprises use cases. And so having it open source gives them an opportunity to extend it, expand it, to make it proper to their use case if they choose to do so, right? But at the same time, what's also critical to us is we are able to provide a supported version of it with an SLA that we, you know, that's backed by us, a SAS hosted version of it as well, for those customers who choose to go that route, you know, once they have used the open source version and loved it and want to take it at scale and in production and need, need, need a partner to collaborate with, who can, you know, support them for that production >>Environment. I have to ask you now, let's get into what's in it for the customer. I'm a customer. Yep. Why should I be enthused about Arla? What's in it for me? You know? Cause if I'm not enthused about it, I'm not gonna be confident and it's gonna be hard for me to get behind this. Can you share your enthusiastic view of, you know, why I should be enthused about Arlo? I'm a >>Customer. Yeah, absolutely. And so, and there's multiple, you know, enterprises that we talk to, many of them, you know, our customers, where this is a very kind of typical story that you hear, which is we have, you know, a Kubernetes distribution. It could be on premise, it could be public clouds, native Kubernetes, and then we have our C I C D pipelines that are automating the deployment of applications, et cetera. And then there's this gray zone. And the gray zone is well before you can you, your CS c D pipelines can deploy the apps. Somebody needs to do all of that groundwork of, you know, defining those clusters and yeah. You know, properly configuring them. And as these things, these things start by being done hand grown. And then as the, as you scale, what typically enterprises would do today is they will have their home homegrown DIY solutions for this. >>I mean, the number of folks that I talk to that have built Terra from automation, and then, you know, some of those key developers leave. So it's a typical open source or typical, you know, DIY challenge. And the reason that they're writing it themselves is not because they want to. I mean, of course technology is always interesting to everybody, but it's because they can't find a solution that's out there that perfectly fits the problem. And so that's that pitch. I think Ops FICO would be delighted. The folks that we've talk, you know, spoken with, have been absolutely excited and have, you know, shared that this is a major challenge we have today because we have, you know, few hundreds of clusters on ecos Amazon, and we wanna scale them to few thousands, but we don't think we are ready to do that. And this will give us the >>Ability to, Yeah, I think people are scared. Not sc I won't say scare, that's a bad word. Maybe I should say that they feel nervous because, you know, at scale small mistakes can become large mistakes. This is something that is concerning to enterprises. And, and I think this is gonna come up at co con this year where enterprises are gonna say, Okay, I need to see SLAs. I wanna see track record, I wanna see other companies that have used it. Yeah. How would you answer that question to, or, or challenge, you know, Hey, I love this, but is there any guarantees? Is there any, what's the SLAs? I'm an enterprise, I got tight, you know, I love the open source trying to free fast and loose, but I need hardened code. >>Yeah, absolutely. So, so two parts to that, right? One is Arlan leverages existing open source components, products that are extremely popular. Two specifically. One is Arlan uses Argo cd, which is probably one of the highest and used CD open source tools that's out there. Right's created by folks that are as part of into team now, you know, really brilliant team. And it's used at scale across enterprises. That's one. Second is Alon also makes use of Cluster api cappi, which is a Kubernetes sub-component, right? For lifecycle management of clusters. So there is enough of, you know, community users, et cetera, around these two products, right? Or, or, or open source projects that will find Arlan to be right up in their alley because they're already comfortable, familiar with Argo cd. Now Arlan just extends the scope of what City can do. And so that's one. And then the second part is going back to a point of the comfort. And that's where, you know, platform line has a role to play, which is when you are ready to deploy online at scale, because you've been, you know, playing with it in your DEF test environments, you're happy with what you get with it, then Platform nine will stand behind it and provide that >>Sla. And what's been the reaction from customers you've talked to Platform nine customers with, with that are familiar with, with Argo and then rlo? What's been some of the feedback? >>Yeah, I, I think the feedback's been fantastic. I mean, I can give you examples of customers where, you know, initially, you know, when you are, when you're telling them about your entire portfolio of solutions, it might not strike a card right away. But then we start talking about Arlan and, and we talk about the fact that it uses Argo adn, they start opening up, they say, We have standardized on Argo and we have built these components, homegrown, we would be very interested. Can we co-develop? Does it support these use cases? So we've had that kind of validation. We've had validation all the way at the beginning of our land before we even wrote a single line of code saying this is something we plan on doing. And the customer said, If you had it today, I would've purchased it. So it's been really great validation. >>All right. So next question is, what is the solution to the customer? If I asked you, Look it, I have, I'm so busy, my team's overworked. I got a skills gap. I don't need another project that's, I'm so tied up right now and I'm just chasing my tail. How does Platform nine help me? >>Yeah, absolutely. So I think, you know, one of the core tenets of Platform nine has always been been that we try to bring that public cloud like simplicity by hosting, you know, this in a lot of such similar tools in a SaaS hosted manner for our customers, right? So our goal behind doing that is taking away or trying to take away all of that complexity from customers' hands and offloading it to our hands, right? And giving them that full white glove treatment, as we call it. And so from a customer's perspective, one, something like arlon will integrate with what they have so they don't have to rip and replace anything. In fact, it will, even in the next versions, it may even discover your clusters that you have today and you know, give you an inventory. And that will, >>So if customers have clusters that are growing, that's a sign correct call you guys. >>Absolutely. Either they're, they have massive large clusters, right? That they wanna split into smaller clusters, but they're not comfortable doing that today, or they've done that already on say, public cloud or otherwise. And now they have management challenges. So >>Especially operationalizing the clusters, whether they want to kind of reset everything and remove things around and reconfigure Yep. And or scale out. >>That's right. Exactly. And >>You provide that layer of policy. >>Absolutely. >>Yes. That's the key value here. >>That's right. >>So policy based configuration for cluster scale up, >>Well profile and policy based declarative configuration and lifecycle management for clusters. >>If I asked you how this enables supercloud, what would you say to that? >>I think this is one of the key ingredients to super cloud, right? If you think about a super cloud environment, there's at least few key ingredients that that come to my mind that are really critical. Like they are, you know, life saving ingredients at that scale. One is having a really good strategy for managing that scale, you know, in a, going back to assembly line in a very consistent, predictable way so that our lot solves then you, you need to compliment that with the right kind of observability and monitoring tools at scale, right? Because ultimately issues are gonna happen and you're gonna have to figure out, you know, how to solve them fast. And arlon by the way, also helps in that direction, but you also need observability tools. And then especially if you're running it on the public cloud, you need some cost management tools. In my mind, these three things are like the most necessary ingredients to make Super Cloud successful. And you know, our alarm fills in >>One. Okay. So now the next level is, Okay, that makes sense. Is under the covers kind of speak under the hood. Yeah. How does that impact the app developers and the cloud native modern application workflows? Because the impact to me, seems the apps are gonna be impacted. Are they gonna be faster, stronger? I mean, what's the impact if you do all those things, as you mentioned, what's the impact of the apps? >>Yeah, the impact is that your apps are more likely to operate in production the way you expect them to, because the right checks and balances have gone through, and any discrepancies have been identified prior to those apps, prior to your customer running into them, right? Because developers run into this challenge to their, where there's a split responsibility, right? I'm responsible for my code, I'm responsible for some of these other plugins, but I don't own the stack end to end. I have to rely on my ops counterpart to do their part, right? And so this really gives them, you know, the right tooling for that. >>So this is actually a great kind of relevant point, you know, as cloud becomes more scalable, you're starting to see this fragmentation gone of the days of the full stack developer to the more specialized role. But this is a key point, and I have to ask you because if this RLO solution takes place, as you say, and the apps are gonna be stupid, they're designed to do, the question is, what did does the current pain look like of the apps breaking? What does the signals to the customer Yeah. That they should be calling you guys up into implementing Arlo, Argo and, and all the other goodness to automate? What are some of the signals? Is it downtime? Is it, is it failed apps, Is it latency? What are some of the things that Yeah, absolutely would be indications of things are effed up a little bit. Yeah. >>More frequent down times, down times that are, that take longer to triage. And so you are, you know, the, you know, your mean times on resolution, et cetera, are escalating or growing larger, right? Like we have environments of customers where they're, they have a number of folks on in the field that have to take these apps and run them at customer sites. And that's one of our partners. And they're extremely interested in this because they're the, the rate of failures they're encountering for this, you know, the field when they're running these apps on site, because the field is automating their clusters that are running on sites using their own script. So these are the kinds of challenges, and those are the pain points, which is, you know, if you're looking to reduce your meantime to resolution, if you're looking to reduce the number of failures that occur on your production site, that's one. And second, if you are looking to manage these at scale environments with a relatively small, focused, nimble ops team, which has an immediate impact on your budget. So those are, those are the signals. >>This is the cloud native at scale situation, the innovation going on. Final thought is your reaction to the idea that if the world goes digital, which it is, and the confluence of physical and digital coming together, and cloud continues to do its thing, the company becomes the application, not where it used to be supporting the business, you know, the back office and the maybe terminals and some PCs and handhelds. Now if technology's running, the business is the business. Yeah. Company's the application. Yeah. So it can't be down. So there's a lot of pressure on, on CSOs and CIOs now and boards is saying, How is technology driving the top line revenue? That's the number one conversation. Yep. Do you see that same thing? >>Yeah. It's interesting. I think there's multiple pressures at the CXO CIO level, right? One is that there needs to be that visibility and clarity and guarantee almost that, you know, that the, the technology that's, you know, that's gonna drive your top line is gonna drive that in a consistent, reliable, predictable manner. And then second, there is the constant pressure to do that while always lowering your costs of doing it, right? Especially when you're talking about, let's say retailers or those kinds of large scale vendors, they many times make money by lowering the amount that they spend on, you know, providing those goods to their end customers. So I think those, both those factors kind of come into play and the solution to all of them is usually in a very structured strategy around automation. >>Final question. What does cloudnative at scale look like to you? If all the things happen the way we want 'em to happen, The magic wand, the magic dust, what does it look like? >>What that looks like to me is a CIO sipping at his desk on coffee production is running absolutely smooth. And his, he's running that at a nimble, nimble team size of at the most, a handful of folks that are just looking after things, but things are >>Just taking care of the CIO doesn't exist. There's no ciso, they're at the beach. >>Yep. >>Thank you for coming on, sharing the cloud native at scale here on the cube. Thank you for your time. >>Fantastic. Thanks for >>Having me. Okay. I'm John Fur here for special program presentation, special programming cloud native at scale, enabling super cloud modern applications with Platform nine. Thanks for watching. Welcome back everyone to the special presentation of cloud native at scale, the cube and platform nine special presentation going in and digging into the next generation super cloud infrastructure as code and the future of application development. We're here with Bickley, who's the chief architect and co-founder of Platform nine Pick. Great to see you Cube alumni. We, we met at an OpenStack event in about eight years ago, or later, earlier when OpenStack was going. Great to see you and great to see congratulations on the success of platform nine. >>Thank you very much. >>Yeah. You guys have been at this for a while and this is really the, the, the year we're seeing the, the crossover of Kubernetes because of what happens with containers. Everyone now has realized, and you've seen what Docker's doing with the new docker, the open source Docker now just the success Exactly. Of containerization, right? And now the Kubernetes layer that we've been working on for years is coming, bearing fruit. This is huge. >>Exactly. Yes. >>And so as infrastructures code comes in, we talked to Bacar talking about Super Cloud, I met her about, you know, the new Arlon, our, our lawn, and you guys just launched the infrastructures code is going to another level, and then it's always been DevOps infrastructures code. That's been the ethos that's been like from day one, developers just code. Then you saw the rise of serverless and you see now multi-cloud or on the horizon, connect the dots for us. What is the state of infrastructure as code today? >>So I think, I think I'm, I'm glad you mentioned it, everybody or most people know about infrastructures code. But with Kubernetes, I think that project has evolved at the concept even further. And these dates, it's infrastructure is configuration, right? So, which is an evolution of infrastructure as code. So instead of telling the system, here's how I want my infrastructure by telling it, you know, do step A, B, C, and D instead with Kubernetes, you can describe your desired state declaratively using things called manifest resources. And then the system kind of magically figures it out and tries to converge the state towards the one that you specified. So I think it's, it's a even better version of infrastructures code. >>Yeah. And that really means it's developer just accessing resources. Okay. That declare, Okay, give me some compute, stand me up some, turn the lights on, turn 'em off, turn 'em on. That's kind of where we see this going. And I like the configuration piece. Some people say composability, I mean now with open source so popular, you don't have to have to write a lot of code, this code being developed. And so it's into integration, it's configuration. These are areas that we're starting to see computer science principles around automation, machine learning, assisting open source. Cuz you got a lot of code that's right in hearing software, supply chain issues. So infrastructure as code has to factor in these new dynamics. Can you share your opinion on these new dynamics of, as open source grows, the glue layers, the configurations, the integration, what are the core issues? >>I think one of the major core issues is with all that power comes complexity, right? So, you know, despite its expressive power systems like Kubernetes and declarative APIs let you express a lot of complicated and complex stacks, right? But you're dealing with hundreds if not thousands of these yamo files or resources. And so I think, you know, the emergence of systems and layers to help you manage that complexity is becoming a key challenge and opportunity in, in this space. >>That's, I wrote a LinkedIn post today was comments about, you know, hey, enterprise is a new breed. The trend of SaaS companies moving our consumer comp consumer-like thinking into the enterprise has been happening for a long time, but now more than ever, you're seeing it the old way used to be solve complexity with more complexity and then lock the customer in. Now with open source, it's speed, simplification and integration, right? These are the new dynamic power dynamics for developers. Yeah. So as companies are starting to now deploy and look at Kubernetes, what are the things that need to be in place? Because you have some, I won't say technical debt, but maybe some shortcuts, some scripts here that make it look like infrastructure is code. People have done some things to simulate or or make infrastructure as code happen. Yes. But to do it at scale Yes. Is harder. What's your take on this? What's your view? >>It's hard because there's a per proliferation of methods, tools, technologies. So for example, today it's very common for DevOps and platform engineering tools, I mean, sorry, teams to have to deploy a large number of Kubernetes clusters, but then apply the applications and configurations on top of those clusters. And they're using a wide range of tools to do this, right? For example, maybe Ansible or Terraform or bash scripts to bring up the infrastructure and then the clusters. And then they may use a different set of tools such as Argo CD or other tools to apply configurations and applications on top of the clusters. So you have this sprawl of tools. You, you also have this sprawl of configurations and files because the more objects you're dealing with, the more resources you have to manage. And there's a risk of drift that people call that where, you know, you think you have things under control, but some people from various teams will make changes here and there and then before the end of the day systems break and you have no idea of tracking them. So I think there's real need to kind of unify, simplify, and try to solve these problems using a smaller, more unified set of tools and methodologies. And that's something that we try to do with this new project. Arlon. >>Yeah. So, so we're gonna get into Arlan in a second. I wanna get into the why Arlon. You guys announced that at AR GoCon, which was put on here in Silicon Valley at the, at the community meeting by in two, they had their own little day over there at their headquarters. But before we get there, vascar, your CEO came on and he talked about Super Cloud at our in AAL event. What's your definition of super cloud? If you had to kind of explain that to someone at a cocktail party or someone in the industry technical, how would you look at the super cloud trend that's emerging? It's become a thing. What's your, what would be your contribution to that definition or the narrative? >>Well, it's, it's, it's funny because I've actually heard of the term for the first time today, speaking to you earlier today. But I think based on what you said, I I already get kind of some of the, the gist and the, the main concepts. It seems like super cloud, the way I interpret that is, you know, clouds and infrastructure, programmable infrastructure, all of those things are becoming commodity in a way. And everyone's got their own flavor, but there's a real opportunity for people to solve real business problems by perhaps trying to abstract away, you know, all of those various implementations and then building better abstractions that are perhaps business or applications specific to help companies and businesses solve real business problems. >>Yeah, I remember that's a great, great definition. I remember, not to date myself, but back in the old days, you know, IBM had a proprietary network operating system, so of deck for the mini computer vendors, deck net and SNA respectively. But T C P I P came out of the osi, the open systems interconnect and remember, ethernet beat token ring out. So not to get all nerdy for all the young kids out there, look, just look up token ring, you'll see, you've probably never heard of it. It's IBM's, you know, connection for the internet at the, the layer two is Amazon, the ethernet, right? So if T C P I P could be the Kubernetes and the container abstraction that made the industry completely change at that point in history. So at every major inflection point where there's been serious industry change and wealth creation and business value, there's been an abstraction Yes. Somewhere. Yes. What's your reaction to that? >>I think this is, I think a saying that's been heard many times in this industry and, and I forgot who originated it, but I think that the saying goes like, there's no problem that can't be solved with another layer of indirection, right? And we've seen this over and over and over again where Amazon and its peers have inserted this layer that has simplified, you know, computing and, and infrastructure management. And I believe this trend is going to continue, right? The next set of problems are going to be solved with these insertions of additional abstraction layers. I think that that's really a, yeah, it's gonna >>Continue. It's interesting. I just, when I wrote another post today on LinkedIn called the Silicon Wars AMD stock is down arm has been on a rise. We remember pointing for many years now that arm's gonna be hugely, it has become true. If you look at the success of the infrastructure as a service layer across the clouds, Azure, aws, Amazon's clearly way ahead of everybody. The stuff that they're doing with the silicon and the physics and the, the atoms, the pro, you know, this is where the innovation, they're going so deep and so strong at ISAs, the more that they get that gets come on, they have more performance. So if you're an app developer, wouldn't you want the best performance and you'd wanna have the best abstraction layer that gives you the most ability to do infrastructures, code or infrastructure for configuration, for provisioning, for managing services. And you're seeing that today with service MeSHs, a lot of action going on in the service mesh area in in this community of, of co con, which will be a covering. So that brings up the whole what's next? You guys just announced our lawn at Argo Con, which came out of Intuit. We've had Mariana Tessel at our super cloud event. She's the cto, you know, they're all in the cloud. So they contributed that project. Where did Arlon come from? What was the origination? What's the purpose? Why our lawn, why this announcement? >>Yeah, so the, the inception of the project, this was the result of us realizing that problem that we spoke about earlier, which is complexity, right? With all of this, these clouds, these infrastructure, all the variations around and, you know, compute storage networks and the proliferation of tools we talked about the Ansibles and Terraforms and Kubernetes itself. You can, you can think of that as another tool, right? We saw a need to solve that complexity problem, and especially for people and users who use Kubernetes at scale. So when you have, you know, hundreds of clusters, thousands of applications, thousands of users spread out over many, many locations, there, there needs to be a system that helps simplify that management, right? So that means fewer tools, more expressive ways of describing the state that you want and more consistency. And, and that's why, you know, we built our lawn and we built it recognizing that many of these problems or sub problems have already been solved. So Arlon doesn't try to reinvent the wheel, it instead rests on the shoulders of several giants, right? So for example, Kubernetes is one building block, GI ops, and Argo CD is another one, which provides a very structured way of applying configuration. And then we have projects like cluster API and cross plane, which provide APIs for describing infrastructure. So arlon takes all of those building blocks and builds a thin layer, which gives users a very expressive way of defining configuration and desired state. So that's, that's kind of the inception of, And >>What's the benefit of that? What does that give the, what does that give the developer, the user, in this case, >>The developers, the, the platform engineer, team members, the DevOps engineers, they get a a ways to provision not just infrastructure and clusters, but also applications and configurations. They get a way, a system for provisioning, configuring, deploying, and doing life cycle management in a, in a much simpler way. Okay. Especially as I said, if you're dealing with a large number of applications. >>So it's like an operating fabric, if you will. Yes. For them. Okay, so let's get into what that means for up above and below the the, this abstraction or thin layer below as the infrastructure. We talked a lot about what's going on below that. Yeah. Above our workloads. At the end of the day, you know, I talk to CXOs and IT folks that are now DevOps engineers. They care about the workloads and they want the infrastructures code to work. They wanna spend their time getting in the weeds, figuring out what happened when someone made a push that that happened or something happened. They need observability and they need to, to know that it's working. That's right. And is my workloads running effectively? So how do you guys look at the workload side of it? Cuz now you have multiple workloads on these fabric, >>Right? So workloads, so Kubernetes has defined kind of a standard way to describe workloads and you can, you know, tell Kubernetes, I want to run this container this particular way, or you can use other projects that are in the Kubernetes cloud native ecosystem like K native, where you can express your application in more at a higher level, right? But what's also happening is in addition to the workloads, DevOps and platform engineering teams, they need to very often deploy the applications with the clusters themselves. Clusters are becoming this commodity. It's, it's becoming this host for the application and it kind of comes bundled with it. In many cases it is like an appliance, right? So DevOps teams have to provision clusters at a really incredible rate and they need to tear them down. Clusters are becoming more, >>It's kinda like an EC two instance, spin up a cluster. We very, people used words like that. That's >>Right. And before arlon you kind of had to do all of that using a different set of tools as, as I explained. So with Armon you can kind of express everything together. You can say I want a cluster with a health monitoring stack and a logging stack and this ingress controller and I want these applications and these security policies. You can describe all of that using something we call a profile. And then you can stamp out your app, your applications and your clusters and manage them in a very, so >>Essentially standard creates a mechanism. Exactly. Standardized, declarative kind of configurations. And it's like a playbook. You deploy it. Now what's there is between say a script like I'm, I have scripts, I could just automate scripts >>Or yes, this is where that declarative API and infrastructures configuration comes in, right? Because scripts, yes you can automate scripts, but the order in which they run matters, right? They can break, things can break in the middle and, and sometimes you need to debug them. Whereas the declarative way is much more expressive and powerful. You just tell the system what you want and then the system kind of figures it out. And there are these things about controllers which will in the background reconcile all the state to converge towards your desire. It's a much more powerful, expressive and reliable way of getting things done. >>So infrastructure has configuration is built kind of on, it's as super set of infrastructures code because it's >>An evolution. >>You need edge's code, but then you can configure the code by just saying do it. You basically declaring and saying Go, go do that. That's right. Okay, so, alright, so cloud native at scale, take me through your vision of what that means. Someone says, Hey, what does cloud native at scale mean? What's success look like? How does it roll out in the future as you, not future next couple years? I mean people are now starting to figure out, okay, it's not as easy as it sounds. Could be nice, it has value. We're gonna hear this year coan a lot of this. What does cloud native at scale >>Mean? Yeah, there are different interpretations, but if you ask me, when people think of scale, they think of a large number of deployments, right? Geographies, many, you know, supporting thousands or tens or millions of, of users there, there's that aspect to scale. There's also an equally important a aspect of scale, which is also something that we try to address with Arran. And that is just complexity for the people operating this or configuring this, right? So in order to describe that desired state and in order to perform things like maybe upgrades or updates on a very large scale, you want the humans behind that to be able to express and direct the system to do that in, in relatively simple terms, right? And so we want the tools and the abstractions and the mechanisms available to the user to be as powerful but as simple as possible. So there's, I think there's gonna be a number and there have been a number of CNCF and cloud native projects that are trying to attack that complexity problem as well. And Arlon kind of falls in in that >>Category. Okay, so I'll put you on the spot road that CubeCon coming up and obviously this will be shipping this segment series out before. What do you expect to see at Coan this year? What's the big story this year? What's the, what's the most important thing happening? Is it in the open source community and also within a lot of the, the people jogging for leadership. I know there's a lot of projects and still there's some white space in the overall systems map about the different areas get run time and there's ability in all these different areas. What's the, where's the action? Where, where's the smoke? Where's the fire? Where's the piece? Where's the tension? >>Yeah, so I think one thing that has been happening over the past couple of cons and I expect to continue and, and that is the, the word on the street is Kubernetes is getting boring, right? Which is good, right? >>Boring means simple. >>Well, well >>Maybe, >>Yeah, >>Invisible, >>No drama, right? So, so the, the rate of change of the Kubernetes features and, and all that has slowed but in, in a, in a positive way. But there's still a general sentiment and feeling that there's just too much stuff. If you look at a stack necessary for hosting applications based on Kubernetes, there are just still too many moving parts, too many components, right? Too much complexity. I go, I keep going back to the complexity problem. So I expect Cube Con and all the vendors and the players and the startups and the people there to continue to focus on that complexity problem and introduce further simplifications to, to the stack. >>Yeah. Vic, you've had an storied career, VMware over decades with them obviously in 12 years with 14 years or something like that. Big number co-founder here at Platform. Now you guys have been around for a while at this game. We, man, we talked about OpenStack, that project you, we interviewed at one of their events. So OpenStack was the beginning of that, this new revolution. And I remember the early days it was, it wasn't supposed to be an alternative to Amazon, but it was a way to do more cloud cloud native. I think we had a cloud ERO team at that time. We would to joke we, you know, about, about the dream. It's happening now, now at Platform nine. You guys have been doing this for a while. What's the, what are you most excited about as the chief architect? What did you guys double down on? What did you guys tr pivot from or two, did you do any pivots? Did you extend out certain areas? Cuz you guys are in a good position right now, a lot of DNA in Cloud native. What are you most excited about and what does Platform nine bring to the table for customers and for people in the industry watching this? >>Yeah, so I think our mission really hasn't changed over the years, right? It's been always about taking complex open source software because open source software, it's powerful. It solves new problems, you know, every year and you have new things coming out all the time, right? OpenStack was an example when the Kubernetes took the world by storm. But there's always that complexity of, you know, just configuring it, deploying it, running it, operating it. And our mission has always been that we will take all that complexity and just make it, you know, easy for users to consume regardless of the technology, right? So the successor to Kubernetes, you know, I don't have a crystal ball, but you know, you have some indications that people are coming up of new and simpler ways of running applications. There are many projects around there who knows what's coming next year or the year after that. But platform will a, platform nine will be there and we will, you know, take the innovations from the the community. We will contribute our own innovations and make all of those things very consumable to customers. >>Simpler, faster, cheaper. Exactly. Always a good business model technically to make that happen. Yes. Yeah, I think the, the reigning in the chaos is key, you know, Now we have now visibility into the scale. Final question before we depart this segment. What is at scale, how many clusters do you see that would be a watermark for an at scale conversation around an enterprise? Is it workloads we're looking at or, or clusters? How would you, Yeah, how would you describe that? When people try to squint through and evaluate what's a scale, what's the at scale kind of threshold? >>Yeah. And, and the number of clusters doesn't tell the whole story because clusters can be small in terms of the number of nodes or they can be large. But roughly speaking when we say, you know, large scale cluster deployments, we're talking about maybe hundreds, two thousands. >>Yeah. And final final question, what's the role of the hyperscalers? You got AWS continuing to do well, but they got their core ias, they got a PAs, they're not too too much putting a SaaS out there. They have some SaaS apps, but mostly it's the ecosystem. They have marketplaces doing over $2 billion billions of transactions a year and, and it's just like, just sitting there. It hasn't really, they're now innovating on it, but that's gonna change ecosystems. What's the role the cloud play in the cloud native of its scale? >>The, the hyperscalers, >>Yeahs Azure, Google. >>You mean from a business perspective? Yeah, they're, they have their own interests that, you know, that they're, they will keep catering to, they, they will continue to find ways to lock their users into their ecosystem of services and, and APIs. So I don't think that's gonna change, right? They're just gonna keep, >>Well they got great I performance, I mean from a, from a hardware standpoint, yes, that's gonna be key, right? >>Yes. I think the, the move from X 86 being the dominant way and platform to run workloads is changing, right? That, that, that, that, and I think the, the hyperscalers really want to be in the game in terms of, you know, the the new risk and arm ecosystems and the platforms. >>Yeah, not joking aside, Paul Morritz, when he was the CEO of VMware, when he took over once said, I remember our first year doing the cube. Oh the cloud is one big distributed computer, it's, it's hardware and he got software and you got middleware and he kind over, well he's kind of tongue in cheek, but really you're talking about large compute and sets of services that is essentially a distributed computer. >>Yes, >>Exactly. It's, we're back on the same game. Vic, thank you for coming on the segment. Appreciate your time. This is cloud native at scale special presentation with Platform nine. Really unpacking super cloud Arlon open source and how to run large scale applications on the cloud Cloud Native Phil for developers and John Furrier with the cube. Thanks for Washington. We'll stay tuned for another great segment coming right up. Hey, welcome back everyone to Super Cloud 22. I'm John Fur, host of the Cuba here all day talking about the future of cloud. Where's it all going? Making it super multi-cloud clouds around the corner and public cloud is winning. Got the private cloud on premise and edge. Got a great guest here, Vascar Gorde, CEO of Platform nine, just on the panel on Kubernetes. An enabler blocker. Welcome back. Great to have you on. >>Good to see you >>Again. So Kubernetes is a blocker enabler by, with a question mark. I put on on that panel was really to discuss the role of Kubernetes. Now great conversation operations is impacted. What's interest thing about what you guys are doing at Platform nine? Is your role there as CEO and the company's position, kind of like the world spun into the direction of Platform nine while you're at the helm? Yeah, right. >>Absolutely. In fact, things are moving very well and since they came to us, it was an insight to call ourselves the platform company eight years ago, right? So absolutely whether you are doing it in public clouds or private clouds, you know, the application world is moving very fast in trying to become digital and cloud native. There are many options for you do on the infrastructure. The biggest blocking factor now is having a unified platform. And that's what we, we come into, >>Patrick, we were talking before we came on stage here about your background and we were gonna talk about the glory days in 2000, 2001, when the first as piece application service providers came out, kind of a SaaS vibe, but that was kind of all kind of cloudlike. >>It wasn't, >>And and web services started then too. So you saw that whole growth. Now, fast forward 20 years later, 22 years later, where we are now, when you look back then to here and all the different cycles, >>I, in fact you, you know, as we were talking offline, I was in one of those ASPs in the year 2000 where it was a novel concept of saying we are providing a software and a capability as a service, right? You sign up and start using it. I think a lot has changed since then. The tooling, the tools, the technology has really skyrocketed. The app development environment has really taken off exceptionally well. There are many, many choices of infrastructure now, right? So I think things are in a way the same but also extremely different. But more importantly now for any company, regardless of size, to be a digital native, to become a digital company is extremely mission critical. It's no longer a nice to have everybody's in the journey somewhere. >>Everyone is going digital transformation here. Even on a so-called downturn recession that's upcoming inflation's here. It's interesting. This is the first downturn in the history of the world where the hyperscale clouds have been pumping on all cylinders as an economic input. And if you look at the tech trends, GDPs down, but not tech. >>Nope. >>Cuz the pandemic showed everyone digital transformation is here and more spend and more growth is coming even in, in tech. So this is a unique factor which proves that that digital transformation's happening and company, every company will need a super cloud. >>Everyone, every company, regardless of size, regardless of location, has to become modernize their infrastructure. And modernizing Infras infrastructure is not just some new servers and new application tools, It's your approach, how you're serving your customers, how you're bringing agility in your organization. I think that is becoming a necessity for every enterprise to survive. >>I wanna get your thoughts on Super Cloud because one of the things Dave Ante and I want to do with Super Cloud and calling it that was we, I, I personally, and I know Dave as well, he can, I'll speak from, he can speak for himself. We didn't like multi-cloud. I mean not because Amazon said don't call things multi-cloud, it just didn't feel right. I mean everyone has multiple clouds by default. If you're running productivity software, you have Azure and Office 365. But it wasn't truly distributed. It wasn't truly decentralized, it wasn't truly cloud enabled. It didn't, it felt like they're not ready for a market yet. Yet public clouds booming on premise. Private cloud and Edge is much more on, you know, more, more dynamic, more real. >>Yeah. I think the reason why we think super cloud is a better term than multi-cloud. Multi-cloud are more than one cloud, but they're disconnected. Okay, you have a productivity cloud, you have a Salesforce cloud, you may have, everyone has an internal cloud, right? So, but they're not connected. So you can say okay, it's more than one cloud. So it's you know, multi-cloud. But super cloud is where you are actually trying to look at this holistically. Whether it is on-prem, whether it is public, whether it's at the edge, it's a store at the branch. You are looking at this as one unit. And that's where we see the term super cloud is more applicable because what are the qualities that you require if you're in a super cloud, right? You need choice of infrastructure, you need, but at the same time you need a single pain, a single platform for you to build your innovations on regardless of which cloud you're doing it on, right? So I think Super Cloud is actually a more tightly integrated orchestrated management philosophy we think. >>So let's get into some of the super cloud type trends that we've been reporting on. Again, the purpose of this event is to, as a pilots, to get the conversations flowing with with the influencers like yourselves who are running companies and building products and the builders, Amazon and Azure are doing extremely well. Google's coming up in third cloudworks in public cloud. We see the use cases on premises use cases. Kubernetes has been an interesting phenomenon because it's become from the developer side a little bit, but a lot of ops people love Kubernetes. It's really more of an ops thing. You mentioned OpenStack earlier. Kubernetes kind of came out of that open stack. We need an orchestration and then containers had a good shot with, with Docker. They re pivoted the company. Now they're all in an open source. So you got containers booming and Kubernetes as a new layer there. What's the, what's the take on that? What does that really mean? Is that a new defacto enabler? It >>Is here. It's for here for sure. Every enterprise somewhere else in the journey is going on. And you know, most companies are, 70 plus percent of them have won two, three container based, Kubernetes based applications now being rolled out. So it's very much here, it is in production at scale by many customers. And the beauty of it is, yes, open source, but the biggest gating factor is the skill set. And that's where we have a phenomenal engineering team, right? So it's, it's one thing to buy a tool >>And just be clear, you're a managed service for Kubernetes. >>We provide, provide a software platform for cloud acceleration as a service and it can run anywhere. It can run in public private. We have customers who do it in truly multi-cloud environments. It runs on the edge, it runs at this in stores are thousands of stores in a retailer. So we provide that and also for specific segments where data sovereignty and data residency are key regulatory reasons. We also un OnPrem as an air gap version. >>Can you give an example on how you guys are deploying your platform to enable a super cloud experience for your >>Customer? Right. So I'll give you two different examples. One is a very large networking company, public networking company. They have, I dunno, hundreds of products, hundreds of r and d teams that are building different, different products. And if you look at few years back, each one was doing it on a different platforms but they really needed to bring the agility and they worked with us now over three years where we are their build test dev pro platform where all their products are built on, right? And it has dramatically increased their agility to release new products. Number two, it actually is a light out operation. In fact the customer says like, like the Maytag service person cuz we provide it as a service and it barely takes one or two people to maintain it for them. >>So it's kinda like an SRE vibe. One person managing a >>Large 4,000 engineers building infrastructure >>On their tools, >>Whatever they want on their tools. They're using whatever app development tools they use, but they use our platform. >>What benefits are they seeing? Are they seeing speed? >>Speed, definitely. Okay. Definitely they're speeding. Speed uniformity because now they're building able to build, so their customers who are using product A and product B are seeing a similar set of tools that are being used. >>So a big problem that's coming outta this super cloud event that we're, we're seeing and we've heard it all here, ops and security teams cuz they're kind of too part of one theme, but ops and security specifically need to catch up speed wise. Are you delivering that value to ops and security? Right. >>So we, we work with ops and security teams and infrastructure teams and we layer on top of that. We have like a platform team. If you think about it, depending on where you have data centers, where you have infrastructure, you have multiple teams, okay, but you need a unified platform. Who's your buyer? Our buyer is usually, you know, the product divisions of companies that are looking at or the CTO would be a buyer for us functionally cio definitely. So it it's, it's somewhere in the DevOps to infrastructure. But the ideal one we are beginning to see now many large corporations are really looking at it as a platform and saying we have a platform group on which any app can be developed and it is run on any infrastructure. So the platform engineering teams, >>You working two sides of that coin. You've got the dev side and then >>And then infrastructure >>Side side, okay. >>Another customer like give you an example, which I would say is kind of the edge of the store. So they have thousands of stores. Retail, retail, you know food retailer, right? They have thousands of stores that are on the globe, 50,000, 60,000. And they really want to enhance the customer experience that happens when you either order the product or go into the store and pick up your product or buy or browse or sit there. They have applications that were written in the nineties and then they have very modern AIML applications today. They want something that will not have to send an IT person to install a rack in the store or they can't move everything to the cloud because the store operations has to be local. The menu changes based on, It's a classic edge. It's classic edge. Yeah. Right. They can't send it people to go install rack access servers then they can't sell software people to go install the software and any change you wanna put through that, you know, truck roll. So they've been working with us where all they do is they ship, depending on the size of the store, one or two or three little servers with instructions that >>You, you say little servers like how big one like a net box box, like a small little >>Box and all the person in the store has to do like what you and I do at home and we get a, you know, a router is connect the power, connect the internet and turn the switch on. And from there we pick it up. >>Yep. >>We provide the operating system, everything and then the applications are put on it. And so that dramatically brings the velocity for them. They manage >>Thousands of them. True plug and play >>Two, plug and play thousands of stores. They manage it centrally. We do it for them, right? So, so that's another example where on the edge then we have some customers who have both a large private presence and one of the public clouds. Okay. But they want to have the same platform layer of orchestration and management that they can use regardless of the location. So >>You guys got some success. Congratulations. Got some traction there. It's awesome. The question I want to ask you is that's come up is what is truly cloud native? Cuz there's lift and shift of the cloud >>That's not cloud native. >>Then there's cloud native. Cloud native seems to be the driver for the super cloud. How do you talk to customers? How do you explain when someone says what's cloud native, what isn't cloud native? >>Right. Look, I think first of all, the best place to look at what is the definition and what are the attributes and characteristics of what is truly a cloud native, is CNC foundation. And I think it's very well documented where you, well >>Con of course Detroit's >>Coming here, so, so it's already there, right? So, so we follow that very closely, right? I think just lifting and shifting your 20 year old application onto a data center somewhere is not cloud native. Okay? You can't put to cloud native, you have to rewrite and redevelop your application and business logic using modern tools. Hopefully more open source and, and I think that's what Cloudnative is and we are seeing a lot of our customers in that journey. Now everybody wants to be cloudnative, but it's not that easy, okay? Because it's, I think it's first of all, skill set is very important. Uniformity of tools that there's so many tools there. Thousands and thousands of tools you could spend your time figuring out which tool to use. Okay? So I think the complexities there, but the business benefits of agility and uniformity and customer experience are truly them. >>And I'll give you an example. I don't know how clear native they are, right? And they're not a customer of ours, but you order pizzas, you do, right? If you just watch the pizza industry, how dominoes actually increase their share and mind share and wallet share was not because they were making better pizzas or not, I don't know anything about that, but the whole experience of how you order, how you watch what's happening, how it's delivered. There were a pioneer in it. To me, those are the kinds of customer experiences that cloud native can provide. >>Being agility and having that flow to the application changes what the expectations of the, for the customer. >>Customer, the customer's expectations change, right? Once you get used to a better customer experience, you learn >>Best car. To wrap it up, I wanna just get your perspective again. One of the benefits of chatting with you here and having you part of the Super Cloud 22 is you've seen many cycles, you have a lot of insights. I want to ask you, given your career where you've been and what you've done and now the CEO platform nine, how would you compare what's happening now with other inflection points in the industry? And you've been, again, you've been an entrepreneur, you sold your company to Oracle, you've been seeing the big companies, you've seen the different waves. What's going on right now put into context this moment in time around Super >>Cloud. Sure. I think as you said, a lot of battles. Cars being been, been in an asp, been in a realtime software company, being in large enterprise software houses and a transformation. I've been on the app side, I did the infrastructure right and then tried to build our own platforms. I've gone through all of this myself with a lot of lessons learned in there. I think this is an event which is happening now for companies to go through to become cloud native and digitalize. If I were to look back and look at some parallels of the tsunami that's going on is a couple of paddles come to me. One is, think of it, which was forced to honors like y2k. Everybody around the world had to have a plan, a strategy, and an execution for y2k. I would say the next big thing was e-commerce. I think e-commerce has been pervasive right across all industries. >>And disruptive. >>And disruptive, extremely disruptive. If you did not adapt and adapt and accelerate your e-commerce initiative, you were, it was an existence question. Yeah. I think we are at that pivotal moment now in companies trying to become digital and cloudnative that know that is what I see >>Happening there. I think that that e-commerce was interesting and I think just to riff with you on that is that it's disrupting and refactoring the business models. I think that is something that's coming out of this is that it's not just completely changing the game, it's just changing how you operate, >>How you think, and how you operate. See, if you think about the early days of eCommerce, just putting up a shopping cart didn't made you an eCommerce or an E retailer or an e e customer, right? Or so. I think it's the same thing now is I think this is a fundamental shift on how you're thinking about your business. How are you gonna operate? How are you gonna service your customers? I think it requires that just lift and shift is not gonna work. >>Mascar, thank you for coming on, spending the time to come in and share with our community and being part of Super Cloud 22. We really appreciate, we're gonna keep this open. We're gonna keep this conversation going even after the event, to open up and look at the structural changes happening now and continue to look at it in the open in the community. And we're gonna keep this going for, for a long, long time as we get answers to the problems that customers are looking for with cloud cloud computing. I'm Sean Feer with Super Cloud 22 in the Cube. Thanks for watching. >>Thank you. Thank you, John. >>Hello. Welcome back. This is the end of our program, our special presentation with Platform nine on cloud native at scale, enabling the super cloud. We're continuing the theme here. You heard the interviews Super Cloud and its challenges, new opportunities around the solutions around like Platform nine and others with Arlon. This is really about the edge situations on the internet and managing the edge multiple regions, avoiding vendor lock in. This is what this new super cloud is all about. The business consequences we heard and and the wide ranging conversations around what it means for open source and the complexity problem all being solved. I hope you enjoyed this program. There's a lot of moving pieces and things to configure with cloud native install, all making it easier for you here with Super Cloud and of course Platform nine contributing to that. Thank you for watching.

Published Date : Oct 18 2022

SUMMARY :

See you soon. but kind of the same as the first generation. And so you gotta rougher and IT kind of coming together, but you also got this idea of regions, So I think, you know, in in the context of this, the, this, Can you scope the scale of the problem? the problem that the scale creates, you know, there's various problems, but I think one, And that is just, you know, one example of an issue that happens. Can you share your reaction to that and how you see this playing out? which is, you know, you have your perfectly written code that is operating just fine on your And so as you give that change to then run at your production edge location, And you guys have a solution you're launching. So what our LA you do in a But again, it gets, you know, processed in a standardized way. So keeping it smooth, the assembly on things are flowing. Because developers, you know, there is, developers are responsible for one picture of So the DevOps is the cloud needed developer's. And so Arlon addresses that problem at the heart of it, and it does that using existing So I'm assuming you have that thought through, can you share open source and commercial relationship? products starting all the way with fision, which was a serverless product, you know, that we had built to buy, but also actually kind of date the application, if you will. I think one is just, you know, this, this, this cloud native space is so vast I have to ask you now, let's get into what's in it for the customer. And so, and there's multiple, you know, enterprises that we talk to, shared that this is a major challenge we have today because we have, you know, I'm an enterprise, I got tight, you know, I love the open source trying And that's where, you know, platform line has a role to play, which is when been some of the feedback? And the customer said, If you had it today, I would've purchased it. So next question is, what is the solution to the customer? So I think, you know, one of the core tenets of Platform nine has always been been that And now they have management challenges. Especially operationalizing the clusters, whether they want to kind of reset everything and remove things around and And And arlon by the way, also helps in that direction, but you also need I mean, what's the impact if you do all those things, as you mentioned, what's the impact of the apps? And so this really gives them, you know, the right tooling for that. So this is actually a great kind of relevant point, you know, as cloud becomes more scalable, So these are the kinds of challenges, and those are the pain points, which is, you know, if you're looking to to be supporting the business, you know, the back office and the maybe terminals and that, you know, that the, the technology that's, you know, that's gonna drive your top line is If all the things happen the way we want 'em to happen, The magic wand, the magic dust, he's running that at a nimble, nimble team size of at the most, Just taking care of the CIO doesn't exist. Thank you for your time. Thanks for Great to see you and great to see congratulations on the success And now the Kubernetes layer that we've been working on for years is Exactly. you know, the new Arlon, our, our lawn, and you guys just launched the So I think, I think I'm, I'm glad you mentioned it, everybody or most people know about infrastructures I mean now with open source so popular, you don't have to have to write a lot of code, you know, the emergence of systems and layers to help you manage that complexity is becoming That's, I wrote a LinkedIn post today was comments about, you know, hey, enterprise is a new breed. you know, you think you have things under control, but some people from various teams will make changes here in the industry technical, how would you look at the super cloud trend that's emerging? the way I interpret that is, you know, clouds and infrastructure, It's IBM's, you know, connection for the internet at the, this layer that has simplified, you know, computing and, the physics and the, the atoms, the pro, you know, this is where the innovation, the state that you want and more consistency. the DevOps engineers, they get a a ways to So how do you guys look at the workload native ecosystem like K native, where you can express your application in more at It's kinda like an EC two instance, spin up a cluster. And then you can stamp out your app, your applications and your clusters and manage them And it's like a playbook. You just tell the system what you want and then You need edge's code, but then you can configure the code by just saying do it. And that is just complexity for the people operating this or configuring this, What do you expect to see at Coan this year? If you look at a stack necessary for hosting We would to joke we, you know, about, about the dream. So the successor to Kubernetes, you know, I don't Yeah, I think the, the reigning in the chaos is key, you know, Now we have now visibility into But roughly speaking when we say, you know, They have some SaaS apps, but mostly it's the ecosystem. you know, that they're, they will keep catering to, they, they will continue to find terms of, you know, the the new risk and arm ecosystems it's, it's hardware and he got software and you got middleware and he kind over, Great to have you on. What's interest thing about what you guys are doing at Platform nine? clouds, you know, the application world is moving very fast in trying to Patrick, we were talking before we came on stage here about your background and we were gonna talk about the glory days in So you saw that whole growth. So I think things are in And if you look at the tech trends, GDPs down, but not tech. Cuz the pandemic showed everyone digital transformation is here and more And modernizing Infras infrastructure is not you know, more, more dynamic, more real. So it's you know, multi-cloud. So you got containers And you know, most companies are, 70 plus percent of them have won two, It runs on the edge, And if you look at few years back, each one was doing So it's kinda like an SRE vibe. Whatever they want on their tools. to build, so their customers who are using product A and product B are seeing a similar set Are you delivering that value to ops and security? Our buyer is usually, you know, the product divisions of companies You've got the dev side and then that happens when you either order the product or go into the store and pick up your product or like what you and I do at home and we get a, you know, a router is And so that dramatically brings the velocity for them. Thousands of them. of the public clouds. The question I want to ask you is that's How do you explain when someone says what's cloud native, what isn't cloud native? is the definition and what are the attributes and characteristics of what is truly a cloud native, Thousands and thousands of tools you could spend your time figuring out which I don't know anything about that, but the whole experience of how you order, Being agility and having that flow to the application changes what the expectations of One of the benefits of chatting with you here and been on the app side, I did the infrastructure right and then tried to build our own If you did not adapt and adapt and accelerate I think that that e-commerce was interesting and I think just to riff with you on that is that it's disrupting How are you gonna service your Mascar, thank you for coming on, spending the time to come in and share with our community and being part of Thank you, John. I hope you enjoyed this program.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
DavePERSON

0.99+

AmazonORGANIZATION

0.99+

PatrickPERSON

0.99+

Paul MorritzPERSON

0.99+

VascarPERSON

0.99+

Adrian KaroPERSON

0.99+

Sean FeerPERSON

0.99+

2000DATE

0.99+

John FurryPERSON

0.99+

oneQUANTITY

0.99+

IBMORGANIZATION

0.99+

50,000QUANTITY

0.99+

JohnPERSON

0.99+

twoQUANTITY

0.99+

John FurrPERSON

0.99+

Vascar GordePERSON

0.99+

John FurPERSON

0.99+

Meor Ma MakowskiPERSON

0.99+

Silicon ValleyLOCATION

0.99+

MakoskiPERSON

0.99+

thousandsQUANTITY

0.99+

14 yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

OracleORGANIZATION

0.99+

12 yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

2001DATE

0.99+

GortPERSON

0.99+

MascarPERSON

0.99+

AWSORGANIZATION

0.99+

Mariana TesselPERSON

0.99+

GoogleORGANIZATION

0.99+

hundredsQUANTITY

0.99+

Palo Alto, CaliforniaLOCATION

0.99+

TwoQUANTITY

0.99+

OneQUANTITY

0.99+

millionsQUANTITY

0.99+

two partsQUANTITY

0.99+

tensQUANTITY

0.99+

LinkedInORGANIZATION

0.99+

next yearDATE

0.99+

ArlonORGANIZATION

0.99+

todayDATE

0.99+

KubernetesTITLE

0.99+

eight years agoDATE

0.99+

one siteQUANTITY

0.99+

ThousandsQUANTITY

0.99+

second partQUANTITY

0.99+

bothQUANTITY

0.99+

each componentQUANTITY

0.99+

AMDORGANIZATION

0.99+

Office 365TITLE

0.99+

one unitQUANTITY

0.99+

one flavorQUANTITY

0.99+

4,000 engineersQUANTITY

0.99+

first generationQUANTITY

0.99+

Super CloudTITLE

0.99+

Dave AntePERSON

0.99+

firstQUANTITY

0.99+

VicPERSON

0.99+

two sidesQUANTITY

0.99+

VMwareORGANIZATION

0.99+

two thousandsQUANTITY

0.99+

BickleyPERSON

0.98+

tens of thousands of nodesQUANTITY

0.98+

AzureTITLE

0.98+

two peopleQUANTITY

0.98+

each siteQUANTITY

0.98+

KubernetesPERSON

0.98+

super cloudTITLE

0.98+

One personQUANTITY

0.98+

two factorsQUANTITY

0.98+

ArlanORGANIZATION

0.98+

Christian Pedersen, IFS & Sioned Edwards, Aston Martin F1 Team | IFS Unleashed 2022


 

>>Hey everyone. Welcome back to Miami. Lisa Martin here live with the Cube at IFS Unleashed 2022. We're so excited to be here. We just had a great conversation with Ifss, CEO of Darren Rouse. Now we've got another exciting conversation. F1 is here. You know how much I love f1. Christian Peterson joins us as well, the Chief Product Officer at ifs, and Sean Edwards IT business partner at Aston Martin. F1. Guys, it's great to have you on the program. Thank you for having >>Us. Thank you >>Very much. We were talking about F one. We probably could have an entire conversation just on that, but Christian, I wanna talk with you. It's been three years since the Cube has covered ifs obviously for obvious reasons during that time. So much momentum has happened. IFS cloud was launched about 18 months ago. Give our audience an o, a flavor of IFS, cloud and some of the milestones that you've hit in such a short time period. >>Yeah, I mean IFS cloud is really transformational in many ways. It's transformational for first and foremost for our customers in what enables them to do, but also transformational for us from a technology perspective, how we work and how we do everything. And at the end of the day, it has really surfaced, served around the the, the fact of what we need to do for our customers. And what we saw our customers often do back then, or any company, was they were out looking for EAP solutions or FSM Solutions or EAM Solutions or what have you. And then they were trying to stitch it all together and we, we said like, Hang on a second, these these traditional software s, those are some that I'm guilty. You know, there's some that we actually invented over the years together with analysts. So we invented EER P and we invented CRM and EAM and all these different things. >>But at the end of the day, customers really want a solution to what they are, they are what they're dealing with. And so in these conversations it became very clear that and very repeated conclusions from the conversations that customers wanted something that could manage and help them optimize the use of their assets. Regardless of what industry you're in, assets is such a key component. Either you are using your assets or you're producing assets. Second thing is really get the best use of of your people, your teams and your crew. How do you get the right people on the right job at the same time? How do you assemble the right crew with the right set of skills in the crew? Get them to the right people at the same time. So, and then the final thing is of course customers, you know all the things that you need to do to get customers to answer these ultimate questions, Will you buy from this company again? And they should say yes. That's the ultimate results of moments of service. So that's how we bring it all together and that's what we have been fast at work at. That's what IFS cloud is all about. >>And you, you talked about IFS cloud, being able to to help customers, orchestrate assets, people, customers, Aston Martin being one of those customers. Shawn, you came from ifs so you have kind of the backstory but just give the audience a little bit of, of flavor of your role at Aston Martin and then let's dig into the smart factory. >>Sure. So I previously worked at IFS as a manufacturing consultant. So my bread and butter is production planning in the ERP sector. So we, I Aston Martin didn't have an ERP system pre IFS or a legacy system that wasn't working for them and the team couldn't rely upon it. So what we did was bring IFS in. I was the consultant there and as IFS always preached customer first, well customer first did come and I jumped to support the team. So we've implemented a fully RP solution to manage the production control and the material traceability all the way through from design until delivery to track. And we've mo most recently implemented a warehouse solution at Trackside as well. So we are now tracking our parts going out with the garage. So that's a really exciting time for RFS. In terms of the smart factory, it's not built yet. >>We're we're supposed to move next year. So that's really exciting cause we're quadrupling our footprint. So going from quite a small factory spread out across the North Hampton Share countryside, we're going into one place quadruple in our footprint. And what we're gonna start looking at is using the technology we're implementing there. So enabling 5G to springboard our IFFs implementations going forward with the likes of Internet of things to connect our 15 brand new CMC machines, but also things like R F I D. So that comes with its own challenges on a Formula One car, but it's all about speed of data capture, single point of truth. And IFFs provides that >>And well, Formula One, the first word that comes to mind is speed. >>Absolutely. Second >>Word is crazy. >>We, we are very unique in terms of most customers Christian deals with, they're about speed but also about profit and efficiency. That doesn't matter to us. It is all about time. Time is our currency and if we go quicker in designing and manufacturing, which ifs supports ultimately the cargo quicker. So speed is everything. >>And and if we, if we think of of people, customers and assets at Asset Martin F one, I can't, I can't imagine the quantity of assets that you're building every race weekend and refactoring. >>Absolutely. So a Formula one car that drives out of the garage is made up of 13,000 car parts, most of which, 50% of which we've made in house. So we have to track that all the way through from the smallest metallic component all the way up to the most complex assembly. So orchestrating that and having a single point of truth for people to look at and track is what IFFs has provided us. >>Christian, elaborate on that a little bit in terms of, I mean, what you're facilitating, F1 is such a great example of of speed we talked about, but the fact that you're setting up the car every, every other weekend maybe sometimes back to back weeks, so many massive changes going on. You mentioned 50% of those 13,000 parts you manufacture. Absolutely. Talk about IFS as being a catalyst for that. >>I mean the, it's, it's fascinating with Formula One, but because as a technology geek like me, it's really just any other business on steroids. I mean we talk, we talk about this absolutely high tech, super high tech manufacturing, but even, even before that, the design that goes in with CFDs and how you optimize for different things and loose simulation software for these things goes into manufacturing, goes into wind tunnels and then goes on track. But guess what, when it's on track, it's an asset. It's an asset that streams from how many sensors are on the car, >>I think it's over 10,000 >>Sensors, over 10,000 sensors that streams maybe at 50 hertz or 50 readings. So every lap you just get this mountain of data, which is really iot. So I always say like F one if one did IOT before anybody invented the term. >>Absolutely. >>Yep. You know, F1 did machine learning and AI before anybody thought about it in terms of pattern recognition and things like that with the data. So that's why it's fascinating to work with an organization like that. It's the, it's the sophistication around the technologies and then the pace what they do. It's not that what they do is actually so different. >>It is, it absolutely isn't. We just have to do it really quickly. Really >>Quickly. Right. And the same thing when you talk about parts. I mean I was fascinated of a conversation with, with one of your designers that says that, you know, sometimes we are, we are designing a part and this, the car is now ready for production but the previous version of that part has not even been deployed on the car yet. So that's how quick the innovation comes through and it's, it's, it's fascinating and that's why we like the challenge that Esther Martin gives us because if we can, if we can address that, there's a lot of businesses we can make happy with that as far, >>So Sha I talk a little bit about this is, so we're coming up, there's what four races left in the 2022 season, but this is your busy time because that new car, the 23 car needs to be debuted in what February? So just a few months time? >>Absolutely. So it's a bit cancer intuitive. So our busiest time is now we're ramping up into it. So we co, we go into something called car build which is from December to December to February, which is our end point and there's no move in that point. The car has gotta go around that track in February. So we have got to make those 13,000 components. We've gotta design 'em, we've gotta make 'em and then we've gotta get 'em to the car in February for our moment of service. They said it on stage. Our moment of service as a manufacturing company is that car going around the track and we have to do it 24 times next year and we've gotta start. Well otherwise we're not gonna keep up. >>I'm just gonna ask you what a, what a moment, what's a moment of service in f1 and you're saying basically getting that >>Functional car >>On the track quickly, as quickly as possible and being able to have the technology underpinning that's really abstracting the complexity. >>Absolutely. So I would say our customer ultimately is the driver and the fans they, they need to have a fast car so they can sport it and they ultimately drive it around the track and go get first place and be competitive. So that is our moment of service to our drivers is to deliver that car 24 times next year. >>I imagine they might be a little demanding >>They are and I think it's gonna be exciting with Alonzo coming in, could the driver if we've gotta manage that change and he'll have new things that he wants to try out on a car. So adds another level of complexity to that. >>Well how influential are the drivers in terms some of the, the manufacturing? Like did they, are they give me kind of a a sense of how Alon Fernando Alanzo your team and ifs maybe collaborate, maybe not directly but >>So Alonzo will come in and suggest that he wants cars to work a certain way so he will feed back to the team in terms of we need this car, we need this car part to do this and this car part to do that. So then we're in a cycle when he first gets into the car in that February, we've then gotta turnaround car parts based off his suggestions. So we need to do that again really quickly and that's where IFS feeds in. So we have to have the release and then the manufacturer of the component completely integrated and that's what we achieve with IFFs and >>It needs to be really seamless. >>Absolutely. If, if we don't get it right, that car doesn't go out track so there's no moving deadline. >>Right. That's the probably one of the industries where deadlines do not move. Absolutely. We're so used to things happening in tech where things shift and change and reorgs, but this is one where the dates are set in their firm. >>Absolutely. And we have to do anything we can do to get that car on the track. So yeah, it's just a move. >>Christian, talk about the partnership a little bit from your standpoint in terms of how influential has Aston Martin F1 been in IFS cloud and its first 18 months. I was looking at some stats that you've already gotten 400,000 plus users in just a short time period. How influential are your customers in the direction and even the the next launch 22 R too? >>I mean our customers do everything plain and simple. That's that's what it is. And we have, we have a partnership, I think about every single customer as a partner of ours and we are partnering in taking technology to the next level in terms of, of the outputs and the benefits it can create for our customers. That's what it's all, all about. And I, I always think about these, these three elements I think I mentioned in our state as well. I think the partnership we have is a partnership around innovation. Innovation doesn't not only come from IFS or the technology partner, it comes from discussions, requirements, opportunities, what if like all these things. So innovation comes from everywhere. There's technology driven innovation, there's customer driven innovation, but that's part of the partnership. The second part of the partnership is inspiration. So with innovation you inspire. So when you innovate on something new that inspires new innovation and new thinking and that's again the second part of the partnership. And then the third part is really iterate and execute, right? Because it's great that we can now innovate and we can agree on what we need to do, but now we need to put it into products, put it in technology and put it into actual use. That's when the benefits comes and that's when we can start bringing the bell. >>And I think it's really intrinsically linked. I mean if you look at progress with Formula One teams and their innovation, it's all underpinned by our technology partners and that's why it's so important. The likes of Christian pushes the product and improves it and innovates it because then we can realize the benefits and ultimately save time and go faster. So it's really important that our, our partners and certainly inform one, push the boundaries and find that technology. >>And I think one of the things that we also find very, very important is that we actually understand our customers and can talk the language. So I think that was one of the key things in our engagement, Martin from the beginning is that we had a set of people that really understand Formula One felt it on their bodies and can have the conversation. So when the Formula One teams they say something, then we actually understand what we're talking about. So for instance, when we talk about, you know, track side inventory, well it's not that different from what a field service technician have in his van when he goes service. The only difference is when you see something happening on track, you'll see the parts manager go out to the pit lane with a tablet and say like, oh we need this, we need that, we need this and we need that. And then we'll go back and pick it and put it on the car and the car is service and maintain and off go. Absolutely. >>Yeah that speed always impresses me. >>It's unbelievable. >>Shannon, last question for you. From a smart factory perspective, you said you're moving in next year. What are some of the things that you are excited about that you think are really gonna be transformative but IFS is doing? >>So I think what I'm really excited about once we get in is using the technology they've already put in terms of 5G networks to sort of springboard that into a further IFS implementation. Maybe IFFs cloud in terms of we always struggle to keep the system up to date with, with what's physically happening so that the less data entry and the more automatic sort of data capture, the better it is for the formula on team cuz we improve our our single point of truth. So I'm really excited to look at the internet of things and sort of integrate our CNC machines to sort of feed that information back into ifs. But also the RFID technology I think is gonna be a game changer when we go into the new factory. So really >>Excited. Excellent. Well well done this year. We look forward to seeing Alonso join the team in 23. Fingers >>Crossed. >>Okay. Fingers crossed. Christian, Jeanette, it's been a pleasure to have you on the program. Thank you so much for sharing your insights and how ifs asked Martin are working together, how you really synergistically working together. We appreciate your time. >>Thank you very much for having us. Our >>Thanks for having us. And go Aston >>Woo go Aston, you already here first Lisa Martin, no relation to Aston Martin, but well, I wanna thank Christian Peterson and Shannon Edwards for joining me, talking about IFS and Aston Martin team and what they're doing at Speed and Scale. Stick around my next guest joins me in a minute. >>Thank you.

Published Date : Oct 11 2022

SUMMARY :

F1. Guys, it's great to have you on the program. a flavor of IFS, cloud and some of the milestones that you've hit in such a short time period. So we invented EER P and we invented But at the end of the day, customers really want a solution to what they are, you came from ifs so you have kind of the backstory but just give the audience a little bit of, So we are now tracking our parts going out with the garage. So going from quite a small factory spread out across the North Hampton Share Absolutely. So speed is everything. Asset Martin F one, I can't, I can't imagine the quantity of assets that you're building So we have to track that all the way through from the Christian, elaborate on that a little bit in terms of, I mean, what you're facilitating, high tech, super high tech manufacturing, but even, even before that, the design that goes in with So I always say like F one if one did IOT before anybody invented the term. So that's why it's fascinating to work with an organization We just have to do it really quickly. And the same thing when you talk about parts. the track and we have to do it 24 times next year and we've gotta start. that's really abstracting the complexity. So that is our moment of service to our drivers is So adds another level of complexity So we have to have the release and then the manufacturer of the component completely If, if we don't get it right, that car doesn't go out track so there's no moving That's the probably one of the industries where deadlines do not move. And we have to do anything we can do to get that car on the track. Christian, talk about the partnership a little bit from your standpoint in terms of how influential has So with innovation you inspire. The likes of Christian pushes the product and improves it and innovates it because then we can realize the benefits Martin from the beginning is that we had a set of people that really understand Formula One What are some of the things that you are excited about that you think are really gonna be transformative but IFS is doing? So I think what I'm really excited about once we get in is using the technology they've We look forward to seeing Alonso join the team in Christian, Jeanette, it's been a pleasure to have you on the program. Thank you very much for having us. And go Aston and what they're doing at Speed and Scale.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
Lisa MartinPERSON

0.99+

MartinPERSON

0.99+

JeanettePERSON

0.99+

ChristianPERSON

0.99+

Aston MartinORGANIZATION

0.99+

50%QUANTITY

0.99+

FebruaryDATE

0.99+

ShannonPERSON

0.99+

AstonORGANIZATION

0.99+

MiamiLOCATION

0.99+

Christian PedersenPERSON

0.99+

50 readingsQUANTITY

0.99+

ShawnPERSON

0.99+

Christian PetersonPERSON

0.99+

AlonzoPERSON

0.99+

13,000 componentsQUANTITY

0.99+

third partQUANTITY

0.99+

13,000 partsQUANTITY

0.99+

three elementsQUANTITY

0.99+

IFSORGANIZATION

0.99+

second partQUANTITY

0.99+

Shannon EdwardsPERSON

0.99+

next yearDATE

0.99+

Sean EdwardsPERSON

0.99+

24 timesQUANTITY

0.99+

50 hertzQUANTITY

0.99+

Esther MartinPERSON

0.99+

f1ORGANIZATION

0.99+

SecondQUANTITY

0.99+

23 carQUANTITY

0.99+

400,000 plus usersQUANTITY

0.99+

2022DATE

0.99+

DecemberDATE

0.99+

oneQUANTITY

0.99+

three yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

F1ORGANIZATION

0.98+

over 10,000 sensorsQUANTITY

0.98+

first wordQUANTITY

0.98+

Formula OneORGANIZATION

0.98+

TracksideORGANIZATION

0.98+

firstQUANTITY

0.97+

over 10,000QUANTITY

0.97+

first 18 monthsQUANTITY

0.97+

15 brandQUANTITY

0.96+

Alon Fernando AlanzoPERSON

0.96+

this yearDATE

0.95+

one placeQUANTITY

0.95+

IFFsORGANIZATION

0.95+

AlonsoPERSON

0.94+

single pointQUANTITY

0.94+

ifsORGANIZATION

0.94+

Sioned EdwardsPERSON

0.92+

13,000 car partsQUANTITY

0.92+

CubeORGANIZATION

0.91+

F1COMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.9+

four racesQUANTITY

0.9+

OneEVENT

0.9+

first placeQUANTITY

0.9+

Darren RouseORGANIZATION

0.89+

FormulaORGANIZATION

0.89+

North HamptonLOCATION

0.88+

IFSTITLE

0.88+

Corey Dyer, Digital Realty & Cliff Evans, HPE GreenLake | HPE Discover 2022


 

>>Que presents HP Discover 2022. Brought to You by HP >>Good morning, everyone. It's the Cube live in Las Vegas. Day two of our coverage of HP Discover 2022 from the Venetian Expo Centre. Lisa Martin and David want a what a day we had yesterday and today. Unbelievable >>for today. Big Big day today, >>Big day Today we've got a lot. We got some big heavy hitters on talking with HP customers. Partners, leadership. We've a couple of guests up with us next. Going to be talking more about the ecosystem. He's welcome. Corey Dire, the chief revenue officer, Digital Realty and Cliff Evans, senior director. H P E Green like partner ecosystem Guys. Great to have you on the >>programme. Thank you. Great to be here. >>Thank you for having us excited to be here >>with. So that's so that's harness that excitement. Cory, talk to us about the partnership. The announcement? What's going on there with Digital Realty and Green like? >>Yeah, we're crazy excited about it. You know, we've got customers dealing with data, gravity and the opportunity around that and how they could make use of it. And then they're thinking through digital transformation. How how you doing? Multi cloud and they need a partnership. To do that in this partnership with Green Leg and digital is perfect solution for them. So I'm crazy excited to be here with Cliff absolute with all of you to talk about it and hopefully build out a great partnership in relationship with HP. >>Talk to us. Sure, you're crazy Excitement >>club? Absolutely no. I think it is absolutely fantastic Partnership. I think the term is coming together as organisations. Bringing the two platforms together isn't it is an amazing thing that we have for customers, customers we know they want. They want a cloud experience. But really, they want to do that without really the DC footprint that had previously. So how did they do that in a way that really works for them in a secure client secure, sustainable way. But with the cloud experience. Really, the combination of the two pieces coming together really makes that happen, and that is what that's exciting. So we >>dig in to the two things that you mentioned Cory digital transformation and multiply. When I go back to the early days of cloud, it was that girl, you know, nobody's going to do anything you know ever again in the data centre. You know Charles Phillips, the the CEO of in four, famously said, Friends don't let friends, Bill Data centres, right? Everything's going in the cloud. So a lot of people predicted, You know, guys like you were going to be in trouble. The exact opposite happened. The market took off. So you mentioned digital transformation of multi cloud. Can we peel the onion on that? What? What is it about those two items? Are there other trends? They're driving your business, >>you know, You tied right on to to where it started. All enterprises started going to the club and then they got to the cloud and there was more that they needed to make that rial. I talk about multi cloud. You're going to use different cloud providers for different opportunities and different applications. And so you have to start thinking about how does this work in a world where you're gonna go to multiple clouds, multiple locations and what it really drove? It is the need for Cole location to make this because you've got a distributed architecture in order to enable all of this and then having to have us help you out with it. And partners like HP. That's part of where it comes from. But if you think through going to the cloud, can you stay there? Is that the full solution? You need to secure sustainable solution for that. One of the opportunities for us around that is that if you're building data centres for yourself on Prem, you don't have all the cloud access we do. We've got more cloud access points than anybody. So that helps in this digital transformation. >>How How much home? I'm sorry, Didn't mean to you how much homogeneity is there are our clients or customers saying, Hey, I kind of want the same experience in the same infrastructure. Same same. Or they saying, Hey, I want to do stuff in Digital Realty that I can't get from, you know, a cloud provider, Oracle Rack. You know, something like that, >>I would tell you that they come to us from all the partners. So we are partner community. We are not going up the stack anywhere on that. We do are we do our part. We're really good at doing the data centres really good at building data. They descended sustainable. Our position in the market is sustainability around it. We were the first to sign up on the science based initiatives for zero kind of carbon neutrality and in the future in 2030. And so yeah, so I think there's the partner aspect that they need help with on it to drive that Yeah. >>And I think from that from the HP Green Lake perspective, I think customers they very much want that that cloud experience. But I want to do on their own terms. The partnership allows that to happen on Gapen simply the cloud experiencing with the green light cloud platform to really go and deliver that genuine cloud experience and then building cloud services. On top of that, they get all the benefits that they would have from a public cloud experience, but done in the way that they would prefer to do it. So it's bringing those pieces together on >>I think the other side of you asked if it was it was the same across the board and ubiquitous. It's very bespoke. Solutions weaken D'oh! Every customer we have has a different footprint. Most from the multinationals. So we think through where their data is, where it needs to be accessed where their customers are, where their employees are, what makes the most sense. And then the partnership we have with HP into a whole lot for making very bespoke solution for that customer and help them be successful. Journey >>s O on. That s o. So what we've done with destroy lt is we have a specific offer around how we go to market with this really going how customers So we call it Green Light with co location. It's all about really positioning on offer to customers that says, Look, we can go and do this with you and do it simply and really make it happen very quickly and efficiently. So the customer ends up with a single contract in a single invoice for Green Lake Cloud Services on the co location piece, all in one single contracts. That just makes it a lot easier in terms of organising on a really big part of that as well is that our involvement is also spans right from the design to the implementation to support. So we do the whole thing to really help organisations golf and do this. So that's the big for me. The big differentiator. So rather than just having Green Lake in Cloud Services, were saying, Look, we can now do the Coehlo piece and they can really take the whole thing to a whole new level in terms of that public cloud experience >>in the sari and that that that invoice comes from HPD or Digital Realty is bundled into that >>correct? Yes, directly through the channel. We can sell that in a number of different ways. Customers get that that single invoice on a big part of that as well, just going a little bit deeper on that. So what we do is we We use a part of the company called Data Centre Technology Services, which are a great kind of consulting organisation with tremendous experience and something like 3000 projects across 40 countries from the very smallest of the very largest of data centre implementation. So all of that really makes the whole thing a lot easier from a customer's perspective in terms of designing, implementing and then supporting. So you pull all of that together. It's fantastic >>and I think it's really changed to add on to that partner in prison. So customers, now we're thinking about it differently and data centres differently, and they see us as a strategic partner along with HP. To go after this used to be space, power and calling. Now it's How much connectivity do you have? What your sustainability profile? What's your security profile? How do you secure this data? Date is the lifeblood of all these companies and you have to have a really secure, sustainable solution for them, >>right? That's absolutely critical for every industry. Talk about the specific value prop at a bespoke co location solution delivers to customers. Maybe you got a favourite customer example that you think really articulates the value of this partnership. >>So I think a combination. So so I think we touched on a lot of it, actually. So there's obviously the data centre aspect itself in terms of with the footprint that realty have across the world, you can pick and choose the data centre in the class of data centre that you want in terms of your Leighton see and connectivity that you want. Then really, it's the green make peace in terms of the flexibility that you get with that really is that value. And as I touched on the Green Lake with Cole Oh, I think for me is from our perspective, I think the biggest piece of value that we provide there to really go make it happen. Yeah, >>there's about 70 applications right now that are part of Green Lake Polo that you can bespoke for what you need to. You can think around your specific solutions that you need, and we've got it all right there with HP Green like and follow for us. And because we have a 290 data centre footprint across 50 markets, it gives us the opportunity really be the data centre provider in the Partner for H P, pretty much anywhere but with connective ity everywhere. >>When you say 70 applications, these the 70 services are you talking about talking >>about? Okay, Category 70 services. There's a lot of stuff. >>Cory, when you talked about sustainability a couple of times, is a really important ingredient of the customer decision. Why is it because they're indirectly paying the power bill or is because that's the right thing to do? And they care. There's increased. People care about it more because you go back a while ago. People way always talked about green it, but it was all lip service. Is that changing or is that there? Is there an economics >>changing in a really big way? Almost every conversation I have with customers is how are you doing Sustainability. So if they're doing an on Prem, that's not their core capabilities. They don't know how to do that. On our end, I mentioned our SP R science based initiatives that we signed up for. But how do we enable that? Enable it for how do we build in designer data centres? How do we actually work them and operate them? And then how do we go after all the green sources of sustainable energy including, I think since 2015, we've issued six billion in green bonds around that same support of it. So yeah, >>and your customer can then I presume, report that on their sustainability report a >>good way to think about it. You no longer have your data centre at its sometimes less efficient way than way are we're really good at building sustainable data centres, and then you can actually get some credits back and forth, >>just from agreement. Perspective. So Green Lake. So there's a specific Forrester Impact report that looks a green lake on how it how it performs from sustainability. Perspective on Greenlee really is giving you their 30% reduction in your energy consumption. So there's a big kind of win there as well, I think. Which is then, >>why? Where does that come from? >>So it Zim part that kind of the avoidance of over provisioning such that you going right size things, Then you have you have you have a certain amount of reserve capacity that you're using them just using the extra consumption piece when you need it. So rather than having everything running at full speed, it really is kind of struggling as to how that work. So you get a combination of effects >>with consulting and the thoughtfulness around this bespoke solution that you have. You end up needing fewer servers, pure technology that drives less power consumption and therefore you get a lot of this same really base it down. You >>talked about the savings you talked about the simplification delivery perspective. Talk about the implementation. What's the time to value that Organisations can glean from this partnership >>superfast So So yeah this This does accelerate the whole process from from initial kind of opportunity if you like and customer inquiry through to actual implementation So previously this would take considerable amount of time in terms of to ing and froing between multiple organisations on Now what we do is coordinate that do it efficiently and effectively So D. C. T s Data Sentinel services team very closely. Just have those connections often do those things incredibly quickly and it does accelerate the whole time >>and they're tied in with our team is well around. Where's the leighton? See where the solutions Because we're really thinking about what is your stack looked like from an HP perspective, but then where you need to deploy it so that you have access to the clouds You have the right proper Leighton see across your environment and you really haven't distributed architecture that works the best for you and your company. >>So this is probably answer those questions Probably both, but I'm asking anyway, I've always been a repatriation sceptic, but I'm happy to be proven wrong. You guys have other data. And maybe this is part of what one of my blind spots question is, is what's driving your business in terms of the EU's case? Is it organisations saying Hey, we want to get out of the data centre business way Don't want to put everything into the cloud but we're going to go on a digital realty and being green leg and we're gonna move into that cola Or is it? People say, You know, while we over rotated into the cloud, you were going to come back. So it's >>both. It's both, >>Yeah, in the empire. The credit. >>I think there are a lot of customers with good intentions on going to the cloud, and then there's some cost with it that maybe they didn't fully factor in it at that time. And now you've got the ability around these bespoke solutions to really right size every bit of this. And when they originally did it, they didn't think through a distributor architecture. They thought my own prim, and then I'm just gonna burst everything that a cloud that's no longer the case, and it's not really the most efficient way to your point about repatriation. They start pulling their storage back in. Well, where do you want your data? Where do you want your storage? You wanted as close as you can to the clouds for that capability and in a solution that's wrapped around it makes it very simple for you. >>I think the repatriation is very real and is increasing, eh? So we're seeing a lot of it in terms of activity and customers really trying to understand the cost that they're incurring now from a public cloud perspective. And how can they do that differently? In fact, with combined offer that we have it, it makes it a lot easier to compare. So, yeah, that really is accelerating because you don't >>see it in the macro numbers. I mean, just to be honest, you see the cloud guys combined growing 35%. And is that because your business is in transition from traditional on prime model, too, and as a service model, and so you've got that imbalance and it gets hidden in >>all that, and I think it's I think it's a new wave of things that are happening. Yeah. I mean, there's a there's a lot of things, obviously, that makes complete sense to me in Public Cloud, but I do think there's been an over rotation towards it, so I think now that realisation and it's going to take time to kind of pick that. But it's absolutely happening. There are a lot of opportunities that we've gotten some very big ones I'd love to talk about. Can't quite talk about them just get but really, where there's big, big savings in terms of what they're paying from a public cloud perspective, Really, what they want is that full management cloud service to go make it happen. So the combination of the data centre piece to Green Lake piece and then some management services, whether they're from ourselves or from party community, from manage service providers that we also work with, that gives them the complete package. >>So I have another premise. A lot of it, of course, is traditionally been focused on internal, and I feel like there's a new era coming. It's talks of the ecosystem. Are you seeing customers not only running there it in digital realty and connecting to the cloud in a hybrid fashion, but also actually building new value and building businesses that are customer facing on that that air monetize herbal. Are you seeing that? Is that happening and having examples, even generic? >>Well, basic from our perspective, our partner community, that's what they do. We have a tonne of enterprise customers, but I'll need to connect and integrate the data that you have doesn't do anything for you, Fitz on its own. And it's not interacting with other data points. And it's not around interacting with other customers, other solutions in one night. So it does help build out a partner community, a solution community for our customers in our data centres and across the >>are their industry patterns emerging. In other words, is that data ecosystems emerging by industry or is a sort of or horizontal? >>There's a mix. So I think there's a lot of lot of financial sector stuff. Yes, certainly. And then certainly manufacturing s O. I think it's interesting that you're getting a bit of a combination, but not a lot of financial sector. >>Of course, the big bags early on that they could build their own cloud. Yeah, now they're probably rethinking that. Yeah, well, maybe >>they're also service providers. When you're that large a za bank on their end. They're doing a lot of work. E. I would also say the other part that a lot of people see as an opportunity is around all the HPC and AI applications as well, in addition to manufacturing distribution. So there's a lot of use cases, a lot of reasons, like us from sort of doing this >>wrap us up with value, perhaps that you're talking Torto Financial Services Organisation or a manufacturing company. What is that 32nd elevator pitch value problem? Why they should go HP Making Digital Realty together. >>So I would say green, like Rico location gives you a single contract. Singling voice, easy to go and design, implement support and go make happen. Sorry, that's very simple way say, very just make it easy >>on. And I would just say thank you on that. It's been great to speak with you guys. And yeah, when you think through that part of it also is a bespoke opportunity to put your data where it needs to be closer to your customers. Closer to the action you were thinking through the rape reiteration of it. A lot of it's being built out there on phones and whatnot. So you've got to think through where your data is and how you managed to >>write and enable every every company in every industry to be a data company. Because that's what, of course, the demanding consumers demanding that demand isn't it is not going to turn down right now. Absolutely. Just thanks so much for David. Very much. Thank you. Together in the ecosystem, there are guests. And Dave l want a I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching the key of live from the Venetian Expo Centre in Vegas, Baby. David, I will be back there next guest in a minute.

Published Date : Jun 29 2022

SUMMARY :

Brought to You by HP of HP Discover 2022 from the Venetian Expo Centre. for today. Great to have you on the Great to be here. Cory, talk to us about the partnership. So I'm crazy excited to be here with Cliff Talk to us. Bringing the two platforms together isn't it is an amazing thing that we have for customers, customers we know So a lot of people predicted, You know, guys like you were going to be in trouble. to have us help you out with it. I'm sorry, Didn't mean to you how much homogeneity I would tell you that they come to us from all the partners. on Gapen simply the cloud experiencing with the green light cloud platform I think the other side of you asked if it was it was the same across the board and ubiquitous. customers that says, Look, we can go and do this with you and do it simply and really make it happen very quickly and So all of that really makes the whole thing a lot easier from a customer's Date is the lifeblood of all these companies and you have Maybe you got a favourite customer example that you think really articulates the value of this partnership. and connectivity that you want. provider in the Partner for H P, pretty much anywhere but with connective ity everywhere. There's a lot of stuff. is because that's the right thing to do? Almost every conversation I have with customers is how are you doing Sustainability. way than way are we're really good at building sustainable data centres, and then you can actually get some credits back and forth, you their 30% reduction in your energy consumption. So it Zim part that kind of the avoidance of over provisioning such that you going right size with consulting and the thoughtfulness around this bespoke solution that you have. talked about the savings you talked about the simplification delivery perspective. from initial kind of opportunity if you like and customer inquiry through to actual architecture that works the best for you and your company. You know, while we over rotated into the cloud, you were going to come back. It's both, Yeah, in the empire. Well, where do you want your data? So, yeah, that really is accelerating because you don't I mean, just to be honest, you see the cloud guys combined growing 35%. the data centre piece to Green Lake piece and then some management services, whether they're from ourselves or from Are you seeing We have a tonne of enterprise customers, but I'll need to connect and integrate the data that you have doesn't are their industry patterns emerging. So I think there's a lot of lot of financial sector stuff. Of course, the big bags early on that they could build their own cloud. So there's a lot of use cases, a lot of reasons, like us from sort of doing this What is that 32nd elevator pitch value problem? So I would say green, like Rico location gives you a single contract. It's been great to speak with you guys. of course, the demanding consumers demanding that demand isn't it is not going to turn down right now.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
DavidPERSON

0.99+

Lisa MartinPERSON

0.99+

HPDORGANIZATION

0.99+

Corey DirePERSON

0.99+

HPORGANIZATION

0.99+

30%QUANTITY

0.99+

2030DATE

0.99+

two piecesQUANTITY

0.99+

six billionQUANTITY

0.99+

35%QUANTITY

0.99+

GreenleeORGANIZATION

0.99+

todayDATE

0.99+

Las VegasLOCATION

0.99+

Green LakeORGANIZATION

0.99+

yesterdayDATE

0.99+

two thingsQUANTITY

0.99+

CoryPERSON

0.99+

TodayDATE

0.99+

bothQUANTITY

0.99+

Cliff EvansPERSON

0.99+

DavePERSON

0.99+

Torto Financial Services OrganisationORGANIZATION

0.99+

one nightQUANTITY

0.99+

two itemsQUANTITY

0.99+

Green LightORGANIZATION

0.99+

50 marketsQUANTITY

0.99+

3000 projectsQUANTITY

0.99+

Data Centre Technology ServicesORGANIZATION

0.99+

Charles PhillipsPERSON

0.99+

2015DATE

0.99+

Green LegORGANIZATION

0.99+

Green Lake Cloud ServicesORGANIZATION

0.99+

firstQUANTITY

0.99+

oneQUANTITY

0.99+

Corey DyerPERSON

0.99+

two platformsQUANTITY

0.99+

70 servicesQUANTITY

0.99+

LeightonORGANIZATION

0.99+

VegasLOCATION

0.99+

ForresterORGANIZATION

0.98+

fourQUANTITY

0.98+

GreenORGANIZATION

0.98+

HP GreenORGANIZATION

0.98+

Green Lake PoloORGANIZATION

0.98+

leightonORGANIZATION

0.98+

Digital RealtyORGANIZATION

0.98+

Venetian Expo CentreLOCATION

0.98+

Day twoQUANTITY

0.98+

70 applicationsQUANTITY

0.98+

HP Green LakeORGANIZATION

0.97+

40 countriesQUANTITY

0.97+

Lisa MartinPERSON

0.96+

single contractQUANTITY

0.96+

290 data centreQUANTITY

0.96+

32nd elevatorQUANTITY

0.96+

Digital RealtyORGANIZATION

0.95+

Green LakeLOCATION

0.95+

about 70 applicationsQUANTITY

0.95+

Data SentinelORGANIZATION

0.94+

OneQUANTITY

0.94+

Oracle RackORGANIZATION

0.94+

single invoiceQUANTITY

0.92+

CoryORGANIZATION

0.92+

FitzORGANIZATION

0.91+

HPEORGANIZATION

0.89+

zeroQUANTITY

0.84+

GapenORGANIZATION

0.83+

timesQUANTITY

0.82+

RicoORGANIZATION

0.8+

blind spotsQUANTITY

0.78+

EUORGANIZATION

0.77+

single contractsQUANTITY

0.75+

coupleQUANTITY

0.75+

Bill Data centresORGANIZATION

0.74+

HP Making Digital RealtyORGANIZATION

0.74+

2022DATE

0.73+

ACC PA3 Bhaskar Ghosh and Rajendra Prasad


 

>>we'll go back to the cubes. Coverage of the age of US Executive Summit at Davis. Reinvent made possible by Accenture My name is Dave Volunteer. We're gonna talk about the arm nation advantage, embraced the future of productivity, improve speed quality and customer experience through artificial intelligence. And we herewith Bhaskar goes, Who's the chief strategy Officer X censure in Rajendra RP Prasad is the senior managing director in Global Automation. The Accenture guys walk into the Cube. Get to seal. >>Thank you. >>Hey, congratulations on the new book. I know it's like giving birth, but it's a mini version. If the well, the automation advantage embraced a future of productivity, improve speed, quality and customer experience to artificial intelligence. What inspired you to write this book? Can you tell us a little bit more about it and how businesses are going to be able to take advantage of the information that's in there? Maybe you could start, >>so I think you know, if we say that what inspired as primarily the two things really style, you know, over inspired have to start this project in first of all is the technology change step change in the technology. Second is the mile maturity of the buyer maturity of the market when it's a little more, you know, when I talk about the technology change, automation is nothing new in the industry. In the starting from the Industrial Revolution, always, industry adopted the automation. But last few years would happen. That there is a significant change in the technology in terms of not of new technologies are coming together like cloud data, artificial intelligence, machine learning and they are gearing match you, and that created a huge opportunity in the industry. So that is number one second if fighting the maturity of the buyer. So buyers are always buying automation, adopting the automation. So when I talked to this different by a different industrial wire, suddenly we realise they're not asking about workings automation, how that will help. But primarily they're talking about how they can scaling. They have all have done the pilot, the prototype, how they can take the full advantage in their enterprise through scheme and talking to few client few of our clients, and he realised that it's best to write this boat and film all our clients to take advantage of this new technologies to skill up their business. If I give a little more than inside that one, exactly we are trying to do in this boat primarily, we dealt with three things. One is the individual automation which deals with the human efficiency. Second is the industrial automation who visited a group efficiency. And third is the intelligent automation. We deal city business, official efficiency while business value. So we believe that this is what will really change their business and help our client help the automation. It users to really make clear an impact in their business. >>Yeah, And so you talked about that? The maturity of the customer. And and I like the way you should describe that spectrum ending with intelligent automation. So the point is you not just paving the cow path, if you will, automating processes that maybe were invented decades ago. You're really trying to rethink the best approach. And that's where you going to get the most business value, our peace In thinking about the maturity, I think the a pre pandemic people were maybe a little reluctant s Bhaskar was saying maybe needed some education. But But how? If things change me, obviously the penned Emmick has had a huge impact. It's accelerated things, but but what's changed in the business environment? In terms of the need to implement automation? R. P >>thank you Well, that is an excellent question. As even through the pandemic, most of the enterprises accelerated what I call as the digital transformation, technology transformation and the war all time that it takes to do. The transformation is compressed in our most land prices. Now do compress transformation. The core of it is innovation and innovation, led technology and technology based solutions. To drive this transformation automation. Artificial intelligence becomes hot of what we do while we are implementing this accelerators. Innovation enablers within the enterprises, most of the enterprises prior to the pandemic we're looking automation and I as a solution for cost efficiency. Saving cost in DePina deriving capacity efficiency does if they do the transformation when we press the fast forward but draw the transformation journey liberating automation. What happens is most of the enterprises which the focus from cost efficiency to speed to market application availability and system resiliency at the core. When I speaking to most of the sea woes Corrine Wall in the tech transformation they have now embrace automation and air as a Conan able to bribe this journeys towards, you know, growth, innovation, lead application, availability and transformation and sustainability of the applications through the are A book addresses all of these aspects, including the most important element of which is compute storeys and the enablement that it can accomplish through cloud transformation, cloud computing services and how I I and Michelle learning take log technologies can in a benefit from transformation to the block. In addition, we also heard person talk about automation in the cloud zero automation taking journey towards the cloud on automation Once you're in the clouds, water the philosophy and principles he should be following to drive the motivation. We also provide holy holistic approach to dry automation by focusing process technology that includes talent and change management and also addressing automation culture for the organisations in the way they work as they go forward. >>You mentioned a couple things computing, storage and when we look at our surveys, guys is it is interesting to see em, especially since the pandemic, four items have popped up where all the spending momentum is cloud province reasons scale and in resource and, you know, be able the report to remotely containers because a lot of people have work loads on Prem that they just can automatically move in the company, want to do development in the cloud and maybe connect to some of those on from work clothes. R P A. Which is underscores automation in, of course, and R. P. You mentioned a computing storage and, of course, the other pieces. Data's We have always data, but so my question is, how has the cloud and eight of us specifically influenced changes in automation? In a >>brilliant question and brilliant point, I say no winner. I talked to my clients. One of the things that I always says, Yeah, I I is nothing but y for the data that is the of the data. So that date of place underlying a very critical part of applying intelligence, artificial intelligence and I in the organization's right as the organisation move along their automation journey. Like you said, promoting process automation to contain a realisation to establishing data, building the data cubes and managing the massive data leveraging cloud and how Yebda please can help in a significant way to help the data stratification Dana Enablement data analysis and not data clustering classification All aspects of the what we need to do within the between the data space that helps for the Lord scale automation effort, the cloud and and ablest place a significant role to help accelerate and enable the data part. Once you do that, building mission learning models on the top of it liberating containers clusters develops techniques to drive, you know the principles on the top of it is very makes it easier to drive that on foster enablement advancement through cloud technologists. Alternatively, using automation itself to come enable the cloud transformation data transformation data migration aspects to manage the complexity, speed and scale is very important. The book stresses the very importance of fuelling the motion of the entire organisation to agility, embracing new development methods like automation in the cloud develops Davis a cop's and the importance of oral cloud adoptions that bills the foundational elements of, you know, making sure you're automation and air capabilities are established in a way that it is scalable and sustainable within the organisations as they move forward, >>Right? Thank you for that r p vast crime want to come back to this notion of maturity and and just quite automation. So Andy Jossy made the phrase undifferentiated, heavy lifting popular. But that was largely last decade. Apply to it. And now we're talking about deeper business integration. And so you know, automation certainly is solves the problem of Okay, I can take Monday and cast like provisioning storage in compute and automate that great. But what is some of the business problems, that deeper business integration that we're solving through things? And I want to use the phrase they used earlier intelligent automation? What is that? Can you give an example? >>Let's a very good question as we said, that the automation is a journey, you know, if we talk to any blind, so everybody wants to use data and artificial intelligence to transform their business, so that is very simple. But the point is that you cannot reach their anti unless you follow the steps. So in our book, we have explained that the process that means you know, we defined in a five steps. We said that everybody has to follow the foundation, which is primarily tools driven optimise, which is process drivel. An official see improvement, which is primarily are driven. Then comes predictive capability, the organisation, which is data driven, and then intelligence, which is primarily artificial intelligence driven. Now, when I talked about the use of artificial intelligence and this new intelligent in the business, what the what I mean is basically improved decision making in every level in the organisation and give the example. We have given multiple example in this, both in a very simple example, if I take suppose, a financial secretary organisation, they're selling wealth management product to the client, so they have a number of management product, and they have number of their number of clients a different profile. But now what is happening? This artificial intelligence is helping their agents to target the night product for the night customers. So then, at the success rate is very high. So that is a change that is a change in the way they do business. Now some of the platform companies like Amazon on Netflix. He will see that this this killed is a very native skill for them. They used the artificial intelligence try to use everywhere, but there a lot of other companies who are trying to adopt this killed today. Their fundamental problem is they do not have the right data. They do not have the capability. They do not have all the processes so that they can inject the decision making artificial intelligence capability in every decision making to empower their workforce. And that is what we have written in this book. To provide the guidance to this in this book. How they can use the better business decision improved the create, the more business value using artificial intelligence and intelligent automation. >>Interesting. Bhaskar are gonna stay with you, you know, in their book in the middle of last decade, Erik Brynjolfsson and Andy McAfee wrote the second Machine Age, and they made a point in the book that machines have always replaced humans in instead of various tasks. But for the first time ever, we're seeing machines replacing human in cognitive task that scares a lot of people so hardy you inspire employees to embrace the change that automation can bring. What what are you seeing is the best ways to do that? >>This is a very good question. The intelligent automation implementation is not, Iet Project is primarily change management. It's primarily change in the culture, the people in the organisation into embrace this change and how they will get empowered with the machine. It is not about the replacing people by machine, which has happened historically into the earlier stages of automation, which I explained. But in this intelligent automation, it is basically empowering people to do the better. Dwelled the example. That is the thing we have written in the book about about a newspaper, 100 years old newspaper in Italy. And you know, this industry has gone through multiple automation and changes black and white printing, printing to digital. Everything happened. And now what is happening? They're using artificial intelligence, so they're writers are using those technologies to write faster. So when they are writing immediately, they're getting supported with the later they're supporting with the related article they are supporting with this script, even they're supported to the heading of this article. So the question is that it is not replacing the news, you know, the content writer, but is basically empowering them so that they can produce the better quality of product they can, better writing in a faster time. So is very different approach and that is why is, um, needs a change management and it's a cultural change. >>Garden R P What's it for me? Why should we read the automation advantage? Maybe you can talk about some of the key takeaways and, you know, maybe the best places to start on an automation journey. >>Very will cut the fastest MP, Newer automation journey and Claude Adoption Journey is to start simple and start right if you know what's have free one of the process, Guru says, If you don't know where you are on a map, a map won't help you, so to start right, a company needs to know where they are on a map today, identify the right focus areas, create a clear roadmap and then move forward with the structured approach for successful our option. The other important element is if you automate an inefficient process, we are going to make your inefficiency run more efficiently. So it is very important to baseline, and then I established the baseline and know very or on the journey map. This is one of the key teams we discuss in the Automation Advantis book, with principles and tips and real world examples on how to approach each of these stages. We also stress the importance of building the right architecture is for intelligent automation, cloud enablement, security at the core of automation and the platform centric approach. Leading enterprises can fade out adopters and Iraq, whether they are in the early stages of the automation, journey or surrender advanced stage the formation journey. They can look at the automation advantage book and build and take the best practises and and what is provided as a practical tips within the book to drive there. Automation journey. This also includes importance of having right partners in the cloud space, like a loveliest who can accelerate automation, journey and making sure accompanies cloud migration. Strategy includes automation, automation, lead, yea and data as part of their journey. Management. >>That's great. Good advice there. Bring us home. Maybe you can wrap it up with the final final world. >>So, lefty, keep it very simple. This book will help you to create difference in your business with the power of automation and artificial intelligence. >>That's a simple message and will governor what industry you're in? There is a disruptions scenario for your industry and that disruption scenarios going to involve automation, so you better get ahead of editor game. They're The book is available, of course, at amazon dot com. You can get more information. X censure dot com slash automation advantage. Gosh, thanks so much for coming in the Cube. Really appreciate your time. >>Thank you. Thank >>you. >>Eh? Thank you for watching this episode of the eight of US Executive Summit of reinvent made possible by Accenture. Keep it right there for more discussions that educating spy inspire You're watching the queue.

Published Date : Nov 9 2021

SUMMARY :

X censure in Rajendra RP Prasad is the senior managing director in Global Hey, congratulations on the new book. maturity of the buyer maturity of the market when it's a little more, and I like the way you should describe that spectrum ending with intelligent automation. most of the enterprises prior to the pandemic we're looking automation the cloud and maybe connect to some of those on from work clothes. of fuelling the motion of the entire organisation to agility, So Andy Jossy made the phrase that the automation is a journey, you know, if we talk to any blind, But for the first time ever, replacing the news, you know, the content writer, Maybe you can talk about some of the key takeaways and, you know, maybe the best places to start on This is one of the key teams we discuss Maybe you can wrap it up with the final final world. This book will help you to create difference Gosh, thanks so much for coming in the Cube. Thank you. the queue.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
Andy JossyPERSON

0.99+

Andy McAfeePERSON

0.99+

ItalyLOCATION

0.99+

Dave VolunteerPERSON

0.99+

AmazonORGANIZATION

0.99+

BhaskarPERSON

0.99+

five stepsQUANTITY

0.99+

Erik BrynjolfssonPERSON

0.99+

MichellePERSON

0.99+

SecondQUANTITY

0.99+

MondayDATE

0.99+

OneQUANTITY

0.99+

AccentureORGANIZATION

0.99+

thirdQUANTITY

0.99+

NetflixORGANIZATION

0.99+

oneQUANTITY

0.99+

DavisPERSON

0.99+

bothQUANTITY

0.98+

eightQUANTITY

0.98+

Rajendra RP PrasadPERSON

0.98+

two thingsQUANTITY

0.98+

Rajendra PrasadPERSON

0.98+

three thingsQUANTITY

0.98+

decades agoDATE

0.98+

first timeQUANTITY

0.98+

pandemicEVENT

0.98+

amazon dot comORGANIZATION

0.97+

DanaPERSON

0.97+

secondQUANTITY

0.96+

last decadeDATE

0.94+

firstQUANTITY

0.94+

EmmickPERSON

0.94+

100 years oldQUANTITY

0.94+

US Executive SummitEVENT

0.93+

todayDATE

0.93+

Corrine WallLOCATION

0.9+

eachQUANTITY

0.89+

IraqLOCATION

0.87+

Industrial RevolutionEVENT

0.84+

Automation AdvantisTITLE

0.84+

Claude AdoptionPERSON

0.83+

four itemsQUANTITY

0.8+

censure dot comORGANIZATION

0.78+

Iet ProjectORGANIZATION

0.75+

Global AutomationORGANIZATION

0.75+

ACC PA3ORGANIZATION

0.74+

YebdaORGANIZATION

0.68+

ConanPERSON

0.68+

lastDATE

0.64+

Bhaskar GhoshPERSON

0.62+

DePinaTITLE

0.61+

Garden RPERSON

0.55+

teamsQUANTITY

0.55+

DavisLOCATION

0.54+

number oneQUANTITY

0.54+

coupleQUANTITY

0.53+

P.PERSON

0.52+

Machine AgeDATE

0.33+

Protect Your Data & Recover from Cyberthreats & Ransomware in Minutes


 

>>Welcome back to the cubes coverage of H P S. Green Lake announcement. We've been following Green Lake and the cadence of announcements making. Now we're gonna talk about ransomware, ransomware become a household term. But what people really don't understand is that virtually any bad actor can become a ransomware criminal by going on the dark web hiring a ransomware as a service sticking, putting a stick into a server and taking a piece of the action and that is a really insidious threat. Uh, the adversaries are extremely capable, so we're going to dig into that with Omar assad, who's the storage platform, lead cloud data services at H P E and Deepak verma vice president of product Zito, which is now an H P E company Gentlemen, welcome to the cube. Good to see you. Thank you. >>Thank you. Welcome. Pleasure to be here. So >>over you heard my little narrative upfront. How does the Xarelto acquisition fit into that discourse? >>Thank you. Dave first of all, we're extremely excited to welcome Sir toe into the HP family. Uh, the acquisition of Puerto expands the Green Lake offerings from H P E uh, into the data protection as a service and ransomware protection as a service capabilities and it at the same time accelerates the transformation that the HP storage businesses going through as it transforms itself into more of a cloud native business, which sort of follows on from the May 4th announcements that you helped us cover. Uh, this enables the HP sales teams to now expand the data protection perimeter and to start offering data protection as a service and ransomware as a service with the best in class technologies uh, from a protection site as well as from ransomware recovery side of the house. And so we're all the way down already trying to integrate uh, you know, the little offerings as part of the Green lake offerings and extending support through our services organization. And the more of these announcements are gonna roll out later in the month. >>And I think that's what you want to see from it as a service offering. You want to see a fast cadence of new services that are not a box by a box that are applying. No, it's services that you want to access. So let's, let's talk about before we get into the tech, can we talk about how you're helping customers deal with ransomware? Maybe some of the use cases that you're seeing. >>First of all, extremely excited to be part of the HP family now. Um, Quick history and that we've been around for about 11 years. We've had about 9000 plus customers and they all benefit from essentially the same technology that we invented 11 years ago. First and foremost, one of the use cases has been continuous data protection. So were built on the CdP platform, which means extremely low RTO S and R P O S for recovery. I'll give you example there um, United Airlines is an application that cost them $1 million dollars for every hour that they're down. They use traditional approaches. That would be a lot of loss with Zito, we have that down two seconds of loss in case and the application goes down. So that's kind of core and fundamental to our plaque. The second uh critical use case that for us has been simplicity. A lot of customers have said we make the difficult, simple. So DRS is a complex uh process. Um, give you an example there. Hcea Healthcare Consolidated four different disaster recovery platforms into a single platform in Puerto and saved about $10 million dollars a year. So it's making that operations of having disaster recovery process is much simpler. Um the third kind of critical use case for us as uh, the environment has evolved as the landscape has involved has been around hybrid cloud. So being able to take customers to the platforms that they want to go to that's critical for us And for our customers an example, there is Kingston technology's so Kingston tried some competitive products to move to Azure, it would take them about 24 hours to recover 30 VMS or so with zero technology. They will get about all their 1000 VMS up in Azure instantaneously. So these are three use cases that were foundational. Built. Built the company in the tech. >>Nice. Thank you. Thank you for that. So simple works well these days, especially with all this complexity we have to deal with. Can we get into the secret sauce a little bit. I mean CdP has been around forever. What do you guys do that? That's different. Maybe you can talk about that. Sure. >>Um it's cdp based, I think we've perfected the technology. It's less about being able to just copy the data. It's more about what you do when things go bump. We've made it simpler with driven economies of scale lower and being platform agnostic. We've really brought that up across to whatever platforms once upon a time it was moving from physical to virtual or even across different virtualization platforms and then being able to move across to whatever cloud platform customer may want or or back >>to cbP continuous data protection by the way for the audience that may not know that go ahead. And >>one of the additional points that I want to add to the box comment over here is the the basics of platform independence is what really drew uh hp technologists into the technology because you know, one of the things we have many, we have the high end platform with the H B electra nine Kv of the electro six kids the midrange platform. Then we have a bunch of file and object offerings on the side. What zero does it University universally applies to all those technologies and along with, you know, as you pair them up with our computer offerings to offer a full stack but now the stack is disaster recovery capable. Natively with the integration of certo, you know, one of the things that, you know, Deepak talked about about the as your migrations that a lot of the customers are talking about cloud is also coming up as a D our use case for a lot of our customers, customers, you know, you know, as we went through thousands of customers interviews one of the, one of the key things that came back was investing in a D our data center which is just waiting there for a disaster to happen. It's a very expensive insurance policy. So absurd. Oh, through its native capabilities allows customers to do is to just use public cloud as a D our target and and as a service, it just takes care of all the format conversions and recoveries and although that's completely automated inside the platform and and we feel that, you know, when you combine this either at the high end of data center storage offering or the middle age offering with this replication, D. R. And ransomware protection built into the same package, working under the same hood, it just simplifies and streamlines the customers deployment. >>Come here a couple of things. So first of all historically, if you wanted to recover to appoint within let's say, you know, 10 seconds, five seconds you have to pay up. Big time. Number one. Number two is you couldn't test your D. R. It was too risky. So people just had it in, they had a checkbox on compliance but they actually couldn't really test it because they were afraid they were going to lose data. So it sounds like you're solving both of those problems or >>or you know we remember the D. R. Test where it was a weekend. It was an event right? It was the event and at the end of july that the entire I. T. Organizing honey >>it's not gonna be home this weekend. Exactly what >>we've changed. That is a click of a button. You can D. R. Test today if you want to you can have disaster recovery still running. You can D. R. Test in Azure bring up your environment an isolated network bubble, make sure everything's running and bring it and bring it down. The interesting thing is the technology was invented back when our fear in the industry was losing a data center was losing power was catastrophic, natural disasters. But the technology has lent itself very well to the new threats which which are very much around ransomware as you mentioned because it's a type of disaster. Somebody's going after your data. Physical servers are still around but you still need to go back to a point in time and you need to do that very quickly. So the technology has really just found itself uh appealing to new challenges. >>If a customer asks you can I really eliminate cyber attacks, where should I put my my if I had 100 bucks to spend. Should I spend it on you know layers and defense should I spend it on recovery. Both, what would you tell them? >>I think it's a balanced answer. I think prevention is 100% impossible. Uh It's really I'd say spend it in in thirds. You want to spend a third of it and and prevention a third of it maybe in detection and then a third of it in uh recovery. So it's really that balancing act that means you can't leave the front door open but then have a lot of recovery techniques invested in. It has to be it has to be a balance and it's also not a matter of if it's a matter of when so we invest in all three areas. Hopefully two of them will work to your advantage. >>You dave you you should always protect your perimeter. I mean that that goes without saying but then as you invest in other aspects of the business, as Deepak mentioned, recovery needs to be fast and quick recovery whether from your recovering from a backup disaster. Are you covering from a data center disaster a corrupted file or from a ransomware attack. A couple of things that zero really stitches together like journal based recovery has been allowed for a while but making journal based recovery platform independent in a seamless fashion with the click of a button within five seconds go back to where your situation was. That gives you the peace of mind that even if the perimeter was breached, you're still protected, you know, five minutes into the problem And, and that's the peace of mind, which along with data protection as a service, disaster recovery as a service and now integrating this, you know, recovery from ransomware along with it in a very simple, easy to consume package is what drew us into the >>more you can do this you said on the use the cloud as a target. I could use the cloud as an air gap if I wanted to. It sounds like it's cloud Native, correct? Just wrap your stack in kubernetes and shove it in the cloud and have a host and say we're cloud to No, really I'm serious. So >>absolutely, we we looked at that approach and that that's where the challenge comes in, Right? So I give you the example of Kingston technology just doesn't scale, it's not fast enough. What we did was developed a platform for cloud Native. We consume cloud services where necessary in order to provide that scalability. So one example in Azure is being able to use scale set. So think about a scenario where you just declare a disaster, you've got 1000 VMS to move over, we can spin up the workers that need to do the work to get 1000 VMS spin them down. So you're up and running instantaneously and that involves using cloud Native uh tools and technologies, >>can we stay on that for a minute, So take take us through an example of what life was like would be like without zero trying to recover and what it's like with Puerto resources, complexity time maybe you could sort of paint a picture. Sure. >>Let me, I'll actually use an example from a customer 10 Kata. They uh develop defensive fabrics, especially fabric. So think about firefighters, think about our men and women abroad that need protective clothing that developed the fibers behave. They were hit by ransomware by crypto locker. That this was before zero. Unfortunately it took they took about a two week uh data loss. It took them weeks to recover that environment, bring it back up and the confidence was pretty low. They invested in, they looked at our technology, they invested in the technology and then they were hit with a different variant of crypto locker immediately. The the IT administrators and the ITS folks there were relieved right, they had a sense of confidence to say yes we can recover. And the second time around they had data loss of about 10 seconds, they could recover within a few minutes. So that's the before and after picture giving customers that confidence to say yep, a breach happened, we tried our best but now it's up to recovery and I can recover without having to dig tapes out from some vault and hopefully have a good copy of data sitting there and then try that over and over again and there's a tolerance right before a time before which business will not be able to sustain itself. So what we want to do is minimize that for businesses so that they can recover as quickly as possible with as little data loss as possible. >>Thank you for that. So, Omar, there's a bigger sort of cyber recovery agenda that you have as part of, of green lake, I'm sure. What, what should we expect, what's next? Where do you want to take this? >>So uh excellent question point in the future day. So one of the things that you helped us, uh you know, unveil uh in May was the data services. Cloud console. Data services. Cloud console was the first uh sort of delivery as we took the storage business as it is and start to transform into more of a cloud native business. We introduced electra uh which is the cloud native hardware with the customers buy for persistent storage within their data center. But then data services, cloud console truly cemented that cloud operational model. Uh We separated the management from, from the devices itself and sort of lifted it up as a sas service into the public, public cloud. So now what you're gonna see is, you know, more and more data and data management services come up on the data services. Cloud console and and zero is going to be one of the first ones. Cloud physics was another one that we we talked about, but zero is the is the true data management service that is going to come up on data services, cloud console as part of the Green Lake services agenda that that HP has in the customer's environ and then you're gonna see compliance as a service. You're going to see data protection as a service. You're gonna see disaster recovery as a service. But the beautiful thing about it is, is choice with simplicity as these services get loaded up on data services, clown console. All our customers instantly get it. There's nothing to install, there's nothing to troubleshoot uh, there's nothing to size. All those capabilities are available on the console, customers go in and just start consuming Xarelto capabilities from a management control plane, Disaster recovery control plan are going to be available on the data services, cloud console, automatically detecting electro systems, rian Bear systems, container based systems, whichever our customers have deployed and from there is just a flip of a button. Another way to look at it is it sort of gives you that slider that you have data protection or back up on one side, you've got disaster recovery on one side, you've got ransomware protection on on the extreme right side, you can just move a slider across and choose the service level that you want without worrying about best practices, installation, application integration. All of that just takes control from the data services, cloud concepts. >>Great, great summary because historically you would have to build that right now. You can buy it as a service. You can programmatically, you know, deploy it and that's a game changer. Have to throw it over the fence to some folks. That's okay. Now, you know, make it make it work and then they change the code and you come back a lot of finger pointing. It's now it's your responsibility. >>Absolutely. Absolutely. We're excited to provide Zito continue provides the desert of customers but also integrate with the Green Green Lake platform and let the rest of Green Lake customers experience some of the sort of technology and really make that available as a service. >>That's great. This is a huge challenge for customers. I mean they do, I pay their ransom. Do not pay the ransom. If I pay the ransom the FBI is going to come after me. But if I don't pay the ransom, I'm not gonna get the crypto key. So solutions like this are critical. You certainly see the president pushing for that. The United States government said, hey, we got to do a better job. Good job guys, Thanks for for sharing your story in the cube and congratulations. Thank >>you. Thank you David. >>All right. And thank you for watching everybody. Uh this is the, I want to tell you that everything that you're seeing today as part of the Green Lake announcement is going to be available on demand as part of the HP discover more. So you got to check that out. Thank you. You're watching the cube. >>Mhm mm.

Published Date : Sep 28 2021

SUMMARY :

Uh, the adversaries are extremely capable, so we're going to dig into that with Omar assad, Pleasure to be here. over you heard my little narrative upfront. itself into more of a cloud native business, which sort of follows on from the May 4th announcements that you And I think that's what you want to see from it as a service offering. First and foremost, one of the use cases has been Thank you for that. It's more about what you do when things go bump. to cbP continuous data protection by the way for the audience that may not know that go ahead. technologists into the technology because you know, one of the things we have many, we have the high end platform with So first of all historically, if you wanted to recover to appoint within let's say, or you know we remember the D. R. Test where it was a weekend. it's not gonna be home this weekend. back to a point in time and you need to do that very quickly. Both, what would you tell them? So it's really that balancing act that means you can't leave the front door You dave you you should always protect your perimeter. more you can do this you said on the use the cloud as a target. So think about a scenario where you just declare a disaster, you've got 1000 VMS to move over, complexity time maybe you could sort of paint a picture. So that's the before and after picture giving customers that confidence to Thank you for that. So one of the things that you You can programmatically, you know, deploy it and that's a game changer. of the sort of technology and really make that available as a service. If I pay the ransom the FBI is going to come after me. Thank you David. So you got to check that out.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
DavidPERSON

0.99+

OmarPERSON

0.99+

100 bucksQUANTITY

0.99+

FBIORGANIZATION

0.99+

1000 VMSQUANTITY

0.99+

H P EORGANIZATION

0.99+

DeepakPERSON

0.99+

May 4thDATE

0.99+

10 secondsQUANTITY

0.99+

HPORGANIZATION

0.99+

100%QUANTITY

0.99+

five minutesQUANTITY

0.99+

United AirlinesORGANIZATION

0.99+

five secondsQUANTITY

0.99+

KingstonORGANIZATION

0.99+

two secondsQUANTITY

0.99+

MayDATE

0.99+

second timeQUANTITY

0.99+

FirstQUANTITY

0.99+

$1 million dollarsQUANTITY

0.99+

Omar assadPERSON

0.99+

BothQUANTITY

0.99+

AzureTITLE

0.99+

three use casesQUANTITY

0.99+

firstQUANTITY

0.99+

oneQUANTITY

0.98+

DavePERSON

0.98+

todayDATE

0.98+

secondQUANTITY

0.98+

about 10 secondsQUANTITY

0.98+

30 VMSQUANTITY

0.98+

11 years agoDATE

0.98+

PuertoLOCATION

0.98+

thousands of customersQUANTITY

0.97+

Hcea HealthcareORGANIZATION

0.97+

bothQUANTITY

0.97+

ZitoORGANIZATION

0.97+

zeroQUANTITY

0.97+

about 11 yearsQUANTITY

0.97+

United States governmentORGANIZATION

0.96+

about 24 hoursQUANTITY

0.96+

thirdQUANTITY

0.96+

Green LakeORGANIZATION

0.96+

third kindQUANTITY

0.95+

D. R. TestEVENT

0.94+

Green LakeLOCATION

0.94+

H P S. Green LakeORGANIZATION

0.93+

about a two weekQUANTITY

0.93+

threeQUANTITY

0.93+

about 9000 plus customersQUANTITY

0.93+

about $10 million dollars a yearQUANTITY

0.93+

single platformQUANTITY

0.92+

Cloud physicsTITLE

0.91+

one sideQUANTITY

0.89+

XareltoTITLE

0.89+

one exampleQUANTITY

0.88+

10 KataORGANIZATION

0.86+

minutesQUANTITY

0.85+

end of julyDATE

0.84+

Deepak vermaPERSON

0.83+

two ofQUANTITY

0.82+

first onesQUANTITY

0.82+

LakeORGANIZATION

0.81+

PuertoORGANIZATION

0.81+

Green Green LakeORGANIZATION

0.78+

Number twoQUANTITY

0.78+

a minuteQUANTITY

0.78+

Adriana Gascoigne, GirlsInTech | AWS Summit DC 2021


 

>>Mhm Hello and welcome back to the cubes coverage of 80 of his public sector summit live for two days in D. C. In person. CuBA's here is an expo floor that people face to face down here. Adriana guest co founder and Ceo of Girls in tech cube alumni friend of the cube. We've known her for a long time. Watch their success really making an impact. Great to see you. Thanks for coming on. >>Wonderful to see you, john, thanks so much for having me. >>You know, one of the things that Sandy carter talks about matt max Peter talks about all of the Amazonian leadership that's about is skills training. Okay, this is a big deal. Okay, so getting talented to the industry is critical and also diversity and women attacking underrepresented minority groups are key. This has been a look at constant focus, you've been successful and and convincing folks about tech and working hard, what's the update, >>wow. So the reason why we're here, not only as Sandy carter are amazing chairman of the board of six plus years, but I heard we heard so many pain points from several of our partners as well as our good friends over at the White House and the Department of State and many other public sector agencies that there is a deficit. It's been very difficult to find diverse groups of talent and talent period to join their companies and populate those important I. T. Jobs stem jobs, whether it's very very technical or more data driven or more sort of design focus, product development focus across the board it's been very hard for them to find talent for those jobs. So girls in tech has partnered with AWS to create an initiative called the next generation public sector leaders and really focusing on creating awareness on career development opportunities for up and coming talent diverse talent that is curious and interested in job opportunities and educational opportunities within the public sector. So it has multi tiers, right? And it's something that we've devised based on the need and based on a lot of data and a lot of interviews from a lot of our partners and within the A. P. N. Network and we're doing a mentorship program which is a six month long program matching these amazing public sector executives, really accomplished leaders as well as our members from around the world um to connect and expose them and provide that nurturing, fostering mentality so that they can succeed in their careers. So >>eight of us getting behind this mission. Yes. And public sector is really fast growing changing. You start to see a lot of public private partnerships go on. So not just the old school public sector business, I mean the pandemic has shown the impact of society. So what does that do for the melting pot of talent out there? Have you seen anything out there? And how does that relate to this? Is that helped you at all or what's that does that mean for the mission? >>So there is a melting pot of talent. I just think we need to do a better job of creating awareness and really knowing where that talent lives. Like what are the blogs that they read? What are the videos that they watch and listen to? Where are they? Right. And we need to do the hard work and investigating and understanding like taking a more empathetic approach to really finding out what um how we can access them what their needs are. What are the things that interest piqued their interest within these jobs within the public sector um And customize it and market it so that they'll be eager and excited. Um And it would be more appealing to them. >>So I looked at the press release I just want to get your reaction to something you got evening with the experts. It's an in person event. >>Yes. When >>is that? Is that here is that going to be on your own event? What's that about? >>All the events that are going to be in person? Will be in D. C. Um There will be some virtual events as well. Our mentorship program is all virtual six month long program with curriculum and matchmaking on a platform that we use the evening with the experts which is a panel discussion with experts from a A. W. S. And beyond the A. P. N. Network. We'll talk about challenges and technology opportunities within a career development and also jobs. Um Well do recruitment like on the fly type of activities as well. Speed and speed interviewing, speed networking? Um We also have a few other programs, our webinar which is about the next gen public sector opportunities and this is more about the challenges that people face that companies face and the new technologies that will be launched very soon. And we're doing a widget on our jobs board to highlight the new career opportunity, new job opportunities from all of the public sector partners. We work with >>a very comprehensive, >>It's very comprehensive on the six >>month guided mentorship program. How does someone get involved in applications? How what's that going on there? >>It will be an application process and we will promote it to anyone who signs up to our newsletter. So go to Girls in tech dot org. Sign up for our newsletter and we will be posting and sharing more information on how people get involved. But we'll definitely send custom uh E. D. M essentially promoting to the people who are here at the conference and also through our Girls in tech D. C. Chapter as well. >>So I have to ask you, I know you've been really busy, been very successful. You've been out and about what's the trend line looked like? Well >>not for the last few years though, >>you've >>been in lockdown now. >>You've been working hard, you know have not not about now. You >>are not >>about what's the temperature like now in terms of the pulse of the industry relative to progress, what's what's what are you finding, what's the current situation >>progress for women in tech in the industry. So Since I started girls in tech in 2007, we've made A lot of progress, I would say it's a lot slower than I thought it would be, but you do see more and more women and people representing bipac actually apply for those jobs. We it is astronomically different than 2006, when I started in my first startup and there's a lot more mentorship, There are a lot more organizations out there that companies are more accountable with the R. G. Groups and they're changing their policies, are changing their training programs are having more off sites, there's now technologies that focus on tracking uh productivity and happiness of employees so that like all of that did not exist or I should say none of that existed, you know? And so we worked hard, we've worked hard, but it takes a village, it takes a lot of different people to create that change. And now one of girls in text mission is not just providing that education that community, that mentorship, we want to get the corporate involved, we want to teach the corporate about D and I training the importance of diversity, different tactics to recruit uh so on and so forth. And and it's been so amazing, so inspirational, I love, I started working more in partnerships and having our monthly calls with partners because I love it. I love collaborating to >>recruit good peer group around you to accelerate and create more territory of awareness and impact more people can get their hands involved. And I think to me that's what I think you're starting to see that with podcasts and media people are starting to go direct to tell their story, apps are out there now as you mentioned. So, but I feel like we're on a crossover point coming soon, totally thinks it's different. Um, but it's still a >>lot more work to do a lot more. We just got the service. I know, I know you've just scratched the surface, but we're so excited to be here. Aws is a huge supporter thanks to Sandy carter and her team. Um, it's been an amazing experience. >>Sandy's got great vision, she takes risks. So she's actually got the Amazonian concept of experiment, try something double down if it works and that's great to see that you guys have extended that relationship with, with her and the team. I like this idea of the fellowship cohort model of the or that program, you have the mentorship program. I think that's super cool. Um, that's something I think will be very successful. >>Uh, it's been successful so far. We typically over sell our mentorship are mentee spots. Uh, we only have 500 spots and last one we had over 2300 like a crazy amount, so we know that our members are really hungry for it around the world. And we know it will just be as just as popular for the public sector. So >>what's next for you? What's the vision? What's the next step was events are coming back in person? We're here in person. >>Yeah, there's just so much going on. I wish I could clone myself and we're busting at the seams. And I think the things that are really exciting to me are being able to produce our programs internationally, specifically in developing countries. So we're working um we haven't made an official announcement yet or anything, but we are working on expanding in african countries with Aws. They're doing some efforts and making some movements there. So places like Cameroon Ghana Nigeria Egypt. Uh we are looking to create chapters there for Girls in Tech and then expand our programming. Uh we're also, as mentioned earlier, we're working a lot with corporations to provide DNA training. So, training about policies, Inclusive leadership. Making sure they have the tools and policies to succeed and for their employees to feel comfortable, safe and productive in their work environment >>is great to see you. Congratulations Girls in tech dot org. Yes. Is the U. R. L. Check it out a great mission, very successful. Making progress any stats you can throw out there, you can share. >>Yeah, of course, you >>wrap it up. >>Yeah. So right now, girls in tech has 58 active chapters in 38 countries with over 70,000 active members. And by the end of the year we will have close to 100 active members. So hopefully we'll see you next year and that number will double or triple sign >>up. Tell him johN sent, you know, don't say that because you won't get no. Great to see you. >>Thank you. Nice to see you too. Thanks so >>much, john. Great to have you on cube coverage here at AWS public Sector summit in Washington, D. C. Is a live event. Were face to face. We had some remote guests. It's a hybrid event. Everything is being streamed. I'm john Kerry with the cube. Thanks for watching. Mhm. Mhm

Published Date : Sep 28 2021

SUMMARY :

that people face to face down here. You know, one of the things that Sandy carter talks about matt max Peter talks about all of the Amazonian leadership So the reason why we're here, not only as Sandy carter are amazing So not just the old school public sector business, I mean the pandemic has shown What are the things that interest piqued their interest within these So I looked at the press release I just want to get your reaction to something you got evening with the experts. All the events that are going to be in person? How what's that going on there? So go to Girls in tech dot org. So I have to ask you, I know you've been really busy, been very successful. You've been working hard, you know have not not about now. I love collaborating to And I think to me that's what I think you're starting to see that with podcasts and media people We just got the service. cohort model of the or that program, you have the mentorship program. around the world. What's the next step was events are coming back in person? And I think the things that are really exciting to me are being able is great to see you. And by the end of the year we will have close to 100 active members. to see you. Nice to see you too. Great to have you on cube coverage here at AWS public Sector summit in Washington,

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
2007DATE

0.99+

AWSORGANIZATION

0.99+

Adriana GascoignePERSON

0.99+

john KerryPERSON

0.99+

2006DATE

0.99+

R. G. GroupsORGANIZATION

0.99+

Washington, D. C.LOCATION

0.99+

D. C.LOCATION

0.99+

six monthQUANTITY

0.99+

johNPERSON

0.99+

A. P. N. NetworkORGANIZATION

0.99+

SandyPERSON

0.99+

johnPERSON

0.99+

next yearDATE

0.99+

Sandy carterPERSON

0.99+

two daysQUANTITY

0.99+

over 70,000 active membersQUANTITY

0.99+

CameroonLOCATION

0.99+

six monthQUANTITY

0.99+

six plus yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

AdrianaPERSON

0.99+

58 active chaptersQUANTITY

0.98+

500 spotsQUANTITY

0.98+

Department of StateORGANIZATION

0.98+

NigeriaLOCATION

0.98+

pandemicEVENT

0.98+

first startupQUANTITY

0.98+

38 countriesQUANTITY

0.98+

eightQUANTITY

0.98+

80QUANTITY

0.98+

CeoPERSON

0.97+

AWS SummitEVENT

0.96+

over 2300QUANTITY

0.96+

White HouseORGANIZATION

0.95+

AWSEVENT

0.95+

oneQUANTITY

0.95+

girls in techORGANIZATION

0.95+

EgyptLOCATION

0.94+

U. R. L.LOCATION

0.93+

Girls in TechORGANIZATION

0.93+

GhanaLOCATION

0.93+

100 active membersQUANTITY

0.9+

end of the yearDATE

0.9+

Sector summitEVENT

0.89+

GirlsORGANIZATION

0.89+

six >>monthQUANTITY

0.89+

africanLOCATION

0.88+

AwsORGANIZATION

0.88+

matt maxPERSON

0.85+

sectorEVENT

0.83+

AmazonianOTHER

0.82+

GirlsInTechORGANIZATION

0.76+

yearsDATE

0.75+

CuBAORGANIZATION

0.72+

AwsPERSON

0.69+

PeterPERSON

0.65+

DC 2021LOCATION

0.6+

D. C.TITLE

0.59+

lastDATE

0.59+

W. S.LOCATION

0.53+

D.PERSON

0.4+

Rashmi Kumar SVP and CIO at Hewlett Packard Enterprise


 

>>Welcome back to HP discover 2021 My name is Dave Volonte and you're watching the cubes, virtual coverage of H. P. S. Big customer event. Of course, the virtual edition, we're gonna dig into transformations the role of technology in the role of senior technology leadership. Look, let's face it, H P. E. Has gone through a pretty dramatic transformation itself in the past few years. So it makes a great example in case study and with me is rashmi kumari who is the senior vice president and C. I. O. At HP rashmi welcome come on inside the cube. >>Dave Nice to be here. >>Well, it's been almost a year since Covid changed the world as we know it. How would you say the role of the CEO specifically and generally it has changed. I mean you got digital Zero Trust has gone from buzzword to >>mandate >>digital. Everybody was complacent about digital in many ways and now it's really accelerated remote work hybrid. How do you see it? >>Absolutely. As I said in the last discover that Covid has been the biggest reason to accelerate digital transformation in the company's I. C. C. I O. S role has changed tremendously in the last 15 months. It's no more just keep the operations running that's become a table stick. Our roles have become not only to create digital customer experience engaged with our customers in different ways, but also to transform the company operations from inside out to be able to give that digital experience from beginning to end off the customer engagement going forward. We have also become responsible for switching our strategies around the companies as the Covid. Covid hit in different parts of the world at different times and how companies structured their operations to go from one region to another. A global company like H. B had to look into its supply chain differently. Had to look into strategies to mitigate the risk that was created because of the supply chain disruptions as well as you go to taking care of our employees. How do you create this digital collaboration experience where teams can still come together and make the work happen for our end customers? How do we think about future employee engagement when people are not coming into these big buildings and offices and working together, But how to create the same level of collaboration coordination as well as delivery or faster uh goods and services which is enabled by technology going forward. So see I. O. And I. T. S. Role has gone from giving a different level of customer experience to a different level of employee experience as well as enabling day to day operations of the company's. Ceos have realized that digital is the way to go forward. It does not matter what industry you are in and now see a as have their seat at the table to define what the future of every company now, which is a technology company respective you are in oil and gas or mining or a technical product or a card or a mobility company. End of the day you have to act and behave like a technology company. >>So I want to ask you about that because you've you've been a Ceo and uh you know, leading technology provider now for the last three years and you've had previous roles and where you know non technical technology, you know, selling to I. T. Companies and as you point out those worlds are coming together, everybody is a technology company today. How do you think that changes the role of the C. I. O. Because it would always seem to me that there was a difference between A C. I. O. And a tech company. You know what I mean by that? And the C. I. O. It's sort of every other company is those two worlds converging. >>Absolutely. And it's interesting you pointed out that I have worked in many different industries from healthcare and pharma to entertainment to utilities. Um And now at a technology company end of the day um The issues that I. T. Deals with are pretty similar across the organization. What is different here is now my customers are people like me in other industries and I have a little bit of an advantage because just having the experience across various ecosystem. Even at H. B. Look I was fortunate um at H. B. Because of Antonio's leadership, we have topped out mandate to transform how we did business. And I talked about my next gen IT program in last year's cube interview. But at the same time while we were changing our customer partners experience from ordering to order processing to supply chain to finance. Uh We decided this pivot of becoming as a service company. And if you think about that pivot it's pretty common if it was a technology company or non technology company at HP. We were very used to selling a product and coming back three years later at the time of refresh of infrastructure or hardware. That's no more true for us now we are becoming as a service or a subscription company and I. T. Played a major role to enable that quote to cash experience. Which is very different than the traditional experience around how we stay connected with our customer, how we proactively understand their behavior. I always talk about this term. Um Digital exhaust which results into data which can result into better insight and you can not only Upsell cross l because now you have more data about your product usage, but first and the foremost give what your customer wants in a much better way because you can proactively understand their needs and wants because you are providing a digital product versus a physical product. So this is the change that most of the companies are now going through. If you look at Domino's transition, there are pills a sellers but they did better because they had better digital experience. If you look at Chipotle, these are food service companies I. K which is a furniture manufacturer across the board. We have helped our customers and industries to understand how to become a more digital provider. And and remember when uh hp says edge to cloud platform as a service edges the product, the customers who we deal with and how do we get that? Help them get their data to understand how the product is behaving and then get the information to cloud for further analysis. Um and understanding from the data that comes out of the products that gets up, >>I think you've been HP now think around three years and I've been watching of course for decades. Hp. Hp then HP is I feel like it's entering now the sort of third phase of its transformation, your phase one was okay, we gotta figure out how to deal or or operate as a separate companies. Okay. That took some time and then it was okay. Now how do we align our resources and you know, what are the waves that we're gonna ride? And how do we how do we take our human capital, our investments and what bets do we place and and all in on as a service. And now it's like okay how do we deliver on all those promises? So pretty massive transformations. You talked about edge to cloud as a service so you've got this huge pivot in your in your business. What's the technology strategy to support that transformation? >>Yeah that's a that's a great question. So as I mentioned first your second phase which was becoming a stand alone company was the next N. I. T. Program very broad and um S. Four and 60 related ecosystem application. We're even in the traditional business there was a realization that we were 100 20 billion company. We are 30 billion company. We need different types of technologies as well as more integrated across our product line across the globe. And um we I'm very happy to report that we are the last leg of next in I. T. Transformation where we have brought in new customer experience through low touch or not touch order pressing. A very strong as four capabilities. Where we are now able to run all global orders across all our hardware and services business together. And I'm happy to report that we have been able to successfully run through the transformation which a typical company of our size would take five or six years to do in around close to three years. But at the same time while we were building this foundation and the capabilities to be able to do other management, supply chain and data and analytics platforms. We also made the pivot to go to as a service now for as a service and subscription selling. It needs a very different quote to Kazakh cash experience for our customers and that's where we had to bring in um platforms like brim to do um subscription building, convergent charging and a whole different way to address. But we were lucky to have this transformation completed on which we could bolt on this new capability and we had the data and another X platform built which now these as a service products can also use to drive better insight into our customer behavior um as well as how they're using our product a real time for our operations teams. >>Well they say follow the money in the cube. We love to say follow the day to day is obviously a crucial component of competitive advantage business value. So you talk a little bit more about the role of data. I'm interested I'm interested in where I. T. Fits uh you know a lot of companies that have a Chief data officer or Ceo sometimes they're separate. Sometimes they they work you know for each other or Cdo works for C. I. O. How do you guys approach the whole data conversation? >>Yeah that's a that's a great question and has been top of the mind of a lot of C E O C I O S. Chief digital officers in many different companies. The way we have set it up here is do we do have a chief data officer and we do have a head of uh technology and platform and data within I. T. Look. The way I see is that I call the term data torture if we have multiple data lakes, if we have multiple data locations and the data is not coming together at one place at the first time that it comes out of the source system, we end up with data swamps and it's very difficult to drive insights. It's very difficult to have a single version of truth. So HP had two pronged approach. First one was as part of this next gen i. T. Transformation we embarked upon the journey first of all to define our customers and products in a very uniform way across the globe. It's called entity Master Data and Product Master Data Program. These were very very difficult program. We are now happy to report that we can understand the customer from code stage to servicing stage beginning to end across all our system. It's been a tough journey but it was a effort well spent at the same time while we were building this message capability, we also invest the time in our analytics platform because we are generating so much data now globally as one footprint. How do we link our data link to R. S. A. P. And Salesforce and all these systems where our customer data flows through and create analytics and insight from it from our customers or our operations team. At the same time, we also created a chief data officer role where the responsibility is really to drive business from understanding what decision making an analytics they need around product, around customer, around their usage, around their experience to be able to drive better alignment with our customers and products going forward. So this creates efficiencies in the organization. If you have a leader who is taking care of your platforms and data building single source of truth and you have a leader who is propagating this mature notion of handling data as enterprise data and driving that focus on understanding the metrics and the insight that the businesses need to drive better customer alignment. That's when we gain those efficiencies and behind the scenes, the chief data officer and the data leader within my organization worked very, very closely to understand each other needs sometimes out of the possible where do we need the data processing? Is it at the edge? Is it in the cloud? What's the best way to drive the technology and the platform forward? And they kind of rely on each other's knowledge and intelligence to give us give us superior results. And I have done data analytics in many different companies. This model works where you have focused on insight and analytics without because data without insight is of no value, but at the same time you need clean data. You need efficient, fast platforms to process that insight at the functional nonfunctional requirements that are business partners have and that's how we have established in here and we have seen many successes recently. As of now, >>I want to ask you a kind of a harder maybe it's not harder question. It's a weird question around single version of the truth because it's clearly a challenge for organizations and there's many applications workloads that require that single version of the truth. The operational systems, the transaction systems, the HR the salesforce. Clearly you have to have a single version of the truth. I feel like however we're on the cusp of a new era where business lines see an opportunity for whatever their own truth to work with a partner to create some kind of new data product. And it's early days in that. But I want to and maybe not the right question for HP. But I wonder if you see it with in your ecosystems where where it's it's yes, single version of truth is sort of one class of data and analytics gotta have that nail down data quality, everything else. But then there's this sort of artistic version of the data where business people need more freedom. They need more latitude to create. Are you seeing that? And maybe you can help me put that into context. >>Uh, that's a great question. David. I'm glad you asked it. So I think tom Davenport who is known in the data space talks about the offensive and the defensive use cases of leveraging data. I think the piece that you talked about where it's clean, it's pristine, it's quality. It's all that most of those offer the offensive use cases where you are improving company's operations incrementally because you have very clean that I have very good understanding of how my territories are doing, how my customers are doing how my products are doing. How am I meeting my sls or how my financials are looking? There's no room for failure in that area. The other area is though, which works on the same set of data. It's not a different set of data, but the need is more around finding needles in the haystack to come up with new needs, new ones and customers or new business models that we go with. The way we have done it is we do take this data take out what's not allowed for everybody to be seen and then what we call is a private space. But that's this entire data available to our business leader, not real time because the need is not as real time because they're doing more what we call this predictive analytics to be able to leverage the same data set and run their analytics. And we work very closely with business in its we educate them. We tell them how to leverage this data set and use it and gather their feedback to understand what they need in that space to continue to run with their with their analytics. I think as we talk about hindsight insight and foresight hindsight and insight happens more from this clean data lakes where you have authenticity, you have quality and then most of the foresight happens in a different space where the users have more leverage to use data in many different ways to drive analytics and insights which is not readily available. >>Thank you for that. That's interesting discussion. You know digital transformation. It's a journey and it's going to take many years. A lot of ways, not a lot of ways 2020 was a forced March to digital. If you weren't a digital business, you were out of business and you really didn't have much time to plan. So now organizations are stepping back saying, okay let's really lean into our strategy the journey and along the way there's gonna be blind spots, there's bumps in the road when you look out what are the potential disruptions that you see maybe in terms of how companies are currently approaching their digital transformations? That's a great question. >>Dave and I'm going to take a little bit more longer term view on this topic. Right in what's top of my mind um recently is the whole topic of E. S. G. Environmental, social and governance. Most of the companies have governance in place, right? Because they are either public companies or they're under some kind of uh scrutiny from different regulatory bodies or what not. Even if you're a startup, you need to do things with our customers and what not. It has been there for companies. It continues to be there. We the public companies are very good at making sure that we have the right compliance, right privacy, right governance in in in place. Now we'll talk about cyber security. I think that creates a whole new challenge in that governance space. However, we have the set up within our companies to be able to handle that challenge. Now, when we go to social, what happened last year was really important. And now as each and every company, we need to think about what are we doing from our perspective to play our part in that. And not only the bigger companies leaders at our level, I would say that Between last March and this year, I have hired more than 400 people during pandemic, which was all virtual, but me and my team have made sure that we are doing the right thing to drive inclusion and diversity, which is also very big objective for h P E. And Antonio himself has been very active in various round tables in us at the world Economic forum level and I think it's really important for companies to create that opportunity, remove that disparity that's there for the underserved communities. If we want to continue to be successful in this world too, create innovative products and services, we need to sell it to the broader cross section of populations and to be able to do that, we need to bring them in our fold and enable them to create that um, equal consumption capabilities across different sets of people. Hp has taken many initiatives and so are many companies. I feel like uh, The momentum that companies have now created around the topic of equality is very important. I'm also very excited to see that a lot of startups are now coming up to serve that 99% versus just the shiny ones, as you know, in the bay area to create better delivery methods of food or products. Right. The third piece, which is environmental, is extremely important as well as we have seen recently in many companies and where even the dollar or the economic value is flowing are around the companies which are serious about environmental HP recently published its living Progress report. We have been in the forefront of innovation to reduce carbon emissions, we help our customers, um, through those processes. Again, if we do, if our planet is on fire, none of us will exist, right. So we all have to do that every little part to be able to do better. And I'm happy to report, I myself as a person, solar panels, battery electric cars, whatever I can do, but I think something more needs to happen right where as an individual I need to pitch in, but maybe utilities will be so green in the future that I don't need to put panels on my roof, which again creates a different kind of uh waste going forward. So when you ask me about disruptions, I personally feel that successful company like ours have to have E. S. G. Top of their mind and think of products and services from that perspective, which creates equal opportunity for people, which creates better environment sustainability going forward. And, you know, our customers are investors are very interested in seeing what we are doing to be able to serve that cause uh for for bigger cross section of companies, and I'm most of the time very happy to share with my C I. O cohort around how are H. P E F s capabilities creates or feeds into the circular economy, how much e waste we have recycled or kept it off of landfills are green capabilities, How it reduces the evils going forward as well as our sustainability initiatives, which can help other, see IOS to be more um carbon neutral going forward as well. >>You know, that's a great answer, rashmi, thank you for that because I gotta tell you hear a lot of mumbo jumbo about E S G. But that was a very substantive, thoughtful response that I think, I think tech companies in particular are have to lead in our leading in this area. So I really appreciate that sentiment. I want to end with a very important topic which is cyber. It's obviously, you know, escalated in, in the news the last several months. It's always in the news, but You know, 10 or 15 years ago there was this mentality of failure equals fire. Now we realize, hey, they're gonna get in, it's how you handle it. Cyber has become a board level topic, you know? Years ago there was a lot of discussion, oh, you can't have the sec ops team working for the C. I. O. Because that's like the Fox watching the Henhouse, that's changed. Uh it's been a real awakening, a kind of a rude awakening. So the world is now more virtual, you've gotta secure physical uh assets. I mean, any knucklehead can now become a ransomware attack, er they can, they can, they can buy ransomware as a services in the dark, dark web. So that's something we've never seen before. You're seeing supply chains get hacked and self forming malware. I mean, it's a really scary time. So you've got these intellectual assets, it's a top priority for organizations. Are you seeing a convergence of the sea? So roll the C. I. O. Roll the line of business roles relative to sort of prior years in terms of driving security throughout organizations. >>This is a great question. And this was a big discussion at my public board meeting a couple of days ago. It's as as I talk about many topics, if you think digital, if you think data, if you think is you, it's no more one organizations, business, it's now everybody's responsibility. I saw a Wall Street Journal article a couple of days ago where Somebody has compared cyber to 9-11-type scenario that if it happens for a company, that's the level of impact you feel on your on your operations. So, you know, all models are going to change where C so reports to see IO at H P E. We are also into products or security and that's why I see. So is a peer of mine who I worked with very closely who also worked with product teams where we are saving our customers from a lot of pain in this space going forward. And H. B. E. Itself is investing enormous amount of efforts in time in coming out of products which are which are secured and are not vulnerable to these types of attacks. The way I see it is see So role has become extremely critical in every company and the big part of that role is to make people understand that cybersecurity is also everybody's responsibility. That's why in I. T. V. Propagate def sec ups. Um As we talk about it, we are very very careful about picking the right products and services. This is one area where companies cannot shy away from investing. You have to continuously looking at cyber security architecture, you have to continuously look at and understand where the gaps are and how do we switch our product or service that we use from the providers to make sure our companies stay secure The training, not only for individual employees around anti phishing or what does cybersecurity mean, but also to the executive committee and to the board around what cybersecurity means, what zero trust means, but at the same time doing drive ins, we did it for business continuity and disaster recovery. Before now at this time we do it for a ransomware attack and stay prepared as you mentioned. And we all say in tech community, it's always if not when no company can them their chest and say, oh, we are fully secured because something can happen going forward. But what is the readiness for something that can happen? It has to be handled at the same risk level as a pandemic or earthquake or a natural disaster. And assume that it's going to happen and how as a company we will behave when when something like this happen. So I'm here's believer in the framework of uh protect, detect, govern and respond um as these things happen. So we need to have exercises within the company to ensure that everybody is aware of the part that they play day today but at the same time when some event happen and making sure we do very periodic reviews of I. T. And cyber practices across the company. There is no more differentiation between I. T. And O. T. That was 10 years ago. I remember working with different industries where OT was totally out of reach of I. T. And guess what happened? Wanna cry and Petra and XP machines were still running your supply chains and they were not protected. So if it's a technology it needs to be protected. That's the mindset. People need to go with invest in education, training, um awareness of your employees, your management committee, your board and do frequent exercises to understand how to respond when something like this happen. See it's a big responsibility to protect our customer data, our customers operations and we all need to be responsible and accountable to be able to provide all our products and services to our customers when something unforeseen like this happens, >>Russian, very generous with your time. Thank you so much for coming back in the CUBA is great to have you again. >>Thank you. Dave was really nice chatting with you. Thanks >>for being with us for our ongoing coverage of HP discover 21 This is Dave Volonte, you're watching the virtual cube, the leader in digital tech coverage. Be right back. >>Mm hmm, mm.

Published Date : Jun 6 2021

SUMMARY :

in the role of senior technology leadership. I mean you got digital Zero Trust has gone from buzzword to How do you see it? End of the day you have to act and behave like a technology company. So I want to ask you about that because you've you've been a Ceo and uh you get the information to cloud for further analysis. What's the technology strategy to support that transformation? And I'm happy to report that we have been able to successfully run through We love to say follow the day to day is obviously a crucial component of I call the term data torture if we have multiple data lakes, if we have multiple data locations But I wonder if you see it with in your in that space to continue to run with their with their analytics. our strategy the journey and along the way there's gonna be blind We have been in the forefront of innovation to reduce carbon emissions, So roll the C. I. O. Roll the line of business roles relative to sort scenario that if it happens for a company, that's the level of impact you feel on Thank you so much for coming back in the CUBA is great to have you again. Dave was really nice chatting with you. cube, the leader in digital tech coverage.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
DavidPERSON

0.99+

Dave VolontePERSON

0.99+

DavePERSON

0.99+

ChipotleORGANIZATION

0.99+

tom DavenportPERSON

0.99+

fiveQUANTITY

0.99+

rashmi kumariPERSON

0.99+

this yearDATE

0.99+

99%QUANTITY

0.99+

last yearDATE

0.99+

AntonioPERSON

0.99+

six yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

HPORGANIZATION

0.99+

30 billionQUANTITY

0.99+

second phaseQUANTITY

0.99+

IOSTITLE

0.99+

last MarchDATE

0.99+

third pieceQUANTITY

0.99+

DominoORGANIZATION

0.99+

10DATE

0.99+

Rashmi KumarPERSON

0.99+

10 years agoDATE

0.99+

firstQUANTITY

0.99+

FoxORGANIZATION

0.99+

more than 400 peopleQUANTITY

0.98+

Hewlett Packard EnterpriseORGANIZATION

0.98+

2020DATE

0.98+

First oneQUANTITY

0.98+

pandemicEVENT

0.98+

one footprintQUANTITY

0.98+

todayDATE

0.98+

three years laterDATE

0.98+

twoQUANTITY

0.98+

eachQUANTITY

0.97+

CUBALOCATION

0.97+

15 years agoDATE

0.97+

third phaseQUANTITY

0.96+

H P. E.ORGANIZATION

0.96+

CeosORGANIZATION

0.96+

single versionQUANTITY

0.95+

one placeQUANTITY

0.95+

2021DATE

0.95+

first timeQUANTITY

0.95+

oneQUANTITY

0.94+

single versionQUANTITY

0.94+

one areaQUANTITY

0.94+

HpORGANIZATION

0.94+

H. B.PERSON

0.94+

decadesQUANTITY

0.94+

MarchDATE

0.93+

HenhouseTITLE

0.93+

hpORGANIZATION

0.93+

I. T. FitsPERSON

0.92+

one regionQUANTITY

0.92+

CovidPERSON

0.92+

around three yearsQUANTITY

0.92+

zero trustQUANTITY

0.92+

last 15 monthsDATE

0.89+

KazakhLOCATION

0.88+

I. T.PERSON

0.88+

I. KORGANIZATION

0.86+

Years agoDATE

0.85+

Wall Street JournalTITLE

0.84+

100 20 billionQUANTITY

0.84+

two pronged approachQUANTITY

0.84+

C. I. O.PERSON

0.84+

three yearsQUANTITY

0.84+

S. FourTITLE

0.82+

couple of days agoDATE

0.82+

couple of days agoDATE

0.81+

phase oneQUANTITY

0.8+

H. B.PERSON

0.79+

H. P. S. BigEVENT

0.78+

Wanna cryORGANIZATION

0.78+

SVPPERSON

0.77+

almost a yearQUANTITY

0.76+

CovidORGANIZATION

0.74+

last three yearsDATE

0.74+

single sourceQUANTITY

0.72+

past few yearsDATE

0.71+

Amanda Silver, Microsoft | DockerCon 2021


 

>>Welcome back to the cubes coverage of dr khan 2021. I'm john for your host of the cube. We're here with Amanda Silver, corporate vice president, product developer division at Microsoft. Amanda, Great to see you you were on last year, Dr khan. Great to see you again a full year later were remote. Thanks for coming on. I know you're super busy with build happening this week as well. Thanks for making the time to come on the cube for Dr khan. >>Thank you so much for having me. Yeah, I'm joining you like many developers around the globe from my personal home office, >>developers really didn't skip a beat during the pandemic and again, it was not a good situation but developers, as you talked about last year on the front lines, first responders to creating value quite frankly, looking back you were pretty accurate in your prediction, developers did have an impact this year. They did create the kind of change that really changed the game for people's lives, whether it was developing solutions from a medical standpoint or even keeping systems running from call centres to making sure people got their their their goods or services and checks and and and kept sanity together. So. >>Yeah absolutely. I mean I think I think developers you know get the M. V. P. Award for this year because you know at the end of the day they are the digital first responders to the first responders and the pivot that we've had to make over the past year in terms of supporting remote telehealth, supporting you know online retail, curbside pickup. All of these things were done through developers being the ones pushing the way forward remote learning. You know my kids are learning at home right behind me right now so you might hear them during the interview that's happening because developers made that happen. >>I don't think mom please stop hogging the band with, they've got a gigabit. Stop it. Don't be streaming. My kids are all game anyway, Hey, great to have you on and you have to get the great keynote, exciting to see you guys continue the collaboration with Docker uh with GIT hub and Microsoft, A great combination, it's a 123 power punch of value. You guys are really kind of killing it. We heard from scott and dan has been on the cube. What's your thoughts on the partnership with the developer division team at Microsoft with Doctor, What's it all about this year? What's the next level? >>Well, I mean, I think, I think what's really awesome about this partnership is that we all have, we all are basically sharing a common mission. What we want to do is make sure that we're empowering developers, that we're focused on their productivity and that we're delivering value to them so they can do their job better so that they can help others. So that's really kind of what drives us day in and day out. So what we focus on is developer productivity. And I think that's a lot of what dana was talking about in her session, the developer division. Specifically, we really try to make sure that we're improving the state of the art from modern developers. So we want to make sure that every keystroke that they take, every mouse move that they make, it sounds like a song but every every one of those matter because we want to make sure that every developers writing the code that only they can write and in terms of the partnership and how that's going. You know my team and the darker team have been collaborating a ton on things like dr desktop and the Doctor Cli tool integrations. And one of the things that we do is we think about pain points and various workflows. We want to make sure that we're shaving off the edges of all of the user experience is the developers have to go through to piece all of these applications together. So one of the big pain points that we have heard from developers is that signing into the Azure cloud and especially our sovereign clouds was challenging. So we contributed back to uh back to doctor to actually make it easier to sign into these clouds. And so dr developers can now use dr desktop and the Doctor Cli to actually change the doctor context so that its Azure. So that makes it a lot easier to connect the other. Oh, sorry, go ahead. No, I was just >>going to say, I love the reference of the police song. Every breath you take, every >>mouth moving. Great, >>great line there. Uh, but I want to ask you while you're on this modern cloud um, discussion, what is I mean we have a lot of developers here at dr khan. As you know, you guys know developers in your ecosystem in core competency. From Microsoft, Kublai khan is a very operator like focus developed. This is a developer conference. You guys have build, what is the state of the art for a modern cloud developer? Could you just share your thoughts because this comes up a lot. You know, what's through the art? What's next jan new guard guard? It's his legacy. What is the state of the art for a modern cloud developer? >>Fantastic question. And extraordinarily relevant to this particular conference. You know what I think about often times it's really what is the inner loop and the outer loop look like in terms of cycle times? Because at the end of the day, what matters is the time that it takes for you to make that code change, to be able to see it in your test environment and to be able to deploy it to production and have the confidence that it's delivering the feature set that you need it to. And it's, you know, it's secure, it's reliable, it's performance, that's what a developer cares about at the end of the day. Um, at the same time, we also need to make sure that we're growing our team to meet our demand, which means we're constantly on boarding new developers. And so what I take inspiration from our, some of the tech elite who have been able to invest significant amounts in, in tuning their engineering systems, they've been able to make it so that a new developer can join a team in just a couple of minutes or less that they can actually make a code change, see that be reflected in their application in just a few seconds and deploy with confidence within hours. And so our goal is to actually be able to take that state of the art metric and democratize that actually bring it to as many of our customers as we possibly can. >>You mentioned supply chain earlier in securing that. What are you guys doing with Docker and how to make that partnership better with registries? Is there any update there in terms of the container registry on Azure? >>Yeah, I mean, you know, we, we we have definitely seen recent events and and it almost seems like a never ending attacks that that you know, increasingly are getting more and more focused on developer watering holes is how we think about it. Kind of developers being a primary target um for these malicious hackers. And so what it's more important than ever that every developer um and Microsoft especially uh really take security extraordinarily seriously. Our engineers are working around the clock to make sure that we are responding to every security incident that we hear about and partnering with our customers to make sure that we're supporting them as well. One of the things that we announced earlier this week at Microsoft build is that we've actually taken, get have actions and we've now integrated that into the Azure Security Center. And so what this means is that, you know, we can now do things like scan for vulnerabilities. Um look at things like who is logging in, where things like that and actually have that be tracked in the Azure security center so that not just your developers get that notification but also your I. T. Operations. Um In terms of the partnership with dR you know, this is actually an ongoing partnership to make sure that we can provide more guidance to developers to make sure that they are following best practices like pulling from a private registry like Docker hub or at your container registry. So I expect that as time goes on will continue to more in partnership in this space >>and that's going to give a lot of confidence. Actually, productivity wise is going to be a big help for developers. Great stuff is always good, good progress. They're moving the needle. >>Last time we >>spoke we talked about tools and setting Azure as the doctor context duty tooling updates here at dot com this year. That's notable. >>Yeah, I mean, I think, you know, there's one major thing that we've been working on which has a big dependency on docker is get help. Code space is now one of the biggest pain points that developers have is setting up a new DEV box, which they often have to do when they are on boarding a new employee or when they're starting a new project or even if they're just kicking the tires on a new technology that they want to be able to evaluate and sometimes creating a developer environment can actually take hours um and especially when you're trying to create a developer environment that matches somebody else's developer environment that can take like a half a day and you can spend all of your time just debugging the differences in environment variables, for example, um, containers actually makes that much easier. So what you can do with this, this services, you can actually create death environment spun up in the cloud and you can access it in seconds and you get from there are working coding environment and a runtime environment and this is repeatable via containers. So it means that there's no inadvertent differences introduced by each DEV. And you might be interested to know that underneath this is actually using Docker files and dr composed to orchestrate the debits and the runtime bits for a whole bunch of different stacks. And so this is something that we're actually working on in collaboration with the with the doctor team to have a common the animal format. And in fact this week we actually introduced a couple of app templates so that everybody can see this all in action. So if you check out a ca dot m s forward slash app template, you can see this in action yourself. >>You guys have always had such a strong developer community and one thing I love about cloud as it brings more agility, as we always talk about. But when you start to see the enterprise grow into, the direction is going now, it's almost like the developer communities are emerging, it's no longer about all the Lennox folks here and the dot net folks there, you've got windows, you've got cloud, >>it's almost >>the the the solidification of everyone kind of coming together. Um and visual studio, for instance, last year, I think you were talking about that to having to be interrogated dr composed, et cetera. >>How do you see >>this melting pot emerging? Because at the end of the day, you pick the language you love and you got devops, which is infrastructure as code doesn't matter. So give us your take on where we are with that whole progress of of making that happen. >>Well, I mean I definitely think that, you know, developer environments and and kind of, you know, our approach to them don't need to be as dogmatic as they've been in the past. I really think that, you know, you can pick the right tool and language and stand developer stack for your team, for your experience and you can be productive and that's really our goal. And Microsoft is to make sure that we have tools for every developer and every team so that they can build any app that they want to want to create. Even if that means that they're actually going to end up ultimately deploying that not to our cloud, they're going to end up deploying it to AWS or another another competitive cloud. And so, you know, there's a lot of things that we've been doing to make that really much easier. We have integrated container tools in visual studio and visual studio code and better cli integrations like with the doctor context that we had talked about a little bit earlier. We continue to try to make it easier to build applications that are targeting containers and then once you create those containers it's much easier to take it to another environment. One of the examples of this kind of work is now that we have WsL and the Windows subsystem for Lennox. This makes it a lot easier for developers who prefer a Windows operating system as their environment and maybe some tools like Visual Studio that run on Windows, but they can still target Lennox with as their production environment without any impedance mismatch. They can actually be as productive as they would be if they had a Linux box as their Os >>I noticed on this session, I got to call this out. I want to get your reaction to it interesting. Selection of Microsoft talks, the container based development. Visual studio code is one that's where you're going to show some some some container action going on with note and Visual Studio code. And then you get the machine learning with Azure uh containers in the V. S. Code. Interesting how you got, you know, containers with V. S. And now you've got machine learning. What does that tell the world about where Microsoft's at? Because in a way you got the cutting edge container management on one side with the doctor integration. Now you get the machine learning which everyone's talking about shifting, left more automation. Why are these sessions so important? Why should people attend? And what's the what's the bottom line? >>Well, like I said, like containers basically empower developer productivity. Um that's what creates the reputable environments, that's what allows us to make sure that, you know, we're productive as soon as we possibly can be with any text act that we want to be able to target. Um and so that's kind of almost the ecosystem play. Um it's how every developer can contribute to the success of others and we can amor ties the kinds of work that we do to set up an environment. So that's what I would say about the container based development that we're doing with both visual studio and visual studio code. Um in terms of the machine learning development, uh you know, the number of machine learning developers in the world is relatively small, but it's growing and it's obviously a very important set of developers because to train a machine learning uh to train an ml model, it actually requires a significant amount of compute resources, and so that's a perfect opportunity to bring in the research that are in a public cloud. Um What's actually really interesting about that particular develop developer stack is that it commonly runs on things like python. And for those of you who have developed in python, you know, just how difficult it is to actually set up a python environment with the right interpreter, with the right run time, with the right libraries that can actually get going super quickly, um and you can be productive as a developer. And so it's actually one of the hardest, most challenging developer stacks to actually set up. And so this allows you to become a machine learning developer without having to spend all of your time just setting up the python runtime environment. >>Yeah, it's a nice, nice little call out on python, it's a double edged sword. It's easier to sling code around on one hand, when you start getting working then you gotta it gets complicated can get well. Um Well the great, great call out there on the island, but good, good, good project. Let me get your thoughts on this other tool that you guys are talking about project tie. Uh This is interesting because this is a trend that we're seeing a lot of conversations here on the cube about around more too many control planes. Too many services. You know, I no longer have that monolithic application. I got micro micro applications with microservices. What the hell is going on with my services? >>Yeah, I mean, I think, you know, containers brought an incredible amount of productivity in terms of having repeatable environments, both for dev environments, which we talked about a lot on this interview already, but also obviously in production and test environments. Super important. Um and with that a lot of times comes the microservices architecture that we're also moving to and the way that I view it is the microservices architecture is actually accompanied by businesses being more focused on the value that they can actually deliver to customers. And so they're trying to kind of create separations of concerns in terms of the different services that they're offering, so they can actually version and and kind of, you know, actually improve each of these services independently. But what happens when you start to have many microservices working together in a SAS or in some kind of aggregate um service environment or kind of application environment is it starts to get unwieldy, it's really hard to make it so that one micro service can actually address another micro service. They can pass information back and forth. And you know what used to be maybe easy if you were just building a client server application because, you know, within the server tear all of your code was basically contained in the same runtime environment. That's no longer the case when every microservices actually running inside of its own container. So the question is, how can we improve program ability by making it easier for one micro service that's being used in an application environment, be to be able to access another another service and kind of all of that context. Um and so, you know, you want to be able to access the service is the the api endpoint, the containers, the ingress is everything, make everything work together as though it felt just as easy as as um you know, server application development. Um And so what this means as well is that you also oftentimes need to get all of these different containers running at the same time and that can actually be a challenge in the developer and test loop as well. So what project tie does is it improves the program ability and it actually allows you to just write a command like thai run so that you can actually in stan she ate all of these containers and get them up and running and basically deploy and run your application in that environment and ultimately make the dev testing or loop much faster >>than productivity gain. Right. They're making it simple to stand up. Great, great stuff. Let me ask you a question as we kind of wrap down here for the folks here at Dakar Con, are >>there any >>special things you'd like to talk about the development you think are important for the developers here within this space? It's very dynamic. A lot of change happening in a good way. Um, but >>sometimes it's hard to keep >>track of all the cool stuff happening. Could you take a minute to, to share your thoughts on what you think are the most important develops developments in this space? That that might be interesting to ducker con attendees. >>I think the most important things are to recognize that developer environments are moving to containerized uh, environments themselves so that they can be repeated, they can be shared, the work, configuring them can be amortized across many developers. That's important thing. Number one important thing. Number two is it doesn't matter as much what operating system you're running as your chrome, you know, desktop. What matters is ultimately the production environment that you're targeting. And so I think now we're in a world where all of those things can be mixed and matched together. Um and then I think the next thing is how can we actually improve microservices, uh programming development together um so that it's easier to be able to target multiple micro services that are working in aggregate uh to create a single service experience or a single application. And how do we improve the program ability for that? >>You know, you guys have been great supporters of DACA and the community and open source and software developers as they transform and become quite frankly the superheroes for the transformation, which is re factoring businesses. So this has been a big thing. I'd love to get your thoughts on how this is all coming together inside Microsoft, you've got your division, you get the developer division, you got GIT hub, got Azure. Um, and then just historically, and he put this up last year army of an ecosystem. People who have been contributing encoding with Microsoft and the partners for many, many decades. >>Yes. The >>heart Microsoft now, how's it all working? What's the news? I get Lincoln, Lincoln, but there's no yet developer model there yet, but probably is soon. >>Um Yeah, I mean, I think that's a pretty broad question, but in some ways I think it's interesting to put it in the context of Microsoft's history. You know, I think when I think back to the beginning of my career, it was kind of a one stack shop, you know, we was all about dot net and you know, of course we want to dot net to be the best developer environment that it can possibly be. We still actually want that. We still want that need to be the most productive developer environment. It could we could possibly build. Um but at the same time, I think we have to recognize that not all developers or dot net developers and we want to make sure that Azure is the most productive cloud for developers and so to do that, we have to make sure that we're building fantastic tools and platforms to host java applications, javascript applications, no Js applications, python applications, all of those things, you know, all of these developers in the world, we want to make sure it can be productive on our tools and our platforms and so, you know, I think that's really kind of the key of you know what you're speaking of because you know, when I think about the partnership that I have with the GIT hub team or with the Azure team or with the Azure Machine learning team or the Lincoln team, um A lot of it actually comes down to helping empower developers, improving their productivity, helping them find new developers to collaborate with, um making sure that they can do that securely and confidently and they can basically respond to their customers as quickly as they possibly can. Um and when, when we think about partnering inside of Microsoft with folks like linkedin or office as an example, a lot of our partnership with them actually comes down to improving their colleagues efficiency. We build the developer tools that office and lengthen are built on top of and so every once in a while we will make an improvement that has, you know, 5% here, 3% there and it turns into an incredible amount of impact in terms of operations, costs for running these services. >>It's interesting. You mentioned earlier, I think there's a time now we're living in a time where you don't have to be dogmatic anymore, you can pick what you like and go with it. Also that you also mentioned just now this idea of distributed applications, distributed computing. You know, distributed applications and microservices go really well together. Especially with doctor. >>Can you share >>your thoughts on the framework that you guys released called Dapper? >>Yeah, yeah. We recently released Dapper. It's called D A P R. You can look it up on GIT hub and it's a programming model for common microservices pattern, two common microservices patterns that make it really easy and automatic to create those kinds of microservices. So you can choose to work with your favorite state stores or databases or pub sub components and get things like cloud events for free. You can choose either http or g R B C so that you can get mesh capabilities like service discovery and re tries and you can bring your own secret store and easily be able to call it from any environment variable. It's also like I was talking about earlier, multi lingual. Um so you don't need to embrace dot net, for example, as you're programming language to be able to benefit from Dapper, it actually supports many programming languages and Dapper itself is actually written and go. Um and so, you know, all developers can benefit from something like Dapper to make it easier to create microservices applications. >>I mean, always great to have you on great update. Take a minute to give an update on what's going on with your division. I know you had to build conference this week. V. S has got the new preview title. We just talked about what are the things you want to get to plug in for? Take a minute to get to plug in for what you're working on, your goals, your objectives hiring, give us the update. >>Yeah, sure. I mean, you know, we we built integrated container tools in visual studio uh and the Doctor extension and Visual Studio code and cli extensions. Uh and you know, even in this most recent release of our Visual Studio product, Visual Studio 16 10, we added some features to make it easier to use DR composed better. So one of the examples of this is that you can actually have uh Oftentimes you need to be able to use multiple doctor composed files together so that you can actually configure various different container environments for a single single application. But it's hard sometimes to create the right Yeah. My file so that you can actually invoke it and invoke the the container and the micro services that you need. And so what this allows you to do is to actually have just a menu of the different doctor composed files so that you can select the runtime and test environment that you need for the subset of the portion of the application that you're working on at the end of the day. This is always about developer productivity. You know, like I said, every keystroke matters. Um and we want to make sure that you as a developer can focus on the code that only you can Right. >>Amanda Silver, corporate vice president product development division of Microsoft. Always great to see you and chat with you remotely soon. We'll be back in in real life with real events soon as we come out of the pandemic and thanks for sharing your insight and congratulations on your success this year and and congratulations on your announcement here at Dakar Gone. >>Thank you so much for having me. >>Okay Cube coverage for Dunkirk on 2021. I'm John for your host of the Cube. Thanks for watching. Mhm

Published Date : May 28 2021

SUMMARY :

Amanda, Great to see you you were on last year, Dr khan. Yeah, I'm joining you like many developers around the globe quite frankly, looking back you were pretty accurate in your prediction, developers did have an impact V. P. Award for this year because you know at the end of the day they are the digital first My kids are all game anyway, Hey, great to have you on and you have to get the great keynote, exciting to see you guys and the Doctor Cli to actually change the doctor context so that its Azure. Every breath you take, every Great, you guys know developers in your ecosystem in core competency. Because at the end of the day, what matters is the time that it takes for you to make that What are you guys doing with Docker and how to make that partnership better with Um In terms of the partnership with dR you know, and that's going to give a lot of confidence. spoke we talked about tools and setting Azure as the doctor context duty So what you can do with this, this services, you can actually create death But when you start to see the enterprise grow into, studio, for instance, last year, I think you were talking about that to having to be interrogated dr composed, Because at the end of the day, you pick the language you love easier to build applications that are targeting containers and then once you create And then you get the machine learning with the machine learning development, uh you know, the number of machine learning developers around on one hand, when you start getting working then you gotta it gets complicated can get well. Um And so what this means as well is that you also oftentimes need to Let me ask you a question as we kind of wrap down here for the folks here at Dakar Con, the developers here within this space? Could you take a minute to, to share your thoughts on what you think are the most I think the most important things are to recognize that developer environments are moving to You know, you guys have been great supporters of DACA and the community and open source and software developers What's the news? that has, you know, 5% here, 3% there and it You mentioned earlier, I think there's a time now we're living in a time where you don't have to be dogmatic anymore, You can choose either http or g R B C so that you can get mesh capabilities I mean, always great to have you on great update. So one of the examples of this is that you can actually Always great to see you and chat with you remotely I'm John for your host of the Cube.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
Diane GreenePERSON

0.99+

Eric HerzogPERSON

0.99+

James KobielusPERSON

0.99+

Jeff HammerbacherPERSON

0.99+

DianePERSON

0.99+

IBMORGANIZATION

0.99+

Mark AlbertsonPERSON

0.99+

MicrosoftORGANIZATION

0.99+

AmazonORGANIZATION

0.99+

Rebecca KnightPERSON

0.99+

JenniferPERSON

0.99+

ColinPERSON

0.99+

Dave VellantePERSON

0.99+

CiscoORGANIZATION

0.99+

Rob HofPERSON

0.99+

UberORGANIZATION

0.99+

Tricia WangPERSON

0.99+

FacebookORGANIZATION

0.99+

SingaporeLOCATION

0.99+

James ScottPERSON

0.99+

ScottPERSON

0.99+

Ray WangPERSON

0.99+

DellORGANIZATION

0.99+

Brian WaldenPERSON

0.99+

Andy JassyPERSON

0.99+

VerizonORGANIZATION

0.99+

Jeff BezosPERSON

0.99+

Rachel TobikPERSON

0.99+

AlphabetORGANIZATION

0.99+

Zeynep TufekciPERSON

0.99+

TriciaPERSON

0.99+

StuPERSON

0.99+

Tom BartonPERSON

0.99+

GoogleORGANIZATION

0.99+

Sandra RiveraPERSON

0.99+

JohnPERSON

0.99+

QualcommORGANIZATION

0.99+

Ginni RomettyPERSON

0.99+

FranceLOCATION

0.99+

Jennifer LinPERSON

0.99+

Steve JobsPERSON

0.99+

SeattleLOCATION

0.99+

BrianPERSON

0.99+

NokiaORGANIZATION

0.99+

EuropeLOCATION

0.99+

Peter BurrisPERSON

0.99+

Scott RaynovichPERSON

0.99+

RadisysORGANIZATION

0.99+

HPORGANIZATION

0.99+

DavePERSON

0.99+

EricPERSON

0.99+

Amanda SilverPERSON

0.99+

Intermission 2 | DockerCon 2021


 

>>welcome back everyone. We're back to intermission. I'm hama in case you forgot and hear them with Brett and Peter. So what a great morning afternoon. We've had like we're now in the home stretch and you know, I really want to give a shout out to all of you who are sticking with us, especially if you're in different time zone than pacific. So I then jumped into the community rooms. The spanish won, the Brazilian won the french one. Everybody is just going strong. So again, so much so gratitude for that. Thank you for being so involved and really participating the chat rooms in the community. The chat windows in the community rooms are just going nuts. So it's, it's really good to see that. And as usual, Peter and brat had some great, very interactive panels and that was very exciting to watch. But you know, since they were on the panels, I decided to go and see some other things and I actually attended the last mile of container ization. That was, that was actually a very good session. We had a lot of good interactivity there. Yeah. And then while also talked about the container security in the cloud native world. So that was, I think that was your panel peter. That was, that was very exciting. And um, I want to share with everybody the numbers that we've been seeing for dr khan live. So as, as of, I'm sorry, said we need a drumroll. We do need a drum roll. Can you do a drum roll for me? No, no, no. >>Just a >>symbol. Okay, good. Go. Uh, we're at over 22,000 attendees um, today. So that's amazing. That's great. I love the sound effect. That's a great sound effect. The community rooms continue to be really engaged. We're still seeing hundreds of people in those rooms. So again shout out to everyone who is participating. And I felt again like a kid in a candy store didn't know which sessions to attend. They were all very interesting and you know, we're getting some good feedback on twitter. I want to read out some more tweets that we got and one in particular, I don't know whether to feel happy for this person or sad for this person, but it's uh well the initials are P. W. And he said that he was up at two am to watch the keynotes. So again, I'll let you decide whether you're it's a good thing or not, but we're happy to have you PW is awesome. Um as well. There was someone who said that these features are so needed. The things that dr announced this morning in the keynotes and that doctor has reacted to our pains and I think they mean has addressed their pain. So that was really gratifying to read. Yeah, really wonderful. That's some other countries that I didn't shout out before this just tells you what the breadth and scope of our community is. Indonesia, la paz Bolivia, Greece, Munich, Ukraine, oxford UK Australia Philippines. And there's just more and I'm going to do a special shadow to Montreal because that's where I'm from. So yes, applause for that. It was really great. And so I just want to thank all of you. Um, I want to encourage you when we talked about the power of community. Remember we're doing a fundraiser. So to combat Covid for Covid relief or actually all that money is going to go to UNICEF. Docker is contributing 10,000 and we're doing a go fund me. And the link is there on the screen. So please donate. You know, just $1. 1 person each of you donates $1. We would have raised over $22,000. So please please find it within you to contribute because again, our communities that are, that are the most effective are India and brazil, which are are very active doctor affinity. So please give back. I really appreciate that >>highlighted by the brazil. Yeah. >>You're going to brazil room and get them all to donate. Exactly. Um, also want to encourage, you know, if you're interested in participating in our, in our road map. Our public road map is on GIT hub. So it's get home dot com slash docker slash roadmap. And that's something that you can participate in and vote up features that you want to see. We love to get the community involved and participating in our, in our road map. So make sure to check that out. And I also want to note on that >>Hello can real quick. I'm sorry. Yeah, I talk about our road map all the time, but honestly folks out there are PMS are in their our ceo is in there that we do watch that. That is our roadmap is extremely, extremely important to us. So any features complaints, right, joining the conversation. That's a great way to get uh to interact with Docker in our products. Right. We we really highly valued the road map. Okay, back to your mama, sorry. >>Oh absolutely. And if you want to see us be even more responsive to what you need to participate in that road map discussion. That's really great. Um a couple of things coming up, just want to put the spotlight on. We have at 3 15 what's new with with desktop from our own ue cow. So I highly recommend that you attend that session and of course there's the Woman in tech live panel. So this is very exciting, moderated by yours truly and it has putting a spotlight on our women captains and our women developers. So that's very exciting. But I also hear that we're doing there's a session with jay frog coming up so peter, why don't you talk about that a little bit? >>Yeah, we have a session coming up from our partners from jay frog around devops patterns and anti patterns for continuous software updates. And another one that I'm extremely excited about is uh RM one talk from our very own Tony's from Docker. So if you have an M one and you're interested in multi arc architecture builds, check that out. It's gonna be a great, great talk. Um and then we have melissa McKay also from jay frog, talking about Docker and the container ecosystem and last but definitely not least. We'll check them all out there. Going to be great. But Brett is going to be doing I think the best panel that I'm gonna go watch and he made up a new word, it's called say this. I'm all about the trending new words today about this is gonna be awesome. Yeah. Yeah >>I'm going to have the battle bottle of the panels. >>Yeah. Yeah well mine's before years so we're not competing. So yeah we have we have two excellent panels in a row to finish off the day and just seven list is basically how to run, how can we run containers without managing servers? So it doesn't mean you don't actually have infrastructure just let's not manage service. Um Yeah and we we uh need to wrap it up and >>Uh before we do that I just want to um tell everyone that we actually have a promotion going on. So we um for those that sign up for a pro or team subscription, we're offering a 20% off so there's the U. R. L.. You can check out what the promotion is and this is for a new and returning users so you can use the promo code dr khan 21 all the information is on the website are really encourage you to check that out promotion for 20% off, join us for our panels. And we're doing a wrap up at five p.m. Where we'll have our own Ceo and that wrap up portion. Look forward to seeing there. All right, >>thank you too. All right everyone we'll see you on the next go around coming up next me and some other people awesome and Yeah. Mhm. Mhm. Yeah. >>Yeah. Yeah. Mhm. Is >>a really varied community. There's a lot of people with completely different backgrounds, completely different experience levels and completely different goals about how they want to use Docker. And I think that's really interesting. It's always easy to talk about the technology that I've used for so many years. I really love Doctor and I can find so many ways that it's useful and it's great to use in your day to day work clothes. I've >>used doctor for anything from um tracking airplanes with my son, which was a kind of cool project to more professional projects where we actually Built one of the first database as his services using docker even before it was 10 and I was released and we took it further and we start composing monitoring tools. We really start taking it to the next level. And we got to the point where I was trying to make everything in a container, I love to use >>doctor to make disposable project so I can download the project and it's been that up using Docker compose or something like that in a way that every developer that works in the project doesn't even need to know the underlying technology doesn't just need to run Docker compose up and the whole project is going to be up and running even if >>you're not using doctor and production, there are a lot of other ways that you can use doctor to make your life so much easier. As a developer, you can run your projects on your machine locally. Um as a tester you can actually launch test containers and be able to run um dependencies that your project requires. You can run real life versions so that um you're as close to production as possible. >>I was able to migrate most of the workloads from our on from uh to the cloud. Running complete IEDs inside a docker or running it or using it basically to replace their build scripts or using it to run not web applications but maybe compile c plus plus code or compile um projects that really just require some sort of consistency across their team, >>whether it be a web app or a database, I can control these all the same. That was really the power I saw within Doctors standardization and the portability >>doctor isn't the one that created containers uh and uh but it's the one that made it uh democratically possible, so everyone use it. And this effort has made the technology environment so much better for everyone that uses it, both for developers and for end users. So this >>past year has been quite interesting and I think we're all in the same boat here, so no one has, no one is an exception to this, but what we all learn from it is, you know, the community is very important and to lean on other people for help for assistance. >>Yeah, it's been really challenging of course, but I think the biggest and most obvious thing that I've learned both on a personal and a business perspective is just to be ready to adapt to change and don't be afraid of it either. I think it's worth noting that you should never really take it for granted that the paradigms of, you know, the world or technology or something like that aren't going to shift drastically and very, very quickly. >>I'm looking forward to what is coming down the pipe with doctor. What more are they going to throw our way in order to make our lives easier? >>It's very interesting to see the company grow and adapt the way it has. I mean it as well as the community, it's been very interesting to see, you know, how, you know, the return to develop our focus is now the main focus and I find that's very interesting because, you know, developers are the ones that really boost the doctor to where it is today. And if we keep on encouraging these developer innovation, we'll just see more tools being developed on top of Doctor in the future, and that's what I'm really excited to see with Doctor and the technology in the future.

Published Date : May 28 2021

SUMMARY :

I really want to give a shout out to all of you who are sticking with us, especially if you're in different time zone than So again, I'll let you decide whether you're it's a good thing or not, highlighted by the brazil. So make sure to check that out. So any features complaints, right, joining the conversation. So I highly recommend that you attend that So if you have an M one and you're interested in multi arc architecture builds, So it doesn't mean you don't actually khan 21 all the information is on the website are really encourage you to check that out All right everyone we'll see you on the next go around coming it's great to use in your day to day work clothes. We really start taking it to the next level. As a developer, you can run your projects on your machine I was able to migrate most of the workloads from our on from That was really the power I saw within Doctors standardization and the portability So this from it is, you know, the community is very important and to lean on other people for help the paradigms of, you know, the world or technology or something like that aren't going to shift I'm looking forward to what is coming down the pipe with doctor. it's been very interesting to see, you know, how, you know, the return to develop

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
BrettPERSON

0.99+

PeterPERSON

0.99+

20%QUANTITY

0.99+

melissa McKayPERSON

0.99+

five p.m.DATE

0.99+

MontrealLOCATION

0.99+

10,000QUANTITY

0.99+

$1QUANTITY

0.99+

over $22,000QUANTITY

0.99+

UNICEFORGANIZATION

0.99+

brazilLOCATION

0.99+

3 15DATE

0.99+

dockerTITLE

0.99+

first databaseQUANTITY

0.98+

P. W.PERSON

0.98+

todayDATE

0.98+

UkraineLOCATION

0.98+

two amDATE

0.98+

MunichLOCATION

0.98+

$1. 1 personQUANTITY

0.97+

twitterORGANIZATION

0.97+

jay frogORGANIZATION

0.97+

oxfordLOCATION

0.97+

oneQUANTITY

0.97+

bothQUANTITY

0.97+

over 22,000QUANTITY

0.96+

DockerORGANIZATION

0.96+

DockerTITLE

0.96+

past yearDATE

0.95+

CovidOTHER

0.94+

hundreds of peopleQUANTITY

0.94+

two excellent panelsQUANTITY

0.94+

GreeceLOCATION

0.94+

bratPERSON

0.92+

frenchOTHER

0.92+

eachQUANTITY

0.9+

peterPERSON

0.89+

c plus plusTITLE

0.88+

spanishOTHER

0.88+

this morningDATE

0.88+

DockerCon 2021EVENT

0.86+

hamaPERSON

0.86+

IndonesiaLOCATION

0.85+

seven listQUANTITY

0.84+

TonyPERSON

0.83+

IndiaLOCATION

0.83+

dr khanPERSON

0.78+

10QUANTITY

0.74+

drPERSON

0.73+

pacificLOCATION

0.73+

BrazilianOTHER

0.72+

U. R.LOCATION

0.7+

Australia PhilippinesLOCATION

0.66+

brazilORGANIZATION

0.63+

UKLOCATION

0.59+

many yearsQUANTITY

0.56+

of peopleQUANTITY

0.55+

PWORGANIZATION

0.54+

GITTITLE

0.53+

khan 21OTHER

0.52+

dockerORGANIZATION

0.52+

CeoORGANIZATION

0.52+

la pazORGANIZATION

0.51+

BoliviaLOCATION

0.4+

Danny Allan & Brian Schwartz | VeeamON 2021


 

>>Hi lisa martin here with the cubes coverage of demon 2021. I've got to alumni joining me. Please welcome back to the cube Danny. Alan beam's ceo Danny. It's great to see you. >>I am delighted to be here lisa. >>Excellent brian Schwartz is here as well. Google director outbound product management brian welcome back to the program. Uh >>thanks for having me again. Excited to be >>here. Excited to be here. Yes, definitely. We're gonna be talking all about what Demon google are doing today. But let's go ahead and start Danny with you. Seems vision is to be the number one trusted provider of backup and recovery solutions for the, for for modern data protection. Unpack that for me, trust is absolutely critical. But when you're talking about modern data protection to your customers, what does that mean? >>Yeah. So I always, I always tell our customers there's three things in there that are really important. Trust is obviously number one and google knows this. You've been the most trusted search provider uh, forever. And, and so we have 400,000 customers. We need to make sure that our products work. We need to make sure they do data protection, but we need to do it in a modern way. And so it's not just back up and recovery, that's clearly important. It's also all of the automation and orchestration to move workloads across infrastructures, move it from on premises to the google cloud, for example, it also includes things like governance and compliance because we're faced with ransomware, malware and security threats. And so modern data protection is far more than just back up. It's the automation, it's the monitoring, it's a governance and compliance. It's the ability to move workloads. Um, but everything that we look at within our platform, we focus on all of those different characteristics and to make sure that it works for our customers. >>One of the things that we've seen in the last year, Danny big optic in ransom were obviously the one that everyone is the most familiar with right now. The colonial pipeline. Talk to me about some of the things that the team has seen, what your 400,000 customers have seen in the last 12 months of such a dynamic market, a massive shift to work from home and to supporting SAS for clothes and things like that. What have you seen? >>Well, certainly the employees working from home, there's a massive increase in the attack surface for organizations because now, instead of having three offices, they have, you know, hundreds of locations for their end users. And so it's all about protecting their data at the same time as well. There's been this explosion in malware and ransomware attacks. So we really see customers focusing on three different areas. The first is making sure that when they take a copy of their data, that it is actually secure and we can get into, you know, a mutability and keeping things offline. But really taking the data, making sure it's secure. The second thing that we see customers doing is monitoring their environment. So this is both inspection of the compute environment and of the data itself. Because when ransomware hits, for example, you'll see change rates on data explode. So secure your data monitor the environment. And then lastly make sure that you can recover intelligently is let us say because the last thing that you want to do if you're hit by ransomware is to bring the ransomware back online from a backup. So we call this security cover re secure, restore. We really see customers focusing on those three areas >>And that restoration is critical there because as we know these days, it's not if we get hit with ransomware, it's really a matter of when. Let's go ahead now and go into the google partnership, jenny talked to me about it from your perspective, the history of the strength of the partnership, all that good stuff. >>Yeah. So we have a very deep and long and lengthy relationship with google um, on a number of different areas. So for example, we have 400,000 customers. Where do they send their backups? Most customers don't want to continue to invest in storage solutions on their premises. And so they'll send their data from on premises and tear it into google cloud storage. So that's one integration point. The second is when the running workloads within the clouds. So this is now cloud native. If you're running on top of the google cloud platform, we are inside the google America place and we can protect those workloads. A third area is around the google vm ware engine, there's customers that have a hybrid model where they have some capacity on premises and some in google using the VM ware infrastructure and we support that as well. That's a third area and then 1/4 and perhaps the longest running um, google is synonymous with containers and especially kubernetes, they were very instrumental in the foundations of kubernetes and so r K 10 product which does data protection for kubernetes is also in the google America place. So a very long and deep relationship with them and it's to the benefit of our customers. >>Absolutely. And I think I just saw the other day that google celebrated the search engine. It's 15th birthday. I thought what, what did we do 16 years ago when we couldn't just find anything we wanted brian talked to me about it from Google's perspective of being partnership. >>Yeah, so as Danny mentioned, it's really multifaceted, um it really starts with a hybrid scenario, you know, there's still a lot of customers that are on their journey into the cloud and protecting those on premises workloads and in some senses, even using beams capabilities to move data to help migrate into the cloud is I'd say a great color of the relationship. Um but as Danny mentioned increasingly, more and more primary applications are running in the cloud and you know, the ability to protect those and have, you know, the great features and capabilities, uh you know, that being provides, whether it be for GCB er VM where you know, capability and google cloud or things like G k e R kubernetes offering, which has mentioned, you know, we've been deep and wide in kubernetes, we really birthed it many, many years ago um and have a huge successful business in, in the managing and hosting containers, that having the capabilities to add to those. It really adds to our ecosystem. So we're super excited about the partnership, we're happy to have this great foundation to build together with them into the future. >>And Danny Wien launched, just been in february a couple of months ago, being backup for google cloud platform. Talk to us about that technology and what you're announcing at them on this year. >>Yeah, sure. So back in february we released the first version of the VM backup for G C p product in the marketplace and that's really intended to protect of course, i as infrastructure as a service workloads running on top of G C p and it's been very, very successful. It has integration with the core platform and what I mean by that is if you do a backup in G C P, you can do you can copy that back up on premises and vice versa. So it has a light integration at the data level. What we're about to release later on this summer is version two of that product that has a deep integration with the VM platform via what we call the uh team service platform, a PS themselves. And that allows a rich bidirectional uh interaction between the two products that you can do not just day one operations, but also day to operations. So you can update the software, you can harmonize schedules between on premises and in the cloud. It really allows customers to be more successful in a hybrid model where they're moving from on premises to the cloud. >>And that seems to be really critically important. As we talk about hybrid club all the time, customers are in hybrid. They're living in the hybrid cloud for many reasons, whether it's acquisition or you know, just the nature of lines of business leveraging their cloud vendor of choice. So being able to support the hybrid cloud environment for customers and ensure that that data is recoverable is table stakes these days. Does that give them an advantage over your competition Danny? >>It does. Absolutely. So customers want the hybrid cloud experience. What we find over time is they do trend towards the cloud. There's no question. So if you have the hybrid experience, if they're sending their data there, for example, a step one, step two, of course, is just to move the workload into the cloud and then step three, they really start to be able to unleash their data. If you think about what google is known for, they have incredible capabilities around machine learning and artificial intelligence and they've been doing that for a very long time. So you can imagine customers after they start putting their data there, they start putting their workloads here, they want to unlock it into leverage the insights from the data that they're storing and that's really exciting about where we're going. It's, they were early days for most customers. They're still kind of moving and transitioning into the cloud. But if you think of the capabilities that are unlocked with that massive platform in google, it just opens up the ability to address big challenges of today, like climate change and sustainability and you know, all the health care challenges that we're faced with it. It really is an exciting time to be partnered with Google >>Ryan. Let's dig into the infrastructure in the architecture from your perspective, help us unpack that and what customers are coming to you for help with. >>Yeah. So Danny mentioned, you know the prowess that google has with data and analytics and, and a, I I think we're pretty well known for that. Uh, there's a tremendous opportunity for people in the future. Um, the thing that people get just right out of the box is the access to the technology that we built to build google cloud itself. Just the scale and, and technology, it's, you know, it's, it's a, you know, just incredible. You know, it's a fact that we have eight products here at google that have a billion users and when you have, you know, most people know the search and maps and gmail and all these things. When you have that kind of infrastructure, you build a platform like google cloud platform and you know, the network as a perfect example, the network endpoints, they're actually close to your house. There's a reason our technology is so fast because you get onto the google private network, someplace really close to where you actually live. We have thousands and thousands of points of presence spread around the world and from that point forward you're riding on our internal network, you get better quality of service. Uh the other thing I like to mention is, you know, the google cloud storage, that team is built on our object storage. It's uh it's the same technology that underpins Youtube and other things that most people are familiar with and you just think about that for a minute, you can find the most obscure Youtube video and it's gonna load really fast. You know, you're not going to sit there waiting for like two minutes waiting for something to load and that same under underlying technology underpins GCS So when you're going to go and you know, go back to an old restore, you know, to do a restore, it's gonna load fast even if you're on one of the more inexpensive storage classes. So it's a really nice experience for data protection. It has this global network properties you can restore to a different region if there was ever a disaster, there's just the scale of our foundation of infrastructure and also, you know, Danny mentioned if we're super proud about the investments that google has made for sustainability, You know, our cloud runs on 100% renewable energy at the cloud at our scale. That's a lot of, that's a lot of green energy. We're happy to be one of the largest consumers of green energy out there and make continued investments in sustainability. So, you know, we think we have some of the greenest data centers in the world and it's just one more benefit that people have when they come to run on Google Cloud. >>I don't know what any of us would do without google google cloud platform or google cloud storage. I mean you just mentioned all of the enterprise things as well as the at home. I've got to find this really crazy, obscure youtube video but as demanding customers as we are, we want things asAP not the same thing. If you know, an employee can't find a file or calendar has been deleted or whatnot. Let's go in to finish our time here with some joint customer use case examples. Let's talk about backing up on prem workloads to google cloud storage using existing VM licensing Danny. Tell us about that. >>Yeah. So one of the things that we've introduced at beam is this beam, universal licensing and it's completely portable license, you can be running your workloads on premises now and on a physical system and then you can, you know, make that portable to go to a virtual system and then if you want to go to the cloud, you can send that data up to the work load up to the cloud. One of the neat things about this transition for customers from a storage perspective, we don't charge for that. If you're backing up a physical system and sending your your back up on premises, you know, we don't charge for that. If you want to move to the cloud, we don't charge for that. And so as they go through this, there's a predictability and and customers want that predictability so much um that it's a big differentiating factor for us. They don't want to be surprised by a bill. And so we just make it simple and seamless. They have a single licensing model and its future proof as they move forward on the cloud journey. They don't have to change anything. >>Tell me what you mean by future proof as a marketer. I know that term very well, but it doesn't mean different things to different people. So for means customers in the context of the expansion of partnership with google the opportunities, the choices that you're giving customers to your customers, what does future proof actually delivered to them? >>It means that they're not locked into where they are today. If you think about a customer right now that's running a workload on premises maybe because they have to um they need to be close to the data that's being generated or feeding into that application system. Maybe they're locked into that on premises model. Now they have one of two choices when their hardware gets to the end of life. They can either buy more hardware which locks them into where they are today for the next three years in the next four years Or they can say, you know what, I don't want to lock into that. I want to model the license that is portable that maybe 12 months from now, 18 months from now, I can move to the cloud and so it future proof some, it doesn't give them another reason to stay on premises. It allows them the flexibility that licensing is taken off the table because it moves with you that there's zero thought or consideration and that locks you into where you are today. And that's exciting because it unlocks the capabilities of the cloud without being handicapped if you will by what you have on premises. >>Excellent. Let's go to the second uh use case lift and shift in that portability brian. Talk to us about it from your perspective. >>Yeah, so we obviously constantly in discussions with our customers about moving more applications to the cloud and there's really two different kind of approach is the lift and shift and modernization. You know, do you want to change and run on kubernetes when you come to the cloud as you move it in? In some cases people want to do that or they're gonna obviously build a new application in the cloud. But increasingly we see a lot of customers wanting to do lift and shift, they want to move into the cloud relatively quickly. As Danny said, there's like compelling events on like refreshes and in many cases we've had a number of customers come to us and say look we're going to exit our data centers. We did a big announcement Nokia, they're gonna exit 50 data centers in the coming years around the world and just move that into the cloud. In many cases you want to lift and shift that application to do the migration with his little change as possible. And that's one of the reasons we've really invested in a lot of enterprise, more classic enterprise support type technologies. And also we're super excited to have a really wide set of partners and ecosystem like the folks here at Wien. So the customers can really preserve those technologies, preserve that operational experience that they're already familiar with on prem and use that in the cloud. It just makes it easier for them to move to the cloud faster without having to rebuild as much stuff on the way in. >>And that's critical. Let's talk about one more use case and that is native protection of workloads that run on g c p Danny. What are you enabling customers to do there? >>Well? So we actually merged the capabilities of two different things. One is we leverage the native Api is of G C p to take a snapshot and we merge that with our ability to put it in a portable data format. Now. Why is that important? Because you want to use the native capabilities of G CPU want to leverage those native snapshots. The fastest way to recover a file or the fastest way to recover of'em is from the G C p snapshot. However, if you want to take a copy of that and move it into another locale or you want to pull it back on premises for compliance reasons or put it in a long term storage format, you probably want to put it in GCS or in our portable storage format. And so we merge those two capabilities, the snapshot and back up into a single product. And in addition to that, one of the things that we do, again, I talked about predictability. We tell customers what that policy is going to cost them because if for example a customer said, well I like the idea of doing my backups in the cloud, but I want to store it on premises. We'll tell them, well if you're copying that data continually, you know what the network charges look like, What the CPU and compute charges look like, What do the storage costs looks like. So we give them the forecast of what the cost model looks like even before they do a single backup. >>That forecasting has got to be key, as you said with so much unpredicted things that we can't predict going on in this world the last year has taught us that with a massive shift, the acceleration of digital business and digital transformation, it's really critical that customers have an idea of what their costs are going to be so that they can make adjustments and be agile as they need the technology to be. Last question Bryant is for you, give us a view uh, and all the V mon attendees, what can we expect from the partnership in the next 12 >>months? You know, we're excited about the foundation of the partnership across hybrid and in cloud for both VMS and containers. I think this is the real beginning of a long standing relationship. Um, and it's really about a marriage of technology. You think about all the great data protection and orchestration, all the things that Danny mentioned married with the cloud foundation that we have at scale this tremendous network. You know, we just signed a deal with SpaceX in the last couple of days to hook their satellite network up to the google cloud network, you know, chosen again because we just have this foundational capability to push large amounts of data around the world. And that's you know, for Youtube. We signed a deal with Univision, same type of thing, just massive media uh, you know, being pushed around the world. And if you think about it that that same foundation is used for data protection. Data protection. There's a lot of data and moving large sets of data is hard. You know, we have just this incredible prowess and we're excited about the future of how our technology and beans. Technology is going to evolve over time >>theme and google a marriage of technology Guys, thank you so much for joining me, sharing what's new? The opportunities that demand google are joined me delivering to your joint customers. Lots of great step. We appreciate your time. >>Thanks lisa >>For Danielle in and Brian Schwartz. I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching the cubes coverage of Lehman 2021.

Published Date : May 25 2021

SUMMARY :

It's great to see you. the program. Excited to be Excited to be here. It's the ability to move workloads. the last 12 months of such a dynamic market, a massive shift to work from home and the last thing that you want to do if you're hit by ransomware is to bring the ransomware back online And that restoration is critical there because as we know these days, it's not if we get hit with ransomware, So for example, we have 400,000 customers. I thought what, what did we do 16 years ago when we couldn't just find anything we the ability to protect those and have, you know, the great features and capabilities, uh you know, Talk to us about that technology and what you're announcing at them on this year. the two products that you can do not just day one operations, but also day to operations. And that seems to be really critically important. the cloud and then step three, they really start to be able to unleash their data. that and what customers are coming to you for help with. go back to an old restore, you know, to do a restore, it's gonna load fast even Let's go in to finish our time here with some joint customer use If you want to move to the cloud, we don't charge for that. the expansion of partnership with google the opportunities, the choices that you're giving customers with you that there's zero thought or consideration and that locks you into where you are today. Let's go to the second uh use case lift and shift in that portability brian. You know, do you want to change and run on kubernetes when you come to the cloud as you move it in? What are you enabling customers to do there? Api is of G C p to take a snapshot and we merge that with our ability to put That forecasting has got to be key, as you said with so much unpredicted And that's you know, for Youtube. The opportunities that demand google are joined me delivering to your joint customers. For Danielle in and Brian Schwartz.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
Brian SchwartzPERSON

0.99+

Lisa MartinPERSON

0.99+

DannyPERSON

0.99+

SpaceXORGANIZATION

0.99+

YoutubeORGANIZATION

0.99+

NokiaORGANIZATION

0.99+

lisa martinPERSON

0.99+

februaryDATE

0.99+

GoogleORGANIZATION

0.99+

thousandsQUANTITY

0.99+

brian SchwartzPERSON

0.99+

100%QUANTITY

0.99+

Danny AllanPERSON

0.99+

400,000 customersQUANTITY

0.99+

UnivisionORGANIZATION

0.99+

firstQUANTITY

0.99+

two productsQUANTITY

0.99+

brianPERSON

0.99+

BryantPERSON

0.99+

youtubeORGANIZATION

0.99+

googleORGANIZATION

0.99+

three thingsQUANTITY

0.99+

three officesQUANTITY

0.99+

oneQUANTITY

0.99+

Danny WienPERSON

0.99+

secondQUANTITY

0.99+

bothQUANTITY

0.99+

two minutesQUANTITY

0.99+

last yearDATE

0.99+

lisaPERSON

0.99+

second thingQUANTITY

0.99+

16 years agoDATE

0.98+

OneQUANTITY

0.98+

two choicesQUANTITY

0.98+

jennyPERSON

0.98+

eight productsQUANTITY

0.98+

RyanPERSON

0.98+

15th birthdayQUANTITY

0.97+

third areaQUANTITY

0.97+

todayDATE

0.97+

single productQUANTITY

0.97+

SASORGANIZATION

0.96+

two capabilitiesQUANTITY

0.96+

50 data centersQUANTITY

0.96+

zero thoughtQUANTITY

0.96+

DaniellePERSON

0.96+

12 monthsQUANTITY

0.96+

three areasQUANTITY

0.95+

this yearDATE

0.95+

single backupQUANTITY

0.94+

WienLOCATION

0.94+

Quantcast The Cookie Conundrum: A Recipe for Success


 

>>what? Hello, I'm john free with the cube. I want to welcome Conrad Feldman, the founder and Ceo of Kwan cast here to kick off the quan cast industry summit on the demise of third party cookies. The events called the cookie conundrum, a recipe for success. The changing advertising landscape, super relevant conversation just now. More than ever. Conrad welcome to your own program kicking this off. Thanks for holding this event. It's a pleasure. Great to chat with you today. So a big fan been following your company since the founding of it. Been analytics is always the prize of any data driven company. Media. Anything's all data driven now. Um, talk about the open internet because now more than ever it's under siege. As I, as I mentioned in my open, um, we've been seeing the democratization, a new trend of decentralization. We're starting to see um, you know, everyone's present online now, Clay Shirky wrote a book called, here comes everyone in 2005. Well everyone's here. Right? So you know, we're here, it's gonna be more open. But yet people are looking at as close right now. You're seeing the big players, um, or in the data. What's your vision of this open internet? >>Well, an open internet exists for everyone. And if you think about the evolution of the internet, when the internet was created for the first time really in history, anyone that had access to the internet could publish the content, whatever they were interested in and could find an audience. And of course that's grown to where we are today, where five billion people around the world are able to engage in all sorts of content, whether that's entertainment or education, news, movies. What's perhaps not so widely understood is that most of that content is paid for by advertising and there's a lot of systems that support advertising on the open Internet and some of those are under siege today certainly. >>And what's the big pressure point? Is it just more control the data? Is it just that these walled gardens are wanting to, you know, suck the audience in there? Is that monetization driving it? What's where's the friction? >>Well, the challenges is sort of the accumulation of power into a really small number of now giant corporations who have actually reduced a lot of the friction that marketers have in spending their money effectively. And it means that those companies are capturing a disproportionate spend of the ad budgets that fund digital content. So the problem is if more of the money goes to them, less of its going to independent content creators. It's actually getting harder for independent voices to emerge and be heard. And so that's the real challenges. That has more power consolidates into just a limited number of tech giants. The funding path for the open Internet becomes constrained and there'll be less choice for consumers without having to pay for subscriptions. >>Everyone knows the more data you have the better and certainly, but the centralized power when the trend is going the other way, the consensus is everyone wants to be decentralized more truth, more trust all this is being talked about on the heels of the google's news around, you know, getting rid of third party cookies and others have followed suit. Um, what does this mean? I mean, this cookies have been the major vehicle for tracking and getting that kind of data. What is gonna be replaced with what is this all about? And can you share with us what the future will look like? >>Sure, Well, just as advertising funds the open Internet is advertising technology that supports that advertising spend. It supports sort of the business of advertising that funds the open Internet. And within all of that technology is the need for different systems to be able to align around um the identification of for example, a consumer, Have they been to this site before? Have they seen an ad before? So there's all of these different systems that might be used for advertising for measurement, for attribution, for creating personalization. And historically they've relied upon the third party cookie as the mechanism for synchronization. Well, the third party cookie has been in decline for some time. It's already mostly gone from actually apple safari browser, but google's chrome has so much control over how people access the internet. And so it was when Google announced that chrome was going to deprecate the third party cookie, that it really sort of focus the minds of the industry in terms of finding alternative ways to tailor content and ultimately to just simply measure the effectiveness of advertising. And so there's an enormous amount of um innovation taking place right now to find alternative solutions. >>You know, some are saying that the free open internet was pretty much killed when, you know, the big comes like facebook and google started bringing all this data and kind of pulls all sucks all the auction in the room, so to speak. What's this mean with cookies now getting, getting rid of um, by google has an impact publishers because is it helpful? I mean hurtful. I mean, where's the where is that, what the publisher impact? >>Well, I don't think anyone really knows right now. So first of all, cookies weren't necessarily a very good solution to the sort of the challenge of maintaining state and understanding those sorts of the delivery of advertising and so on. It's just the one that's commonly used, I think for different publishers it may mean different things. But many publishers need to be able to demonstrate the value and the effectiveness of the advertising solutions that they deliver. So they'll be innovating in terms of how they use their first party data. They'll be continuing to use contextual solutions that have long been used to create advertising relevant, relevant. I think the big question of course is how we're going to measure it that any of this is effective at all because everyone relies upon measuring advertising effectiveness to justify capturing those budgets in the first place. >>You know, you mentioned contextual come up a lot also in the other interviews we've done with the folks in the around the internet around this topic of machine learning is a big 12 What is the impact of this with the modernization of the solution? You mentioned cookies? Okay cookies, old technology. But the mechanisms in this ecosystem around it or not, it funds the open internet. What is that modern solution that goes that next level? Is it contextual metadata? Is that shared systems? What's the it's the modernization of that. >>It's all of those and and more. There's no there's no single solution to replace the third party cookie. There'll be a combination of solutions. Part of that will be alternative identity mechanisms. So you know, you will start to see more registration wars to access content so that you have what's called a deterministic identify there will be statistical models so called probabilistic models, contextual has always been important. It will become more important and it will be combined with we use contextual combining natural language processing with machine learning models to really understand the detailed context of different pages across the internet. You'll also see the use of first party data and there are discussions about shared data services as well. I think there's gonna be a whole set of different innovations that will need to inter operate and it's going to be an evolutionary process as people get used to using these different systems to satisfy the different stages of the media fulfillment cycle from research and planning to activation to measurement. >>You know, you put up walled gardens. I want to just touch on the on on this kind of concept of walled gardens and and and and compare and contrast that with the demand for community, open internet has always fostered a community vibe. You see network effects mostly in distinct user communities or subnets of sub networks. If you will kind of walled gardens became that kind of group get together but then became more of a media solution to make the user is the product, as they say, facebook's a great example, right? People talk about facebook and from that misinformation abuse walled garden is not the best thing happening right now in the world, but yet is there any other other choice? That's how they're going to make money? But yet everyone wants trust, truth community. Are they usually exclusive? How do you see this evolving, what's your take? >>Well, I think the open internet is a, is a forum where anyone can have their voice, uh, put their voice out there and have it discovered and it's in that regard, it's a it's a force for good look. I think there are there are challenges, obviously in terms of some of the some of the optimization that takes place with inside the walled gardens, which is, is sort of optimized to drive engagement can have some unintended consequences. Um obviously that's something that's, that's broadly being discussed today and the impact on society, but sort of more at a more pointed level, it's just the absorption of advertising dollars. There's a finite amount of money from advertisers. It's estimated to be $400 billion this year in digital advertising. So it's a huge amount of money in terms of funding the open Internet, which sounds great except for its increasingly concentrated in a tiny number of companies. And so, you know, our job at Quan cast as champions of the free and open Internet is to help direct money effectively to publishers across the open internet and give advertisers a reliable, repeatable way of accessing the audiences that they care about in the environment they care about and delivering advertising results. >>It's a publisher, we care a lot about what our audience wants and try to serve them and listen to them. If we could get the data, we want that data and then also broker in the monetization with advertisers, who might want to reach that audience in whatever way. So this brings up the question of, you know, automation and role of data. You know, this is a huge thing to having that data closed loop, if you will for for publishers. But yet most publishers are small, some niche. And even as they can become super large, they don't have all the data and more, the more data, the better the machine learning. So what's the answer to this as it goes forward? How do we get there? What's the dots that that we need to connect to get that future state? >>So I think it takes it takes companies working together effectively. I think a really important part of it is, is a more direct conversation with consumers. We've seen that change beginning to happen over the past few years with the introduction of regulations that require clear communication to consumers about the data that's captured. And y and I think that creates an opportunity to explain to your audience is the way in which content is funded. So I think that consumer that consumer conversation will be part of the collective solution. >>You know, I want to as we wind down this kickoff segment, get your thoughts and vision around um, the evolution of the internet and you guys have done some great work at quan Cast is well documented, but everyone used to talk about traffic by traffic, then it became cost of acquisitions. PPC search. This is either mechanisms that people have been using for a long, long time, then you know, your connections but audience is about traffic, audience traffic. If this if my family is online, doesn't it become about networks and the people. So I want to get your thoughts and your vision because if community is going to be more important than people agree that it is and things are gonna be decentralized, more openness, more voices to be heard. You need to dress ability. The formation of networks and groups become super important. What's your vision on that? >>So my vision is to create relevance and utility for consumers. I think that's one of the things that's often forgotten is that when we make advertising more relevant and useful for consumers, it automatically fulfils the objectives that publishers and marketers have, everyone wins when advertising is more relevant. And our vision is to make advertising relevant across the entire open internet so that that ad supported model can continue to flourish and that five billion and hopefully many more billions in the future, people around the world have access to high quality, diverse content. >>If someone asked you Conrad, what is quant cast doing to make the open internet viable now that cookies are going away? What's the answer? >>So well, the cookie pieces is a central piece of it in terms of finding solutions that will enable sort of planning activation and measurement post cookies and we have a lot of innovation going on. There were also working with a range of industry bodies and our and our partners to build solutions for this. What we're really trying to do is to make buying the open internet as straightforward for marketers as it is today and buying the walled gardens. The reason the walled gardens capture so much money is they made it really easy for marketers to get results, marketers would like to be able to spend their money across all of the diverse publishes the open internet. You know, our job at Comcast is to make it just as easy to effectively spend money in funding the content that they really care about in reaching the audiences that they want. >>Great stuff. Great Mission. Conrad, thanks for coming on. Conrad Feldmann founder and Ceo here at the cookie conundrum recipe for success event, Quant Cast Industry summit on the demise of third party cookies. Thank you. Conrad appreciate it. Thank you. Yeah, I'm john ferrier, stay with us for more on the industry event around the middle cookies. Mhm Yeah, yeah, thank you. Mhm. Welcome back to the Qantas industry summit on the demise of third party cookies, the cookie conundrum, a recipe for success. I'm john furrier host of the cube, the changing landscape of advertising is here and shit Gupta, founder of you of digital is joining us chief. Thanks for coming on this segment. Really appreciate, I know you're busy, you've got two young kids as well as providing education to the digital industry, you got some kids to take care of and train them to. So welcome to the cube conversation here as part of the program. >>Yeah, thanks for having me excited to be here. >>So the office of the changing landscape of advertising really centers around the open to walled garden mindset of the web and the big power players. We know the big 34 tech players dominate the marketplace so clearly in a major inflection point and we've seen this movie before Web mobile revolution which was basically a reply platform NG of capabilities. But now we're in an error of re factoring the industry, not re platt forming a complete changing over of the value proposition. So a lot at stake here as this open web, open internet, global internet evolves. What are your, what's your take on this, this industry proposals out there that are talking to this specific cookie issue? What does it mean? And what proposals are out there? >>Yeah, so, you know, I I really view the identity proposals and kind of to to kind of groups, two separate groups. So on one side you have what the walled gardens are doing and really that's being led by google. Right, so google um you know, introduce something called the privacy sandbox when they announced that they would be deprecating third party cookies uh as part of the privacy sandbox, they've had a number of proposals unfortunately, or you know, however you want to say they're all bird themed for some reason, I don't know why. Um but the one, the bird theme proposal that they've chosen to move forward with is called flock, which stands for Federated learning of cohorts. And essentially what it all boils down to is google is moving forward with cohort level learning and understanding of users in the future after third party cookies, unlike what we've been accustomed to in this space, which is a user level understanding of people and what they're doing online for targeting tracking purposes. And so that's on one side of the equation, it's what google is doing with flock and privacy sandbox now on the other side is, you know, things like unified I. D. Two point or the work that I. D five is doing around building new identity frameworks for the entire space that actually can still get down to the user level. Right? And so again, unified I. D. Two point oh comes to mind because it's the one that's probably got the most adoption in the space. It's an open source framework. So the idea is that it's free and pretty much publicly available to anybody that wants to use it and unified, I need to point out again is user level. So it's it's basically taking data that's authenticated data from users across various websites you know that are logging in and taking those authenticated users to create some kind of identity map. And so if you think about those two work streams right, you've got the walled gardens and or you know, google with flock on one side and then you've got unified I. D. Two point oh and other I. D. Frameworks for the open internet. On the other side, you've got these two very differing type of approaches to identity in the future. Again on the google side it's cohort level, it's going to be built into chrome. Um The idea is that you can pretty much do a lot of the things that we do with advertising today, but now you're just doing it at a group level so that you're protecting privacy, whereas on the other side of the open internet you're still getting down to the user level. Um And that's pretty powerful. But the the issue there is scale, right? We know that a lot of people are not logged in on lots of websites. I think the stat that I saw is under five of all website traffic is authenticated. So really if you if you simplify things you boil it all down, you have kind of these two very differing approaches. >>I guess the question it really comes down to what alternatives are out there for cookies and which ones do you think will be more successful? Because I think, you know, the consensus is at least from my reporting, in my view, is that the world agrees. Let's make it open, Which one is going to be better. >>Yeah, that's a great question, john So as I mentioned, right, we have we have to kind of work streams here, we've got the walled garden work streams, work stream being led by google and their work around flock, and then we've got the open internet, right? Let's say unified I. D to kind of represents that. I personally don't believe that there is a right answer or an endgame here. I don't think that one of them wins over the other, frankly, I think that, you know, first of all, you have those two frameworks, neither of them are perfect, they're both flawed in their own ways. There are pros and cons to both of them. And so what we're starting to see now is you have other companies kind of coming in and building on top of both of them as kind of a hybrid solution. Right? So they're saying, hey, we use, you know, an open I. D. Framework in this way to get down to the user level and use that authenticated data and that's important. But we don't have all the scale. So now we go to google and we go to flock to kind of fill the scale. Oh and hey, by the way, we have some of our own special sauce, right? We have some of our own data, we have some of our own partnerships, we're gonna bring that in and layer it on top. Right? And so really where I think things are headed is the right answer, frankly, is not one or the other. It's a little mishmash of both. With a little extra something on top. I think that's that's what we're starting to see out of a lot of companies in the space. And I think that's frankly where we're headed. >>What do you think the industry will evolve to, in your opinion? Because I think this is gonna, you can't ignore the big guys on this because these programmatic you mentioned also the data is there. But what do you think the market will evolve to with this, with this conundrum? >>So, so I think john where we're headed? You know, I think we're right now we're having this existential existential crisis, right? About identity in this industry, because our world is being turned upside down, all the mechanisms that we've used for years and years are being thrown out the window and we're being told they were gonna have new mechanisms, Right? So cookies are going away device ids are going away and now we got to come up with new things and so the world is being turned upside down and everything that you read about in the trades and you know, we're here talking about it, right? Like everyone's always talking about identity right now, where do I think this is going if I was to look into my crystal ball, you know, this is how I would kind of play this out. If you think about identity today. Right? Forget about all the changes. Just think about it now and maybe a few years before today, Identity for marketers in my opinion has been a little bit of a checkbox activity. Right? It's been hey, um, okay, uh, you know ad tech company or a media company, do you have an identity solution? Okay. Tell me a little bit more about it. Okay, Sounds good. That sounds good. Now can we move on and talk about my business and how are you going to drive meaningful outcomes or whatever for my business? And I believe the reason that is, is because identity is a little abstract, right? It's not something that you can actually get meaningful validation against. It's just something that, you know. Yes, You have it. Okay, great. Let's move on, type of thing. Right. And so that, that's, that's kind of where we've been now, all of a sudden The cookies are going away, the device ids are going away. And so the world is turning upside down in this crisis of how are we going to keep doing what we were doing for the last 10 years in the future. So everyone's talking about it and we're trying to re engineer right? The mechanisms now if I was to look into the crystal ball right 2 3 years from now where I think we're headed is not much is going to change. And what I mean by that john is um uh I think that marketers will still go to companies and say do you have an ID solution? Okay tell me more about it. Okay uh Let me understand a little bit better. Okay you do it this way. Sounds good. Now the ways in which companies are going to do it will be different right now. It's flock and unified I. D. And this and that right. The ways the mechanisms will be a little bit different but the end state right? Like the actual way in which we operate as an industry and kind of like the view of the landscape in my opinion will be very simple or very similar, right? Because marketers will still view it as a tell me you have an ID solution. Make me feel good about it. Help me check the box and let's move on and talk about my business and how you're going to solve for my needs. So I think that's where we're going. That is not by any means to discount this existential moment that we're in. This is a really important moment where we do have to talk about and figure out what we're going to do in the future. My just my viewpoint is that the future will actually not look all that different than the present. >>And I'll say the user base is the audience. Their their data behind it helps create new experiences, machine learning and Ai are going to create those and we have the data you have the sharing it or using it as we're finding shit Gupta great insight dropping some nice gems here. Founder of you of Digital and also the Adjunct professor of Programmatic advertising at Levi School of Business and santa Clara University professor. Thank you for coming dropping the gems here and insight. Thank you. >>Thanks a lot for having me john really appreciate >>it. Thanks for watching. The cooking 100 is the cube host Jon ferrier me. Thanks for watching. Mhm. Yeah. Mhm. Hello welcome back to the cookie conundrum recipe for success and industry conference and summit from Guanacaste on the demise of third party cookies. Got a great industry panel here to break it down chris Gunther Senior Vice president Global Head of programmatic at news corp chris thanks for coming on Zal in Managing Director Solutions at Z axis and Summer Simpson. Vice president Product at quan cast stellar panel. Looking forward to this conversation. Uh thanks for coming on and chatting about the cookie conundrum. Thank you for having us. So chris we'll start with you at news corp obviously a major publisher deprecation of third party cookies affects everyone. You guys have a ton of traffic, ton of audience across multiple formats. Um, tell us about the impact to you guys and the reliance he has had on them. And what are you gonna do to prepare for this next level change? >>Sure. I mean, I think like everyone in this industry there's uh a significant reliance and I think it's something that a lot of talk about audience targeting but obviously that reliance on third party cookies pervasive across the whole at tech ecosystem Martek stack. And so you know, we have to think about how that impact vendor vendors, we work with what it means in terms of use cases across marketing, across advertising, across site experience. So, you know, without a doubt, it it's it's significant, but you know, we look at it as listen, it's disruptive, uh, disruption and change is always a little scary. Um, but overall it's a, it's a long overdue reset. I mean, I think that, you know, our perspective is that the cookies, as we all know was it was a crutch, right sort of a technology being used in way it shouldn't. Um, and so as we look at what's going to happen presumably after Jan 2022 then it's, it's a good way to kind of fix on some bad practices practices that lead to data leakage, um, practice or devalue for our perspective, some of the, you know, we offered as as publishers and I think that this is a key thing is that we're not just looking to as we look at the post gender world, not just kind of recreating the prior world because the prior world was flawed or I guess you could say the current world since it hasn't changed yet. But the current world is flawed. Let's not just not, you know, let's not just replicate that. Let's make sure that, you know, third party cookie goes away. Other work around like fingerprinting and things like that. You know, also go away so philosophically, that's where our heads at. And so as we look at how we are preparing, you know, you look at what are the core building blocks of preparing for this world. Obviously one of the key ones is privacy compliance. Like how do we treat our users with consent? Yeah, obviously. Are we um aligned with the regulatory environments? Yeah. In some ways we're not looking just a Jan 2022, but Jan 23 where there's gonna be the majority of our audiences we covered by regulation. And so I think from regulation up to data gathering to data activation, all built around an internal identifier that we've developed that allows us to have a consistent look at our users whether they're logged in or obviously anonymous. So it's really looking across all those components across all our sites and in all in a privacy compliant way. So a lot of work to be done, a lot of work in progress. But we're >>excited about what's going on. I like how you framed at Old world or next gen kind of the current situation kind of flawed. And as you think about programmatic, the concept is mind blowing and what needs to be done. So we'll come back to that because I think that original content view is certainly relevant, a huge investment and you've got great content and audience consuming it from a major media standpoint. Get your perspective on the impact because you've got clients who want to get their their message out in front of the audience at the right time, at the right place and the right context. Right, So your privacy, you got consent, all these things kind of boiling up. How do you help clients prepare? Because now they can go direct to the consumer. Everyone, everyone has a megaphone, now, everyone's, everyone's here, everyone's connected. So how are you impacted by this new notion? >>You know, if if the cookie list future was a tic tac, dance will be dancing right now, and at least into the next year, um this has been top of mind for us and our clients for quite some time, but I think as each day passes, the picture becomes clearer and more in focus. Uh the end of the third party cookie does not mean the end of programmatic. Um so clients work with us in transforming their investments into real business outcomes based on our expertise and based on our tech. So we continue to be in a great position to lead to educate, to partner and to grow with them. Um, along this uh cookie list future, the impact will be all encompassing in changing the ways we do things now and also accelerating the things that we've already been building on. So we take it from the top planning will have a huge impact because it's gonna start becoming more strategic around real business outcomes. Uh where Omni channel, So clients want to drive outcomes, drew multiple touch points of a consumer's journey, whether it has programmatic, whether it has uh cookie free environment, like connected tv, digital home audio, gaming and so forth. So we're going to see more of these strategic holistic plans. Creative will have a lot of impact. It will start becoming more important with creative testing. Creative insights. You know, creative in itself is cookie list. So there will be more focused on how to drive uh brand dialogue to connect to consumers with less targeting. With less cookies, with the cohesiveness of holistic planning. Creative can align through multiple channels and lastly, the role of a. I will become increasingly important. You know, we've always looked to build our tech our products to complement new and existing technology as well as the client's own data and text back to deliver these outcomes for them. And ai in its core it's just taking input data uh and having an output of your desired outcome. So input data could be dSP data beyond cookies such as browser such as location, such as contextual or publisher taking clients first party data, first party crm data like store visitation, sales, site activity. Um and using that to optimize in real time regardless of what vendor or what channel we're on. Um So as we're learning more about this cookie list dance, we're helping our clients on the steps of it and also introducing our own moves. >>That's awesome. Data is going to be a key value proposition, connecting in with content real time. Great stuff. Somewhere with your background in journalism and you're the tech VP of product at quan cast. You have the keys to the kingdom over there. It's interesting Journalism is about truth and good content original content. But now you have a data challenge problem opportunity on both sides, brands and publishers coming together. It's a data problem in a way it's a it's a tech stack, not so much just getting the right as to show up at the right place the right time. It's really bigger than that now. What's your take on this? >>Um you know, >>so first >>I think that consumers already sort of like except that there is a reasonable value exchange for their data in order to access free content. Right? And that's that's a critical piece for us to all kind of like understand over the past. Hi guys, probably two years since even even before the G. D. P. R. We've been doing a ton of discovery with customers, both publishers and marketers. Um and so you know, we've kind of known this, this cookie going away thing has been coming. Um And you know, Google's announcement just kind of confirmed it and it's been, it's been really, really interesting since Google's announcement, how the conversations have changed with with our customers and other folks that we talked to. And I've almost gone from being like a product manager to a therapist because there's such an emotional response. Um you know, from the marketing perspective, there's real fear there. There's like, oh my God, how you know, it's not just about, you know, delivering ads, it's about how do I control frequency? How do I, how do I measure, you know, success? Because the technology has has grown so much over the years to really give marketers the ability to deliver personalized advertising, good content, right. The consumers um and be able to monitor it and control it so that it's not too too intrusive on the publisher perspective side, we see slightly different response. It's more of a yes, right. You know, we're taking back control and we're going to stop the data leakage, we're going to get the value back for our inventory. Um and that both things are a good thing, but if it's, if it's not managed, it's going to be like ships passing in the night, right? In terms of um of, you know, they're there, them coming together, right, and that's the critical pieces that they have to come together. They have to get closer, you got to cut out a lot of that loom escape in the middle so that they can talk to each other and understand what's the value exchange happening between marketers and publishers and how do we do that without cookies? >>It's a fascinating, I love love your insight there. I think it's so relevant and it's got broader implications because, you know, if you look at how data's impact, some of these big structural changes and re factoring of industries, look at cyber security, you know, no one wants to share their data, but now if they share they get more insight, more machine learning, benefit more ai benefit. So now we have the sharing notion, but that goes against counter the big guys that want to wall garden, they want to hoard all the data and and control that to provide their own personalization. So you have this confluence of, hey, I want to hoard the data and then now I want to share the data. So so christmas summer you're in the, in the wheelhouse, you got original content and there's other providers out there. So is there the sharing model coming with privacy and these kinds of services? Is the open, come back again? How do you guys see this uh confluence of open versus walled gardens, because you need the data to make machine learning good. >>So I'll start uh start off, I mean, listen, I think you have to give credit to the walled gardens have created, I think as we look as publishers, what are we offering to our clients, what are we offering to the buy side? We need to be compelling. We shouldn't just be uh yeah, actually as journalists, I think that there is a case of the importance of funding journalism. Um but ultimately we need to make sure we're meeting the KPI is and the business needs of the buy side. And I think around that it is the sort of three core pillars that its ease of access, its scope of of activation and targeting and finally measurable results. So as I think is us as an individual publishers, so we have, we have multiple publications. So we do have scale. But then in partnership with other publishers perhaps to organizations like pre bid, you know, I think we can, you know, we're trying to address that and I think we can offer something that's compelling um, and transparent in terms of what these results are. But obviously, you know, I want to make sure it's clear transparent terms of results, but obviously where there's privacy in terms of the data and I think the form, you know, I think we've all heard a lot like data clean rooms, a lot of them out there flogging those wears. I think there's something valuable but you know, I think it's the right who is sort of the right partner or partners um and ultimately who allows us to get as close as possible to the buy side. And so that we can share that data for targeting, share it for perhaps for measurement, but obviously all in a privacy compliant >>way summer, what's your take on this? Because you talk about the future of the open internet democratization, the network effect that we're seeing in Vire al Itty and across multiple on the on the channels. Is that pointed out what's happening? That's the distribution now. So um that's almost an open garden model. So it's like um yeah, >>yeah, it's it's um you know, back in the day, you know, um knight ridder who was who was the first group that I that I worked for, um you know, each of those individual properties, um we're not hugely valuable on their own from a digital perspective, but together as a unit, they became valuable, right, and got scale for advertisers. Now we're in a place where, you know, I kind of think that each of those big networks are going to have to come together and work together to compare in size to the, to the world gardens. Um, and yeah, this is something that we've talked about before and an open garden. Um, I think that's the, that's the definitely the right route to take. And I and I agree with chris it's, it's about publishers getting as close to the market. Is it possible working with the tech companies that enable them to do that and doing so in a very privacy centric >>way. So how do we bring the brands and agencies together to get ready for third party cookies? Because there is a therapist moment here of it's gonna be okay. The parachute will open. The future is not gonna be as as grim. Um, it's a real opportunity. But if managed properly, what's your take on this is just more first party data strategy and what's your assessment of this? >>So we collaborated right now with ball grants on how did this still very complex cookie list future. Um, you know what's going to happen in the future? 2, 6 steps that we can take right now and market should take. Um, The first step is to gather intel on what's working on your current campaign, analyzing the data sets across cookie free environment. So you can translate those tactics eventually when the cookies do go away. So we have to look at things like temperature or time analysis. We could look at log level data. We could look at site analytics data. We can look at brand measurement tools and how creative really impacts the campaign success. The second thing we can look at is geo targeting strategies. The geo target strategy has been uh underrated because the granularity and geo data could go down all the way to the local level, even beyond zip code. So for example the census black data and this is especially important for CPG brands. So we're working closely with the client teams to understand not only the online data but the offline data and how we can utilize that in the future. Uh We want to optimize investments around uh markets that are working so strong markets and then test and underperforming markets. The third thing we can look at is contextual. So contextual by itself is cookie free. Uh We could build on small scale usage to test and learn various keywords and content categories based sets. Working closely with partners to find ways to leverage their data to mimic audiences that you are trying to target right now with cookies. Um the 4th 1 is publisher data or publisher targeting. So working with your publishers that you have strong relationships with who can curate similar audiences using their own first party data and conducting RFs to understand the scale and reach against your audience and their future role maps. So work with your top publishers based on historical data to try to recreate your best strategies. The 15 and I think this is very important is first party data, you know, that's going to matter more than ever. In the calculus future brands will need to think about how to access and developed the first party data starting with the consumers seeing a value in exchange for the information. It's a gold mine and understanding of consumer, their intent, the journey um and you need a really great data science team to extract insights out of that data, which will be crucial. So partner with strategic onboarding vendors and vet their ability to accept first party data into a cleaner environment for targeting for modeling for insight. And lastly, the six thing that we can do is begin to inform prospect prospecting by dedicating test budget to start gaining learnings about cookie list 11 place that we can start and it is under invested right now is Safari and Firefox. They have been calculus for quite some time so you can start here and begin testing here. Uh work with your data scientist team to understand the right mix is to to target and start exploring other channels outside of um just programmatic cookies like CTV digital, out of home radio gaming and so forth. So those are the six steps that we're taking right now with our clients to uh prepare and plan for the cookie list future. >>So chris let's go back to you. What's the solution here? Is there one, is there multiple solutions? What's the future look like for a cookie was future? >>Uh I think the one certain answers, they're definitely not just one solution. Um as we all know right now there there seems to be endless solutions, a lot of ideas out there, proposals with the W three C uh work happening within other industry bodies uh you know private companies solutions being offered and you know, it's a little bit of it's enough to make everyone's head spin and to try to track it to understand and understand the impact. And as a publisher were obviously a lot of people are knocking on our door. Uh they're saying, hey our solution is one that is going to bring in lots of money, you know, the all the buy side is going to use it. This is the one like I ma call to spend um, and so expect here and so far is that none of these solutions are I think everyone is still testing and learning no one on the buy side from our, from our knowledge is really committed to one or a few. It's all about a testing stage. I think that, you know, putting aside all that noise, I think what matters the most to us as publisher is actually something summer mentioned before. It's about control. You know, if we're going to work with a again, outside of our sort of, you know, internal identifier work that we're doing is we're going to work with an outside party or outside approach doesn't give us control as a publisher to ensure that it is, we control the data from our users. There isn't that data leakage, it's probably compliant. What information gets shared out there. What is it, what's released within within the bid stream? Uh If it is something that's attached to a somewhat declared user registered user that if that then is not somehow amplified or leverage off on another site in a way that is leveraging bit stream data or fingerprinting and going against. I think that the spirit of what we're trying to do in a post third party cookie world so that those controls are critical and I think they have those controls, his publisher, we have collectively be disciplined in what solutions that we we test out and what we eventually adopt. But even when the adoption point arrives, uh definitely it will not be one. There will be multiple because it's just too many use cases to address >>great, great insight there from, from you guys, news corp summer. Let's get back to you. I want to get your thoughts. You've been in many waves of innovation ups and downs were on a new one. Now we talked about the open internet democratization. Journalism is under a lot of pressure now, but there's now a wave of quality people really leaning in towards fighting misinformation, understanding truth and community and date is at the heart of it. What do you see as the new future for journalists, reward journalism is our ways their path forward. >>So there's uh, there's what I hope is going to happen. Um, and then I'm just gonna ignore what could write. Um, you know, there's there's a trend in market right now, a number of fronts, right? So there are marketers who are leaning into wanting to spend their marketing dollars with quality journalists, focusing on bipac owned and operated, really leaning into into supporting those businesses that have been uh, those publishers that have been ignored for years. I really hope that this trend continues. Um We are leaning into into helping um, marketers curate that supply right? And really, uh, you know, speak with their dollars about the things that that they support. Um, and uh, and and value right in market. So I'm hoping that that trend continues and it's not just sort of like a marketing blip. Um, but we will do everything possible to kind of like encourage that behavior and and give people the information they need to find, you know, truly high quality journalism. >>That's awesome chris Summer. Thanks for coming on and sharing your insight on this panel on the cookie list future. Before we go, just quick summary each of you. If you don't mind just giving a quick sound bite or bumper sticker of what we can expect. If you had to throw a prediction For what's going to happen in the next 24 months Chris We'll start with you. >>Uh it's gonna be quite a ride. I think that's an understatement. Um I think that there, I wouldn't be surprised if if google delays the change to the chrome by a couple of months and and may give the industry some much needed time, but no one knows. I guess. I guess I'm not except for someone somewhere deep within chrome. So I think we all have to operate in a way that changes to happen, changes to happen quickly and it's gonna cover across all facets of the industry, all facets of from advertising, marketing. So just be >>prepared. >>Yeah, along the same lines, be prepared, nobody knows what's going to happen in the future. Uh You know, while dancing in this together. Uh I think um for us it's um planning and preparing and also building on what we've already been working on. Um So omni channel ai um creative and I think clients will uh lean more into those different channels, >>awesome. So we'll pick us home, last word. >>I think we're in the throwing spaghetti against the wall stage. Right, so this is a time of discovery of leaning in trying everything out, Learning and iterating as fast as we possibly >>can. Awesome. And I love the cat in the background over your shoulder. Can't stop staring at your wonderful cat. Thanks for coming on chris, Thanks for coming on. This awesome panel industry breakdown of the cookie conundrum. The recipe for success data ai open. Uh The future is here, it's coming, it's coming fast. I'm john fryer with the cube. Thanks for watching. Mhm. Yeah. Mhm. Mhm. Welcome back to the Quant Cast industry summit on the demise of third party cookies. The cookie conundrum, a recipe for success. We're here peter day. The cto of quad cast and crew T cop car, head of product marketing quad cast. Thanks for coming on talking about the changing advertising landscape. >>Thanks for having us. Thank you for having >>us. So we've been hearing this story out to the big players. Want to keep the data, make that centralized control, all the leverage and then you've got the other end. You got the open internet that still wants to be free and valuable for everyone. Uh what's what are you guys doing to solve this problem? Because cookies go away? What's going to happen there? How do people track things you guys are in this business first question? What is quan cast strategies to adapt to third party cookies going away? What's gonna be, what's gonna be the answer? >>Yeah. So uh very rightly said, john the mission, the Qantas mission is the champion of free and open internet. Uh And with that in mind, our approach to this world without third party cookies is really grounded in three fundamental things. Uh First as industry standards, we think it's really important to participate and to work with organizations who are defining the standards that will guide the future of advertising. So with that in mind, we've been participating >>with I. A. B. >>Tech lab, we've been part of their project Triarc. Uh same thing with pre bid, who's kind of trying to figure out the pipes of identity. Di di di di di pipes of uh of the future. Um And then also is W three C, which is the World Wide Web Consortium. Um And our engineers and our engineering team are participating in their weekly meetings trying to figure out what's happening with the browsers and keeping up with the progress they're on things such as google's block. Um The second uh sort of thing is interoperability, as you've mentioned, there are lots of different uh I. D. Solutions that are emerging. You have you I. D. Two point oh, you have live RAM, you have google's flock. Uh And there will be more, there are more and they will continue to be more. Uh We really think it is important to build a platform that can ingest all of these signals. And so that's what we've done. Uh The reason really is to meet our customers where they are at today. Our customers use multiple different data management platforms, the mps. Um and that's why we support multiple of those. Um This is not going to be much different than that. We have to meet our customers where we are, where they are at. And then finally, of course, which is at the very heart of who contrast is innovation. Uh As you can imagine being able to take all of these multiple signals in including the I. D. S. And the cohorts, but also others like contextual first party um consent is becoming more and more important. Um And then there are many other signals, like time, language geo location. So all of these signals can help us understand user behavior intent and interests um in absence of 3rd party cookies. However, uh there's there's something to note about this. They're very raw, their complex, they're messy all of these different signals. Um They are changing all the time, they're real time. Um And there's incomplete information isolation. Just one of these signals cannot help you build a true and complete picture. So what you really need is a technology like AI and machine learning to really bring all of these signals together, combine them statistically and get an understanding of user behavior intent and interests and then act on it, be it in terms of providing audience insights um or responding to bid requests and and so on and so forth. So those are sort of the three um fundamentals that our approach is grounded in which is industry standards, interoperability and and innovation. Uh and you know, you have peter here, who is who is the expert So you can dive much deeper into >>it. Is T. T. O. You've got to tell us how is this going to actually work? What are you guys doing from a technology standpoint to help with data driven advertising in a third party cookie list world? >>Well, we've been um This is not a shock, you know, I think anyone who's been close to his space has known that the 3rd Party Cookie has been um uh reducing inequality in terms of its pervasiveness and its longevity for many years now. And the kind of death knell is really google chrome making a, making the changes that they're gonna be making. So we've been investing in the space for many years. Um and we've had to make a number of hugely diverse investment. So one of them is in how as a marketer, how do I tell if my marketing still working in the world without >>computers? The >>majority of marketers completely reliant on third party cookies today to tell them if they're if they're marketing is working or not. And so we've had to invest heavily and statistical techniques which are closer to kind of economic trick models that markets are used to things like out of home advertising, It's going to establishing whether they're advertising is working or not in a digital environment actually, >>just as >>often, you know, as is often the case in these kind of times of massive disruption, there's always opportunity to make things better. And we really think that's true. And you know, digital measurement has often mistaken precision for accuracy. And there's a real opportunity to kind of see the wood for the trees if you like. And start to come with better methods of measuring the affections of advertising without third party cookies. And in fact to make countless other investments in areas like contextual modeling and and targeting that third party cookies and and uh, connecting directly to publishers rather than going through this kind of bloom escape that's gonna tied together third party cookies. So if I was to enumerate all the investments we've made, I think we'll be here till midnight but we have to make a number of vestments over a number of years and that level investments only increasing at the moment. >>Peter on that contextual. Can you just double click on that and tell us more? >>Yeah, I mean contextual is unfortunately these things, this is really poorly defined. It can mean everything from a publisher saying, hey, trust us, this dissipated about CVS to what's possible now and has only really been possible the last couple of years, which is to build >>statistical >>models of the entire internet based on the content that people are actually consumed. And this type of technology requires massive data processing capabilities. It's able to take advantage of the latest innovations in there is like natural language processing and really gives um computers are kind of much deeper and richer understanding of the internet, which ultimately makes it possible to kind of organize, organized the Internet in terms of the types of content of pages. So this type of technology has only been possible the last two years and we've been using contextual signals since our inception, it's always been massively predictive in terms of audience behaviours, in terms of where advertising is likely to work. And so we've been very fortunate to keep the investment going um and take advantage of many of these innovations that have happened in academia and in kind of uh in adjacent areas >>on the ai machine learning aspect, that seems to be a great differentiator in this day and age for getting the most out of the data. How is machine learning and ai factoring into your platform? >>I think it's, it's how we've always operated right from our interception when we started as a measurement company, the way that we were giving our customers at the time, we were just publishers, just the publisher side of our business insights into who their audience was, were, was using machine learning techniques. And that's never really changed. The foundation of our platform has always been, has always been machine learning from from before. It was cool. A lot of our kind of, a lot of our core teams have backgrounds in machine learning phds in statistics and machine learning and and that really drives our our decision making. I mean, data is only useful if you can make sense of it and if you can organize it and if you can take action on it and to do that at this kind of scout scale, it's absolutely necessary to use machine learning technology. >>So you mentioned contextual also, you know, in advertising, everyone knows in that world that you've got the contextual behavioural dynamics, the behavior that's kind of generally everyone's believing is happening. The consensus is undeniable is that people are wanting to expect an environment where there's trust, there's truth, but also they want to be locked in. They don't wanna get walled into a walled garden, nobody wants to be in the world, are they want to be free to pop around and visit sites is more horizontal scalability than ever before. Yet, the bigger players are becoming walled garden, vertical platforms. So with future of ai the experience is going to come from this data. So the behavior is out there. How do you get that contextual relevance and provide the horizontal scale that users expect? >>Yeah, I think it's I think it's a really good point and we're definitely this kind of tipping point. We think, in the broader industry, I think, you know, every published right, we're really blessed to work with the biggest publishers in the world, all the way through to my mom's vlog, right? So we get to hear the perspectives of publishers at every scale. I think they consistently tell us the same thing, which is they want to more directly connected consumers, they don't wanna be tied into these walled gardens, which dictate how they must present their content and in some cases what content they're allowed to >>present. >>Um and so our job as a company is to really provide level >>the playing field a little bit, >>provide them the same capabilities they're only used to in the walled gardens, but let's give them more choice in terms of how they structure their content, how they organize their content, how they organize their audiences, but make sure that they can fund that effectively by making their audiences in their environments discoverable by marketers measurable by marketers and connect them as directly as possible to make that kind of ad funded economic model as effective in the open Internet as it is in social. And so a lot of the investments we've made over recent years have been really to kind of realize that vision, which is, it should be as easy for a marketer to be able to understand people on the open internet as it is in social media. It should be as effective for them to reach people in the environment is really high quality content as it is on facebook. And so we invest a lot of a lot of our R and D dollars in making that true. We're now live with the Comcast platform, which does exactly that. And as third party cookies go away, it only um only kind of exaggerated or kind of further emphasizes the need for direct connections between brands and publishers. And so we just wanna build the technology that helps make that true and gives the kind of technology to these marketers and publishers to connect and to deliver great experiences without relying on these kind of walled >>gardens. Yeah, the Director Director, Consumer Director audience is a new trend. You're seeing it everywhere. How do you guys support this new kind of signaling from for for that's happening in this new world? How do you ingest the content and just this consent uh signaling? >>Uh we were really fortunate to have an amazing, amazing R and D. Team and, you know, we've had to do all sorts to make this, you need to realize our vision. This has meant things like, you know, we have crawlers which scan the entire internet at this point, extract the content of the pages and kind of make sense of it and organize it uh, and organize it for publishers so they can understand how their audiences overlap with potential competitors or collaborators. But more importantly, organize it for marketers. So you can understand what kind of high impact opportunities are there for them there. So, you know, we've had to we've had to build a lot of technology. We've had to build analytics engines, which can get answers back in seconds so that marketers and publishers can kind of interact with their own data and make sense of it and present it in a way that's compelling and help them drive their strategy as well as their execution. We've had to invest in areas like consent management because we believe that a free and open internet is absolutely reliant on trust and therefore we spend a lot of our time thinking about how do we make it easy for end users to understand who has access to their data and easy for end users to be able to opt out. And uh and as a result of that, we've now got the world's most widely adopted adopted consent management platform. So it's hard to tackle one of these problems without tackling all of them. Were fortunate enough to have had a large enough R and D budget over the last four or five years, make a number investments, everything from consent and identity through context, your signals through the measurement technologies, which really bring advertisers >>and Publishers places together great insight. Last word for you is what's the what's the customer view here as you bring these new capabilities of the platform, uh what's what are you guys seeing as the highlight uh from a platform perspective? >>So the initial response that we've seen from our customers has been very encouraging, both on the publisher side as well as the marketer side. Um I think, you know, one of the things we hear quite a lot is uh you guys are at least putting forth a solution, an actual solution for us to test Peter mentioned measurement, that really is where we started because you cannot optimize what you cannot measure. Um so that that is where his team has started and we have some measurement very, very uh initial capabilities still in alpha, but they are available in the platform for marketers to test out today. Um so the initial response has been very encouraging. People want to engage with us um of course our, you know, our fundamental value proposition, which is that the Qantas platform was never built to be reliant on on third party data. These stale segments like we operate, we've always operated on real time live data. Um The second thing is, is our premium publisher relationships. We have had the privilege of working like Peter said with some of the um biggest publishers, but we also have a very wide footprint. We have first party tags across um over 100 million plus web and mobile destinations. Um and you know, as you must have heard like that sort of first party footprint is going to come in really handy in a world without third party cookies, we are encouraging all of our customers, publishers and marketers to grow their first party data. Um and so that that's something that's a strong point that customers love about us and and lean into it quite a bit. Um So yeah, the initial response has been great. Of course it doesn't hurt that we've made all these are in the investments. We can talk about consent. Um, and you know, I often say that consent, it sounds simple, but it isn't, there's a lot of technology involved, but there's lots of uh legal work involved as it as well. We have a very strong legal team who has expertise built in. So yeah, very good response. Initially >>democratization. Everyone's a publisher. Everyone's a media company. They have to think about being a platform. You guys provide that. So I congratulate Peter. Thanks for dropping the gems there. Shruti, thanks for sharing the product highlights. Thanks for, for your time. Thank you. Okay, this is the quan cast industry summit on the demise of third party cookies. And what's next? The cookie conundrum. The recipe for success with Kwan Cast. I'm john free with the cube. Thanks for watching. Mm

Published Date : May 18 2021

SUMMARY :

Great to chat with you today. And of course that's grown to where we are today, where five billion people around the world are able to engage in all sorts So the problem is if more of the money goes to them, less of its going to independent content creators. being talked about on the heels of the google's news around, you know, getting rid of third party cookies that it really sort of focus the minds of the industry in terms of finding alternative ways to tailor content You know, some are saying that the free open internet was pretty much killed when, you know, the big comes like facebook of the delivery of advertising and so on. is the impact of this with the modernization of the solution? So you know, you will start to see more registration wars to access content so that you have garden is not the best thing happening right now in the world, but yet is there any other other choice? So it's a huge amount of money in terms of funding the open Internet, which sounds great except for its increasingly thing to having that data closed loop, if you will for for publishers. is the way in which content is funded. long time, then you know, your connections but audience is about traffic, in the future, people around the world have access to high quality, diverse content. The reason the walled gardens capture so much money the changing landscape of advertising is here and shit Gupta, founder of you of digital So the office of the changing landscape of advertising really centers around the open to Um but the one, the bird theme proposal that they've chosen to move forward with is called I guess the question it really comes down to what alternatives are out there for cookies and So they're saying, hey, we use, you know, an open I. Because I think this is gonna, you can't ignore the big guys And I believe the reason that is, have the data you have the sharing it or using it as we're finding shit Gupta great insight dropping So chris we'll start with you at news corp obviously a major publisher deprecation of third not just kind of recreating the prior world because the prior world was flawed or I guess you could say the current world since it hasn't So how are you impacted by this new notion? You know, if if the cookie list future was a tic tac, dance will be dancing right now, You have the keys to the kingdom over there. Um and so you know, we've kind of known this, this cookie going in the wheelhouse, you got original content and there's other providers out there. perhaps to organizations like pre bid, you know, I think we can, you know, we're trying to address that and the network effect that we're seeing in Vire al Itty and across multiple on the on the channels. you know, I kind of think that each of those big networks are going to So how do we bring the brands and agencies together to get ready for third party The 15 and I think this is very important is first party data, you know, that's going to matter more than So chris let's go back to you. saying, hey our solution is one that is going to bring in lots of money, you know, the all the buy side is going to use it. What do you see as the new future and give people the information they need to find, you know, truly high quality journalism. If you had to throw a prediction For what's going to happen in the next 24 months Chris So I think we all have to operate in a way that changes Yeah, along the same lines, be prepared, nobody knows what's going to happen in the future. So we'll pick us home, last word. I think we're in the throwing spaghetti against the wall stage. Thanks for coming on talking about the changing advertising landscape. Thank you for having make that centralized control, all the leverage and then you've got the other end. the Qantas mission is the champion of free and open internet. Uh and you know, you have peter here, who is who is the expert So you can dive much doing from a technology standpoint to help with data driven advertising in a third Well, we've been um This is not a shock, you know, I think anyone who's been close to his It's going to establishing whether they're advertising is working or not in a digital environment actually, And there's a real opportunity to kind of see the wood for the trees if you Can you just double click on that and tell us more? what's possible now and has only really been possible the last couple of years, which is to build models of the entire internet based on the content that people are actually consumed. on the ai machine learning aspect, that seems to be a great differentiator in this day you can make sense of it and if you can organize it and if you can take action on it and to do that So you mentioned contextual also, you know, in advertising, everyone knows in that world that you've got the contextual behavioural in the broader industry, I think, you know, every published right, we're really blessed to work And so a lot of the investments we've made over recent years have been really to How do you ingest the content and just this consent uh signaling? So you can understand what kind of high impact opportunities view here as you bring these new capabilities of the platform, uh what's what are you guys seeing as Um and you know, as you must have heard like that sort of Thanks for dropping the gems there.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
ComcastORGANIZATION

0.99+

Clay ShirkyPERSON

0.99+

Jan 2022DATE

0.99+

Jan 23DATE

0.99+

Z axisORGANIZATION

0.99+

2005DATE

0.99+

PeterPERSON

0.99+

ShrutiPERSON

0.99+

ConradPERSON

0.99+

Conrad FeldmanPERSON

0.99+

GoogleORGANIZATION

0.99+

john ferrierPERSON

0.99+

john fryerPERSON

0.99+

$400 billionQUANTITY

0.99+

SafariTITLE

0.99+

ChrisPERSON

0.99+

five billionQUANTITY

0.99+

FirefoxTITLE

0.99+

twoQUANTITY

0.99+

bothQUANTITY

0.99+

six stepsQUANTITY

0.99+

GuptaPERSON

0.99+

chromeTITLE

0.99+

QantasORGANIZATION

0.99+

john furrierPERSON

0.99+

googleORGANIZATION

0.99+

Levi School of BusinessORGANIZATION

0.99+

first stepQUANTITY

0.99+

CeoPERSON

0.99+

chris SummerPERSON

0.99+

facebookORGANIZATION

0.99+

oneQUANTITY

0.99+

chrisPERSON

0.99+

todayDATE

0.99+

Conrad FeldmannPERSON

0.99+

next yearDATE

0.99+

second thingQUANTITY

0.99+

third thingQUANTITY

0.99+

johnPERSON

0.98+

five billion peopleQUANTITY

0.98+

two young kidsQUANTITY

0.98+

15QUANTITY

0.98+

first questionQUANTITY

0.98+

FirstQUANTITY

0.98+

both thingsQUANTITY

0.98+

one sideQUANTITY

0.98+

first timeQUANTITY

0.98+

santa Clara UniversityORGANIZATION

0.98+

two separate groupsQUANTITY

0.98+

one solutionQUANTITY

0.97+

World Wide Web ConsortiumORGANIZATION

0.97+

eachQUANTITY

0.97+

two frameworksQUANTITY

0.97+

each dayQUANTITY

0.97+

christmasEVENT

0.97+

two yearsQUANTITY

0.97+

first partyQUANTITY

0.97+

both sidesQUANTITY

0.96+

Glenn Grossman and Yusef Khan | Io-Tahoe ActiveDQ Intelligent Automation


 

>>from around the globe. It's the >>cube presenting >>active de que intelligent automation for data quality brought to you by Iota Ho >>Welcome to the sixth episode of the I. O. Tahoe data automation series. On the cube. We're gonna start off with a segment on how to accelerate the adoption of snowflake with Glenn Grossman, who is the enterprise account executive from Snowflake and yusef khan, the head of data services from Iota. Gentlemen welcome. >>Good afternoon. Good morning, Good evening. Dave. >>Good to see you. Dave. Good to see you. >>Okay glenn uh let's start with you. I mean the Cube hosted the snowflake data cloud summit in November and we heard from customers and going from love the tagline zero to snowflake, you know, 90 minutes very quickly. And of course you want to make it simple and attractive for enterprises to move data and analytics into the snowflake platform but help us understand once the data is there, how is snowflake helping to achieve savings compared to the data lake? >>Absolutely. dave. It's a great question, you know, it starts off first with the notion and uh kind of, we coined it in the industry or t shirt size pricing. You know, you don't necessarily always need the performance of a high end sports car when you're just trying to go get some groceries and drive down the street 20 mph. The t shirt pricing really aligns to, depending on what your operational workload is to support the business and the value that you need from that business? Not every day. Do you need data? Every second of the moment? Might be once a day, once a week through that t shirt size price and we can align for the performance according to the environmental needs of the business. What those drivers are the key performance indicators to drive that insight to make better decisions, It allows us to control that cost. So to my point, not always do you need the performance of a Ferrari? Maybe you need the performance and gas mileage of the Honda Civic if you would just get and deliver the value of the business but knowing that you have that entire performance landscape at a moments notice and that's really what what allows us to hold and get away from. How much is it going to cost me in a data lake type of environment? >>Got it. Thank you for that yussef. Where does Io Tahoe fit into this equation? I mean what's, what's, what's unique about the approach that you're taking towards this notion of mobilizing data on snowflake? >>Well, Dave in the first instance we profile the data itself at the data level, so not just at the level of metadata and we do that wherever that data lives. So it could be structured data could be semi structured data could be unstructured data and that data could be on premise. It could be in the cloud or it could be on some kind of SAAS platform. And so we profile this data at the source system that is feeding snowflake within snowflake itself within the end applications and the reports that the snowflake environment is serving. So what we've done here is take our machine learning discovery technology and make snowflake itself the repository for knowledge and insights on data. And this is pretty unique. Uh automation in the form of our P. A. Is being applied to the data both before after and within snowflake. And so the ultimate outcome is that business users can have a much greater degree of confidence that the data they're using can be trusted. Um The other thing we do uh which is unique is employee data R. P. A. To proactively detect and recommend fixes the data quality so that removes the manual time and effort and cost it takes to fix those data quality issues. Uh If they're left unchecked and untouched >>so that's key to things their trust, nobody's gonna use the data. It's not trusted. But also context. If you think about it, we've contextualized are operational systems but not our analytic system. So there's a big step forward glen. I wonder if you can tell us how customers are managing data quality when they migrate to snowflake because there's a lot of baggage in in traditional data warehouses and data lakes and and data hubs. Maybe you can talk about why this is a challenge for customers. And like for instance can you proactively address some of those challenges that customers face >>that we certainly can. They have. You know, data quality. Legacy data sources are always inherent with D. Q. Issues whether it's been master data management and data stewardship programs over the last really almost two decades right now, you do have systemic data issues. You have siloed data, you have information operational, data stores data marks. It became a hodgepodge when organizations are starting their journey to migrate to the cloud. One of the things that were first doing is that inspection of data um you know first and foremost even looking to retire legacy data sources that aren't even used across the enterprise but because they were part of the systemic long running operational on premise technology, it stayed there when we start to look at data pipelines as we onboard a customer. You know we want to do that era. We want to do QA and quality assurance so that we can, And our ultimate goal eliminate the garbage in garbage out scenarios that we've been plagued with really over the last 40, 50 years of just data in general. So we have to take an inspection where traditionally it was E. T. L. Now in the world of snowflake, it's really lt we're extracting were loading or inspecting them. We're transforming out to the business so that these routines could be done once and again give great business value back to making decisions around the data instead of spending all this long time. Always re architect ng the data pipeline to serve the business. >>Got it. Thank you. Glenda yourself of course. Snowflakes renowned for customers. Tell me all the time. It's so easy. It's so easy to spin up a data warehouse. It helps with my security. Again it simplifies everything but so you know, getting started is one thing but then adoption is also a key. So I'm interested in the role that that I owe. Tahoe plays in accelerating adoption for new customers. >>Absolutely. David. I mean as Ben said, you know every every migration to Snowflake is going to have a business case. Um uh and that is going to be uh partly about reducing spending legacy I. T. Servers, storage licenses, support all those good things um that see I want to be able to turn off entirely ultimately. And what Ayatollah does is help discover all the legacy undocumented silos that have been built up, as Glenn says on the data estate across a period of time, build intelligence around those silos and help reduce those legacy costs sooner by accelerating that that whole process. Because obviously the quicker that I. T. Um and Cdos can turn off legacy data sources the more funding and resources going to be available to them to manage the new uh Snowflake based data estate on the cloud. And so turning off the old building, the new go hand in hand to make sure those those numbers stack up the program is delivered uh and the benefits are delivered. And so what we're doing here with a Tahoe is improving the customers are y by accelerating their ability to adopt Snowflake. >>Great. And I mean we're talking a lot about data quality here but in a lot of ways that's table stakes like I said, if you don't trust the data, nobody's going to use it. And glenn, I mean I look at Snowflake and I see obviously the ease of use the simplicity you guys are nailing that the data sharing capabilities I think are really exciting because you know everybody talks about sharing data but then we talked about data as an asset, Everyone so high I to hold it. And so sharing is is something that I see as a paradigm shift and you guys are enabling that. So one of the things beyond data quality that are notable that customers are excited about that, maybe you're excited about >>David, I think you just cleared it out. It's it's this massive data sharing play part of the data cloud platform. Uh you know, just as of last year we had a little over about 100 people, 100 vendors in our data marketplace. That number today is well over 450 it is all about democratizing and sharing data in a world that is no longer held back by FTp s and C. S. V. S and then the organization having to take that data and ingested into their systems. You're a snowflake customer. want to subscribe to an S and P data sources an example, go subscribe it to it. It's in your account there was no data engineering, there was no physical lift of data and that becomes the most important thing when we talk about getting broader insights, data quality. Well, the data has already been inspected from your vendor is just available in your account. It's obviously a very simplistic thing to describe behind the scenes is what our founders have created to make it very, very easy for us to democratize not only internal with private sharing of data, but this notion of marketplace ensuring across your customers um marketplace is certainly on the type of all of my customers minds and probably some other areas that might have heard out of a recent cloud summit is the introduction of snow park and being able to do where all this data is going towards us. Am I in an ale, you know, along with our partners at Io Tahoe and R. P. A. Automation is what do we do with all this data? How do we put the algorithms and targets now? We'll be able to run in the future R and python scripts and java libraries directly inside Snowflake, which allows you to even accelerate even faster, Which people found traditionally when we started off eight years ago just as a data warehousing platform. >>Yeah, I think we're on the cusp of just a new way of thinking about data. I mean obviously simplicity is a starting point but but data by its very nature is decentralized. You talk about democratizing data. I like this idea of the global mesh. I mean it's very powerful concept and again it's early days but you know, keep part of this is is automation and trust, yussef you've worked with Snowflake and you're bringing active D. Q. To the market what our customers telling you so far? >>Well David the feedback so far has been great. Which is brilliant. So I mean firstly there's a point about speed and acceleration. Um So that's the speed to incite really. So where you have inherent data quality issues uh whether that's with data that was on premise and being brought into snowflake or on snowflake itself, we're able to show the customer results and help them understand their data quality better Within Day one which is which is a fantastic acceleration. I'm related to that. There's the cost and effort to get that insight is it's a massive productivity gain versus where you're seeing customers who've been struggling sometimes too remediate legacy data and legacy decisions that they've made over the past couple of decades, so that that cost and effort is much lower than it would otherwise have been. Um 3rdly, there's confidence and trust, so you can see Cdos and see IOS got demonstrable results that they've been able to improve data quality across a whole bunch of use cases for business users in marketing and customer services, for commercial teams, for financial teams. So there's that very quick kind of growth in confidence and credibility as the projects get moving. And then finally, I mean really all the use cases for the snowflake depend on data quality, really whether it's data science, uh and and the kind of snow park applications that Glenn has talked about, all those use cases work better when we're able to accelerate the ri for our joint customers by very quickly pushing out these data quality um insights. Um And I think one of the one of the things that the snowflake have recognized is that in order for C. I. O. Is to really adopt enterprise wide, um It's also as well as the great technology with Snowflake offers, it's about cleaning up that legacy data state, freeing up the budget for CIA to spend it on the new modern day to a state that lets them mobilise their data with snowflake. >>So you're seeing the Senate progression. We're simplifying the the the analytics from a tech perspective. You bring in Federated governance which which brings more trust. Then then you bring in the automation of the data quality piece which is fundamental. And now you can really start to, as you guys are saying, democratized and scale uh and share data. Very powerful guys. Thanks so much for coming on the program. Really appreciate your time. >>Thank you. I appreciate as well. Yeah.

Published Date : Apr 29 2021

SUMMARY :

It's the the head of data services from Iota. Good afternoon. Good to see you. I mean the Cube hosted the snowflake data cloud summit and the value that you need from that business? Thank you for that yussef. so not just at the level of metadata and we do that wherever that data lives. so that's key to things their trust, nobody's gonna use the data. Always re architect ng the data pipeline to serve the business. Again it simplifies everything but so you know, getting started is one thing but then I mean as Ben said, you know every every migration to Snowflake is going I see obviously the ease of use the simplicity you guys are nailing that the data sharing that might have heard out of a recent cloud summit is the introduction of snow park and I mean it's very powerful concept and again it's early days but you know, Um So that's the speed to incite And now you can really start to, as you guys are saying, democratized and scale uh and I appreciate as well.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
DavidPERSON

0.99+

Glenn GrossmanPERSON

0.99+

BenPERSON

0.99+

Io TahoeORGANIZATION

0.99+

Yusef KhanPERSON

0.99+

DavePERSON

0.99+

20 mphQUANTITY

0.99+

GlennPERSON

0.99+

CIAORGANIZATION

0.99+

IOSTITLE

0.99+

GlendaPERSON

0.99+

90 minutesQUANTITY

0.99+

100 vendorsQUANTITY

0.99+

FerrariORGANIZATION

0.99+

last yearDATE

0.99+

OneQUANTITY

0.99+

firstQUANTITY

0.99+

first instanceQUANTITY

0.99+

NovemberDATE

0.99+

sixth episodeQUANTITY

0.99+

once a dayQUANTITY

0.99+

once a weekQUANTITY

0.98+

SenateORGANIZATION

0.98+

todayDATE

0.98+

bothQUANTITY

0.98+

eight years agoDATE

0.97+

yusef khanPERSON

0.97+

overQUANTITY

0.96+

oneQUANTITY

0.95+

R. P. A. AutomationORGANIZATION

0.95+

pythonTITLE

0.95+

TahoeORGANIZATION

0.94+

I. O. TahoeTITLE

0.93+

HondaORGANIZATION

0.93+

Io-TahoeORGANIZATION

0.93+

one thingQUANTITY

0.91+

Io TahoePERSON

0.87+

firstlyQUANTITY

0.87+

CivicCOMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.87+

SnowflakeTITLE

0.86+

TahoePERSON

0.85+

AyatollahPERSON

0.84+

SnowflakeEVENT

0.83+

past couple of decadesDATE

0.82+

about 100 peopleQUANTITY

0.81+

two decadesQUANTITY

0.8+

over 450QUANTITY

0.79+

40, 50 yearsQUANTITY

0.76+

Day oneQUANTITY

0.75+

glennPERSON

0.74+

javaTITLE

0.72+

snowflakeEVENT

0.7+

Iota HoORGANIZATION

0.68+

P.ORGANIZATION

0.62+

ActiveDQ Intelligent AutomationORGANIZATION

0.61+

snowflake data cloud summitEVENT

0.6+

IotaLOCATION

0.58+

FTpTITLE

0.56+

SnowflakeORGANIZATION

0.54+

zeroQUANTITY

0.53+

RTITLE

0.52+

O.EVENT

0.41+

C.EVENT

0.34+

Clayton Coleman, Red Hat | Red Hat Summit 2021 Virtual Experience


 

>>mhm Yes, Welcome back to the cubes coverage of red hat summit 2021 virtual, which we were in person this year but we're still remote. We still got the Covid coming around the corner. Soon to be in post. Covid got a great guest here, Clayton Coleman architect that red hat cuba love and I've been on many times expanded role again this year. More cloud, more cloud action. Great, great to see you. Thanks for coming on. >>It's a pleasure >>to be here. So great to see you were just riffing before we came on camera about distributed computing uh and the future of the internet, how it's all evolving, how much fun it is, how it's all changing still. The game is still the same, all that good stuff. But here at Red had some and we're gonna get into that, but I want to just get into the hard news and the real big, big opportunities here you're announcing with red hat new managed cloud services portfolio, take us through that. >>Sure. We're continuing to evolve our open shift managed offerings which has grown now to include um the redhead open shift service on amazon to complement our as your redhead open shift service. Um that means that we have um along with our partnership on IBM cloud and open ship dedicated on both a W S and G C P. We now have um managed open shift on all of the major clouds. And along with that we are bringing in and introducing the first, I think really the first step what we see as uh huh growing and involving the hybrid cloud ecosystem on top of open shift and there's many different ways to slice that, but it's about bringing capabilities on top of open shift in multiple environments and multiple clouds in ways that make developers and operation teams more productive because at the heart of it, that's our goal for open shift. And the broader, open source ecosystem is do what makes all of us safer, more, uh, more productive and able to deliver business value? >>Yeah. And that's a great steak you guys put in the ground. Um, and that's great messaging, great marketing, great value proposition. I want to dig into a little bit with you. I mean, you guys have, I think the only native offering on all the clouds out there that I know of, is that true? I mean, you guys have, it's not just, you know, you support AWS as your and I B M and G C P, but native offerings. >>We do not have a native offering on GCPD offered the same service. And this is actually interesting as we've evolved our approach. You know, everyone, when we talk about hybrid, Hybrid is, um, you know, dealing with the realities of the computing world, We live in, um, working with each of the major clouds, trying to deliver the best immigration possible in a way that drives that consistency across those environments. And so actually are open shift dedicated on AWS service gave us the inspiration a lot of the basic foundations for what became the integrated Native service. And we've worked with amazon very closely to make sure that that does the right thing for customers who have chosen amazon. And likewise, we're trying to continue to deliver the best experience, the best operational reliability that we can so that the choice of where you run your cloud, um, where you run your applications, um, matches the decisions you've already made and where your future investments are gonna be. So we want to be where customers are, but we also want to give you that consistency. That has been a hallmark of um of open shift since the beginning. >>Yeah. And thanks for clarifying, I appreciate that because the manage serves on GCB rest or native. Um let me ask about the application services because Jeff Barr from AWS posted a few weeks ago amazon celebrated their 15th birthday. They're still teenagers uh relatively speaking. But one comment he made that he that was interesting to me. And this applies kind of this cloud native megatrend happening is he says the A. P. I. S are basically the same and this brings up the hybrid environment. You guys are always been into the api side of the management with the cloud services and supporting all that. As you guys look at this ecosystem in open source. How is the role of A PS and these integrations? Because without solid integration all these services could break down and certainly the open source, more and more people are coding. So take me through how you guys look at these applications services because many people are predicting more service is going to be on boarding faster than ever before. >>It's interesting. So um for us working across multiple cloud environments, there are many similarities in those mps, but for every similarity there is a difference and those differences are actually what dr costs and drive complexity when you're integrating. Um and I think a lot of the role of this is, you know, the irresponsible to talk about the role of an individual company in the computing ecosystem moving to cloud native because as many of these capabilities are unlocked by large cloud providers and transformations in the kinds of software that we run at scale. You know, everybody is a participant in that. But then you look at the broad swath of developer and operator ecosystem and it's the communities of people who paper over those differences, who write run books and build um you know, the policies and who build the experience and the automation. Um not just in individual products or an individual clouds, but across the open source ecosystem. Whether it's technologies like answerable or Terror form, whether it's best practices websites around running kubernetes, um every every part of the community is really involved in driving up uh driving consistency, um driving predictability and driving reliability and what we try to do is actually work within those constraints um to take the ecosystem and to push it a little bit further. So the A. P. I. S. May be similar, but over time those differences can trip you up. And a lot of what I think we talked about where the industry is going, where where we want to be is everyone ultimately is going to own some responsibility for keeping their services running and making sure that their applications and their businesses are successful. The best outcome would be that the A. P. R. S are the same and they're open and that both the cloud providers and the open source ecosystem and vendors and partners who drive many of these open source communities are actually all working together to have the most consistent environment to make portability a true strength. But when someone does differentiate and has a true best to bring service, we don't want to build artificial walls between those. I mean, I mean, that's hybrid cloud is you're going to make choices that make sense for you if we tell people that their choices don't work or they can't integrate or, you know, an open source project doesn't support this vendor, that vendor, we're actually leaving a lot of the complexity buried in those organizations. So I think this is a great time to, as we turn over for cloud. Native looking at how we, as much as possible try to drive those ap is closer together and the consistency underneath them is both a community and a vendor. And uh for red hat, it's part of what we do is a core mission is trying to make sure that that consistency is actually real. You don't have to worry about those details when you're ignoring them. >>That's a great point. Before I get into some architectural impact, I want to get your thoughts on um, the, this trends going on, Everyone jumps on the bandwagon. You know, you say, oh yeah, I gotta, I want a data cloud, you know, everything is like the new, you know, they saw Snowflake Apollo, I gotta have some, I got some of that data, You've got streaming data services, you've got data services and native into the, these platforms. But a lot of these companies think it's just, you're just gonna get a data cloud, just, it's so easy. Um, they might try something and then they get stuck with it or they have to re factor, >>how do you look >>at that as an architect when you have these new hot trends like say a data cloud, how should customers be thinking about kicking the tires on services like that And how should they think holistically around architect in that? >>There's a really interesting mindset is, uh, you know, we deal with this a lot. Everyone I talked to, you know, I've been with red hat for 10 years now in an open shift. All 10 years of that. We've gone through a bunch of transformations. Um, and every time I talked to, you know, I've talked to the same companies and organizations over the last 10 years, each point in their evolution, they're making decisions that are the right decision at the time. Um, they're choosing a new capability. So platform as a service is a great example of a capability that allowed a lot of really large organizations to standardize. Um, that ties into digital transformation. Ci CD is another big trend where it's an obvious wind. But depending on where you jumped on the bandwagon, depending on when you adopted, you're going to make a bunch of different trade offs. And that, that process is how do we improve the ability to keep all of the old stuff moving forward as well? And so open api is open standards are a big part of that, but equally it's understanding the trade offs that you're going to make and clearly communicating those so with data lakes. Um, there was kind of the 1st and 2nd iterations of data lakes, there was the uh, in the early days these capabilities were knew they were based around open source software. Um, a lot of the Hadoop and big data ecosystem, you know, started based on some of these key papers from amazon and google and others taking infrastructure ideas bringing them to scale. We went through a whole evolution of that and the input and the output of that basically let us into the next phase, which I think is the second phase of data leak, which is we have this data are tools are so much better because of that first phase that the investments we made the first time around, we're going to have to pay another investment to make that transformation. And so I've actually, I never want to caution someone not to jump early, but it has to be the right jump and it has to be something that really gives you a competitive advantage. A lot of infrastructure technology is you should make the choices that you make one or two big bets and sometimes people say this, you call it using their innovation tokens. You need to make the bets on big technologies that you operate more effectively at scale. It is somewhat hard to predict that. I certainly say that I've missed quite a few of the exciting transformations in the field just because, um, it wasn't always obvious that it was going to pay off to the degree that um, customers would need. >>So I gotta ask you on the real time applications side of it, that's been a big trend, certainly in cloud. But as you look at hybrid hybrid cloud environments, for instance, streaming data has been a big issue. Uh any updates there from you on your managed service? >>That's right. So one of we have to manage services um that are both closely aligned three managed services that are closely aligned with data in three different ways. And so um one of them is redhead open shift streams for Apache Kafka, which is managed cloud service that focuses on bringing that streaming data and letting you run it across multiple environments. And I think that, you know, we get to the heart of what's the purpose of uh managed services is to reduce operational overhead and to take responsibilities that allow users to focus on the things that actually matter for them. So for us, um managed open shift streams is really about the flow of data between applications in different environments, whether that's from the edge to an on premise data center, whether it's an on premise data center to the cloud. And increasingly these services which were running in the public cloud, increasingly these services have elements that run in the public cloud, but also key elements that run close to where your applications are. And I think that bridge is actually really important for us. That's a key component of hybrid is connecting the different locations and different footprints. So for us the focus is really how do we get data moving to the right place that complements our API management service, which is an add on for open ship dedicated, which means once you've brought the data and you need to expose it back out to other applications in the environment, you can build those applications on open shift, you can leverage the capabilities of open shift api management to expose them more easily, both to end customers or to other applications. And then our third services redhead open shift data science. Um and that is a, an integration that makes it easy for data scientists in a kubernetes environment. On open shift, they easily bring together the data to make, to analyze it and to help route it is appropriate. So those three facets for us are pretty important. They can be used in many different ways, but that focus on the flow of data across these different environments is really a key part of our longer term strategy. >>You know, all the customer checkboxes there you mentioned earlier. I mean I'll just summarize that that you said, you know, obviously value faster application velocity time to value. Those are like the checkboxes, Gardner told analysts check those lower complexity. Oh, we do the heavy lifting, all cloud benefits, so that's all cool. Everyone kind of gets that, everyone's been around cloud knows devops all those things come into play right now. The innovation focuses on operations and day to operations, becoming much more specific. When people say, hey, I've done some lift and shift, I've done some Greenfield born in the cloud now, it's like, whoa, this stuff, I haven't seen this before. As you start scaling. So this brings up that concept and then you add in multi cloud and hybrid cloud, you gotta have a unified experience. So these are the hot areas right this year, I would say, you know, that day to operate has been around for a while, but this idea of unification around environments to be fully distributed for developers is huge. >>How do you >>architect for that? This is the number one question I get. And I tease out when people are kind of talking about their environments that challenges their opportunities, they're really trying to architect, you know, the foundation that building to be um future proof, they don't want to get screwed over when they have, they realize they made a decision, they weren't thinking about day to operation or they didn't think about the unified experience across clouds across environments and services. This is huge. What's your take on this? >>So this is um, this is probably one of the hardest questions I think I could get asked, which is uh looking into the crystal ball, what are the aspects of today's environments that are accidental complexity? That's really just a result of the slow accretion of technologies and we all need to make bets when, when the time is right within the business, um and which parts of it are essential. What are the fundamental hard problems and so on. The accidental complexity side for red hat, it's really about um that consistent environment through open shift bringing capabilities, our connection to open source and making sure that there's an open ecosystem where um community members, users vendors can all work together to um find solutions that work for them because there's not, there's no way to solve for all of computing. It's just impossible. I think that is kind of our that's our development process and that's what helps make that accidental complexity of all that self away over time. But in the essential complexity data is tied the location, data has gravity data. Lakes are a great example of because data has gravity. The more data that you bring together, the bigger the scale the tools you can bring, you can invest in more specialized tools. I've almost do that as a specialization centralization. There's a ton of centralization going on right now at the same time that these new technologies are available to make it easier and easier. Whether that's large scale automation um with conflict management technologies, whether that's kubernetes and deploying it in multiple sites in multiple locations and open shift, bringing consistency so that you can run the apps the same way. But even further than that is concentrating, mhm. More of what would have typically been a specialist problem, something that you build a one off around in your organization to work through the problem. We're really getting to a point where pretty soon now there is a technology or a service for everyone. How do you get the data into that service out? How do you secure it? How do you glue it together? Um I think of, you know, some people might call this um you know, the ultimate integration problem, which is we're going to have all of this stuff and all of these places, what are the core concepts, location, security, placement, topology, latency, where data resides, who's accessing that data, We think of these as kind of the building blocks of where we're going next. So for us trying to make investments in, how do we make kubernetes work better across lots of environments. I have a coupon talk coming up this coupon, it's really exciting for me to talk about where we're going with, you know, the evolution of kubernetes, bringing the different pieces more closely together across multiple environments. But likewise, when we talk about our managed services, we've approached the strategy for managed services as it's not just the service in isolation, it's how it connects to the other pieces. What can we learn in the community, in our services, working with users that benefits that connectivity. So I mentioned the open shift streams connecting up environments, we'd really like to improve how applications connect across disparate environments. That's a fundamental property of if you're going to have data uh in one geographic region and you didn't move services closer to that well, those services I need to know and encode and have that behavior to get closer to where the data is, whether it's one data lake or 10. We gotta have that flexibility in place. And so those obstructions are really, and to >>your point about the building blocks where you've got to factor in those building blocks, because you're gonna need to understand the latency impact, that's going to impact how you're gonna handle the compute piece, that's gonna handle all these things are coming into play. So, again, if you're mindful of the building blocks, just as a cloud concept, um, then you're okay. >>We hear this a lot. Actually, there's real challenges in the, the ecosystem of uh, we see a lot of the problems of I want to help someone automate and improved, but the more balkanize, the more spread out, the more individual solutions are in play, it's harder for someone to bring their technology to bear to help solve the problem. So looking for ways that we can um, you know, grease the skids to build the glue. I think open source works best when it's defining de facto solutions that everybody agrees on that openness and the easy access is a key property that makes de facto standards emerged from open source. What can we do to grow defacto standards around multi cloud and application movement and application interconnect I think is a very, it's already happening and what can we do to accelerate it? That's it. >>Well, I think you bring up a really good point. This is probably a follow up, maybe a clubhouse talk or you guys will do a separate session on this. But I've been riffing on this idea of uh, today's silos, tomorrow's component, right, or module. If most people don't realize that these silos can be problematic if not thought through. So you have to kill the silos to bring in kind of an open police. So if you're open, not closed, you can leverage a monolith. Today's monolithic app or full stack could be tomorrow's building block unless you don't open up. So this is where interesting design question comes in, which is, it's okay to have pre existing stuff if you're open about it. But if you stay siloed, you're gonna get really stuck >>and there's going to be more and more pre existing stuff I think, you know, uh even the data lake for every day to lake, there is a huge problem of how to get data into the data lake or taking existing applications that came from the previous data link. And so there's a, there's a natural evolutionary process where let's focus on the mechanisms that actually move that day to get that data flowing. Um, I think we're still in the early phases of thinking about huge amounts of applications. Microservices or you know, 10 years old in the sense of it being a fairly common industry talking point before that we have service oriented architecture. But the difference now is that we're encouraging and building one developer, one team might run several services. They might use three or four different sas vendors. They might depend on five or 10 or 15 cloud services. Those integration points make them easier. But it's a new opportunity for us to say, well, what are the differences to go back to? The point is you can keep your silos, we just want to have great integration in and out of >>those. Exactly, they don't have to you have to break down the silos. So again, it's a tried and true formula integration, interoperability and abstracting away the complexity with some sort of new software abstraction layer. You bring that to play as long as you can paddle with that, you apply the new building blocks, you're classified. >>It sounds so that's so simple, doesn't it? It does. And you know, of course it'll take us 10 years to get there. And uh, you know, after cloud native will be will be galactic native or something like that. You know, there's always going to be a new uh concept that we need to work in. I think the key concepts we're really going after our everyone is trying to run resilient and reliable services and the clouds give us in the clouds take it away. They give us those opportunities to have some of those building blocks like location of geographic hardware resources, but they will always be data that spread. And again, you still have to apply those principles to the cloud to get the service guarantees that you need. I think there's a completely untapped area for helping software developers and software teams understand the actual availability and guarantees of the underlying environment. It's a property of the services you run with. If you're using a disk in a particular availability zone, that's a property of your application. I think there's a rich area that hasn't been mined yet. Of helping you understand what your effective service level goals which of those can be met. Which cannot, it doesn't make a lot of sense in a single cluster or single machine or a single location world the moment you start to talk about, Well I have my data lake. Well what are the ways my data leg can fail? How do we look at your complex web of interdependencies and say, well clearly if you lose this cloud provider, you're going to lose not just the things that you have running there, but these other dependencies, there's a lot of, there's a lot of next steps that we're just learning what happens when a major cloud goes down for a day or a region of a cloud goes down for a day. You still have to design and work around those >>cases. It's distributed computing. And again, I love the space where galactic cloud, you got SpaceX? Where's Cloud X? I mean, you know, space is the next frontier. You know, you've got all kinds of action happening in space. Great space reference there. Clayton, Great insight. Thanks for coming on. Uh, Clayton Coleman architect at red Hat. Clayton, Thanks for coming on. >>Pretty pleasure. >>Always. Great chat. I'm talking under the hood. What's going on in red hats? New managed cloud service portfolio? Again, the world's getting complex, abstract away. The complexities with software Inter operate integrate. That's the key formula with the cloud building blocks. I'm john ferry with the cube. Thanks for watching. Yeah.

Published Date : Apr 28 2021

SUMMARY :

We still got the Covid coming around the corner. So great to see you were just riffing before we came on camera about distributed computing in and introducing the first, I think really the first step what we see as uh I mean, you guys have, it's not just, you know, you support AWS as so that the choice of where you run your cloud, um, So take me through how you guys Um and I think a lot of the role of this is, you know, the irresponsible to I want a data cloud, you know, everything is like the new, you know, they saw Snowflake Apollo, I gotta have some, But depending on where you jumped on the bandwagon, depending on when you adopted, you're going to make a bunch of different trade offs. So I gotta ask you on the real time applications side of it, that's been a big trend, And I think that, you know, we get to the heart of what's the purpose of You know, all the customer checkboxes there you mentioned earlier. you know, the foundation that building to be um future proof, shift, bringing consistency so that you can run the apps the same way. latency impact, that's going to impact how you're gonna handle the compute piece, that's gonna handle all you know, grease the skids to build the glue. So you have to kill the silos to bring in kind and there's going to be more and more pre existing stuff I think, you know, uh even the data lake for You bring that to play as long as you can paddle with that, you apply the new building blocks, the things that you have running there, but these other dependencies, there's a lot of, there's a lot of next I mean, you know, space is the next frontier. That's the key formula with the cloud building blocks.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
Jeff BarrPERSON

0.99+

fiveQUANTITY

0.99+

amazonORGANIZATION

0.99+

oneQUANTITY

0.99+

ClaytonPERSON

0.99+

GardnerPERSON

0.99+

10 yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

threeQUANTITY

0.99+

CovidPERSON

0.99+

1stQUANTITY

0.99+

AWSORGANIZATION

0.99+

Clayton ColemanPERSON

0.99+

first phaseQUANTITY

0.99+

three facetsQUANTITY

0.99+

10QUANTITY

0.99+

first timeQUANTITY

0.99+

TodayDATE

0.99+

john ferryPERSON

0.99+

fourQUANTITY

0.99+

one teamQUANTITY

0.99+

RedORGANIZATION

0.99+

googleORGANIZATION

0.99+

two big betsQUANTITY

0.99+

2nd iterationsQUANTITY

0.99+

second phaseQUANTITY

0.99+

firstQUANTITY

0.99+

tomorrowDATE

0.99+

single machineQUANTITY

0.99+

15 cloud servicesQUANTITY

0.98+

15th birthdayQUANTITY

0.98+

this yearDATE

0.98+

red HatORGANIZATION

0.98+

bothQUANTITY

0.98+

each pointQUANTITY

0.98+

eachQUANTITY

0.98+

third servicesQUANTITY

0.98+

one commentQUANTITY

0.98+

todayDATE

0.98+

a dayQUANTITY

0.97+

IBMORGANIZATION

0.97+

first stepQUANTITY

0.97+

red hat summit 2021EVENT

0.96+

three different waysQUANTITY

0.96+

Red HatORGANIZATION

0.96+

ApacheORGANIZATION

0.95+

Cloud XTITLE

0.95+

one developerQUANTITY

0.95+

single clusterQUANTITY

0.94+

Snowflake ApolloTITLE

0.94+

three managed servicesQUANTITY

0.9+

SpaceXORGANIZATION

0.87+

Red Hat Summit 2021 Virtual ExperienceEVENT

0.85+

W SORGANIZATION

0.83+

few weeks agoDATE

0.82+

red hatsORGANIZATION

0.82+

one data lakeQUANTITY

0.78+

GCBORGANIZATION

0.77+

A. P. R.ORGANIZATION

0.77+

GreenfieldORGANIZATION

0.74+

single locationQUANTITY

0.72+

G C P.ORGANIZATION

0.71+

GCPDTITLE

0.7+

Ci CDTITLE

0.68+

last 10 yearsDATE

0.66+

G C PORGANIZATION

0.63+

B MCOMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.62+

hatORGANIZATION

0.58+

A. P. I. S.ORGANIZATION

0.56+

redORGANIZATION

0.54+

themQUANTITY

0.5+

HadoopTITLE

0.43+

BOS26 Mani Dasgupta + Jason Kelley VTT


 

>>From around the globe. It's the Cube with digital coverage of IBM think 2021 brought to you by >>IBM. Welcome back to IBM Think 2021. This is the cubes ongoing coverage where we go out to the events, we extract the signal from the noise of course, virtually in this case now we're going to talk about ecosystems, partnerships in the flywheel, they deliver in the technology business and with me or Jason kelly, general manager, global strategic partnerships, IBM global business services and Mani Das Gupta, who is the vice president of marketing for IBM Global Business services folks. It's great to see you again in which we're face to face. But this will have to do >>good to see you Dave and uh same, I wish we were face to face but uh we'll we'll go with this >>soon. We're being patient, Jason. Let's start with you. You have a partner strategy. I wonder if you could sort of summarize that and tell us more about it. >>So it's interesting that we start with the strategy because you said we have a partner strategy dave and I'd say that the market has dictated back to us a partner strategy something that we it's not new and we didn't start it yesterday. It's something that we continue to evolve and build even stronger. This thought of a partner strategy is it nothing is better than the thought of a partner ship. And people say oh well you know you got to work together as one team and as a partner And it sounds almost as a 1-1 type relationship. Our strategies is much different than that. David our execution is even better and that that execution is focused on now. The requirement that the market our clients are showing to us and our strategic partners that one player can't deliver all their needs, they can't Design solution and deliver that from one place. It does take an ecosystem to the word that you called out. This thought of an ecosystem and our strategy and execution is focused on that. And the reason why I say it evolves is because the market will continue to evolve and this thought of being able to look at a client's let's call it a a workflow, let's call it a value chain from one end to the other, wherever they start their process to wherever it ultimately hits that end user. It's going to take many players to cover that. And then we, as IBM want to make sure that we are the general contractor of that capability with the ability to convene the right strategic partners, bring out the best value for that outcome, not just technology for technology's sake, but the outcome that the incline is looking for so that we bring value to our strategic partners and that in client. >>I think about when you talk about the value chain, you know, I'm imagining, you know, the business books years ago you see the conceptual value chain, you can certainly understand that you can put processes together to connect them and now you've got technology, I think of a P. I. S. It's it's really supports that everything gets accelerated and and uh money. I wonder if you could address some of the the go to market how this notion of of ecosystem which is so important, is impacting the way in which you go to market. >>Absolutely. So modern business, you know, demands a new approach to working the ecosystem. Thought that Jason was just alluding to, it's a mutual benefit of all these companies working together in the market, it's a mutual halo of the brands, so as responsible for the championship of the IBM and the global business services brand. I am very, very interested in this mutual working together. It should be a win win win, as we say in the market, it should be a win for our clients, first and foremost, it should be a win for our partners and it should be a win for IBM and we are working together right now on an approach to bring this, go to market strategy to life. >>So I wonder if we could maybe talk about how this actually works and and pull in some examples, uh you must have some favorites that that we can touch on. Uh is that, is that fair? Can we, can we name some names, >>sure names, always working debut, right. And it's always in context of reality that we can talk about, as I said, this execution and not just a strategy. And I'll start with probably what's right in the front of many people's minds as we're doing this virtually because of what because of an unfortunate pandemic, um, this disastrous loss of life and things that have taken us down a path. We go well, how do we, how do we address that? Well, any time there's a tough task, IBM raises its hand first. You know, whether it was putting a person on the moon and bringing them home safely or standing up a system behind the current Social Security Administration, you know, during the Depression, you pick it well here we are now. And why not start with that as an example? Because I think it calls out just what we mentioned here first day, this thought of a, of an ecosystem because the first challenge, how do we create uh and address the biggest data puzzle of our lives, which is how do we get this vaccine created in record time, which it was the fastest before that was four years. This was a matter of months. Visor created the first one out and then had to get it out to distribution. Behind. That is a wonderful partner of R. S. A. P. Trying to work with that. So us working with S. A. P. Along with Pfizer in order to figure out how to get that value chain. And some would say supply chain, but I'll address that in a second. But there's many players there. And so we were in the middle of that with fires are committed to saying, how do we do that with S. A. P. So now you see players working together as one ecosystem. But then think about the ecosystem that that's happening where you have a federal government agency, a state, a local, you have healthcare, life science industry, you have consumer industry. Oh wait a second day. This is getting very complicated, Right? Well, this is the thought of convening an ecosystem and this is what I'm telling you is our execution and it has worked well. And so it's it's it's happening now. We still it's we see it's still developing and being, being, you know, very productive in real time. But then I said there was another example and that's with me, you mani whomever you pick the consumer. Ultimately we are that outcome of of the value chain. That's why I said, I don't want to just call it a supply chain because at the end is a someone consuming and in this case we need a shot. And so we partnered with Salesforce, IBM and Salesforce saying, wait a minute, that's not a small task. It's not just get the content there and put it in someone's arm instead they're scheduling that must be done. There's follow up an entire case management like system sells force is a master at this, so work dot com team with IBM, we sit now let's get that part done for the right type of UI UX capability that the user experience, user interaction interface and then also in bringing another player in the ecosystem, one of ours Watson health along with our block changing, we brought together something called a Digital Health pass. So I've just talked about two ecosystems work multiple ecosystems working together. So you think of an ecosystem of ecosystems. I called out Blockchain technology and obviously supply chain but there's also a I I O T. So you start to see where look this is truly an orchestration effort. It has to happen with very well designed capability and so of course we master and design and tying that that entire ecosystem together and convening it so that we get to the right outcome you me money all getting into shot being healthy. That's a real time example of us working with an ecosystem and teeming with key strategic partners, >>you know, money, I mean Jason you're right. I mean pandemics been horrible, I have to say. I'm really thankful it didn't happen 20 years ago because it would have been like okay here's some big pcs and a modem and go ahead and figure it out. So I mean the tech industry has saved business. I mean with not only we mentioned ai automation data, uh even things basic things like security at the end point. I mean so many things and you're right, I mean IBM in particular, other large companies you mentioned ASAP you have taken the lead and it's really I don't money, I don't think the tech industry gets enough credit, but I wonder if there's some of your favorite, you know, partnerships that you can talk about. >>Yeah, so I'm gonna I'm gonna build on what you just said. Dave IBM is in this unique position amongst this ecosystem. Not only the fact that we have the world leading most innovative technologies to bring to bear, but we also have the consulting capabilities that go with it now to make any of these technologies work towards the solution that Jason was referring to in this digital health pass, it could be any other solution you would need to connect these disparate systems, sometimes make them work towards a common outcome to provide value to the client. So I think our role as IBM within this ecosystem is pretty unique in that we are able to bring both of these capabilities to bear. In terms of you know, you asked about favorite there are this is really a coop petition market where everybody has products, everybody has service is the most important thing is how how are we bringing them all together to serve the need or the need of the hour in this case, I would say one important thing in this. As you observe how these stories are panning out in an ecosystem in in part in a partnership, it is about the value that we provide to our clients together. So it's almost like a cell with model from from a go to market perspective, there is also a question of our products and services being delivered through our partners. Right? So think about the span and scope of what we do here. And so that's the sell through. And then of course we have our products running within our partner companies and our partner products, for example. Salesforce running within IBM. So this is a very interesting and a new way of doing business. I would say it's almost like the modern way of doing business with modernity. >>Well. And you mentioned cooperation. I mean you're you're part of IBM that will work with anybody because your customer first, whether it's a W. S. Microsoft oracle is a is a is a really tough competitor. But your customers are using oracle and they're using IBM. So I mean as a those are some good examples. I think of your point about cooper Titian. >>Absolutely. If you pick on any other client, I'll mention in this case. Delta, Delta was working with us on moving, being more agile. Now this pandemic has impacted the airline sector particularly hard, right With travel stopping and anything. So they are trying to get to a model which will help them scale up, scale down, be more agile will be more secure, be closer to their customers, try and understand how they can provide value to their customers and customers better. So we are working with Delta on moving them to cloud on the journey to cloud. Now that public cloud could be anything. The beauty of this model and a hybrid cloud approach is that you are able to put them on red hat open shift, you're able to do and package the services into a microservices kind of a model. You want to make sure all the applications are running on a portable, almost platform. Agnostic kind of a model. This is the beauty of this ecosystem that we are discussing is the ability to do what's right for the end customer at the end of the day, >>how about some of the like sass players, like some of the more prominent ones and we watched the ascendancy of service now and and, and work day, you mentioned Salesforce. How do you work with those guys? Obviously there's an Ai opportunity, but maybe you could add some, you know, color there. >>So I like the fact that you call out the different hyper scholars for example, uh whether it's a W. S, whether it's Microsoft, knowing that they have their own cloud instances, for example. And when you, when you mentioned, he had this happened a long time ago, you know, you start talking about the heft of the technology, I started thinking of all the truckloads of servers or whatever they have to pull up. We don't need that now because it can happen in the cloud and you don't have to pick one cloud or the other. And so when people say hybrid cloud, that's what comes out, you start to think of what I I call, you know, a hybrid of hybrids because I told you before, you know, these roles are changing. People aren't just buyers or suppliers, they're both. And then you start to say what we're different people supplying well in that ecosystem, we know there's not gonna be one player, there's gonna be multiple. So we partner by doing just what monty called out is this thought of integrating in hybrid environments on hybrid platforms with hybrid clouds, Multi clouds, maybe I want something on my premises, something somewhere else. So in giving that capability that flexibility we empower and this is what's doing that cooperation, we empower our partners are strategic partners, we want them to be better with us. And this is this thought of being able to actually bring more together and move faster which is almost counterintuitive. You're like wait a minute you're adding more players but you're moving faster. Exactly because we have the capability to integrate those those technologies and get that outcome that monty mentioned, >>I would add to this one. Jason you mentioned something very very interesting. I think if you want to go just fast you go alone but if you want to go further, you go together. And that is the core of our point of view in this case is that we want to go further and we want to create value that is long lasting. >>What about like so I get the technology players and there may be things that you do that others don't or vice versa. So the gap fillers etcetera. But what about how to maybe customers that they get involved? Perhaps government agencies, may they be they be customer or an N. G. O. As another example, Are they part of this value chain? Part of this ecosystem? >>Absolutely. I'll give you I'll stick with the same example when I mentioned a digital health past that Digital Health Pass is something that we have as IBM and it's a credential Think of it as a health credential not a vaccine passport because it could be used for a test for a negative test on Covid, it could be used for antibiotics. So if you have this credential, it's something that we, as IBM created years back and we were using it for learning. When you think of getting people uh certifications versus a four year diploma, how do we get people into the workforce? That was what was original. That was a jenny Rometty thought, let's focus on new collar workers. So we had this asset that we'd already created and then it's wait, there's a place for it to work with, with health, with validation verification on someone's option, it's optional. They choose it. Hey, I want to do it this way. Well, the state of new york said that they wanted to do it that way and they said, listen, we are going to have a digital health pass for all of our, all of our new york citizens and we want to make sure that it's equitable, it could be printed or on a screen and we want it to be designed in this way and we wanted to work on this platform and we want to be able to, to work with the strategic Partners, a Salesforce and ASAP and work. I mean, I can just keep and we said okay let's do this. And this is the start of collaboration and doing it by design. So we haven't lost that day but this only brings it to the forefront just as you said, yes, that is what we want. We want to make sure that in this ecosystem we have a way to ensure that we are bringing together convening not just point products or different service providers but taking them together and getting the best outcome so that that end user can have it configured in the way that they want it >>guys, we got to leave it there but it's clear you're helping your customers and your partners on this this digital transformation journey that we already we all talk about. You get this massive portfolio of capabilities, deep, deep expertise, I love the hybrid cloud and AI Focus, Jason and money really appreciate you coming back in the cubes. Great to see you both. >>Thank you so much. Dave Fantastic. All >>Right. And thank you for watching everybody's day Vigilante for the Cuban. Our continuous coverage of IBM, think 2021, the virtual edition. Keep it right there. Yeah. Mhm. Mhm. >>Mhm.

Published Date : Apr 16 2021

SUMMARY :

think 2021 brought to you by It's great to see you again in which we're I wonder if you could sort of summarize that and tell us more about it. So it's interesting that we start with the strategy because you said we have I think about when you talk about the value chain, you know, I'm imagining, So modern business, you know, demands a new approach to working the ecosystem. in some examples, uh you must have some favorites that that we can touch and convening it so that we get to the right outcome you me money all getting favorite, you know, partnerships that you can talk about. it is about the value that we provide to our clients together. part of IBM that will work with anybody because your customer first, whether it's a W. that you are able to put them on red hat open shift, you're able to do and package how about some of the like sass players, like some of the more prominent ones and we watched the ascendancy So I like the fact that you call out the different hyper scholars And that is the core of our point of view in this case is that we want to go What about like so I get the technology players and there may be things that you do that others So if you have this credential, it's something that we, as IBM created years back Great to see you both. Thank you so much. And thank you for watching everybody's day Vigilante for the Cuban.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
IBMORGANIZATION

0.99+

JasonPERSON

0.99+

PfizerORGANIZATION

0.99+

DavidPERSON

0.99+

DavePERSON

0.99+

Jason kellyPERSON

0.99+

Mani Das GuptaPERSON

0.99+

DeltaORGANIZATION

0.99+

Jason KelleyPERSON

0.99+

MicrosoftORGANIZATION

0.99+

Social Security AdministrationORGANIZATION

0.99+

Mani DasguptaPERSON

0.99+

SalesforceORGANIZATION

0.99+

S. A. P.ORGANIZATION

0.99+

first challengeQUANTITY

0.99+

four yearQUANTITY

0.99+

yesterdayDATE

0.99+

new yorkLOCATION

0.99+

one teamQUANTITY

0.99+

bothQUANTITY

0.99+

one playerQUANTITY

0.98+

jenny RomettyPERSON

0.98+

two ecosystemsQUANTITY

0.98+

first dayQUANTITY

0.98+

second dayQUANTITY

0.98+

first oneQUANTITY

0.97+

four yearsQUANTITY

0.97+

davePERSON

0.97+

20 years agoDATE

0.95+

oneQUANTITY

0.95+

firstQUANTITY

0.95+

minuteQUANTITY

0.92+

one placeQUANTITY

0.91+

Think 2021COMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.91+

pandemicsEVENT

0.91+

one important thingQUANTITY

0.9+

R. S. A. P.ORGANIZATION

0.9+

one ecosystemQUANTITY

0.88+

IBM Global BusinessORGANIZATION

0.88+

W.ORGANIZATION

0.84+

oracleORGANIZATION

0.84+

VigilanteTITLE

0.83+

2021DATE

0.83+

pandemicEVENT

0.81+

IBM global business servicesORGANIZATION

0.8+

yearsDATE

0.76+

think 2021COMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.75+

ASAPORGANIZATION

0.71+

secondQUANTITY

0.7+

years backDATE

0.65+

CovidOTHER

0.64+

N. G.LOCATION

0.62+

BOS26OTHER

0.56+

Health PassCOMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.56+

WatsonORGANIZATION

0.56+

VisorPERSON

0.51+

P.ORGANIZATION

0.5+

CubanPERSON

0.49+

TitianPERSON

0.48+

BOS9 Glenn Finch VTT


 

>>from >>Around the globe. It's the cube with digital coverage of IBM think 2021 brought to you by IBM >>Hello and welcome back to the cubes ongoing coverage of IBM Think 2021. The virtual edition, my name is David and I'm excited to introduce our next segment. We're going to dig into the intersection of machines and humans and the changing nature of work, worker productivity and the potential of humans with me is Glenn Finch, who's the global managing partner for data and ai at IBM Glenn great to see you again. Thanks for coming on. >>Dave good to be with you. Always a lot of fun to chat. >>So I'm interested in this concept that you've been working on about amplifying worker potential. You've got humans, you've got digital workers coming together and maybe you could talk a little bit about what you're seeing at that intersection. >>You know, it's um it's interesting for most of my career, I've always thought about um amplifying human worker potential. And you know I would say over the last five years we start to think about this concept of digital workers and amplifying their potential so that human potential can extend even further. What's cool is when we get them both to work together, amplifying digital worker potential. Amplifying human worker potential to radically change how services experienced by an end consumer. I mean that's really the winner is when you start seeing the end consumer, the end user fundamentally feeling the difference in the experience. >>I mean a lot of the you see a lot of the trade press and the journalists they like to focus on the sort of the negative of automation. But when you talk to people who have implemented things they take it, for example R. P. A. They're so happy that they're not have to do these menial tasks anymore. And then it sort of the interesting discussion is, okay well what are you what are you doing with your free time? What are you doing with your weekend? So how should we be thinking about that? What you what you called? Amplifying human worker potential? What has to occur for that outcome? >>You know? Um The all my life I've spent time making money for people, right? And this uh last year I was involved in a project where it fundamentally changed. It's tied to answer that exact question. You know the servicemen and women in America who are willing to risk their lives. Um you know for our country um they file claims for medical benefits. And on average it would take 15 days to get a response Actually for about 70 or 80 of them. We've taken that down to like 15 minutes and to do that. You can't just drop in a R. P. A. You can't just drop in a. I. It's not one thing right? It's this it's this seamless interaction between digital workers and human workers right? So that a lot of the more routine mundane tasks can be done by ai and robotics. But all of the really hard complex cases that only a human being can adjudicate. That's what the folks that were doing, the more monday work can can go focus on. So I mean God that's what makes me come to work every day is if I can change the life of a serviceman or woman that was willing to risk their lives for our country. So that's that's the concept now. The critical piece of what I said, it's not about implementing Ai and robotics anymore because a lot of that started to get very wrote but picking up on okay we've liberated this block of human capability. How do we reposition it? How do we re skillet? How do we get them to focus on new things? That's just as important. The human change aspect incredibly important. >>Yeah, I mean that's interesting because you're right. I mean the downside, you mentioned our P. A. A lot of it is paving the cow path and you know the human in the loop piece has been it's been missing and that's obviously changing. But what about the what about the flip side of that equation? Where you know you ask the question okay what can humans do that machines can't do that equation continues to evolve. But maybe you could talk about where you have amplified the digital worker potential. >>Yeah. So you know um one of our clients is anthem and you know we've you know they've been on a variety of programs with us to talk about this. But you know, we just recorded, um, you know, another session with them for think where, um, the chief technology officer came and talked about how they wanted to radically change their member experience. And when you think about the last year, I mean, I don't know. Dave, I know you travel a lot because I see you in all the places that I'm in, right? But I don't remember like 15 months ago, if you had to wait on the phone for two minutes, you thought it was an eternity, right? You're like, what's the matter with me? I'm a frequent flyer. I deserve a better service on this. Then as Covid started to roll around those wait times or two hours and then 30 days into Covid. If you got a call back within two days or two weeks, it was a blessing. Right? So all of our expectations changed in an instant. Right? So I have to say, over the last 12-15 months, that's where we've been spending a lot of our time in all of those human contact human touch places to radically transition the ability to be responsive, touch people with With the same experience that we had 15 months ago to get an answer back in two minutes. You can't get enough people right now to do that. And so we're forced to make sure that the digital experience is what that needs to be. So the digital worker has to be up and on and extending the brand. Experience the same way that the human worker was back when everybody could be at a call center. That makes sense. Yeah. I >>mean, I think I like about this conversation, Glenn is it's not an either or. It's not a zero sum game, which is kind of, it's sort of used to be. I mean, we've talked about this before. Humans have machines have always replaced humans at certain tasks, but never really a cognitive task. And that's why I think there's a lot of fear out there. But what you're talking about is is the potential to amplify both human and digital capabilities. And I think people might look at that and say, well wait a minute, is it isn't a zero sum game, but it's not explain why. >>Yes, So we're never finding the zero sum game because there is um there is always something for people to do, right? And so, you know, I talked about the one an amplification of digital worker at anthem, let me let me switch to an amplification of a human worker, right? So state of Rhode Island, Um you know, we had the great honor to work with their governor and their Department of Health and Human Services, around again, around the whole covid thing. We started out just answering basic questions and helping with contact tracing. And then from there we moved into helping them with their data and ai being able to answer questions. Why are there are hotspots? Why should I shut this person of the city down? Should I shut fires down? Should I do this? And the Governor and Health and human Services Director were constantly saying on press briefings in the morning. Well, you know, we learned from our partners, IBM, that we want to consider this, right? And we we did pinpoint vaccinations and and other things like that. To me, that's that whole continuum. So, you know, we liberated some people from one spot. They went to work in another spot. All human beings guided by ai so, you know, I think this is all about, you know, for the first time in our lives being able to realize sort of the vaulted member experience or client experience that everybody has already talked about using a blend of digital workers and human workers. It's just it's all about the experience. I think >>you're laying out some really good outcomes. You mentioned some of the folks in the military, the healthcare examples. Um and I'm struck because if you think about look at the numbers, I mean the productivity gains over the last 20 years, particularly in the US. and Europe, doesn't it's not the case for China the productivity exploding, but but it's gone down. And so when you think about the big problems that we face in society, um climate change, income inequality, I mean, these are big, chewy problems that, you know, what kind of humans, you just can't throw humans at the problem that's, that's been proven. Um, and I'm curious as to if you know how you see it in terms of some of those other outcomes of the potential that is there and, and, and can you give us a glimpse as to what tech is involved underneath all this? Sure. >>So, you know, um, the first of all on outcomes, you know, that whole picture changes with the business cycle, right? I'd love to tell you that it's always these three outcomes, but you know, during downturns in business cycles, costs based outcomes are, you know, are paramount because people are thinking about survival right? In upticks, people are worried about, you know, converting new business growth, they're worried about net promoter score, they're worried about experience score. And then Over the last 12 to 18 months, you know, we've seen this whole concept of carbon footprint and sustainability All tied into the outcomes. So hey, did you realize that shifting these 22 legacy applications from here to the cloud would reduce your carbon footprint by 3%? No. Right. And so, so you know, the big hitters are always, you know, the cost metric, the sort of time to value or the whole cycle time of the process and net promoter score. Those are generally in all of the, you know, all the plays, obviously the book ends, you know, around, um, what's happening with, you know, the, the economy, what's happening with carbon, what's happening with sustainability are always in there. Now, the technology side boy, that's the cool part about working for IBM, right, is that there is a new thing that shows up on my door every two weeks from either the math and science labs or from a new ecosystem partner. Right. And that's one of the things that I will say about over the last 12 to 15 months, you've seen this massive shift from IBM to to go away from pure blue to embrace the whole ecosystem. So you know, Dave the stuff I work with every day is, you know, ai computer vision, Blockchain automation, quantum uh connected operations. Uh not just software robots, but now human robots, Digital Twin, all these things where we are digitally rendering um what used to be a very paper based legacy. Right. So boy, I couldn't be more excited to be a part of that. And then now with the opening up to all the hyper scholars, the Microsoft, the google the amazon, the, you know, uh salesforce adobe, all those folks. It's like a candy store. And quite honestly, my single greatest challenge is to kind of bring all of that together and point it at a series of three or 4 buyers at a chief marketing officer experience officer for the whole customer piece, at a chief human resource officer around the town peace and at a CFO or a chief procurement officer for finance and supply chain. I'm sorry to answer. So, you know, long winded, but it's it's awesome out there. >>It was a great answer. And I think, you know, I joke the other day, glenn that Milton Friedman must be turned over his grave because he said, you know, the only job of a company has to make profits for shareholders and increase shareholder value. But but you're but but ironically, you know, things like E. S. G. Sustainability, his climate change, he said they actually make business sense. So it's really not antithetical to Friedman economics necessarily but it's good business. And I think I think the other thing that I'm excited about is that there is some like deep tech we're seeing an explosion of of something as fundamental as processing power like we've never seen before but he talks about Moore's law being dead. Well okay with the doubling of of of of processor performance every 24 months. We're now at a quadrupling when you include GPU S. And N. P. U. S. And accelerators and all. I mean that is gonna power the next wave of machine intelligence and that really is exciting. >>Yeah I am. You know it's I feel blessed every day to come to work that you know I can you know a mass all these technologies and change how human beings experience service. I mean that's man, that whole service experience. that's what I've lived for for, you know, 2.5 decades in my career is to not just just to make and deploy stuff. That's cool, technically, but to change people's lives. I mean, that's it for me. That's you know, that's that's the way that I want to ride. So I couldn't be more excited to do that stuff. Well, glad >>Thanks so much for coming on. Is your your passion shows right through the camera and hopefully we'll face to face, you know, sometime soon, maybe, maybe later on this year. But for sure Lockwood 2022. All right. Hey, great to see you. Thank you so much. >>Dave same to you. Thanks have a great rest of the day. >>All right. Thank you. And thanks for following along with our continuing broadcast of IBM think 2021 you're watching the cube the leader in digital tech coverage right back. Mhm. Yeah.

Published Date : Apr 16 2021

SUMMARY :

think 2021 brought to you by IBM Glenn great to see you again. Dave good to be with you. So I'm interested in this concept that you've been working on about amplifying worker potential. I mean that's really the winner is when you start seeing the end I mean a lot of the you see a lot of the trade press and the journalists they like to focus on the sort of the negative Um you know for our country um A lot of it is paving the cow path and you know the human in the loop piece has been it's been missing and that's But you know, we just recorded, um, you know, another session with them for And I think people might look at that and say, well wait a minute, is it isn't a zero sum game, And so, you know, I talked about the one an amplification of digital worker Um, and I'm curious as to if you know how you see it in the google the amazon, the, you know, uh salesforce adobe, And I think, you know, I joke the other day, glenn that Milton Friedman must to come to work that you know I can you know a mass all you know, sometime soon, maybe, maybe later on this year. Dave same to you. the cube the leader in digital tech coverage right back.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
Glenn FinchPERSON

0.99+

DavidPERSON

0.99+

IBMORGANIZATION

0.99+

two minutesQUANTITY

0.99+

AmericaLOCATION

0.99+

DavePERSON

0.99+

15 daysQUANTITY

0.99+

15 minutesQUANTITY

0.99+

MicrosoftORGANIZATION

0.99+

threeQUANTITY

0.99+

GlennPERSON

0.99+

30 daysQUANTITY

0.99+

3%QUANTITY

0.99+

Rhode IslandLOCATION

0.99+

two hoursQUANTITY

0.99+

15 months agoDATE

0.99+

4 buyersQUANTITY

0.99+

amazonORGANIZATION

0.99+

22 legacy applicationsQUANTITY

0.99+

last yearDATE

0.99+

Department of Health and Human ServicesORGANIZATION

0.99+

singleQUANTITY

0.98+

two daysQUANTITY

0.98+

2021DATE

0.98+

2.5 decadesQUANTITY

0.98+

one spotQUANTITY

0.98+

two weeksQUANTITY

0.98+

last yearDATE

0.98+

EuropeLOCATION

0.98+

80QUANTITY

0.97+

USLOCATION

0.97+

adobeTITLE

0.97+

oneQUANTITY

0.97+

bothQUANTITY

0.97+

first timeQUANTITY

0.96+

googleORGANIZATION

0.96+

18 monthsQUANTITY

0.94+

Milton FriedmanPERSON

0.94+

MoorePERSON

0.94+

R. P. A.PERSON

0.93+

Think 2021COMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.93+

about 70QUANTITY

0.92+

last 20 yearsDATE

0.9+

12QUANTITY

0.89+

FriedmanPERSON

0.89+

firstQUANTITY

0.87+

last five yearsDATE

0.87+

this yearDATE

0.86+

three outcomesQUANTITY

0.82+

think 2021COMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.82+

a minuteQUANTITY

0.82+

GodPERSON

0.81+

every two weeksQUANTITY

0.79+

every 24 monthsQUANTITY

0.74+

CovidPERSON

0.72+

waveEVENT

0.71+

one thingQUANTITY

0.7+

lastDATE

0.67+

Health and humanORGANIZATION

0.65+

monthsDATE

0.64+

ChinaLOCATION

0.64+

15 monthsQUANTITY

0.61+

mondayDATE

0.59+

CovidORGANIZATION

0.59+

12-15QUANTITY

0.57+

U. S.LOCATION

0.55+

LockwoodLOCATION

0.54+

2022COMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.38+

BOS2 Madhuri Chawla VTT


 

>>from >>Around the globe. It's the cube with digital coverage of IBM think 2021 brought to you by IBM. Welcome to the cubes coverage of IBM Think 2021. I'm your host lisa martin today. Have a new guest new to the cube moderate Tabla, the director of strategic partnerships for enterprise application services is joining me moderate. It's nice to have you on the program. >>Thank you lisa. Very excited to be here and hello everyone. >>So different this year. Again Virtual like last year we're going to talk about digital transformation and we saw this huge acceleration in 2020. The massive adoption of SAS applications. We want to talk though about IBM managed services for S AP applications. So before we get into that I'd love for you to be able to describe what your role is to our audience. >>Absolutely lisa. So good day everyone. I've been with IBM for over 23 years and my current role, I run the strategic alliances for IBM basically in the E. R. P. Space S. A. P. Being our primary strategic partner, I have a global team of architects and we basically look at market requirements. Talk to a lot of customers, talk to our business partner S. A. P. Obviously um you know, try to help them would come up with a solution. Well the transformation journey to the cloud and hopefully today, you know, we'll elaborate a little bit more on the exact work that we do in this space. So very happy to be here. Thank you. >>Sure. So we're going to dissect the IBM s. A. P. Relationship. I think you even worked at S. A. P. Before your 23 year tenure at IBM. So we'll get to some of that as well. But help us understand customers have so much choice each day. There is more and more interest why should a customer choose IBM as their strategic partner for this digital transformation journey. >>Well really, IBM has been in this essay p business for many, many decades. As you know Um we have many many certified people in S. A. P. close to 40,000 people actually globally. Um And we can help the clients in various aspects of their journey. So you know the typical cloud journey has four different aspects to it. Um You need the advice so you need basically systems integration services to help customers actually define the scope on, you know what they actually want to either upgrade, bring it to current as well as you know what workloads they want to move to the cloud. We can help customers with our Systems integration services called the Global Business Business Services in IBM we can help them with their entire planning, we can help them with the actual move to the cloud. So IBM offers a whole different variety of services for migration or not only to see ASAP workloads. I mean ASAP typically ends up being the heart of the workloads that any of the major customers run but surrounding SCP, there's a lot of other applications so we can help plan that entire journey for advice and then move it as well as in the interim. You know, there's also another step which can be some customers. They need to build net new and you know upgrade their applications to the latest technologies so we can help them with that. And then once the building move is over, obviously customers need help with the actual steady state run state environment and that's where this key service that we have managed services for SCP applications helps them. So our certifications with S. A. P. And the fact that we have consultants that are certified and all these different aspects of the journey can really help your clients. The other part, I would say that IBM is really a hybrid cloud provider. So obviously we have our cloud service, the IBM cloud, but we can offer this service meeting the customer where they need to be. So we are a client centric service, so if the customer has a choice of AWS or Azure, uh we can meet them left. So this is how, you know, we can really help our customers with our expertise. I know the data point to note that, you know, 70 80 of the enterprise customers still have not moved their workloads to the cloud. So this is a space, especially with Covid, as you've seen what's happened, you know, customers now are really, really looking to accelerate the journey because it's become a necessity, It's no longer something that our Ceo and C I O can push to the right, right, this is something they have to act now. So I began with all these various services, you know, specifically good in the S A. P area. Um, and given that we've been managing these production workloads for a lot of these enterprise customers on our cloud services for many, many years, we have the experience, we can truly help them with their journey >>And as you said, that's so critical of these days. One of the things that I think we learned in 2020 is is there was no time like the present, it really became such a massive shift that for business survival, those that weren't digitized definitely were in some hot water. Talk to me. So you talked about the IBM s, a P relationship being longstanding, Can you talk to me about the different aspects of the alliance and how that helps you guys to meet customers where they are? >>Sure. Um so s. a. p. and idea, we've been strategic partners for over 46 years. That's a long time. The partnership obviously has evolved over the years and I'll talk about you know a few of the different aspects where we've been partners um you know, the alliance initially obviously started, you know, IBM is in multiple businesses as you know, we have our one of the largest systems integrators in the world from a global business services point of view as well as one of the largest application planet services providers. So that's uh you know part of the alliance then we have our server groups, the power systems that IBM has. So that's another dimension of the alliance where um you know 5 6000 plus ASAP clients even today are still running um there? S a the applications on the power systems, whether it's on premise or also in some of the cloud deployment models. Historically we also had obviously the Database DB two alliance, but now with the S. A. P. S moved to Hannah um that's kind of a little bit of a mute point. Obviously it still exists, but most of the clients are now obviously being encouraged really to adopt S. A. P. S latest S four hana from the services standpoint. The other facet, you know, is really around the cloud services. So that's really our topic today right. Um in the cloud services area we have alliances with S. A. P very very strong alliances that have existed for you know, almost a decade now. Um as I said we've been managing the production workloads for very very large customers in many different industries, their entire supply chains. HR financial systems are running on IBM either in the old traditional hosting models um or also in our cloud models for the past 10 plus years. Right as IBM has evolved, so we have made sure that we do a whole different types of certifications with S. A. P. To stay current. Um many of these certifications are done either you know every two years, some are done every year. And if anyone checks, you know, the S. A. P. Service marketplace website which is owned by S. A. P. You can see IBM listed in all these different angles as a certified provider. There isn't another provider that can claim this breath in terms of certifications that IBM has done and that's why customers can benefit either from one or two of these services that IBMS provides or obviously a combination is a single vendor if the customer needs. So, you know, we have the sex, we have the credibility, we have decades of, you know, Delivery excellence in these areas, servicing these clients. Lots of the Fortune, 100 customers actually are running. Um there? S a p workloads on the IBM systems, whether in traditional hosting or in a hybrid cloud deployment. Some cases were actually providing services for customers that run their SCP workloads on premise. So we cater to that, you know, sets of clients as well and then of course others that are purely on our cloud. Um IBM cloud as well as hyper scholars. Yeah, so long >>list of certifications, that seems to be one of the biggest differentiators that you talked about me a little bit about how things have evolved over the last 12 to 18 months. in terms of how is IBMS focus changed for hybrid cloud with S. A. P. >>Yeah, so the focus changed if you know, you know, until last year we will call the cloud and cognitive company. Um This year of course the whole company has changed and we're going through a major transformation at the moment. We are the hybrid cloud company now. And that that name change means a lot. It means a lot in the sense that it gives choices to the customer, that's what the whole mission is all about. We want to make sure that customers are consuming IBM services and the IBM wants to meet them where they want to be. So there's you know, flexibility of choices in terms of hybrid, another cloud deployment model. So most customers in the S. A. P. Area, you know, they're looking for either just a pure private cloud deployment or they're looking for public cloud deployment or a combination and some are because, you know, there? S A. P. S. Footprint sizes are so large. Think about the multinational global companies, you know, and then they operate in so many different regions of the world and their data sizes of their databases are so large. Perhaps, you know, the public cloud really isn't a good fit yet. These customers are looking to move some sort of their workloads to the cloud. So that's where this hybrid cloud helps them. Because customers, you know, 90 plus percent of the clients today are really not choosing one hyper Scaler as their deployment option. They're really looking at multiple. So because they're running their workloads not just ASAP, but everything else, you know, SCP always brings along a whole bunch of other applications like tax applications and other interfaces, homegrown applications analytics that the customers are using. So if you want to take advantage of the true hybrid cloud and the benefits of all the various um, deployments and hyper scale is available in that region. Really, the hybrid cloud strategy from IBM is a perfect fit because we give them choices of deployment. We're not saying that you have to deploy an IBM cloud. Um, we're saying you can deploy either on premise VWs as your idea of cloud. Really what makes sense? You know, best sense for the types of war clothes that the customer is looking at. So that's how the strategy for IBM has completely changed to meet the clients, you know, for what they're actually looking for. Talk to me a >>little bit about the go to market so I B M and S A P longstanding decades old relationship, A lot of certifications that you talked about. We're talking about business critical Applications, you mentioned supply chain a minute ago and I can't help but think it how supply chain has been affected in the last year. What is the good market approach with respect to providing consultation services to help customers determine? Should we migrate to what Hyper Scaler and how and when? >>Yeah, so we can help them with that? Um, so hyper hyper scale is obviously, you know, IBM has been listed for example, as the leader in Gartner 2020 and you know, there's lots of other stats that show them that IBM is a leader in application services, in consulting services, application management services as well as managed services. So these are all different, Right? And you can see us being listed as a leader either it's in Gartner or I. D. C. Or Horse or Wave. And for many reasons and you know, IBM actually has one series of pinnacle awards from S. A. P. Over the U. S. How this helps the clients really determined is that, you know, IBM obviously does a lot of studies externally. We have internal as well as external facing views of comparatives of the various hyper scholars, um you know, including Aws, Azure, G. C. P. And so on. So when a customer comes to us for asking for advice, um, and so on, we basically look at our own intellectual properties, all the analysis that has been done. And more importantly, we look at the full scope of services that the customer wants is doing. What sort of a business are there in. We have industry experts, there's E. R. P. Strategy, um, folks within IBM. So, you know, they go after a certain industry and when they, let's say, you know, they've gone after the oil and gas industry, for example, they will look at multiple customers in that particular space. So based on their experiences, we can actually define the right road map for the client to be able to help them to move their work clothes to this hybrid cloud strategy that I just mentioned. Right? So that's how we can help them because we have the expertise in that industry as well. >>And I'm curious moderate in the last year with so much flux and rapidly changing market conditions, Did you >>see any >>one or two industries in particular really leading the charge here and coming to IBM. S. A. P. For help on this transformation journey which has been accelerated by a couple of years. >>Suddenly the retail industry for sure, right. I mean in spite of the crisis, I think the retail industry did pretty well, right? Because people still have to buy stuff. Of course, the whole buying behavior change. No question. Um You and I don't know about two days of, but for me, you know, I was never a major online shopper. Oh yeah. You know, I just about everything. Um previously it used to be select things here and there, but now it's totally changed, right? So that industry certainly has accelerated. No question. We've had a lot of those coming. The other industries that I've seen. The change in the last 12, 18 months is really, for example, you know, the banking industry and so on. Um IBM basically, you know, launched a lot of services in the financial services sector for this reason. Um So those are of course transforming very fast to keep up with the market. Um and I'm sure there's others, right? But these are the two that come to mind. Yeah, >>two that have been most affected and needed to pivot so quickly. In addition to health care. Let me ask you one final question here. Before we wrap. Talk to me about the advantages of using the PMC partner managed cloud s a P license resale model. The advantages of using that and the benefits. >>Sure. Um so we, you know, so far our discussion was really focused around, you know, the various service capabilities that IBM has in terms of our capabilities for helping clients with hyper scholars and hybrid cloud. We also need to spend a little bit of time talking about the operations model. Right? So when they're running their production workloads on IBM PMC is yet another dimension. So what PMC partner managed cloud is really some very limited partnerships that s A P does And the IBM is the lead on that one in this base. What ASAP allows is the partner, which in this case is IBM to resell the ASAP software license to a customer. So IBM has the rights globally to resell the license and why is that beneficial to the client? Because now, um, IBM can actually turn around the S. A. P license and have the customer pay us in a SAS model. So it basically is now an apex model where the customer is basically paying, you know, a monthly fee as an example, so there's no upfront cost to the client and they basically pay IBM and IBM PS ASAP. So IBM is kind of holding the risk if you will on behalf of the customer, it gives customers more choices, more flexibilities, better pricing approach. So if the customer wants as an example to buy everything the full package, including systems implementation services, deployment models with choices on a cloud, whether it's IBM cloud or others as well as the license itself. IBM has this end to end capability today. We've been selling it to several clients for a few years in several geography is right. So that's the advantage behind it. >>Excellent. Thanks for breaking that down moderate and joining me today talking about what's new with I B M and S A P, the opportunities for customers to accelerate their digital transformation. We appreciate you stopping by. >>Thank you very much, lisa truly enjoyed it. Thank you. >>Good. Me too. For moderate Tabla. I'm lisa martin. You're watching the cubes coverage of IBM think 2021. >>Mm.

Published Date : Apr 16 2021

SUMMARY :

It's nice to have you on the program. Thank you lisa. So before we get into that I'd love for you to be able to describe what your role is to our audience. talk to our business partner S. A. P. Obviously um you know, try to help them would come I think you even worked at S. I know the data point to note that, you know, 70 80 So you talked about the IBM s, a P relationship being longstanding, has evolved over the years and I'll talk about you know a few of the different aspects where we've been partners list of certifications, that seems to be one of the biggest differentiators that you talked about me a little bit about how things Yeah, so the focus changed if you know, you know, until last year we will call the cloud and little bit about the go to market so I B M and S A P longstanding And for many reasons and you know, S. A. P. For help on this transformation journey which has been accelerated by a couple of years. for example, you know, the banking industry and so on. Let me ask you one final question here. So IBM has the rights globally to resell the license and why is that beneficial to the client? the opportunities for customers to accelerate their digital transformation. Thank you very much, lisa truly enjoyed it. think 2021.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
IBMORGANIZATION

0.99+

2020DATE

0.99+

oneQUANTITY

0.99+

lisa martinPERSON

0.99+

S. A. P.ORGANIZATION

0.99+

S. A. P.ORGANIZATION

0.99+

23 yearQUANTITY

0.99+

twoQUANTITY

0.99+

lisaPERSON

0.99+

S. A. PORGANIZATION

0.99+

AWSORGANIZATION

0.99+

last yearDATE

0.99+

100 customersQUANTITY

0.99+

over 23 yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

90 plus percentQUANTITY

0.99+

PMCORGANIZATION

0.99+

Madhuri ChawlaPERSON

0.99+

todayDATE

0.99+

each dayQUANTITY

0.99+

GartnerORGANIZATION

0.99+

2021DATE

0.99+

over 46 yearsQUANTITY

0.98+

S. A. P.LOCATION

0.98+

I. D. C.ORGANIZATION

0.98+

IBMSORGANIZATION

0.98+

TablaPERSON

0.98+

HorseORGANIZATION

0.98+

this yearDATE

0.97+

S A PORGANIZATION

0.97+

WaveORGANIZATION

0.97+

I B MORGANIZATION

0.96+

single vendorQUANTITY

0.96+

VWsORGANIZATION

0.95+

S. A. P. AreaLOCATION

0.94+

Think 2021COMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.94+

IBM1 Debbie Vavangas VTT


 

>>from around the globe, it's the >>Cube with digital coverage of IBM think 2020 >>one brought to you >>by IBM. Hello, welcome back to the cubes coverage of IBM Think 2021 virtual soon we'll be back in person in real life. But this year again it's a virtual conference. I'm john for your host of the cube for more cube coverage. You got a great guest here Debbie Viviendas Global garage lead for IBM Services Global garage great program. Ah Debbie, great to see you. Thanks for coming on the cube. >>Thanks for having me. >>So we've covered the garage a lot on the cube in the past and the success, Everyone loves the garage things are born in the garage, entrepreneurship innovation has been kind of categorically known for kind of the garage start up um but also it's become um known for really agile agility and which has been a cloud phenomenon, devops and now we're seeing Deb sec apps as a big trend this year with hybrid cloud. So I gotta ask you, how is garage doing with the pandemic? I was I can almost imagine people at home kind of disrupted from the office, but maybe more creativity, maybe more energy online. What's going on with the garage? How has your transformation journey been with Covid? >>Well, don't I mean it's Covid has been the level of for us. All right, there isn't a person who hasn't had some challenge or some complexity to Yeah, and that includes our clients and I'm incredibly proud to be able to say that IBM garage because it is so digitally native. When the covid pandemic has struck around the world, every single one of our garages was able to switch to being virtual without fail without a single days lost productivity. And that I mean that's hugely beneficial to clients who are on an incredible time sensitive journey. And so we've seen as a result of Covid actually there are a huge acceleration in garages from two reasons. The number one from a virtualization perspective. Actually it's much easier when everybody's together in the same space, everybody's together virtually in the same space. And we've seen acceleration in our velocity and our collaboration because everybody is really learning how to work in that century. But to because of the pandemic, because of the pressure on our client's needs to make decisions fast. No, not guess really, be focused on their outcomes, not just doing stuff, the garage really plays to that objective for them. And so we've seen a huge rise. We've gone from 2019 to just a few 100 garages to finishing 2020 with over 2.5 1000 garages and being embedded across services and the goal of being the primary way our clients experiencing COVID has been a big accelerator. >>Sorry Debbie, can you repeat the numbers again? I just want to capture that. I missed that. >>Sure. Sure. So we finished >>training on the numbers. >>Yeah. So that we finished 2019 with just under 300 garages and we finished 2020 with just over 2.5 1000. So we've had a huge growth in the in the rain and it isn't just the number of garages, it's the range of garages and what we're what we're serving with our clients and how we're collaborating with our clients and the topics were unpacking. That is is really broadened. >>Yeah. I mean I I covered and we've reported on the garage on the Cuban also in silicon angle dot com. And the past thinks and through your your news coverage. That's amazing growth. Um I gotta believe the tailwind from Covid and just the energy around it has energized. You wanna get your thoughts on that because you know what we've reported the past, it's been about design, thinking human centered design, all those beautiful things that come with cloud, cloud scale, right? You know, you're moving faster, you're innovating. Um and so that's been kind of there, but what you're getting at with this growth is with and what Covid has proven. And again, we've been pointing this out, you're seeing the pattern, It's clear companies are either retrenching okay. Which is re factoring, redesigning, doing those things to kind of get ready to come out to cope with a growth strategy and you're seeing other companies um build net new innovations so they're building new capabilities because Covid shown them kind of pulled back the curtain if you will on where the action is. So this means there's two threads going on. You got okay, I got to transform my business and I gotta re factor and then, or hey, we got net new business models, these are kind of two different things and not mutually exclusive. What's your comment on that? >>Uh, and I think that my comment on is that is the sweet spot that garage comes into its own right. You mentioned lots of things in that, you talked about design thinking and agility and you know, these other buzzwords that are used all the time and garage of course is synonymous with those of course, you know, it's Gap uses the best design thinking and agile practices and all of those things that absolutely core to what we do, devops, even through down to design up, we have the whole range depending on what the client objective is, but I think what is really happening now is the innovation, you know, being something separate. It is no longer how to accelerate your outcomes and your business outcomes regardless of whether that is in re factoring and modernizing your existing estate or diversifying creating new ecosystems and new platforms and new offerings. Regardless of what that is, you can't do it separate to your, To your core business. I mean it's a well known fact John right, like 75 of transformation programmes failed to deliver an impact on the business performance. Right? And in the same period of time there's been huge cuts in innovation funding and that's because for the same reason because they don't deliver the impact of the business performance and that's why garage is unique because it is entirely focused on the outcome, right? But using user research through design thinking of course using agile to deliver it at speed and all of those other things, but it's focused on value, on benefits, realization and driving to your outcome. And we do that by putting that innovation at the heart of your enterprise in order to drive that transformation rather than it being something separate. >>Debbie, I saw you gave a talk uh called Innovation Is Dead. Um obviously that's a provocative title. That's an attention getter. Um tell me what you mean by that because it seems to be a setup. I mean many mentions dead. Was it with a question mark? What you're kind of trying to highlight that innovation is transformation? Or were you trying >>to do the full title? The full title was Innovation is Dead and transformation is pointless. And of course, it's meant to be an eye catching title. So people show up and listen to my pitch rather than somebody else's. But But the reality is I mean that most sincerely it's back to that step, 75 of these transformation programmes failed to deliver the impact. And I and I speculate that that is for a few reasons because the idea itself wasn't a good one or wasn't at the right time because you were unable to understand what the measure of good looked like and therefore him just be able to create that path. And in order to transform a company, you must transform the individuals within a company. And so that way of working becomes incredibly holistic and it's those three things, I think amongst the whole myriad of others are the primary reasons why those programs fail. And what garage does is it breaks this by putting innovation at the heart of your enterprise and by using data driven value orchestration. That means that we don't no, we don't guess where the value to be gained is. We know it's no longer checking ideas at the wall to see what sticks it's meaningful research. It's not searching. This is my favorite quote from my dear friend Courtney, know, who says it's not about searching for the innovation needle in the proverbial haystack. It's using your research in order to de risk your investment and drive your innovation to enable your outcomes. So if you do innovation without a view to how it's going to yield your business outcomes, I agree. I fundamentally agree that it's pointless. >>Exactly. Of course, we're on the writing side. We love titles like innovation is dead long live innovation, so that's classic. Get your attention. But I think >>Exactly, and of course what I really mean is that innovation is a separate entity, >>totally. >>There is no longer relevant for company to make sure they achieve their business >>outcome. Well, this is what I wanted to just double click on that with you on is that you look at transformation, you guys essentially saying transformation meets innovation with the garage philosophy if I get that right. Um, and, and, and it's interesting I had, and we've experienced here with the cube where the cube virtual, we're not at IBM think there is no physical game day, like >>my house. >>And, and so I was talking to a Ceo and he said, I said, hey you guys are doing really, really good. You know, we had to pivot with the cube and he goes, you guys did a good pivot yourself because no, john we did not pivot, we actually put our business on hold because of the pandemic. We actually created a line extension. So technically we're going to bring that business back when Covid is gone and we come back to real life. So it's technically not a pivot. We're not pivoting our business. We've created new functionality through the innovations that they were doing. So this is kind of like, this is the real deal here. This is like depends proven what's your share your thoughts on that? >>Well, it's just to me it's about people get so focused on the output that they lose track of the outcome, right? And so being really clear on what you're doing and why and the outcomes can be really broad that, you know, so instead of saying, you know, we're all going to implement the new E. R. P. Or build a new mobile app. That's that's that's not an outcome, right? What we should be saying is what we're trying to achieve is a 10% growth in net promoter score in china, Right in this group or whatever it is we were trying to achieve right, we want to make a 25 reduction in our operating cost base by simplifying our estate whatever those outcomes are. I mean that's the starting point and then driving that use to use as the vehicle for what is the right innovation, what is going to deliver that value and fast right garage delivers 3-5 times faster than other models and reduced delivery costs. And so it's all about that speed, speed of decision, speed of insight, speed of culture and training, speed of new skills and speed to outcomes. >>You got a great job, love what you're doing in Karaj got a great model, congratulations on the growth. Love this intersection or transformation meets innovation because innovation is transformation advice versus interplay going on there I think has proven that. Let me dig into a little bit more about the garage. What's going on? How many practitioners you guys have there now at IBM? Um, you've got growth. Are you adding more people in? I'll see virtual first. Covid. Is there still centers of design take us through what's going on at garage? >>Certainly. So I think I mentioned it right up front. Right. So our goal is to make IBM guards the primary way our clients experiences. We've proven that it delivers higher value to our clients and they get really rich and broad set of outcomes. And so in order for us to deliver on that promise, we have to be unable to cross IBM to deliver to it. Right? So over the last 18 months or so we've had a whole range of training programs and enable we have a whole badging and certification program. We have all the skills and the pathways and the career pathways to find. But garages for everybody. Right? And so it isn't about creating a selected group that can do this across IBM, this is about making all of services capable. So in 2020 we we trained over 28,000 people right? In in all the different skills that are needed from selling to execution to QA to use a research, whatever it is. And this year we're launching our garage skills academy which will take that across all of services and make it easily available. So we will, you've got to >>talk about the footprint of the global side because again, not to bring up global, but global is what yours in your title companies need to be global because now with virtual workforce is you're seeing much more tapped creativity and execution ability to execute from global teams. How does that impact you? >>Well, so garages as in its global in two perspectives. Right, So number one, we have garages all around the world. Right? It isn't it isn't just the market of you are most developed nations in the Americas and europe. It is everywhere. We see it in all emerging markets, from latin America through to you all parts of eastern europe which are really beginning to come into their own. So we see all these different garages of different different scales and opportunity. So definitely global from that image. But what what what virtualization has also enabled these truly global teams because it's really easy to go, I need one of those. Okay, I need a supply chain expert and I need an Ai expert and I need somebody who's got industry experience in whatever it is and you can quickly gather them around the virtual table faster than you can in a physical table. But we still leverage the global community >>for the network. You have an expert network there at IBM. >>You have a huge network. Yeah. And both both within IBM and of course a growing network of ecosystem partners that we continue to work >>with. Debbie. I'm really excited. Congratulations. Growth. I'm looking forward to partnering with you on your ecosystem as that develops. I can almost imagine you must be getting a lot of outside IBM practitioners and experts coming in to collaborate. It is a social construct. It's a great program. Thanks for sharing >>my pleasure. It's been great to be here. Thank >>you. Okay, IBM's global garage. Lee Debbie Vegas who's here on the queue with IBM services, a phenomenon. This is social construct is helping companies with digital transformation intersecting with innovation. I'm john for your host. Thanks for watching

Published Date : Apr 15 2021

SUMMARY :

Thanks for coming on the cube. been kind of categorically known for kind of the garage start up um but also of the pandemic, because of the pressure on our client's needs to make decisions Sorry Debbie, can you repeat the numbers again? and what we're what we're serving with our clients and how we're collaborating with our clients and the topics were And the past thinks and through your your news coverage. and garage of course is synonymous with those of course, you know, it's Gap uses the best tell me what you mean by that because it seems to be a setup. And in order to transform a company, you must transform the individuals within But I think Well, this is what I wanted to just double click on that with you on is that you look at transformation, You know, we had to pivot with the cube and he goes, I mean that's the starting point and then driving that use to use as the vehicle You got a great job, love what you're doing in Karaj got a great model, congratulations on the growth. and the career pathways to find. talk about the footprint of the global side because again, not to bring up global, through to you all parts of eastern europe which are really beginning to come into for the network. ecosystem partners that we continue to work I'm looking forward to partnering with you on your ecosystem It's been great to be here. This is social construct is helping companies with digital transformation intersecting

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
DebbiePERSON

0.99+

IBMORGANIZATION

0.99+

chinaLOCATION

0.99+

Debbie VavangasPERSON

0.99+

10%QUANTITY

0.99+

2020DATE

0.99+

2019DATE

0.99+

AmericasLOCATION

0.99+

Lee Debbie VegasPERSON

0.99+

CourtneyPERSON

0.99+

75QUANTITY

0.99+

two perspectivesQUANTITY

0.99+

latin AmericaLOCATION

0.99+

two threadsQUANTITY

0.99+

Debbie ViviendasPERSON

0.99+

two reasonsQUANTITY

0.99+

over 28,000 peopleQUANTITY

0.99+

bothQUANTITY

0.99+

over 2.5 1000 garagesQUANTITY

0.98+

JohnPERSON

0.98+

europeLOCATION

0.98+

under 300 garagesQUANTITY

0.98+

two different thingsQUANTITY

0.98+

over 2.5 1000QUANTITY

0.98+

three thingsQUANTITY

0.98+

eastern europeLOCATION

0.97+

oneQUANTITY

0.97+

covidEVENT

0.97+

3-5 timesQUANTITY

0.96+

this yearDATE

0.96+

johnPERSON

0.96+

CovidPERSON

0.95+

Innovation is DeadTITLE

0.94+

agileTITLE

0.93+

pandemicEVENT

0.93+

CovidORGANIZATION

0.91+

IBM Services GlobalORGANIZATION

0.89+

100 garagesQUANTITY

0.89+

E. R. P.ORGANIZATION

0.87+

KarajPERSON

0.87+

single daysQUANTITY

0.86+

last 18 monthsDATE

0.83+

Think 2021COMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.82+

25 reductionQUANTITY

0.81+

Innovation Is DeadTITLE

0.81+

singleQUANTITY

0.81+

firstQUANTITY

0.8+

programmesQUANTITY

0.78+

CovidTITLE

0.77+

75 of transformation programmesQUANTITY

0.73+

CubanLOCATION

0.72+

CeoPERSON

0.71+

doubleQUANTITY

0.66+

GlobalORGANIZATION

0.6+

thinkCOMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.54+

IBM1ORGANIZATION

0.48+

COVIDORGANIZATION

0.4+

IBM15 Terrance Wampler V2


 

>>from around the globe. It's the cube >>With digital coverage of IBM think 2021 brought to you by IBM. Welcome to the cubes coverage of IBM Think 2021. I'm lisa martin. Terrence WAmpler joins me next General manager at Workday financial management at workday Terrance. Welcome to the cube. >>Well thank you for having me. It's great to be here. I appreciate it. >>Nice that we can still do these events virtually even though we are quite socially distance. So the last year has brought lots of changes. One of them being at B. M. Thinking the cube being virtual. I'm curious to get your perspectives and your observations. We've seen many finance organizations have to rapidly pivot and accelerate their digital transformation making it a priority. What are some of the key priorities that you've seen that the C suite the CFO are dealing with? >>Yeah. Well I think what's happening is what we've seen our new ways to work and using remote access, having to do mobile technologies. What's happening is that's actually driving more risk for companies. And so as companies get more risk that's driving the needs to have more scrutiny on those business processes and that's forcing them to want to accelerate what they're doing in terms of the digital transformation, other stuff like that. It's also forcing them to think more about the data they have and the information they have looking forward and how they're doing planning and how they can do planning in terms of bringing people back to work in terms of new business models, in terms of what may be next, in terms of opportunity for them or even doing catastrophe planning as they, as they work through this stuff and as they start to look at that they're really thinking about how to make their business process and much more agile. And so it's kind of a complicated thread that you start to pull as people start to change how things work. >>Yeah, that risk is a big factor in that pivot was so quick for so many businesses where suddenly so many of us and so many of us are still remote. I'm curious what some of the things are though that you're hearing with respect to organizations looking to start opening things back up and bringing some of the folks back on campus. >>Yeah, it's a very interesting dilemma because what's happening is people have learned how to work remotely now and so they're trying to figure out how they're going to bring people back to be more collaborative. But at the end of the day, the first and most important thing they've learned is that especially for a finance function, they no longer want to be transaction operators. What they want to start doing is pushing that work to more automated tools to have that be done for them and try to promote themselves to be more like analysts or even advisors to the business or even a partner to the business. And as they go through that evolution, what they're really trying to do is unlock all of the potential of the people they have of the processes they have and if the data they have. So what is really made companies do is look at everything in its entirety and want to change all of it. But they have to go at different paces, >>definitely talk to me about what worked and IBM are doing together to help customers tackle these challenges, adjust their priorities and accelerate that transformation. >>Yeah, certainly. So one of the things that we've done is gotten together and created this go to market strategy called enterprise finance and what enterprise finance does is it really tries to meet the customer where they are. So while all of these customers are looking to accelerate their digital transformation, they come from very different places, right? And their journey to that transformation is going to be very different and that means that some of them are going to want to be able to do a full transformation right away and do it globally and make a big change because they've just been hit very hard by this or they see it as an opportunity to grow and others are going to come from a very complex environment. And that complex environment could include complicated manufacturing components in their solution. And they need to look at something like just a corporate finance layer that has kind of an integrated planning solution, consolidation, close capabilities for them to be able to run their business and be a little bit more agile at the top line. >>So a spectrum of of use of meeting them where they are. There's a lot of customers in different places. I'm curious what some of the things are that you've observed over the last year, that really are kind of unique ways that finance leaders are approaching this, this new way of working. >>Yeah, so there's probably two examples I can give you. One is a generic example where we have customers that have participated in merger or acquisition activity over the past year as it happens to be. Or customers that have even spun up new divisions with new business models trying to introduce new services or think about things that they can take advantage of or even shifting away from all this months that have been impact by what's happening And as they do that they will look to do a transformation around finance in that function only or for that subsidiary or for that division. And so that's probably the first example. The second example that I'll give you is companies having to do something they never thought they would do before. I'll give you a simple example. We have a large number of insurance companies here in the United States as customers and we all probably got our rebate check from the insurance company for automobiles. Right? So what happened is most of the large insurance companies identified that, hey, we actually don't have much risk because people aren't driving and they're paying us these big premiums. And so the insurance regulatory bodies put pressure on those insurance companies. So they had to figure out a business process model, any mechanism by which to go out forecast what the premium reduction should be, what the business should look like, what that risk should be, do all of that planning and then think about it for their future, actually, really old stuff and then figure out a process by which to get those rebates delivered out to customers. So there's interesting things like that happening in process. And if somebody wasn't running a remote system that didn't have good agility, they wouldn't be able to make that quick pivot and get us all those rebate checks that we were so happy to have. >>Yes, very happy to have that. It sounds like that was done in a pretty, pretty fast turnaround time. So imagine you're also dealing with customers who have sort of a TBD time schedule where there's still so much dynamics going on in the market today. >>Well, that's exactly right. I mean because you're looking at different business models in different industries. I picked insurance there, but you can pick other extremes like how are retailers reopening? What are they thinking? You can look at hospitality places, how are they going to reopen? How are they going to generate revenue? How are they going to do planning, How are they going to account for things? Right. So it's a range. So what's happened is everybody has looked at this as it's now an opportunity to not think in terms of years or even longer range plans, it's really an opportunity to be much more agile and think about being able to dynamically move in quarters or half, half year. Kind of, >>we've been having a lot of conversations about how that timetable has shifted and it's getting smaller and smaller because there's been so much flux and so much change that these organizations are really figuring out, how do we actually shift? Um and not just organizations but culturally as well to be able to adapt to these changes. That can be pretty sudden and pretty significant. I am curious to workday has historically focused its financial management solutions on really very much people intensive industries, but you do have customers that are outside of that and the services you talked about insurance getting value from work. They talk to me about um some of those other expansion of opportunities there are in the more services oriented industries. >>That makes a lot of sense. And so I'll call it product based industries but you can think about it as manufacturing or other components, but it's people that have systems around product and while they might have complex supply chains that Workday isn't able to support for them right now, they are looking at doing either that corporate transformation layer or they're looking at a solution we have around the county center. What accounting center allows them to do is bring in high volume of data from those source transaction systems and then generate accounting from it. But it gives them the ability to mix that operational data with that accounting data to do exactly what you're describing. Be able to pivot more quickly and do more planning because they have a better foundation from their data accuracy than the consistency of that data. So they may be running multiple E. R. P. Systems and as they're running those they can bring that data together through accounting center kind of a Federated way and get better insight into what they need to do to plan more rapidly to roll things out so they can kind of keep that execution system of record system and then they can basically promote this to more of operational planning and analysis type. >>Have you noticed in your conversations with customers? The financial management changing in terms of being elevated up to the C suite or a board level conversation with businesses. Now suddenly being very laser focused on understanding that reducing risk and did that any of that change and shift in terms of visibility in the last year? >>Yes it did. And the primary reason is because finance has always been the stewards of that information. They curate the data, they do all of that word and then other people take it and do analysis. The Finance department has taken more control of not only being the curator of that information but also being the team that does more of the analysis and has engaged more with corporate strategy or the chief revenue officers trying to bring forward the ability to do analysis and have a voice in terms of what are the business models we should be doing? What are the strategic growth initiatives we should be doing? How should we be looking at running the business, not just doing a finance function, but really doing that advisory role. And it really has become because the data is so important to make those decisions. Everyone wants these data german decisions and they are the curator of that data or the steward of that data. So they kind of helped promote themselves to do. >>What are some of the things that if you look out into your crystal ball for the rest of 2021, but are some of the things that you can that you think we're going to see in some of the key industries that are, that are working hard to return retail, manufacturing, the supply chain. We just had that big traffic jam in the Suez Canal and a lot of challenges there. What are some of the things that you think are opportunities that we're gonna see unfolding this year? >>Yeah, so I think it's going to be first around getting back to work, so it's back to office stuff which will start on the HR side, but it's going to lead to facility costs. It's going to lead to, you know, work or safety stuff and reporting, it's going to lead to how you manage health care or other tracking of things is going to lead to how you engage with customers remotely. It's going to be a number of factors that are related to how do we transition back into real life? Because what we started to see is in different parts of the country or the world, even parts of retail open up. But we haven't seen mass return to lots of offices like here in the United States. And I think that will drive a lot of different processes in terms of about how people do working shifts, how they do meetings, how they do analysis. And there will be a desire then to have those business processes automated the results of the transaction that comes from that, etc. >>That's a good point that you bring up that there's so many things that I hadn't really considered in terms of what it's going to take for businesses to return and have folks come back to campus. The extroverted me just wants to go back but you bring up a great point. There's so many other facets that they had to deal with rapidly last year. They have to be reconsidered. And so it makes sense that automation is something that they're looking at is coming in and really helping to automate certain processes to help reduce risk, reduce costs. Last question for you Terrence. Working customers go if they are looking to get back on the track, how can they engage IBM and workday together to help transform. >>Yeah. So the the best and easiest way is we have some joint blogs that we've worked together but first there's this cube and then there is the joint blogs that we've worked together to talk about enterprise finance and how we're going to market and that enterprise finance talks about the spectrum of a full finance transformation to a division to a corporate layer. >>Excellent. And I did see your blog. It sounds like you've been very busy in the last year which is excellent but thanks so much Terrence for coming by and sharing with us all the dynamics that are going on in financial management and beyond and the the acceleration of elements of transformation that organizations have to look at now. It's very interesting. We appreciate your time. >>No, thank you for having me >>for Terrence Wobbler. I'm lisa martin. You're watching the cube. >>Mhm.

Published Date : Apr 15 2021

SUMMARY :

It's the cube With digital coverage of IBM think 2021 brought to you by IBM. It's great to be here. I'm curious to get your perspectives and your observations. and how they can do planning in terms of bringing people back to work in terms of new business models, Yeah, that risk is a big factor in that pivot was so quick for so many businesses where suddenly But they have to go at different paces, definitely talk to me about what worked and IBM are doing together to help customers tackle these And they need to look at something like just a corporate finance layer that has kind of an integrated planning solution, I'm curious what some of the things are that you've observed over the last year, that really are kind of unique So they had to figure out a business process model, any mechanism by which so much dynamics going on in the market today. How are they going to do planning, How are they going to account for things? I am curious to workday has historically focused its system and then they can basically promote this to more of operational planning and analysis that any of that change and shift in terms of visibility in the last year? And it really has become because the data is so important to make those decisions. What are some of the things that if you look out into your crystal ball for the rest of 2021, It's going to be a number of factors that are related to how do we transition There's so many other facets that they had to deal with of a full finance transformation to a division to a corporate layer. that organizations have to look at now. I'm lisa martin.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
IBMORGANIZATION

0.99+

TerrencePERSON

0.99+

Terrence WobblerPERSON

0.99+

Terrence WAmplerPERSON

0.99+

lisa martinPERSON

0.99+

United StatesLOCATION

0.99+

second exampleQUANTITY

0.99+

Suez CanalLOCATION

0.99+

last yearDATE

0.99+

OneQUANTITY

0.99+

two examplesQUANTITY

0.99+

firstQUANTITY

0.99+

first exampleQUANTITY

0.99+

oneQUANTITY

0.98+

todayDATE

0.97+

2021DATE

0.97+

Think 2021COMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.95+

this yearDATE

0.93+

halfQUANTITY

0.88+

past yearDATE

0.87+

E. R. P.ORGANIZATION

0.83+

V2COMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.8+

think 2021COMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.8+

half yearQUANTITY

0.73+

TerranceCOMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.7+

WorkdayORGANIZATION

0.61+

thingsQUANTITY

0.57+

TerranceORGANIZATION

0.54+

WamplerPERSON

0.53+

germanLOCATION

0.52+

IBM15 Terrance Wampler V1


 

>>from around the globe. It's the cube >>with digital coverage >>of IBM Think >>2021 >>brought to you by IBM. >>Welcome to the cubes coverage of IBM Think 2021. I'm lisa martin. Terrence Wobbler joins me next General manager at workday financial management at workday Terrance. Welcome to the cube. >>Well thank you for having me. It's great to be here. I appreciate it. >>Nice that we can still do these events virtually even though we are quite socially distance. So the last year has brought lots of changes. One of them being IBM think and the cube being virtual. I'm curious to get your perspectives and your observations. We've seen many finance organizations have to rapidly pivot and accelerate their digital transformation making it a priority. What are some of the key priorities that you've seen that the C suite the CFO are dealing with? >>Yeah. Well I think what's happening is what we've seen our new ways to work and using remote access, having to do mobile technologies. What's happening is that's actually driving more risk for companies. And so as companies get more risk that's driving the needs to have more scrutiny on those business processes and that's forcing them to want to accelerate what they're doing in terms of the digital transformation, other stuff like that. It's also forcing them to think more about the data they have and the information they have looking forward and how they're doing planning and how they can do planning in terms of bringing people back to work in terms of new business models, in terms of what may be next, in terms of opportunity for them or even doing catastrophe planning as they, as they work through this stuff and as they start to look at that they're really thinking about how to make their business process and much more agile. And so it's kind of a complicated thread that you start to pull as people start to change how things work. >>Yeah, that risk is a big factor in that pivot was so quick for so many businesses where suddenly so many of us and so many of us are still remote. I'm curious what some of the things are though that you're hearing with respect to organizations looking to start opening things back up and bringing some of the folks back on campus. >>Yeah, it's a very interesting dilemma because what's happening is people have learned how to work remotely now and so they're trying to figure out how they're going to bring people back to be more collaborative. But at the end of the day, the first and most important thing they've learned is that especially for a finance function, they no longer want to be transaction operators. What they want to start doing is pushing that work to more automated tools to have that be done for them and try to promote themselves to be more like analysts or even advisors to the business or even a partner to the business. And as they go through that evolution, what they're really trying to do is unlock all of the potential of the people they have of the processes they have and if the data they have. So what is really made companies do is look at everything in its entirety and want to change all of it. But they have to go at different paces, >>definitely talk to me about what worked and IBM are doing together to help customers tackle these challenges, adjust their priorities and accelerate that transformation. >>Yeah, certainly. So one of the things that we've done is gotten together and created this go to market strategy called enterprise finance and what enterprise finance does is it really tries to meet the customer where they are. So while all of these customers are looking to accelerate their digital transformation, they come from very different places, right? And their journey to that transformation is going to be very different and that means that some of them are going to want to be able to do a full transformation right away and do it globally and make a big change because they've just been hit very hard by this or they see it as an opportunity to grow and others are going to come from a very complex environment. And that complex environment could include complicated manufacturing components in their solution. And they need to look at something like just a corporate finance layer that has kind of an integrated planning solution, consolidation, closed capabilities for them to be able to run their business and be a little bit more agile top one. >>So a spectrum of of use of meeting them where they are. There's a lot of customers in different places. I'm curious what some of the things are that you've observed over the last year, that really are kind of unique ways that finance leaders are approaching this, this new way of working. >>Yeah, So there's probably two examples I can give you. One is a generic example where we have customers that have participated in merger or acquisition activity over the past year as it happens to be. Or customers that have even spun up new divisions with new business models trying to introduce new services or think about things that they can take advantage of or even shifting away from all of this must have been impact by what's happening and as they do that they will look to do a transformation around finance in that function only or for that subsidiary or for that division. And so that's probably the first example, The second example that I'll give you is companies having to do something they never thought they would do before. I'll give you a simple example. We have a large number of insurance companies here in the United States as customers and we all probably got our rebate check from the insurance company for automobiles. Right? So what happened is most of the large insurance companies identified that, hey, we actually don't have much risk because people aren't driving and they're paying us these big premiums. And so the insurance regulatory bodies put pressure on those insurance companies. So they had to figure out a business process model any mechanism by which to go out forecast what the premium reduction should be, what the business should look like, what that risk should be. Do all of that planning and then think about it for their future, actually, really old stuff and then figure out a process by which to get those rebates delivered out to customers. So there's interesting things like that happening in process. And if somebody wasn't running a remote system that didn't have good agility, they wouldn't be able to make that quick pivot and get us all those rebate checks that we were so happy to have. >>Yes, very happy to have that. It sounds like that was done in a pretty, pretty fast turnaround time. So imagine you're also dealing with customers who have sort of a TBD time schedule where there's still so much dynamics going on in the market today. >>Well, that's exactly right. I mean, because you're looking at different business models in different industries. I picked insurance there, but you can pick other extremes like how are retailers reopening? What are they thinking? You can look at hospitality places, how are they going to reopen? How are they going to generate revenue? How are they going to do planning? How are they going to account for things? Right. So it's a range. So what's happened is everybody has looked at this as it's now an opportunity to not think in terms of years or even longer range plans. It's really an opportunity to be much more agile and think about being able to dynamically move in quarters or half, half year. Kind of, >>we've been having a lot of conversations about how that timetable has shifted and it's getting smaller and smaller because there's been so much flux and so much change that these organizations are really figuring out, how do we actually shift? Um and not just organizations, but culturally as well to be able to adapt to these changes that can be pretty sudden and pretty significant. I am curious to workday has historically focused its financial management solutions on really very much people intensive industries, but you do have customers that are outside of that in the services, You talked about insurance, getting value from work. They talk to me about um some of those other expansion of opportunities there are in the more services oriented industries. >>That makes a lot of sense and so I'll call it product based industries but you can think about it as manufacturing or other components but it's people that have systems around product and while they might have complex supply chains that Workday isn't able to support for them right now, they are looking at doing either that corporate transformation layer or they're looking at a solution we have around the counting centre. What accounting center allows them to do is bring in high volume of data from those source transaction systems and then generate accounting from it. But it gives them the ability to mix that operational data with that accounting data to do exactly what you're describing. Be able to pivot more quickly and do more planning because they have a better foundation from their data accuracy than the consistency of that data. So they may be running multiple E. R. P. Systems and as they're running those they can bring that data together through accounting center kind of in a Federated way and get better insight into what they need to do to plan more rapidly to roll things out so they can kind of keep that execution system of record system and then they can basically promote this to more of operational planning and analysis type function. >>Have you noticed in your conversations with customers, the financial management changing in terms of being elevated up to the C suite or a board level conversation with businesses. Now suddenly being very laser focused on understanding that reducing risk and did that any of that change and shift in terms of visibility in the last year? >>Yes it did. And the primary reason is because finance has always been the stewards of that information. They curate the data, they do all of that word and then other people take it and do analysis. The Finance department has taken more control of not only being the curator of that information but also being the team that does more of the analysis and has engaged more with corporate strategy or the Chief revenue officers trying to bring forward the ability to do analysis and have a voice in terms of what are the business models we should be doing? What are the strategic growth initiatives we should be doing? How should we be looking at running the business, not just doing a finance function, but really doing that advisory role. And it really has become because the data is so important to make those decisions. Everyone wants these data driven decisions and they are the curator of that data or the steward of that data. So they kind of helped promote themselves to do that. >>What are some of the things that if you look out into your crystal ball for the rest of 2021? But are some of the things that you can that you think we're going to see in some of the key industries that are that are working hard to return retail, manufacturing, the supply chain. We just had that big traffic jam in the Suez Canal and a lot of challenges there. What are some of the things that you think are opportunities that we're going to see unfolding this year? >>Yeah, so I think it's going to be first around getting back to work, so it's back to office stuff which will start on the HR side, but it's going to lead to facility costs. It's going to lead to, you know, worker safety stuff and reporting, it's going to lead to how you manage health care or other tracking of things. It's going to lead to how you engage with customers remotely. It's going to be a number of factors that are related to how do we transition back into real life? Because what we started to see is in different parts of the country or the world, even parts of retail open up. But we haven't seen mass return to lots of offices like here in the United States. And I think that will drive a lot of different processes in terms of about how people do working shifts, how they do meetings, how they do analysis. And there will be a desire then to have those business processes automated the results of the transaction that comes from that, etc. >>That's a good point that you bring up that there's so many things that I hadn't really considered in terms of what it's going to take for businesses to return and have folks come back to campus. The extroverted just wants to go back. But you bring up a great point. There's so many other facets that they had to deal with rapidly last year. They have to be reconsidered. And so it makes sense that automation, it's something that they're looking at is coming in and really helping to automate certain processes to help reduce risk, reduce costs. Last question for you terrence. Working customers go if they are looking to get back on the track, how can they engage IBM and work together to help transform. >>Yeah. So the the best and easiest way is we have some joint blogs that we've worked together but first there's this cube and then there is the joint blogs that we've worked together to talk about enterprise finance and how we're going to market and that enterprise finance talks about the spectrum of a full finance transformation to a division to a corporate layer. >>Excellent. And I did see your blog. It sounds like you've been very busy in the last year which is excellent but thanks so much Terrence for coming by and sharing with us all the dynamics that are going on in financial management and beyond and the the acceleration of elements of transformation that organizations have to look at now. It's very interesting. We appreciate your time. >>No, thank you for having me >>for terrence Wobbler. I'm lisa martin. You're watching the cube.

Published Date : Apr 14 2021

SUMMARY :

It's the cube Welcome to the cubes coverage of IBM Think 2021. It's great to be here. I'm curious to get and how they can do planning in terms of bringing people back to work in terms of new business models, Yeah, that risk is a big factor in that pivot was so quick for so many businesses where suddenly But they have to go at different paces, definitely talk to me about what worked and IBM are doing together to help customers tackle these And they need to look at something like just a corporate finance layer that has kind of an integrated planning solution, I'm curious what some of the things are that you've observed over the last year, that really are kind of unique So they had to figure out a business process model any mechanism by which so much dynamics going on in the market today. How are they going to do planning? I am curious to workday has historically focused its system and then they can basically promote this to more of operational planning and analysis Have you noticed in your conversations with customers, the financial management And it really has become because the data is so important to make those decisions. What are some of the things that if you look out into your crystal ball for the rest of 2021? It's going to lead to how you engage with customers remotely. There's so many other facets that they had to deal with of a full finance transformation to a division to a corporate layer. that organizations have to look at now. I'm lisa martin.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
Terrence WobblerPERSON

0.99+

IBMORGANIZATION

0.99+

lisa martinPERSON

0.99+

United StatesLOCATION

0.99+

2021DATE

0.99+

second exampleQUANTITY

0.99+

last yearDATE

0.99+

Suez CanalLOCATION

0.99+

firstQUANTITY

0.99+

OneQUANTITY

0.99+

terrence WobblerPERSON

0.99+

two examplesQUANTITY

0.99+

first exampleQUANTITY

0.99+

oneQUANTITY

0.98+

todayDATE

0.97+

this yearDATE

0.97+

Think 2021COMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.92+

past yearDATE

0.88+

TerrencePERSON

0.87+

E. R. P.ORGANIZATION

0.85+

half yearQUANTITY

0.84+

TerranceORGANIZATION

0.82+

IBM15COMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.81+

half,QUANTITY

0.74+

WorkdayORGANIZATION

0.73+

ThinkCOMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.6+

IBMCOMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.58+

Wampler V1COMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.5+

thinkCOMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.39+

Neil MacDonald, HPE | HPE Accelerating Next


 

>>Okay, >>welcome to Accelerating next. Thank you so much for joining us today. We have a great program. We're gonna talk tech with experts, will be diving into the changing economics of our industry and how to think about the next phase of your digital transformation. Now. Very importantly, we're also going to talk about how to optimize workloads from edge to excess scale with full security and automation all coming to you as a service. And with me to kick things off as Neil Mcdonald, who's the GM of compute at HP NEAL. Always a pleasure. Great to have you on. >>It's great to see you dad >>now, of course, when we spoke a year ago, we had hoped by this time we'd be face to face. But here we are again, you know, this pandemic, It's obviously affected businesses and people in so many ways that we could never have imagined. But the reality is in reality, tech companies have literally saved the day. Let's start off, how is HPV contributing to helping your customers navigate through things that are so rapidly shifting in the marketplace, >>although it's nice to be speaking to you again and I look forward to being able to do this in person. At some >>point. The >>pandemic has really accelerated the need for transformation and businesses of all sizes. More than three quarters of C. I. O. S. Report that the crisis has forced them to accelerate their strategic agendas, organizations that were ready transforming or having to transform faster and organizations that weren't on that journey yet are having to rapidly develop and execute a plan to adapt to this new reality. Our customers are on this journey and they need a partner for not just the computer technology but also the expertise and economics that they need for that digital transformation. And for us this is all about unmatched optimization for workloads from the edge to the enterprise to extra scale With 360° security and the intelligent automation all available in that as a service experience. >>Well, you know, as you well know, it's a challenge to manage through any transformation, let alone having to set up remote workers overnight, securing them, re setting budget priorities. What are some of the barriers that you see customers are working hard to overcome? >>Simply put the organizations that we talk with our challenged in three areas. They need the financial capacity to actually execute a transformation. They need the access to the resource and the expertise needed to successfully deliver on a transformation. And they have to find the way to match their investments with the revenues for the new services that they're putting in place to service their customers in this environment. >>You know, we have a data partner E. T. R. Enterprise Technology Research and the spending data that we see from them is it's quite dramatic. I mean last year we saw a contraction of roughly 5% of in terms of I. T. Spending budgets etcetera. And this year we're seeing a pretty significant rebound. Maybe a 67% growth ranges is the prediction. The challenge we see his organizations have to they got to iterate on that. I call it the forced march to digital transformation and yet they also have to balance their investments. For example that the corporate headquarters which have kind of been neglected. Is there any help in sight for the customers that are trying to reduce their spending and also take advantage of their investment capacity? >>I think you're right. Many businesses are understandably reluctant to loosen the purse strings right now given all of the uncertainty. And often a digital transformation is viewed as a massive upfront investment that will pay off in the long term, and that can be a real challenge in an environment like this, but it doesn't need to be uh, we work through HP financial services to help our customers create the investment capacity to accelerate the transformation, often by leveraging assets they already have and helping them monetize them in order to free up the capacity to accelerate what's next for their infrastructure and for the business. >>So can we drill into that? I would wonder if you could add some specifics. I mean, how do you ensure a successful outcome? What are you really paying attention to as those sort of markers for success? >>Well, when you think about the journey that an organization is going through, it's tough to be able to run the business and transform at the same time and one of the constraints is having the people with enough bandwidth and enough expertise to be able to do both. So we're addressing that in two ways for our customers. One is by helping them confidently deploy new solutions which we have engineered, leveraging decades of expertise and experience in engineering to deliver those workload optimized portfolios that take the risk and the complexity out of assembling some of these solutions and give them a prepackaged validated supported solution intact that simplifies that work for them. But in other cases we can enhance our customers bandwidth by bringing them HP point Next experts with all of the capabilities we have to help them plan, deliver and support these I. T. Projects and transformations. Organizations can get on a faster track of modernization, getting greater insight and control as they do it. We're a trusted partner to get the most for a business that's on this journey in making these critical computer investments to underpin the transformations and whether that's planning to optimizing to save for retirement at the end of life. We can bring that expertise to bear to help amplify what our customers already have in house and help them accelerate and succeed in executing these transformations. >>Thank you for that. Let's let's talk about some of the other changes that customers see him in the cloud is obviously forced customers and their suppliers to really rethink how technology is packaged, how it's consumed, how it's priced. I mean there's no doubt in that. So take Green Lake, it's obviously leading example of a pay as you scale infrastructure model and it could be applied on prem or hybrid. Can you maybe give us a sense as to where you are today with Green Lake? >>Well, it's really exciting now from our first pay, as you go offering back in 2006, 15 years ago to the introduction of Green Lake. HBs really been paving the way on consumption-based services through innovation and partnership to help meet the exact needs of our customers. Hp Green Lake provides an experience, is the best of both worlds. A simple paper use technology model with the risk management of data that's under our customers direct control and it lets customers shift to everything as a service in order to free up capital and avoid that upfront expense that we talked about. They can do this anywhere at any scale or any size and really HP Greenlee because the cloud that comes to you >>like that. So we've touched a little bit on how customers can maybe overcome some of the barriers to transformation. What about the nature of transformations themselves? I mean historically there was a lot of lip service paid to digital and and there's a lot of complacency, frankly, but you know that covid wrecking ball meme that so well describes that if you're not a digital business, essentially you're gonna be out of business. So, you know, those things have evolved, how is HPV addressed the new requirements? >>Well, the new requirements are really about what customers are trying to achieve. And four very common themes that we see are enabling the productivity of remote workforce. That was never really part of the plan for many organizations being able to develop and deliver new apps and services in order to service customers in a different way or drive new revenue streams, being able to get insights from data so that in these tough times they can optimize their business more thoroughly. And then finally think about the efficiency of an agile hybrid private cloud infrastructure. Especially one that now has to integrate the edge. And we're really thrilled to be helping our customers accelerate all of these and more with HP computer. >>I want to double click on that remote workforce productivity. I mean again the surveys that we see, 46 of the ceo say that productivity improved with the whole work from home remote work trend. And on average those improvements were in the four range which is absolutely enormous. I mean when you think about that how does HP specifically help here? What do you guys do? >>Well every organization in the world has had to adapt to a different style of working and with more remote workers than they had before. And for many organizations that's going to become the new normal. Even post pandemic, many I. T. Shops are not well equipped for the infrastructure to provide that experience because if all your workers are remote the resiliency of that infrastructure, the latency is of that infrastructure, the reliability of are all incredibly important. So we provide comprehensive solutions expertise and as a service options that support that remote work through virtual desktop infrastructure or V. D. I. So that our customers can support that new normal of virtual engagements online everything across industries wherever they are. And that's just one example of many of the workload optimized solutions that we're providing for our customers is about taking out the guesswork and the uncertainty in delivering on these changes that they have to deploy as part of their transformation. And we can deliver that range of workload optimized solutions across all of these different use cases. Because of our broad range of innovation in compute platforms that span from the ruggedized edge to the data center all the way up to exa scale in HPC. >>I mean that's key if you're trying to affect the digital transformation and you don't have to fine tune, you know, basically build your own optimized solutions if I can buy that rather than having to build it and rely on your R and D. You know, that's key. What else is HP doing? You know, to deliver new apps, new services, you your microservices, containers, the whole developer trend, what's going on there? >>Well, that's really key because organizations are all seeking to evolve their mix of business and bring new services and new capabilities, new ways to reach their customers, new way to reach their employees, new ways to interact in their ecosystem all digitally. And that means that development and many organizations of course are embracing container technology to do that today. So with the HP container platform, our customers can realize that agility and efficiency that comes with container ization and use it to provide insight to their data more and more on that data of course is being machine generated or generated the edge or the near edge. And it can be a real challenge to manage that data holistically and not of silos and islands at H. P. S. Moral data fabric speeds the agility and access to data with a unified platform that can span across the data centers, multiple clouds and even the edge. And that enables data analytics that can create insights powering a data driven production oriented cloud enabled analytics and AI available anytime anywhere and at any scale. And it's really exciting to see the kind of impact that that can have in helping businesses optimize their operations in these challenging times. >>You gotta go where the data is and the data is distributed. It's decentralized. I I like the liberal vision and execution there so that all sounds good. But with digital transformation you're gonna see more compute in hybrid deployments. You mentioned edge. So the surface area, it's like the universe its its ever expanding. You mentioned, you know, remote work and work from home before. So I'm curious where are you investing your resources from a cyber security perspective? What can we count on from H P. E there >>Or you can count on continued leadership from hp as the world's most secure industry standard server portfolio. We provide an enhanced and holistic 360° view to security that begins in the manufacturing supply chain and concludes with a safeguarded end of life Decommissioning. And of course we've long set the bar for security with our work on silicon root of trust and we're extending that to the application tier. But in addition to the security customers that are building this modern Khyber or private cloud, including the integration of the Edge need other elements to they need an intelligent software defined control plane so that they can automate their compute fleets from all the way at the edge to the core. And while scale and automation enable efficiency, all private cloud infrastructures are competing with Web scale economics and that's why we're democratizing web scale technologies like Pensando to bring web scale economics and web scale architecture to the private cloud. Our partners are so important in helping us serve our customers needs. >>Yeah. I mean H. P. Is really up to its ecosystem game since the middle of last decade when when you guys reorganized and it became even more partner friendly. So maybe give us a preview of what's coming next in that regard from today's event. >>Well, they were really excited to have HP. Ceo, Antonio Neri speaking with Pat Gelsinger's from Intel and later lisa su from A. M. D. And later I'll have the chance to catch up with john Chambers, the founder and Ceo of J. C. Two ventures to discuss the state of the market today. >>Yeah, I'm jealous. You got, yeah, that's a good interviews coming up, NEal, thanks so much for joining us today on the virtual cube. You've really shared a lot of great insight how HP is is partner with customers. It's, it's always great to catch up with you. Hopefully we can do so face to face, you know, sooner rather than later. >>I look forward to that. And you know, no doubt our world has changed and we're here to help our customers and partners with the technology, the expertise and the economics they need For these digital transformations. And we're going to bring them unmatched workload optimization from the edge to exa scale with that 360° security with the intelligent automation. And we're gonna deliver it all as an as a service experience. We're really excited to be helping our customers accelerate what's next for their businesses. And it's been really great talking with you today about that day. Thanks for having me >>very welcome. It's been super Neil and I actually, you know, I had the opportunity to speak with some of your customers about their digital transformation and the role of that HPV plays there. So let's dive right in. >>Yeah. Mm.

Published Date : Apr 7 2021

SUMMARY :

to excess scale with full security and automation all coming to you as a But here we are again, you know, although it's nice to be speaking to you again and I look forward to being able to do this in person. The enterprise to extra scale With 360° security and the What are some of the barriers that you see customers are working hard to overcome? And they have to find the way to match their investments with I call it the forced march to digital transformation and yet they also have to balance the investment capacity to accelerate the transformation, often by leveraging I would wonder if you could add some specifics. We can bring that expertise to bear to help amplify Let's let's talk about some of the other changes that customers see him in the cloud is obviously forced and really HP Greenlee because the cloud that comes to you What about the nature of transformations themselves? Especially one that now has to integrate the edge. 46 of the ceo say that productivity improved with the whole work from home in compute platforms that span from the ruggedized edge to the data center all the way You know, to deliver new apps, new services, you your microservices, P. S. Moral data fabric speeds the agility and access to data with a unified platform So the surface area, it's like the universe its its including the integration of the Edge need other elements to they need an intelligent decade when when you guys reorganized and it became even more partner friendly. to catch up with john Chambers, the founder and Ceo of J. C. Two ventures to discuss It's, it's always great to catch up with you. edge to exa scale with that 360° security with the intelligent It's been super Neil and I actually, you know, I had the opportunity to speak with some of your customers

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
Neil McdonaldPERSON

0.99+

Neil MacDonaldPERSON

0.99+

2006DATE

0.99+

Antonio NeriPERSON

0.99+

NEalPERSON

0.99+

67%QUANTITY

0.99+

NeilPERSON

0.99+

last yearDATE

0.99+

HPORGANIZATION

0.99+

Green LakeORGANIZATION

0.99+

Pat GelsingerPERSON

0.99+

46QUANTITY

0.99+

IntelORGANIZATION

0.99+

todayDATE

0.99+

john ChambersPERSON

0.99+

CeoPERSON

0.99+

OneQUANTITY

0.99+

this yearDATE

0.99+

bothQUANTITY

0.99+

HP NEALORGANIZATION

0.99+

Hp Green LakeORGANIZATION

0.99+

E. T. R. Enterprise Technology ResearchORGANIZATION

0.99+

15 years agoDATE

0.99+

a year agoDATE

0.99+

hpORGANIZATION

0.99+

two waysQUANTITY

0.98+

HP GreenleeORGANIZATION

0.98+

oneQUANTITY

0.98+

first payQUANTITY

0.98+

fourQUANTITY

0.97+

pandemicEVENT

0.95+

both worldsQUANTITY

0.95+

I. T. ShopsORGANIZATION

0.95+

5%QUANTITY

0.93+

H. P.ORGANIZATION

0.93+

common themesQUANTITY

0.93+

one exampleQUANTITY

0.92+

HPEORGANIZATION

0.92+

HBsORGANIZATION

0.91+

H P. EORGANIZATION

0.9+

C. TwoPERSON

0.9+

J.ORGANIZATION

0.9+

lisa suPERSON

0.89+

More than three quartersQUANTITY

0.84+

KhyberORGANIZATION

0.84+

PensandoORGANIZATION

0.82+

C. I. O. S. ReportTITLE

0.8+

HPVORGANIZATION

0.75+

three areasQUANTITY

0.71+

last decadeDATE

0.7+

360°QUANTITY

0.66+

A. M. D.LOCATION

0.65+

middle ofDATE

0.64+

doubleQUANTITY

0.54+

H. P.LOCATION

0.49+

theCube On Cloud 2021 - Kickoff


 

>>from around the globe. It's the Cube presenting Cuban cloud brought to you by silicon angle, everybody to Cuban cloud. My name is Dave Volonte, and I'll be here throughout the day with my co host, John Ferrier, who was quarantined in an undisclosed location in California. He's all good. Don't worry. Just precautionary. John, how are you doing? >>Hey, great to see you. John. Quarantine. My youngest daughter had covitz, so contact tracing. I was negative in quarantine at a friend's location. All good. >>Well, we wish you the best. Yeah, well, right. I mean, you know what's it like, John? I mean, you're away from your family. Your basically shut in, right? I mean, you go out for a walk, but you're really not in any contact with anybody. >>Correct? Yeah. I mean, basically just isolation, Um, pretty much what everyone's been kind of living on, kind of suffering through, but hopefully the vaccines are being distributed. You know, one of the things we talked about it reinvent the Amazon's cloud conference. Was the vaccine on, but just the whole workflow around that it's gonna get better. It's kind of really sucky. Here in the California area, they haven't done a good job, a lot of criticism around, how that's rolling out. And, you know, Amazon is now offering to help now that there's a new regime in the U. S. Government S o. You know, something to talk about, But certainly this has been a terrible time for Cove it and everyone in the deaths involved. But it's it's essentially pulled back the covers, if you will, on technology and you're seeing everything. Society. In fact, um, well, that's big tech MIT disinformation campaigns. All these vulnerabilities and cyber, um, accelerated digital transformation. We'll talk about a lot today, but yeah, it's totally changed the world. And I think we're in a new generation. I think this is a real inflection point, Dave. You know, modern society and the geo political impact of this is significant. You know, one of the benefits of being quarantined you'd be hanging out on these clubhouse APS, uh, late at night, listening to experts talk about what's going on, and it's interesting what's happening with with things like water and, you know, the island of Taiwan and China and U. S. Sovereignty, data, sovereignty, misinformation. So much going on to talk about. And, uh, meanwhile, companies like Mark injuries in BC firm starting a media company. What's going on? Hell freezing over. So >>we're gonna be talking about a lot of that stuff today. I mean, Cuba on cloud. It's our very first virtual editorial event we're trying to do is bring together our community. It's a it's an open forum and we're we're running the day on our 3 65 software platform. So we got a great lineup. We got CEO Seo's data Practitioners. We got a hard core technologies coming in, cloud experts, investors. We got some analysts coming in and we're creating this day long Siri's. And we've got a number of sessions that we've developed and we're gonna unpack. The future of Cloud computing in the coming decade is, John said, we're gonna talk about some of the public policy new administration. What does that mean for tech and for big tech in General? John, what can you add to that? >>Well, I think one of the things that we talked about Cove in this personal impact to me but other people as well. One of the things that people are craving right now is information factual information, truth texture that we call it. But hear this event for us, Davis, our first inaugural editorial event. Robbo, Kristen, Nicole, the entire Cube team Silicon angle, really trying to put together Morva cadence we're gonna doom or of these events where we can put out feature the best people in our community that have great fresh voices. You know, we do interview the big names Andy Jassy, Michael Dell, the billionaires with people making things happen. But it's often the people under there that are the rial newsmakers amid savory, for instance, that Google one of the most impressive technical people, he's gotta talk. He's gonna present democratization of software development in many Mawr riel people making things happen. And I think there's a communal element. We're going to do more of these. Obviously, we have, uh, no events to go to with the Cube. So we have the cube virtual software that we have been building and over years and now perfecting and we're gonna introduce that we're gonna put it to work, their dog footing it. We're gonna put that software toe work. We're gonna do a lot mawr virtual events like this Cuban cloud Cuban startup Cuban raising money. Cuban healthcare, Cuban venture capital. Always think we could do anything. Question is, what's the right story? What's the most important stories? Who's telling it and increase the aperture of the lens of the industry that we have and and expose that and fastest possible. That's what this software, you'll see more of it. So it's super exciting. We're gonna add new features like pulling people up on stage, Um, kind of bring on the clubhouse vibe and more of a community interaction with people to meet each other, and we'll roll those out. But the goal here is to just showcase it's cloud story in a way from people that are living it and providing value. So enjoy the day is gonna be chock full of presentations. We're gonna have moderated chat in these sessions, so it's an all day event so people can come in, drop out, and also that's everything's on demand immediately after the time slot. But you >>want to >>participate, come into the time slot into the cube room or breakout session. Whatever you wanna call it, it's a cube room, and the people in there chatting and having a watch party. So >>when you're in that home page when you're watching, there's a hero video there. Beneath that, there's a calendar, and you'll see that red line is that red horizontal line of vertical line is rather, it's a linear clock that will show you where we are in the day. If you click on any one of those sessions that will take you into the chat, we'll take you through those in a moment and share with you some of the guests that we have upcoming and and take you through the day what I wanted to do. John is trying to set the stage for the conversations that folks are gonna here today. And to do that, I wanna ask the guys to bring up a graphic. And I want to talk to you, John, about the progression of cloud over time and maybe go back to the beginning and review the evolution of cloud and then really talk a little bit about where we think it Z headed. So, guys, if you bring up that graphic when a W S announced s three, it was March of 2000 and six. And as you recall, John you know, nobody really. In the vendor and user community. They didn't really pay too much attention to that. And then later that year, in August, it announced E C two people really started. They started to think about a new model of computing, but they were largely, you know, chicken tires. And it was kind of bleeding edge developers that really leaned in. Um what? What were you thinking at the time? When when you saw, uh, s three e c to this retail company coming into the tech world? >>I mean, I thought it was totally crap. I'm like, this is terrible. But then at that time, I was thinking working on I was in between kind of start ups and I didn't have a lot of seed funding. And then I realized the C two was freaking awesome. But I'm like, Holy shit, this is really great because I don't need to pay a lot of cash, the Provisional Data center, or get a server. Or, you know, at that time, state of the art startup move was to buy a super micro box or some sort of power server. Um, it was well past the whole proprietary thing. But you have to assemble probably anyone with 5 to 8 grand box and go in, and we'll put a couple ghetto rack, which is basically, uh, you know, you put it into some coasting location. It's like with everybody else in the tech ghetto of hosting, still paying monthly fees and then maintaining it and provisioning that's just to get started. And then Amazon was just really easy. And then from there you just It was just awesome. I just knew Amazon would be great. They had a lot of things that they had to fix. You know, custom domains and user interface Council got better and better, but it was awesome. >>Well, what we really saw the cloud take hold from my perspective anyway, was the financial crisis in, you know, 709 It put cloud on the radar of a number of CFOs and, of course, shadow I T departments. They wanted to get stuff done and and take I t in in in, ah, pecs, bite sized chunks. So it really was. There's cloud awakening and we came out of that financial crisis, and this we're now in this 10 year plus boom um, you know, notwithstanding obviously the economic crisis with cove it. But much of it was powered by the cloud in the decade. I would say it was really about I t transformation. And it kind of ironic, if you will, because the pandemic it hits at the beginning of this decade, >>and it >>creates this mandate to go digital. So you've you've said a lot. John has pulled forward. It's accelerated this industry transformation. Everybody talks about that, but and we've highlighted it here in this graphic. It probably would have taken several more years to mature. But overnight you had this forced march to digital. And if you weren't a digital business, you were kind of out of business. And and so it's sort of here to stay. How do you see >>You >>know what this evolution and what we can expect in the coming decades? E think it's safe to say the last 10 years defined by you know, I t transformation. That's not gonna be the same in the coming years. How do you see it? >>It's interesting. I think the big tech companies are on, but I think this past election, the United States shows um, the power that technology has. And if you look at some of the main trends in the enterprise specifically around what clouds accelerating, I call the second wave of innovations coming where, um, it's different. It's not what people expect. Its edge edge computing, for instance, has talked about a lot. But industrial i o t. Is really where we've had a lot of problems lately in terms of hacks and malware and just just overall vulnerabilities, whether it's supply chain vulnerabilities, toe actual disinformation, you know, you know, vulnerabilities inside these networks s I think this network effects, it's gonna be a huge thing. I think the impact that tech will have on society and global society geopolitical things gonna be also another one. Um, I think the modern application development of how applications were written with data, you know, we always been saying this day from the beginning of the Cube data is his integral part of the development process. And I think more than ever, when you think about cloud and edge and this distributed computing paradigm, that cloud is now going next level with is the software and how it's written will be different. You gotta handle things like, where's the compute component? Is it gonna be at the edge with all the server chips, innovations that Amazon apple intel of doing, you're gonna have compute right at the edge, industrial and kind of human edge. How does that work? What's Leighton see to that? It's it really is an edge game. So to me, software has to be written holistically in a system's impact on the way. Now that's not necessarily nude in the computer science and in the tech field, it's just gonna be deployed differently. So that's a complete rewrite, in my opinion of the software applications. Which is why you're seeing Amazon Google VM Ware really pushing Cooper Netease and these service messes in the micro Services because super critical of this technology become smarter, automated, autonomous. And that's completely different paradigm in the old full stack developer, you know, kind of model. You know, the full stack developer, his ancient. There's no such thing as a full stack developer anymore, in my opinion, because it's a half a stack because the cloud takes up the other half. But no one wants to be called the half stack developer because it doesn't sound as good as Full Stack, but really Cloud has eliminated the technology complexity of what a full stack developer used to dio. Now you can manage it and do things with it, so you know, there's some work to done, but the heavy lifting but taking care of it's the top of the stack that I think is gonna be a really critical component. >>Yeah, and that that sort of automation and machine intelligence layer is really at the top of the stack. This this thing becomes ubiquitous, and we now start to build businesses and new processes on top of it. I wanna I wanna take a look at the Big Three and guys, Can we bring up the other The next graphic, which is an estimate of what the revenue looks like for the for the Big three. And John, this is I asked and past spend for the Big Three Cloud players. And it's It's an estimate that we're gonna update after earning seasons, and I wanna point a couple things out here. First is if you look at the combined revenue production of the Big Three last year, it's almost 80 billion in infrastructure spend. I mean, think about that. That Z was that incremental spend? No. It really has caused a lot of consolidation in the on Prem data center business for guys like Dell. And, you know, um, see, now, part of the LHP split up IBM Oracle. I mean, it's etcetera. They've all felt this sea change, and they had to respond to it. I think the second thing is you can see on this data. Um, it's true that azure and G C P they seem to be growing faster than a W s. We don't know the exact numbers >>because >>A W S is the only company that really provides a clean view of i s and pass. Whereas Microsoft and Google, they kind of hide the ball in their numbers. I mean, I don't blame them because they're behind, but they do leave breadcrumbs and clues about growth rates and so forth. And so we have other means of estimating, but it's it's undeniable that azure is catching up. I mean, it's still quite distance the third thing, and before I want to get your input here, John is this is nuanced. But despite the fact that Azure and Google the growing faster than a W s. You can see those growth rates. A W s I'll call this out is the only company by our estimates that grew its business sequentially last quarter. Now, in and of itself, that's not significant. But what is significant is because AWS is so large there $45 billion last year, even if the slower growth rates it's able to grow mawr and absolute terms than its competitors, who are basically flat to down sequentially by our estimates. Eso So that's something that I think is important to point out. Everybody focuses on the growth rates, but it's you gotta look at also the absolute dollars and, well, nonetheless, Microsoft in particular, they're they're closing the gap steadily, and and we should talk more about the competitive dynamics. But I'd love to get your take on on all this, John. >>Well, I mean, the clouds are gonna win right now. Big time with the one the political climate is gonna be favoring Big check. But more importantly, with just talking about covert impact and celebrating the digital transformation is gonna create a massive rising tide. It's already happening. It's happening it's happening. And again, this shift in programming, uh, models are gonna really kinda accelerating, create new great growth. So there's no doubt in my mind of all three you're gonna win big, uh, in the future, they're just different, You know, the way they're going to market position themselves, they have to be. Google has to be a little bit different than Amazon because they're smaller and they also have different capabilities, then trying to catch up. So if you're Google or Microsoft, you have to have a competitive strategy to decide. How do I wanna ride the tide If you will put the rising tide? Well, if I'm Amazon, I mean, if I'm Microsoft and Google, I'm not going to try to go frontal and try to copy Amazon because Amazon is just pounding lead of features and scale and they're different. They were, I would say, take advantage of the first mover of pure public cloud. They really awesome. It passed and I, as they've integrated in Gardner, now reports and integrated I as and passed components. So Gardner finally got their act together and said, Hey, this is really one thing. SAS is completely different animal now Microsoft Super Smart because they I think they played the right card. They have a huge installed base converted to keep office 3 65 and move sequel server and all their core jewels into the cloud as fast as possible, clarified while filling in the gaps on the product side to be cloud. So you know, as you're doing trends job, they're just it's just pedal as fast as you can. But Microsoft is really in. The strategy is just go faster trying. Keep pedaling fast, get the features, feature velocity and try to make it high quality. Google is a little bit different. They have a little power base in terms of their network of strong, and they have a lot of other big data capabilities, so they have to use those to their advantage. So there is. There is there is competitive strategy game application happening with these companies. It's not like apples, the apples, In my opinion, it never has been, and I think that's funny that people talk about it that way. >>Well, you're bringing up some great points. I want guys bring up the next graphic because a lot of things that John just said are really relevant here. And what we're showing is that's a survey. Data from E. T. R R Data partners, like 1400 plus CEOs and I T buyers and on the vertical axis is this thing called Net score, which is a measure of spending momentum. And the horizontal axis is is what's called market share. It's a measure of the pervasiveness or, you know, number of mentions in the data set. There's a couple of key points I wanna I wanna pick up on relative to what John just said. So you see A W S and Microsoft? They stand alone. I mean, they're the hyper scale er's. They're far ahead of the pack and frankly, they have fall down, toe, lose their lead. They spend a lot on Capex. They got the flywheel effects going. They got both spending velocity and large market shares, and so, but they're taking a different approach. John, you're right there living off of their SAS, the state, their software state, Andi, they're they're building that in to their cloud. So they got their sort of a captive base of Microsoft customers. So they've got that advantage. They also as we'll hear from from Microsoft today. They they're building mawr abstraction layers. Andy Jassy has said We don't wanna be in that abstraction layer business. We wanna have access to those, you know, fine grain primitives and eso at an AP level. So so we can move fast with the market. But but But so those air sort of different philosophies, John? >>Yeah. I mean, you know, people who know me know that I love Amazon. I think their product is superior at many levels on in its way that that has advantages again. They have a great sass and ecosystem. They don't really have their own SAS play, although they're trying to add some stuff on. I've been kind of critical of Microsoft in the past, but one thing I'm not critical of Microsoft, and people can get this wrong in the marketplace. Actually, in the journalism world and also in just some other analysts, Microsoft has always had large scale eso to say that Microsoft never had scale on that Amazon owned the monopoly on our franchise on scales wrong. Microsoft had scale from day one. Their business was always large scale global. They've always had infrastructure with MSN and their search and the distributive how they distribute browsers and multiple countries. Remember they had the lock on the operating system and the browser for until the government stepped in in 1997. And since 1997 Microsoft never ever not invested in infrastructure and scale. So that whole premise that they don't compete well there is wrong. And I think that chart demonstrates that there, in there in the hyper scale leadership category, hands down the question that I have. Is that there not as good and making that scale integrate in because they have that legacy cards. This is the classic innovator's dilemma. Clay Christensen, right? So I think they're doing a good job. I think their strategy sound. They're moving as fast as they can. But then you know they're not gonna come out and say We don't have the best cloud. Um, that's not a marketing strategy. Have to kind of hide in this and get better and then double down on where they're winning, which is. Clients are converting from their legacy at the speed of Microsoft, and they have a huge client base, So that's why they're stopping so high That's why they're so good. >>Well, I'm gonna I'm gonna give you a little preview. I talked to gear up your f Who's gonna come on today and you'll see I I asked him because the criticism of Microsoft is they're, you know, they're just good enough. And so I asked him, Are you better than good enough? You know, those are fighting words if you're inside of Microsoft, but so you'll you'll have to wait to see his answer. Now, if you guys, if you could bring that that graphic back up I wanted to get into the hybrid zone. You know where the field is. Always got >>some questions coming in on chat, Dave. So we'll get to those >>great Awesome. So just just real quick Here you see this hybrid zone, this the field is bunched up, and the other companies who have a large on Prem presence and have been forced to initiate some kind of coherent cloud strategy included. There is Michael Michael, multi Cloud, and Google's there, too, because they're far behind and they got to take a different approach than a W s. But as you can see, so there's some real progress here. VM ware cloud on AWS stands out, as does red hat open shift. You got VM Ware Cloud, which is a VCF Cloud Foundation, even Dell's cloud. And you'd expect HP with Green Lake to be picking up momentum in the future quarters. And you've got IBM and Oracle, which there you go with the innovator's dilemma. But there, at least in the cloud game, and we can talk about that. But so, John, you know, to your point, you've gotta have different strategies. You're you're not going to take out the big too. So you gotta play, connect your print your on Prem to your cloud, your hybrid multi cloud and try to create new opportunities and new value there. >>Yeah, I mean, I think we'll get to the question, but just that point. I think this Zeri Chen's come on the Cube many times. We're trying to get him to come on lunch today with Features startup, but he's always said on the Q B is a V C at Greylock great firm. Jerry's Cloud genius. He's been there, but he made a point many, many years ago. It's not a winner. Take all the winner. Take most, and the Big Three maybe put four or five in there. We'll take most of the markets here. But I think one of the things that people are missing and aren't talking about Dave is that there's going to be a second tier cloud, large scale model. I don't want to say tear to cloud. It's coming to sound like a sub sub cloud, but a new category of cloud on cloud, right? So meaning if you get a snowflake, did I think this is a tale? Sign to what's coming. VM Ware Cloud is a native has had huge success, mainly because Amazon is essentially enabling them to be successful. So I think is going to be a wave of a more of a channel model of indirect cloud build out where companies like the Cube, potentially for media or others, will build clouds on top of the cloud. So if Google, Microsoft and Amazon, whoever is the first one to really enable that okay, we'll do extremely well because that means you can compete with their scale and create differentiation on top. So what snowflake did is all on Amazon now. They kind of should go to azure because it's, you know, politically correct that have multiple clouds and distribution and business model shifts. But to get that kind of performance they just wrote on Amazon. So there's nothing wrong with that. Because you're getting paid is variable. It's cap ex op X nice categorization. So I think that's the way that we're watching. I think it's super valuable, I think will create some surprises in terms of who might come out of the woodwork on be a leader in a category. Well, >>your timing is perfect, John and we do have some questions in the chat. But before we get to that, I want to bring in Sargi Joe Hall, who's a contributor to to our community. Sargi. Can you hear us? All right, so we got, uh, while >>bringing in Sarpy. Let's go down from the questions. So the first question, Um, we'll still we'll get the student second. The first question. But Ronald ask, Can a vendor in 2021 exist without a hybrid cloud story? Well, story and capabilities. Yes, they could live with. They have to have a story. >>Well, And if they don't own a public cloud? No. No, they absolutely cannot. Uh hey, Sergey. How you doing, man? Good to see you. So, folks, let me let me bring in Sergeant Kohala. He's a He's a cloud architect. He's a practitioner, He's worked in as a technologist. And there's a frequent guest on on the Cube. Good to see you, my friend. Thanks for taking the time with us. >>And good to see you guys to >>us. So we were kind of riffing on the competitive landscape we got. We got so much to talk about this, like, it's a number of questions coming in. Um, but Sargi we wanna talk about you know, what's happening here in Cloud Land? Let's get right into it. I mean, what do you guys see? I mean, we got yesterday. New regime, new inaug inauguration. Do you do you expect public policy? You'll start with you Sargi to have What kind of effect do you think public policy will have on, you know, cloud generally specifically, the big tech companies, the tech lash. Is it gonna be more of the same? Or do you see a big difference coming? >>I think that there will be some changing narrative. I believe on that. is mainly, um, from the regulators side. A lot has happened in one month, right? So people, I think are losing faith in high tech in a certain way. I mean, it doesn't, uh, e think it matters with camp. You belong to left or right kind of thing. Right? But parlor getting booted out from Italy s. I think that was huge. Um, like, how do you know that if a cloud provider will not boot you out? Um, like, what is that line where you draw the line? What are the rules? I think that discussion has to take place. Another thing which has happened in the last 23 months is is the solar winds hack, right? So not us not sort acknowledging that I was Russia and then wish you watching it now, new administration might have a different sort of Boston on that. I think that's huge. I think public public private partnership in security arena will emerge this year. We have to address that. Yeah, I think it's not changing. Uh, >>economics economy >>will change gradually. You know, we're coming out off pandemic. The money is still cheap on debt will not be cheap. for long. I think m and a activity really will pick up. So those are my sort of high level, Uh, >>thank you. I wanna come back to them. And because there's a question that chat about him in a But, John, how do you see it? Do you think Amazon and Google on a slippery slope booting parlor off? I mean, how do they adjudicate between? Well, what's happening in parlor? Uh, anything could happen on clubhouse. Who knows? I mean, can you use a I to find that stuff? >>Well, that's I mean, the Amazons, right? Hiding right there bunkered in right now from that bad, bad situation. Because again, like people we said Amazon, these all three cloud players win in the current environment. Okay, Who wins with the U. S. With the way we are China, Russia, cloud players. Okay, let's face it, that's the reality. So if I wanted to reset the world stage, you know what better way than the, you know, change over the United States economy, put people out of work, make people scared, and then reset the entire global landscape and control all with cash? That's, you know, conspiracy theory. >>So you see the riches, you see the riches, get the rich, get richer. >>Yeah, well, that's well, that's that. That's kind of what's happening, right? So if you start getting into this idea that you can't actually have an app on site because the reason now I'm not gonna I don't know the particular parlor, but apparently there was a reason. But this is dangerous, right? So what? What that's gonna do is and whether it's right or wrong or not, whether political opinion is it means that they were essentially taken offline by people that weren't voted for that. Weren't that when people didn't vote for So that's not a democracy, right? So that's that's a different kind of regime. What it's also going to do is you also have this groundswell of decentralized thinking, right. So you have a whole wave of crypto and decentralized, um, cyber punks out there who want to decentralize it. So all of this stuff in January has created a huge counterculture, and I had predicted this so many times in the Cube. David counterculture is coming and and you already have this kind of counterculture between centralized and decentralized thinking and so I think the Amazon's move is dangerous at a fundamental level. Because if you can't get it, if you can't get buy domain names and you're completely blackballed by by organized players, that's a Mafia, in my opinion. So, uh, and that and it's also fuels the decentralized move because people say, Hey, if that could be done to them, it could be done to me. Just the fact that it could be done will promote a swing in the other direction. I >>mean, independent of of, you know, again, somebody said your political views. I mean Parlor would say, Hey, we're trying to clean this stuff up now. Maybe they didn't do it fast enough, but you think about how new parlor is. You think about the early days of Twitter and Facebook, so they were sort of at a disadvantage. Trying to >>have it was it was partly was what it was. It was a right wing stand up job of standing up something quick. Their security was terrible. If you look at me and Cory Quinn on be great to have him, and he did a great analysis on this, because if you look the lawsuit was just terrible. Security was just a half, asshole. >>Well, and the experience was horrible. I mean, it's not It was not a great app, but But, like you said, it was a quick stew. Hand up, you know, for an agenda. But nonetheless, you know, to start, get to your point earlier. It's like, you know, Are they gonna, you know, shut me down? If I say something that's, you know, out of line, or how do I control that? >>Yeah, I remember, like, 2019, we involved closing sort of remarks. I was there. I was saying that these companies are gonna be too big to fail. And also, they're too big for other nations to do business with. In a way, I think MNCs are running the show worldwide. They're running the government's. They are way. Have seen the proof of that in us this year. Late last year and this year, um, Twitter last night blocked Chinese Ambassador E in us. Um, from there, you know, platform last night and I was like, What? What's going on? So, like, we used to we used to say, like the Chinese company, tech companies are in bed with the Chinese government. Right. Remember that? And now and now, Actually, I think Chinese people can say the same thing about us companies. Uh, it's not a good thing. >>Well, let's >>get some question. >>Let's get some questions from the chat. Yeah. Thank you. One is on M and a subject you mentioned them in a Who do you see is possible emanate targets. I mean, I could throw a couple out there. Um, you know, some of the cdn players, maybe aka my You know, I like I like Hashi Corp. I think they're doing some really interesting things. What do you see? >>Nothing. Hashi Corp. And anybody who's doing things in the periphery is a candidate for many by the big guys, you know, by the hyper scholars and number two tier two or five hyper scholars. Right. Uh, that's why sales forces of the world and stuff like that. Um, some some companies, which I thought there will be a target, Sort of. I mean, they target they're getting too big, because off their evaluations, I think how she Corpuz one, um, >>and >>their bunch in the networking space. Uh, well, Tara, if I say the right that was acquired by at five this week, this week or last week, Actually, last week for $500 million. Um, I know they're founder. So, like I found that, Yeah, there's a lot going on on the on the network side on the anything to do with data. Uh, that those air too hard areas in the cloud arena >>data, data protection, John, any any anything you could adhere. >>And I think I mean, I think ej ej is gonna be where the gaps are. And I think m and a activity is gonna be where again, the bigger too big to fail would agree with you on that one. But we're gonna look at white Spaces and say a white space for Amazon is like a monster space for a start up. Right? So you're gonna have these huge white spaces opportunities, and I think it's gonna be an M and a opportunity big time start ups to get bought in. Given the speed on, I think you're gonna see it around databases and around some of these new service meshes and micro services. I mean, >>they there's a There's a question here, somebody's that dons asking why is Google who has the most pervasive tech infrastructure on the planet. Not at the same level of other to hyper scale is I'll give you my two cents is because it took him a long time to get their heads out of their ads. I wrote a piece of around that a while ago on they just they figured out how to learn the enterprise. I mean, John, you've made this point a number of times, but they just and I got a late start. >>Yeah, they're adding a lot of people. If you look at their who their hiring on the Google Cloud, they're adding a lot of enterprise chops in there. They realized this years ago, and we've talked to many of the top leaders, although Curry and hasn't yet sit down with us. Um, don't know what he's hiding or waiting for, but they're clearly not geared up to chicken Pete. You can see it with some some of the things that they're doing, but I mean competed the level of Amazon, but they have strength and they're playing their strength, but they definitely recognize that they didn't have the enterprise motions and people in the DNA and that David takes time people in the enterprise. It's not for the faint of heart. It's unique details that are different. You can't just, you know, swing the Google playbook and saying We're gonna home The enterprises are text grade. They knew that years ago. So I think you're going to see a good year for Google. I think you'll see a lot of change. Um, they got great people in there. On the product marketing side is Dev Solution Architects, and then the SRE model that they have perfected has been strong. And I think security is an area that they could really had a lot of value it. So, um always been a big fan of their huge network and all the intelligence they have that they could bring to bear on security. >>Yeah, I think Google's problem main problem that to actually there many, but one is that they don't They don't have the boots on the ground as compared to um, Microsoft, especially an Amazon actually had a similar problem, but they had a wide breath off their product portfolio. I always talk about feature proximity in cloud context, like if you're doing one thing. You wanna do another thing? And how do you go get that feature? Do you go to another cloud writer or it's right there where you are. So I think Amazon has the feature proximity and they also have, uh, aske Compared to Google, there's skills gravity. Larger people are trained on AWS. I think Google is trying there. So second problem Google is having is that that they're they're more focused on, I believe, um, on the data science part on their sort of skipping the cool components sort of off the cloud, if you will. The where the workloads needs, you know, basic stuff, right? That's like your compute storage and network. And that has to be well, talk through e think e think they will do good. >>Well, so later today, Paul Dillon sits down with Mids Avery of Google used to be in Oracle. He's with Google now, and he's gonna push him on on the numbers. You know, you're a distant third. Does that matter? And of course, you know, you're just a preview of it's gonna say, Well, no, we don't really pay attention to that stuff. But, John, you said something earlier that. I think Jerry Chen made this comment that, you know, Is it a winner? Take all? No, but it's a winner. Take a lot. You know the number two is going to get a big chunk of the pie. It appears that the markets big enough for three. But do you? Does Google have to really dramatically close the gap on be a much, much closer, you know, to the to the leaders in orderto to compete in this race? Or can they just kind of continue to bump along, siphon off the ad revenue? Put it out there? I mean, I >>definitely can compete. I think that's like Google's in it. Then it they're not. They're not caving, right? >>So But But I wrote I wrote recently that I thought they should even even put mawr oven emphasis on the cloud. I mean, maybe maybe they're already, you know, doubling down triple down. I just I think that is a multi trillion dollar, you know, future for the industry. And, you know, I think Google, believe it or not, could even do more. Now. Maybe there's just so much you could dio. >>There's a lot of challenges with these company, especially Google. They're in Silicon Valley. We have a big Social Justice warrior mentality. Um, there's a big debate going on the in the back channels of the tech scene here, and that is that if you want to be successful in cloud, you have to have a good edge strategy, and that involves surveillance, use of data and pushing the privacy limits. Right? So you know, Google has people within the country that will protest contract because AI is being used for war. Yet we have the most unstable geopolitical seen that I've ever witnessed in my lifetime going on right now. So, um, don't >>you think that's what happened with parlor? I mean, Rob Hope said, Hey, bar is pretty high to kick somebody off your platform. The parlor went over the line, but I would also think that a lot of the employees, whether it's Google AWS as well, said, Hey, why are we supporting you know this and so to your point about social justice, I mean, that's not something. That >>parlor was not just social justice. They were trying to throw the government. That's Rob e. I think they were in there to get selfies and being protesters. But apparently there was evidence from what I heard in some of these clubhouse, uh, private chats. Waas. There was overwhelming evidence on parlor. >>Yeah, but my point is that the employee backlash was also a factor. That's that's all I'm saying. >>Well, we have Google is your Google and you have employees to say we will boycott and walk out if you bid on that jet I contract for instance, right, But Microsoft one from maybe >>so. I mean, that's well, >>I think I think Tom Poole's making a really good point here, which is a Google is an alternative. Thio aws. The last Google cloud next that we were asked at they had is all virtual issue. But I saw a lot of I T practitioners in the audience looking around for an alternative to a W s just seeing, though, we could talk about Mano Cloud or Multi Cloud, and Andy Jassy has his his narrative around, and he's true when somebody goes multiple clouds, they put you know most of their eggs in one basket. Nonetheless, I think you know, Google's got a lot of people interested in, particularly in the analytic side, um, in in an alternative, hedging their bets eso and particularly use cases, so they should be able to do so. I guess my the bottom line here is the markets big enough to have Really? You don't have to be the Jack Welch. I gotta be number one and number two in the market. Is that the conclusion here? >>I think so. But the data gravity and the skills gravity are playing against them. Another problem, which I didn't want a couple of earlier was Google Eyes is that they have to boot out AWS wherever they go. Right? That is a huge challenge. Um, most off the most off the Fortune 2000 companies are already using AWS in one way or another. Right? So they are the multi cloud kind of player. Another one, you know, and just pure purely somebody going 200% Google Cloud. Uh, those cases are kind of pure, if you will. >>I think it's gonna be absolutely multi cloud. I think it's gonna be a time where you looked at the marketplace and you're gonna think in terms of disaster recovery, model of cloud or just fault tolerant capabilities or, you know, look at the parlor, the next parlor. Or what if Amazon wakes up one day and said, Hey, I don't like the cubes commentary on their virtual events, so shut them down. We should have a fail over to Google Cloud should Microsoft and Option. And one of people in Microsoft ecosystem wants to buy services from us. We have toe kind of co locate there. So these are all open questions that are gonna be the that will become certain pretty quickly, which is, you know, can a company diversify their computing An i t. In a way that works. And I think the momentum around Cooper Netease you're seeing as a great connective tissue between, you know, having applications work between clouds. Right? Well, directionally correct, in my opinion, because if I'm a company, why wouldn't I wanna have choice? So >>let's talk about this. The data is mixed on that. I'll share some data, meaty our data with you. About half the companies will say Yeah, we're spreading the wealth around to multiple clouds. Okay, That's one thing will come back to that. About the other half were saying, Yeah, we're predominantly mono cloud we didn't have. The resource is. But what I think going forward is that that what multi cloud really becomes. And I think John, you mentioned Snowflake before. I think that's an indicator of what what true multi cloud is going to look like. And what Snowflake is doing is they're building abstraction, layer across clouds. Ed Walsh would say, I'm standing on the shoulders of Giants, so they're basically following points of presence around the globe and building their own cloud. They call it a data cloud with a global mesh. We'll hear more about that later today, but you sign on to that cloud. So they're saying, Hey, we're gonna build value because so many of Amazon's not gonna build that abstraction layer across multi clouds, at least not in the near term. So that's a really opportunity for >>people. I mean, I don't want to sound like I'm dating myself, but you know the date ourselves, David. I remember back in the eighties, when you had open systems movement, right? The part of the whole Revolution OS I open systems interconnect model. At that time, the networking stacks for S N A. For IBM, decadent for deck we all know that was a proprietary stack and then incomes TCP I p Now os I never really happened on all seven layers, but the bottom layers standardized. Okay, that was huge. So I think if you look at a W s or some of the comments in the chat AWS is could be the s n a. Depends how you're looking at it, right? And you could say they're open. But in a way, they want more Amazon. So Amazon's not out there saying we love multi cloud. Why would they promote multi cloud? They are a one of the clouds they want. >>That's interesting, John. And then subject is a cloud architect. I mean, it's it is not trivial to make You're a data cloud. If you're snowflake, work on AWS work on Google. Work on Azure. Be seamless. I mean, certainly the marketing says that, but technically, that's not trivial. You know, there are latent see issues. Uh, you know, So that's gonna take a while to develop. What? Do your thoughts there? >>I think that multi cloud for for same workload and multi cloud for different workloads are two different things. Like we usually put multiple er in one bucket, right? So I think you're right. If you're trying to do multi cloud for the same workload, that's it. That's Ah, complex, uh, problem to solve architecturally, right. You have to have a common ap ice and common, you know, control playing, if you will. And we don't have that yet, and then we will not have that for a for at least one other couple of years. So, uh, if you if you want to do that, then you have to go to the lower, lowest common denominator in technical sort of stock, if you will. And then you're not leveraging the best of the breed technology off their from different vendors, right? I believe that's a hard problem to solve. And in another thing, is that that that I always say this? I'm always on the death side, you know, developer side, I think, uh, two deaths. Public cloud is a proxy for innovative culture. Right. So there's a catch phrase I have come up with today during shower eso. I think that is true. And then people who are companies who use the best of the breed technologies, they can attract the these developers and developers are the Mazen's off This digital sort of empires, amazingly, is happening there. Right there they are the Mazen's right. They head on the bricks. I think if you don't appeal to developers, if you don't but extensive for, like, force behind educating the market, you can't you can't >>put off. It's the same game Stepping story was seeing some check comments. Uh, guard. She's, uh, linked in friend of mine. She said, Microsoft, If you go back and look at the Microsoft early days to the developer Point they were, they made their phones with developers. They were a software company s Oh, hey, >>forget developers, developers, developers. >>You were if you were in the developer ecosystem, you were treated his gold. You were part of the family. If you were outside that world, you were competitors, and that was ruthless times back then. But they again they had. That was where it was today. Look at where the software defined businesses and starve it, saying it's all about being developer lead in this new way to program, right? So the cloud next Gen Cloud is going to look a lot like next Gen Developer and all the different tools and techniques they're gonna change. So I think, yes, this kind of developer ecosystem will be harnessed, and that's the power source. It's just gonna look different. So, >>Justin, Justin in the chat has a comment. I just want to answer the question about elastic thoughts on elastic. Um, I tell you, elastic has momentum uh, doing doing very well in the market place. Thea Elk Stack is a great alternative that people are looking thio relative to Splunk. Who people complain about the pricing. Of course it's plunks got the easy button, but it is getting increasingly expensive. The problem with elk stack is you know, it's open source. It gets complicated. You got a shard, the databases you gotta manage. It s Oh, that's what Ed Walsh's company chaos searches is all about. But elastic has some riel mo mentum in the marketplace right now. >>Yeah, you know, other things that coming on the chat understands what I was saying about the open systems is kubernetes. I always felt was that is a bad metaphor. But they're with me. That was the TCP I peep In this modern era, C t c p I p created that that the disruptor to the S N A s and the network protocols that were proprietary. So what KUBERNETES is doing is creating a connective tissue between clouds and letting the open source community fill in the gaps in the middle, where kind of way kind of probably a bad analogy. But that's where the disruption is. And if you look at what's happened since Kubernetes was put out there, what it's become kind of de facto and standard in the sense that everyone's rallying around it. Same exact thing happened with TCP was people were trashing it. It is terrible, you know it's not. Of course they were trashed because it was open. So I find that to be very interesting. >>Yeah, that's a good >>analogy. E. Thinks the R C a cable. I used the R C. A cable analogy like the VCRs. When they started, they, every VC had had their own cable, and they will work on Lee with that sort of plan of TV and the R C. A cable came and then now you can put any TV with any VCR, and the VCR industry took off. There's so many examples out there around, uh, standards And how standards can, you know, flair that fire, if you will, on dio for an industry to go sort of wild. And another trend guys I'm seeing is that from the consumer side. And let's talk a little bit on the consuming side. Um, is that the The difference wouldn't be to B and B to C is blood blurred because even the physical products are connected to the end user Like my door lock, the August door lock I didn't just put got get the door lock and forget about that. Like I I value the expedience it gives me or problems that gives me on daily basis. So I'm close to that vendor, right? So So the middle men, uh, middle people are getting removed from from the producer off the technology or the product to the consumer. Even even the sort of big grocery players they have their APs now, uh, how do you buy stuff and how it's delivered and all that stuff that experience matters in that context, I think, um, having, uh, to be able to sell to thes enterprises from the Cloud writer Breuder's. They have to have these case studies or all these sample sort off reference architectures and stuff like that. I think whoever has that mawr pushed that way, they are doing better like that. Amazon is Amazon. Because of that reason, I think they have lot off sort off use cases about on top of them. And they themselves do retail like crazy. Right? So and other things at all s. So I think that's a big trend. >>Great. Great points are being one of things. There's a question in there about from, uh, Yaden. Who says, uh, I like the developer Lead cloud movement, But what is the criticality of the executive audience when educating the marketplace? Um, this comes up a lot in some of my conversations around automation. So automation has been a big wave to automate this automate everything. And then everything is a service has become kind of kind of the the executive suite. Kind of like conversation we need to make everything is a service in our business. You seeing people move to that cloud model. Okay, so the executives think everything is a services business strategy, which it is on some level, but then, when they say Take that hill, do it. Developers. It's not that easy. And this is where a lot of our cube conversations over the past few months have been, especially during the cova with cute virtual. This has come up a lot, Dave this idea, and start being around. It's easy to say everything is a service but will implement it. It's really hard, and I think that's where the developer lead Connection is where the executive have to understand that in order to just say it and do it are two different things. That digital transformation. That's a big part of it. So I think that you're gonna see a lot of education this year around what it means to actually do that and how to implement it. >>I'd like to comment on the as a service and subject. Get your take on it. I mean, I think you're seeing, for instance, with HP Green Lake, Dell's come out with Apex. You know IBM as its utility model. These companies were basically taking a page out of what I what I would call a flawed SAS model. If you look at the SAS players, whether it's salesforce or workday, service now s a P oracle. These models are They're really They're not cloud pricing models. They're they're basically you got to commit to a term one year, two year, three year. We'll give you a discount if you commit to the longer term. But you're locked in on you. You probably pay upfront. Or maybe you pay quarterly. That's not a cloud pricing model. And that's why I mean, they're flawed. You're seeing companies like Data Dog, for example. Snowflake is another one, and they're beginning to price on a consumption basis. And that is, I think, one of the big changes that we're going to see this decade is that true cloud? You know, pay by the drink pricing model and to your point, john toe, actually implement. That is, you're gonna need a whole new layer across your company on it is quite complicated it not even to mention how you compensate salespeople, etcetera. The a p. I s of your product. I mean, it is that, but that is a big sea change that I see coming. Subject your >>thoughts. Yeah, I think like you couldn't see it. And like some things for this big tech exacts are hidden in the plain >>sight, right? >>They don't see it. They they have blind spots, like Look at that. Look at Amazon. They went from Melissa and 200 millisecond building on several s, Right, Right. And then here you are, like you're saying, pay us for the whole year. If you don't use the cloud, you lose it or will pay by month. Poor user and all that stuff like that that those a role models, I think these players will be forced to use that term pricing like poor minute or for a second, poor user. That way, I think the Salesforce moral is hybrid. They're struggling in a way. I think they're trying to bring the platform by doing, you know, acquisition after acquisition to be a platform for other people to build on top off. But they're having a little trouble there because because off there, such pricing and little closeness, if you will. And, uh, again, I'm coming, going, going back to developers like, if you are not appealing to developers who are writing the latest and greatest code and it is open enough, by the way open and open source are two different things that we all know that. So if your platform is not open enough, you will have you know, some problems in closing the deals. >>E. I want to just bring up a question on chat around from Justin didn't fitness. Who says can you touch on the vertical clouds? Has your offering this and great question Great CP announcing Retail cloud inventions IBM Athena Okay, I'm a huge on this point because I think this I'm not saying this for years. Cloud computing is about horizontal scalability and vertical specialization, and that's absolutely clear, and you see all the clouds doing it. The vertical rollouts is where the high fidelity data is, and with machine learning and AI efforts coming out, that's accelerated benefits. There you have tow, have the vertical focus. I think it's super smart that clouds will have some sort of vertical engine, if you will in the clouds and build on top of a control playing. Whether that's data or whatever, this is clearly the winning formula. If you look at all the successful kind of ai implementations, the ones that have access to the most data will get the most value. So, um if you're gonna have a data driven cloud you have tow, have this vertical feeling, Um, in terms of verticals, the data on DSO I think that's super important again, just generally is a strategy. I think Google doing a retail about a super smart because their whole pitches were not Amazon on. Some people say we're not Google, depending on where you look at. So every of these big players, they have dominance in the areas, and that's scarce. Companies and some companies will never go to Amazon for that reason. Or some people never go to Google for other reasons. I know people who are in the ad tech. This is a black and we're not. We're not going to Google. So again, it is what it is. But this idea of vertical specialization relevant in super >>forts, I want to bring to point out to sessions that are going on today on great points. I'm glad you asked that question. One is Alan. As he kicks off at 1 p.m. Eastern time in the transformation track, he's gonna talk a lot about the coming power of ecosystems and and we've talked about this a lot. That that that to compete with Amazon, Google Azure, you've gotta have some kind of specialization and vertical specialization is a good one. But of course, you see in the big Big three also get into that. But so he's talking at one o'clock and then it at 3 36 PM You know this times are strange, but e can explain that later Hillary Hunter is talking about she's the CTO IBM I B M's ah Financial Cloud, which is another really good example of specifying vertical requirements and serving. You know, an audience subject. I think you have some thoughts on this. >>Actually, I lost my thought. E >>think the other piece of that is data. I mean, to the extent that you could build an ecosystem coming back to Alan Nancy's premise around data that >>billions of dollars in >>their day there's billions of dollars and that's the title of the session. But we did the trillion dollar baby post with Jazzy and said Cloud is gonna be a trillion dollars right? >>And and the point of Alan Answer session is he's thinking from an individual firm. Forget the millions that you're gonna save shifting to the cloud on cost. There's billions in ecosystems and operating models. That's >>absolutely the business value. Now going back to my half stack full stack developer, is the business value. I've been talking about this on the clubhouses a lot this past month is for the entrepreneurs out there the the activity in the business value. That's the new the new intellectual property is the business logic, right? So if you could see innovations in how work streams and workflow is gonna be a configured differently, you have now large scale cloud specialization with data, you can move quickly and take territory. That's much different scenario than a decade ago, >>at the point I was trying to make earlier was which I know I remember, is that that having the horizontal sort of features is very important, as compared to having vertical focus. You know, you're you're more healthcare focused like you. You have that sort of needs, if you will, and you and our auto or financials and stuff like that. What Google is trying to do, I think that's it. That's a good thing. Do cook up the reference architectures, but it's a bad thing in a way that you drive drive away some developers who are most of the developers at 80 plus percent, developers are horizontal like you. Look at the look into the psyche of a developer like you move from company to company. And only few developers will say I will stay only in health care, right? So I will only stay in order or something of that, right? So they you have to have these horizontal capabilities which can be applied anywhere on then. On top >>of that, I think that's true. Sorry, but I'll take a little bit different. Take on that. I would say yes, that's true. But remember, remember the old school application developer Someone was just called in Application developer. All they did was develop applications, right? They pick the framework, they did it right? So I think we're going to see more of that is just now mawr of Under the Covers developers. You've got mawr suffer defined networking and software, defined storage servers and cloud kubernetes. And it's kind of like under the hood. But you got your, you know, classic application developer. I think you're gonna see him. A lot of that come back in a way that's like I don't care about anything else. And that's the promise of cloud infrastructure is code. So I think this both. >>Hey, I worked. >>I worked at people solved and and I still today I say into into this context, I say E r P s are the ultimate low code. No code sort of thing is right. And what the problem is, they couldn't evolve. They couldn't make it. Lightweight, right? Eso um I used to write applications with drag and drop, you know, stuff. Right? But But I was miserable as a developer. I didn't Didn't want to be in the applications division off PeopleSoft. I wanted to be on the tools division. There were two divisions in most of these big companies ASAP. Oracle. Uh, like companies that divisions right? One is the cooking up the tools. One is cooking up the applications. The basketball was always gonna go to the tooling. Hey, >>guys, I'm sorry. We're almost out of time. I always wanted to t some of the sections of the day. First of all, we got Holder Mueller coming on at lunch for a power half hour. Um, you'll you'll notice when you go back to the home page. You'll notice that calendar, that linear clock that we talked about that start times are kind of weird like, for instance, an appendix coming on at 1 24. And that's because these air prerecorded assets and rather than having a bunch of dead air, we're just streaming one to the other. So so she's gonna talk about people, process and technology. We got Kathy Southwick, whose uh, Silicon Valley CEO Dan Sheehan was the CEO of Dunkin Brands and and he was actually the c 00 So it's C A CEO connecting the dots to the business. Daniel Dienes is the CEO of you I path. He's coming on a 2:47 p.m. East Coast time one of the hottest companies, probably the fastest growing software company in history. We got a guy from Bain coming on Dave Humphrey, who invested $750 million in Nutanix. He'll explain why and then, ironically, Dheeraj Pandey stew, Minuteman. Our friend interviewed him. That's 3 35. 1 of the sessions are most excited about today is John McD agony at 403 p. M. East Coast time, she's gonna talk about how to fix broken data architectures, really forward thinking stuff. And then that's the So that's the transformation track on the future of cloud track. We start off with the Big Three Milan Thompson Bukovec. At one oclock, she runs a W s storage business. Then I mentioned gig therapy wrath at 1. 30. He runs Azure is analytics. Business is awesome. Paul Dillon then talks about, um, IDs Avery at 1 59. And then our friends to, um, talks about interview Simon Crosby. I think I think that's it. I think we're going on to our next session. All right, so keep it right there. Thanks for watching the Cuban cloud. Uh huh.

Published Date : Jan 22 2021

SUMMARY :

cloud brought to you by silicon angle, everybody I was negative in quarantine at a friend's location. I mean, you go out for a walk, but you're really not in any contact with anybody. And I think we're in a new generation. The future of Cloud computing in the coming decade is, John said, we're gonna talk about some of the public policy But the goal here is to just showcase it's Whatever you wanna call it, it's a cube room, and the people in there chatting and having a watch party. that will take you into the chat, we'll take you through those in a moment and share with you some of the guests And then from there you just It was just awesome. And it kind of ironic, if you will, because the pandemic it hits at the beginning of this decade, And if you weren't a digital business, you were kind of out of business. last 10 years defined by you know, I t transformation. And if you look at some of the main trends in the I think the second thing is you can see on this data. Everybody focuses on the growth rates, but it's you gotta look at also the absolute dollars and, So you know, as you're doing trends job, they're just it's just pedal as fast as you can. It's a measure of the pervasiveness or, you know, number of mentions in the data set. And I think that chart demonstrates that there, in there in the hyper scale leadership category, is they're, you know, they're just good enough. So we'll get to those So just just real quick Here you see this hybrid zone, this the field is bunched But I think one of the things that people are missing and aren't talking about Dave is that there's going to be a second Can you hear us? So the first question, Um, we'll still we'll get the student second. Thanks for taking the time with us. I mean, what do you guys see? I think that discussion has to take place. I think m and a activity really will pick up. I mean, can you use a I to find that stuff? So if I wanted to reset the world stage, you know what better way than the, and that and it's also fuels the decentralized move because people say, Hey, if that could be done to them, mean, independent of of, you know, again, somebody said your political views. and he did a great analysis on this, because if you look the lawsuit was just terrible. But nonetheless, you know, to start, get to your point earlier. you know, platform last night and I was like, What? you know, some of the cdn players, maybe aka my You know, I like I like Hashi Corp. for many by the big guys, you know, by the hyper scholars and if I say the right that was acquired by at five this week, And I think m and a activity is gonna be where again, the bigger too big to fail would agree with Not at the same level of other to hyper scale is I'll give you network and all the intelligence they have that they could bring to bear on security. The where the workloads needs, you know, basic stuff, right? the gap on be a much, much closer, you know, to the to the leaders in orderto I think that's like Google's in it. I just I think that is a multi trillion dollar, you know, future for the industry. So you know, Google has people within the country that will protest contract because I mean, Rob Hope said, Hey, bar is pretty high to kick somebody off your platform. I think they were in there to get selfies and being protesters. Yeah, but my point is that the employee backlash was also a factor. I think you know, Google's got a lot of people interested in, particularly in the analytic side, is that they have to boot out AWS wherever they go. I think it's gonna be a time where you looked at the marketplace and you're And I think John, you mentioned Snowflake before. I remember back in the eighties, when you had open systems movement, I mean, certainly the marketing says that, I think if you don't appeal to developers, if you don't but extensive She said, Microsoft, If you go back and look at the Microsoft So the cloud next Gen Cloud is going to look a lot like next Gen Developer You got a shard, the databases you gotta manage. And if you look at what's happened since Kubernetes was put out there, what it's become the producer off the technology or the product to the consumer. Okay, so the executives think everything is a services business strategy, You know, pay by the drink pricing model and to your point, john toe, actually implement. Yeah, I think like you couldn't see it. I think they're trying to bring the platform by doing, you know, acquisition after acquisition to be a platform the ones that have access to the most data will get the most value. I think you have some thoughts on this. Actually, I lost my thought. I mean, to the extent that you could build an ecosystem coming back to Alan Nancy's premise But we did the trillion dollar baby post with And and the point of Alan Answer session is he's thinking from an individual firm. So if you could see innovations Look at the look into the psyche of a developer like you move from company to company. And that's the promise of cloud infrastructure is code. I say E r P s are the ultimate low code. Daniel Dienes is the CEO of you I path.

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
SergeyPERSON

0.99+

JohnPERSON

0.99+

CaliforniaLOCATION

0.99+

Andy JassyPERSON

0.99+

MicrosoftORGANIZATION

0.99+

AmazonORGANIZATION

0.99+

JustinPERSON

0.99+

Daniel DienesPERSON

0.99+

GoogleORGANIZATION

0.99+

John FerrierPERSON

0.99+

Dave VolontePERSON

0.99+

IBMORGANIZATION

0.99+

RonaldPERSON

0.99+

Jerry ChenPERSON

0.99+

DavidPERSON

0.99+

Ed WalshPERSON

0.99+

Michael DellPERSON

0.99+

DavePERSON

0.99+

Kathy SouthwickPERSON

0.99+

Paul DillonPERSON

0.99+

OracleORGANIZATION

0.99+

Rob HopePERSON

0.99+

DellORGANIZATION

0.99+

1997DATE

0.99+

TaraPERSON

0.99+

HPORGANIZATION

0.99+

Dan SheehanPERSON

0.99+

Simon CrosbyPERSON

0.99+

AlanPERSON

0.99+

Kevin Heald & Steven Adelman, Novetta | AWS re:Invent 2020 Public Sector Day


 

>>from around the globe. It's the Cube with digital coverage of AWS reinvent 2020. Special coverage sponsored by AWS Worldwide Public sector. >>Welcome to the Cube. Virtual. This is our coverage of aws reinvent 2020. Specialized programming for worldwide public sector. I'm Lisa Martin. Got a couple of guests here from No. Veta, please welcome Steven Adelman, principal computer scientists, and Kevin Healed, vice president of Information Exploitation. Gentlemen, welcome to the Cube. >>Thank you. >>Thank you for having us. >>Alright, guys. So? So, Kevin, we're going to start with you. Give our audience an introduction to Nevada. What do you What do you guys do? Who are you? How do you play in the public sector Government space, >>right? Yeah. Thank you, Lisa. Eso, Nevada Nevada is a technology services company focused on government solutions. So primarily national security solutions. Eso think customers such as Doody, the intelligence community, FBI, law enforcement and things like that about 13 1300 employees worldwide, primarily in our in our field. Clear resource is, um, that really focused on cloud for solutions for our customers. So solving the tough mission challenges our customers have, so that could be in technology solutions such as Data Analytics A I M L i O T. Secure Workloads, full spectrum cyber Cobb video processing. Really anything that's a high end technology solution or something we do for the government. We have been a privilege. We have. It's a privilege to be a partner with AWS for for some time now. In fact, I think the first reinvent we may have been to Stephen was six years ago. Five years ago, two >>1012 or 13 >>s So we've we've we've been around for a while, really kind of enjoying it and certainly sad that we're missing an in person reinvent this year, but looking forward to doing it virtually so, we're actually advanced your partner with AWS with a machine learning and government competency. Andi really kind of thio pump the m l side of that. That was one of our first companies with compasses with AWS and led by a center of excellence that I have in my division that really focuses on machine learning and how we applied for the Michigan. And so, um, really, we focus on protecting the nation and protecting our activities in the country >>and on behalf of the country. We thank you, Steven. Give me a little bit of information from a double click perspective as computer scientists. What are some of the key challenges that no, that helps its customers to solve. And how do you do that with a W s? >>Yeah, Thank you. So really as, ah, company, that is is data first. So our initial love and and still are kind of strongest competency is in applying solutions to large data sets. And as you can imagine, uh, the bigger the data set them or compute you need the the more resource is you need and the flexibility from those resource is is truly important, which led us very early, as especially in the government space and public sector space to be in early. A doctor of cloud resource is because of the fact that, you know, rather than standing up a 200 node cluster at at many millions of dollars, we could we could spend up a W s resource is process a big data set, and then and then get the answers an analyst or on operator needed and then spin down. Those resource is when When when that kind of compute wasn't needed. And that is really, uh, kind of informed how we do our work Azaz Nevadans that that cloud infrastructure and now pushing into the edge compute space. Still kind of keeping those cloud best practices in play to get access to more data. That the two, the two biggest, I think revolutions that we've seen with regards to using data to inform business processes and missions has been that that cloud resource that allows us to do so much with so less and so much more flexibly and then the idea of cheap compute making it to the edge and the ability to apply sensors thio places where you know it would been a would have been, you know, operational cost prohibitive to do that and then, ironically, those air to things that aren't necessarily data analytics or machine learning focused but man, did they make it easier to collect that data and process that data and then get the answers back out. So that really has has has kind of, uh, shaped a lot of the way Nevada has grown as a company and how we serve our customers. >>So coming back over to you lets. One of the things that we've been talking about almost all year is just the acceleration in digital transformation and how much faster organizations, private sector, public sector need to innovate to stay relevant, to stay competitive. How do you are you working with government customers to help them innovate so quickly? >>You know, we're very fortunate that a set of customers that focuses actually innovation it's focuses. I rad on. Do you know we can't do the cool things we do without those customer relationships that really encourage us to, um, to try new things out and, quite frankly, fail quickly when we need Thio. And so, by establishing that relationship, what we've been able to do is to blend agile development. Actual acquisition with government requirements process, right? If if you know the typical stereotype of government work is it's this very stovepiped hard core acquisition process, right? And so we have been fortunate to instead try quick win kind of projects. And so one of the biggest things we do is partner with our government customers and try to find it difficult, um, challenged to solve over 6 to 12 month time, right? So instead of making this long four or five year acquisition cycles like show me, right. How can we solve this problem? And then we partner with the mission partner show success in six months show that we can do it with a smaller part of money, and then as we're able to actually make that happen, it expands in something bigger, broader, and then we kind of bringing together a coalition of the willing, if you will in the government and saying, Okay, are there other stakeholders to care about this problem, bring them on, bring their problems and bringing together? You know, we can't do that with some of the passionate people we have, like Stevens. A perfect example. When we talk about a car in the projects we're doing here, Stevens passion for this technology partner with our customers having these challenges and try to enhance what they're doing is a powerful combination. And then the last thing that we're able to is a company is we actually spend a decent amount of our own dollar dollars on I rad S O. R and D that we fund ourselves. And so, while finding those problems and spending government dollars in doing that. We also have spent our own dollars on machine learning Coyote sensor next Gen five g and things like that and how those compartment together partner together to go back to the government. >>Yeah, yeah, So I would even say, You know, there's this. There's a conventional wisdom that government is slow in plotting and a little bit behind commercial best practices. But there are There are pockets in growing pockets across the government, Um, where they're really they're really jumping ahead of, ah, lot of processes and getting in front of this curve and actually are quite innovative. And and because they kind of started off from behind, they could jump over a lot of kind of middle ground legacy technologies. And they're really innovating. As Kevin said with With With the card platform, we're partnering with um P E O Digital in the Air Force in South C, D. M and Air Force security forces as that kind of trifecta of stakeholders who all want toe kind of saw a mission problem and wanted to move forward quickly and leave the legacy behind and and really take a quantum leap forward. And if anything, they're they're driving us Thio, Innovate Mawr Thio Introduce more of those kind of modern back practices on bond. Nevada as a company loves to find those spots in the government sector where we've got those great partners who love what we're doing. And it's this great feedback loop where, um, where we can solve hard technical problems but then see them deployed to some really important and really cool and impactful missions. And we tend to recruit that that set that kind of nexus of people who want to both solve a really difficult problem but want to see it executed in a really impactful way as well. I mean, that really grates a great bond for us, and and I'm really excited to say that that a lot of the government it is really taking a move forward in this this this realm. And I think it's it's just good for our country and good for the missions that they support. >>Absolutely. And it's also surprising because, as you both said, you know, there is this expectation that government processes or lengthy, you know, laborious, um, not able to be turned around quickly. But as Kevin, you just said, you know helping customers. Government agencies get impact within 6 to 12 months versus 4 to 5 years. So you talked about Picard? Interesting name. Kevin. Tell me a little bit more about that technology and what it is that you guys deliver. That's unique. >>Well, honestly, it's probably best to start with Stephen. I can give you the high level. This is Stevens vision. I have to give him credit for that. And I will say way have lots of fun. Acronym. So it isn't Actually, it isn't backward. Um, right. Stephen doesn't actually stand for something. >>It stands for Platform for Integrated, a C three and Responsive for defense on >>Guy. You know >>that the Star Trek theme is the leg up from the last set of programs I had, >>which were >>my little ponies. So >>Oh, wow. That's a definite stuff in a different direction. Like >>it? Part of the great thing about working in the government is you get to name things, cool things, so but t get to your question eso So Picard really sprung out of this idea that I had a few years ago that the world but for our spaces, the Department of defense and the federal government was going to see a massive influx of the desire to consume sensors from from areas of responsibility, from installations and, frankly, from battlefields. Um, but they were gonna have to do it. In a way, um, uh, that presented some real challenges that you couldn't just kind of throw compute editor, throw traditional I t processes at it. You know, we have legacy sensors that are 40 years old sitting on installations. You know, old program, a logical controllers or facilities control systems that were written in cobalt in the seventies, right in the world are not even I, p based, most of them bond. Then on the other end of the spectrum, you have seven figure sensors that air, you know, throwing out megabits of second of data that are mounted to the back of jeeps. Right, That that air bouncing through the desert today. But we'll be bouncing through the jungle tomorrow, and you have to find all of those kind of in combined all of those together, um, and kind of create a cohesive data center for data set set for you know, the mission for, um, you know what we call a user to find common operating picture for a person. Thio kind of combine all of those different resource is and make it work for them. And so we found a great partner with security forces. Um, they realized that they wanted Thio to make a quantum leap forward. They had this idea that the next defender So there are there, like a military police outfit that the next defender was going to be a data driven defender and they were gonna have to win the information war war as much as they had to kind of dominate physical space. And they immediately got what we were trying to achieve, and it was just just great synergy. And then we've piled on some other elements, and we're really moving that platform forward to to kind of take every little bit of information we can get from the areas of responsibility and get it into a you know, your modern Data Lake, where they can extract information from all that data. >>Kevin, as the VP of information exploitation, that's a very interesting title. How are you helping government organizations to win the war on information? Leverage that information to make a big impact fast. >>Yeah. I mean, I think a lot of it is is that we try to break down the barriers between systems on data so that we can actually enable that data to fuse together to find and get insights into it. You know, as ML and I have become trendy topics, you know, they're very data hungry operations. And I think what Steven has done with the card and his team is really we want to be able to make those sensors seamless from a plug and play perspective that Aiken plug in a new sensor. It's a standards based, uh, interface that sends that data back so that we can and take it back to the user to find Operation Picture and make some decisions based off of that data. Um, you know, what's more is that data could even refused with more than the data that Stevens collecting off the sensors. It could be commercial data, other government data and I think is Davis. As Stephen said earlier, you have to get it back. And as long as you've gotten back in Labour's share with some of our mission partners, then you can do amazing things with it. And, you know, Stephen, I know you have some pretty cool ideas and what we're gonna do on the edge, right? How do we do some of this work of the edge where a sensor doesn't allow us to pull out that data back? >>Yeah, and and Thio follow on to what you were kind of referring to with regards to thio handling heterogeneous data from different sensors. Um, one of the main things that our government customers and we have seen is that there are a lot of historically there are a lot of vertical solutions where you know, the sensor, the platform, and then the data Laker kind of all part of this proprietary stack. And we quickly realized that that just doesn't work. And so one of the major thrust of that card platform was to make sure that we had ah, platform by which we could consume data through adapters from essentially any sensor speaking. Any protocol with any style data object, Whether that was an industry standard or a proprietary protocol, we could quickly interested and bring it into our Data lake. And then to pile on to what Kevin was talking about with compute. Right? So you have, uh, like, almost like a mass locks hierarchy of needs when it comes to cyber data or thio this coyote data or kind of unified data, Um, you know, you wanna turn it into basic information, alerts alarms, then you want to do reporting on it, or analytics or some some higher level workflow function. And then finally, you probably want to perform some analytics or some trending or sort of anomaly detection on it. And and that gets more computational e intensive each step of the way. And so you gotta You gotta build a platform that allows you to to both take some of that high level compute down to the edge, but also then bring some of that data up into the clouds where you could do that processing, and you have to have kind of fun jubilate e between that and so that hard platform allows you to kind of bring GP use and high processing units down to the edge and and make that work. Um, but then also and then as maybe even a first passive to rule out some of the most you know, some of the boring gated in the video Analytics platform. We call it Blue Sky and Blue Ocean. Right, so you're recording lots of video. That's not that interesting. How do you filter that out? So you're only sending the information The interesting video up eso You're not wasting bandwidth on stuff that just doesn't matter on DSO. It's It's a lot of kind of tuning these knobs and having a flexible enough platform that you could bring Compute down when you need it. And you could bring data up to compute on Big Cloud while you need it, and just kind of finding a way to tune that that that really does. I mean it. You know, that's a lot of words about how you do that. But what that comes to is flexible hardware and being able to apply those dev ops and C I. C D platform characteristics to that edge hardware and having a unified platform that allows you to kind of orchestrate your applications in your services all the way up and down your stack, from micro controllers to a big cloud instant creation. >>You make it sound so easy. Steven Kevin. Let's wrap it up with you in terms of like making impacts and going forward. We know the edge has exploded, even mawr, during this very interesting year. And that's going to be something that's probably going to stay, um, stay as a permanent impact or effect. What are some of the things that we can expect in 2021 in terms of how you're able to help government organizations capitalize on that, find things faster, make impact faster? >>Yeah. I mean, I think the cool thing we're seeing is that there's a lot more commoditization of sensors. There's a lot more censored information. And so let's use lighters. Example. We you know, things were getting cheaper, and so we can all of a sudden doom or or more things at the edge, and we ever would have expected. Right when you know Steven's team is integrating camera data and fence data from 40 years ago, you know, it's just saying on off it's not do anything fancy. But now we you know, you know, Stephen, I camera whether Metro you gave him before was, but the cost of light are has dropped so significantly that we can now then deploy that we can actually roll it out there and not being locked in their proprietary, uh, system. Um, so I see that being very powerful, you know? Also, I can see where you start having sensors interact with each other, right? So one sensor finds one thing and then a good example that we've started thio experiment with. And I think Steve, you could touch on it is using triggering a sensor, triggers a drone to actually investigate what's going on and then therefore, hybrid video back and then automatically can investigate instead of having to deploy a defender to actually see what happened at that. At that end, Points dio e don't know. There's it's amore detail you can provide there. >>Yeah, No. So exactly that Kevin. So So the power of the sensor is is something something old that that gives you very uninteresting Data like a one or a zero on on or off can detect something very specific and then do something kind of high speed, like task a drone to give you a visual assessment and then run object detection or facial recognition on, you know, do object detection to find a person and do facial recognition on that person to find out if that's a patrol walking through a field or a bad guy trying Thio invade your space. Um and so it's really the confluence and the gestalt of all of these sensors in the analytics working together, Um, that really creates the power from very simple, simple delivery. I think, um, there's this, You know, this idea that you know, ah 100 bytes of data is not that important. But when you put a million sensors giving you 100 bytes of data, you can truly find something extremely powerful. And then when you kind of and you make those interactions sing, um, it's amazing. Tow us the productivity that we can produce and the kind of fidelity of response that we can give thio actors in the space whether that's a defender trying to defend the base or a maintenance person trying thio proactively replace the fan or clean the fan on an H vac system. So So you know, you know, there isn't a fire at a base or for, uh, interesting enough. One of the things that we we've been able to achieve is we've taken maintenance data for helicopter engines and And we've been able to proactively say, Hey, you need to You need to take care of this part of the helicopter engine. Um and it saves money. It saves downtimes. It keeps the birds in the air. And it's a relatively simple algorithm that we were able to achieve. And we were able to do that with the maintenance people, bring them along in this endeavor and create analytics that they understood and could trust on DSO. I think that's really the power of this base. >>Tremendous power. I wish we had more time to to dig into it. Guys, thank you so much for sharing. Not just your insights, what nobody is doing but your passion for what you're doing and how you're making such an impact. Your passion is definitely palpable. Steven. Kevin, Thank you for joining me today. >>Thank you >>for my guests. I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching the Cube? Virtual. Yeah,

Published Date : Dec 9 2020

SUMMARY :

It's the Cube with digital coverage Got a couple of guests here from No. What do you What do you guys do? It's a privilege to be a partner with AWS for for some time now. And so, um, really, we focus on protecting the nation and protecting our activities And how do you do that with a W s? the bigger the data set them or compute you need the the more resource is you need So coming back over to you lets. And so one of the biggest things we do is partner with our government customers say that that a lot of the government it is really taking a move forward in this this this realm. And it's also surprising because, as you both said, you know, there is this expectation that I can give you the high level. So That's a definite stuff in a different direction. Part of the great thing about working in the government is you get to name things, cool things, How are you helping government organizations to win the war on information? on data so that we can actually enable that data to fuse together to find Yeah, and and Thio follow on to what you were kind of referring to with regards What are some of the things that we can expect in 2021 in terms of how But now we you know, And then when you kind of and you make those interactions sing, Kevin, Thank you for joining me today. Yeah,

SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :

ENTITIES

EntityCategoryConfidence
StevePERSON

0.99+

KevinPERSON

0.99+

Steven AdelmanPERSON

0.99+

StephenPERSON

0.99+

Lisa MartinPERSON

0.99+

StevenPERSON

0.99+

Kevin HealedPERSON

0.99+

FBIORGANIZATION

0.99+

4QUANTITY

0.99+

AWSORGANIZATION

0.99+

StevensPERSON

0.99+

100 bytesQUANTITY

0.99+

2021DATE

0.99+

40 yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

DoodyORGANIZATION

0.99+

twoQUANTITY

0.99+

Steven KevinPERSON

0.99+

LisaPERSON

0.99+

Kevin HealdPERSON

0.99+

Star TrekTITLE

0.99+

six monthsQUANTITY

0.99+

five yearQUANTITY

0.99+

oneQUANTITY

0.99+

MichiganLOCATION

0.99+

fourQUANTITY

0.99+

NevadaLOCATION

0.99+

tomorrowDATE

0.99+

six years agoDATE

0.99+

5 yearsQUANTITY

0.99+

6QUANTITY

0.99+

12 monthsQUANTITY

0.99+

OneQUANTITY

0.98+

Department of defenseORGANIZATION

0.98+

bothQUANTITY

0.98+

todayDATE

0.98+

Five years agoDATE

0.98+

EsoORGANIZATION

0.98+

firstQUANTITY

0.98+

ThioPERSON

0.98+

PicardORGANIZATION

0.98+

about 13 1300 employeesQUANTITY

0.97+

first companiesQUANTITY

0.97+

this yearDATE

0.97+

P E O DigitalORGANIZATION

0.96+

12 monthQUANTITY

0.96+

seven figureQUANTITY

0.94+

CoyoteORGANIZATION

0.94+

40 years agoDATE

0.94+

one sensorQUANTITY

0.94+

each stepQUANTITY

0.94+

over 6QUANTITY

0.93+

DavisPERSON

0.92+

AWS WorldwideORGANIZATION

0.91+

Azaz NevadansORGANIZATION

0.9+

CubeCOMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.9+

few years agoDATE

0.89+

200QUANTITY

0.89+

one thingQUANTITY

0.87+

lakeORGANIZATION

0.86+

Gen five gCOMMERCIAL_ITEM

0.86+

seventiesDATE

0.84+