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Manuvir Das, Dell EMC | Dell Technologies World 2018


 

>> Announcer: Live, from Las Vegas, it's the Cube. Covering Dell Technologies World 2018. Brought to you by Dell EMC and it's ecosystem partners. >> And welcome back live here on the Cube as we continue our coverage of Dell Technologies World 2018. We're live at the Sands and it is now my pleasure for the first time today to say, "My partner's Stu Miniman". Stu, how you been? >> Awesome John, great to be talking on the Cube with you and our great guest. >> It's been too long, that's for sure! Good to see you again. We're joined by Manuvir Das who's the senior vice-president GM of unstructured data at Dell EMC. Thanks for being with us. We appreciate it. >> It's my pleasure to be here. >> Let's talk about your world, this exponential growth, this unpredictable growth, all this unstructured data, and now it's worth something, right? >> Yes, it is. >> So people are turning out to realize what an asset, what a resource that it's become. >> In fact, it's funny you say "Asset" because, the whole theme and tagline for my team is data capital, because I think people are coming to realize that just like you have capital assets in your factories and your people, data is part of the capital of a company now, right? And you really need to turn it into something, so I think it's an exciting time. For my team, we basically work in file and object storage, Isilon has been a market leader for some time. We have an object storage product called ECS, and we are the market leader, and we have been for some time, but it's a very interesting time because data is growing so greatly now that the leader today can be a nobody five years from now, right? So, what I tell my team every day is how are we going to disrupt ourselves before we get disrupted so that we can still be the leader five years from now when that exponential growth has continued, right? So that's what we do every day. We think about what are the ways, on behalf of the customer, the world of unstructured storage is being disrupted and how are we going to be there on the other side with the customer? >> Manuvir, I'm wondering if you could bring us inside the customers 'cuz we've been talking about unstructured data at least five years. Data data everywhere, but how is it changing customers' lives? How is it changing their businesses? What's the update on the customer's viewpoint on unstructured data? >> So, we have an interesting perspective because our business really grew up with working with specific verticals. Like media, entertainment, life sciences, automotive, and we see that there. For example, in the automotive industry, we have a lot of customers that are doing Adax and so they're basically driving vehicles around, capturing videos of a child running across the street, of a bicycle on the road, and they're bringing all that data back to our storage system so that they can train their software that runs the car, so that when the situation happens in real life, the software does the right thing, right? In media entertainment now, with 4K streaming and more and more digitized movies, how do you produce these movies, right? How does Pixar and everybody produce these movies? In life sciences, it's all about Genomix. It's started in the research domain with Genomix, and now it's going into hospitals where people want to use Genomix to make real-time decisions about what to do for their patients. And these are all ways in which these existing industries are really using unstructured data now as their lifeblood to change their business. So, it's an interesting change, really. >> You mentioned five years from now, we want to make sure that we're the disruptor, and I read a number that by five years out, all data or unstructured data, will be 93% of all data, So that kind of growth when you see that mushroom occurring, does that put a little fear, does that put the challenge? >> It's a great opportunity, right? It's a great opportunity, and it's an opportunity not just for us at Dell EMC, right? It's an opportunity for everybody. The public cloud vendors, start-ups, and our only interest is, let's take the customer to the right place, and if we can participate in that in some way, I believe there are opportunities so big, that we will be happy with whatever share of it we have. As long as the customer gets what they need. And I think every customer's going to have some mix of On-Premises storage, appliances, software defined storage, storage in the public cloud. It'll all sort of come together and I think we have a role to play, right? If I may, there's really four things we see about how the data is changing say from now to five years from now. The first thing is Flash, right? Flash is no longer just for high-end storage. Flash is everywhere in storage. The second thing is the public cloud. More and more data going into the public cloud. The fourth thing is analytics. Who is going to pay to store all of this data unless they can actually put it to use, right? And so, how do you provide the analytics? And then the fourth thing is archiving because the truth of the matter is, when you expand your data at that scale, most of the data is not useful at any point in time. It may be useful tomorrow, but it's not useful today. So how do you use technologies like optic storage to really economically store the bulk of the data? So these are the four trends we see, flash, the public cloud, analytics, and advent of object, and everything we're doing at Dell EMC with unstructured storage, is to embrace these four trends. So that we can come out the other side with the customer on these. >> There was one thing that caught my ear during the keynote this morning, there were many things that stood out, but one of them I could have sworn Michael said something about Isilon. We've googled cloud, and I'm googling, I'm looking around, obviously object storage, I think very much in the public crowd, seeing growth elsewhere, but maybe you can explain what that is and what's going on. >> So this is an Isilon file storage, is now available for customer's of Google in the Google Cloud. So, for years our customers have used Isilon On-Premise because it's really the only solution in the market where you can get a very large file system that performs well. You don't have this technology in the public cloud today. And, we have all these customers who run their workloads on prem using Isilon. And they're looking to use the computer in the public cloud, but if they don't have Isilon there, they would have to re-write their application. So, we worked out a model with Google where we host our Isilon gear, our physical Isilon clusters in the same place where Google has their cloud, and their compute, so now a customer can run their application, on the compute VMs of Google cloud, but they have some millisecond access to an Isilon cluster that is dedicated to them that is right there. So in this way, they can take the journey to the public cloud, but not have to change their application because they still use Isilon. So, this is the model we came up with. We just launched it, so that's what Michael was referring to. We're very excited about it. I think it's really an opportunity for the customer to embrace the cloud, and the thing I'm trying to tell every customer that we have because we've been on premises for a long time, is "Look, I believe in the public cloud." I actually worked on building one of those at Microsoft years ago, and all we want is, we want to help the customers get to the public cloud by giving them the same technology there, that they've had On-Premise. And, so I think everybody wins. >> Yeah, that's exciting. Thank you so much for going through that. Your team, it's up there in Seattle, so much going on. Have there been customers on beta on this? Is this available now? Give some of the speeds and feeds. >> So, in the cloud terminology, people usually start with a what they call a tech preview or an early adoptive program, so that's where we're at right now. We have the first customer already running operational on it, and they will talking about it in some of our breakout sessions as well, so we're in the early the adoptive program right now, so anybody's that's interested can join the early adoptive program. It's fully operational, but we're sort of controlling how many customers adopt it first, and then we expand from there. >> Look at the, if you would, the risk side of this, with all that data, it's a treasure trove in some respects to a company, but it's also a very alluring target. So from a security standpoint, what kind of emphasis are you shifting towards that, knowing that you have that much more waterfront to cover now? >> I think it is the key issue really, and so that's why, even John in this move to the public cloud, that we just talked about, we have not done this as some kind of multi-tenant, shared kind of environment. Every customer has a dedicated environment, their Isilon is in a cage, everybody can't get into that cage, and all the security protocols are in place. So that's a very important aspect of this. And then whether it's in the cloud or On-Premise, they're constantly raising the bar on the security protections. How does the data flow internally between the servers in the cluster? Everything's encrypted, authenticated, protected, so I think that is really the key issue going forward. Well, I know it's a challenge, but as you said, it's also an opportunity. So, good luck meeting the challenge, and I hope five years from now, we're still talking about you. >> Yes, we'll see where we are. >> Hey, how do you like the music, by the way? >> Uh, it's great. >> It's a little loud. >> That's right, a little loud. >> Manuvir, thanks for being with us. >> Sure my pleasure. >> We'll continue from a floor that's starting to get a little more energy to it. Here live at the Sands, we are at Dell Technologies World 2018.

Published Date : May 1 2018

SUMMARY :

Las Vegas, it's the Cube. on the Cube as we continue talking on the Cube with you Good to see you again. resource that it's become. so greatly now that the inside the customers of a bicycle on the road, and and I think we have a role to play, right? during the keynote this morning, "Look, I believe in the public cloud." Give some of the speeds and feeds. So, in the cloud terminology, knowing that you have that much into that cage, and all the Here live at the Sands, we are at

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