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Chris Copeland, Accenture Federal Services & Mark Kim, MSRB | AWS re:Invent 2021


 

(upbeat music) >> Hey, welcome back everyone to theCUBE's coverage of AWS re:Invent 2021. I'm John Furrier, your host of theCUBE. We've got two sets on the show floor, it's a virtual event, we've got the hybrid stream going, check out all the content we're here for wall-to-wall coverage. It's all been about data cloud transformation, culture change, and making things happen. I got a great segment here with Accenture, Chris Copeland, CTO of Accenture's Federal Services, and Mark Kim, the CEO of Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board, also known as the MSRB. Welcome to theCUBE. >> Thank you, John, it's a pleasure to be here. >> Thanks for coming, first of all, explain what the Municipal Rulemaking Board does, so people know what it is and we'll jump in. >> Sure, thank you, John, for the opportunity to have this conversation, the MSRB serves as the principal regulator of the $4 trillion Municipal Securities market. So Municipal Securities or muni-Bonds as there're most commonly known, finance the majority of this nation's infrastructure from the public schools that educate our kids to the hospitals that care for our sick. Muni-bonds even finance the airport that we flew into to get to this conference. But in addition to writing the rules that regulate this market, the MSRB also provides the technology infrastructure that supports this market. So, in addition to being a financial regulator, the MSRB is also a technology company and we saw the future of technology and cloud computing and that was our decision to embrace that future and to move the MSRB to the cloud. >> Correct, and obviously, Chris, this is critical infrastructure, you're talking about, legacy, has a lot of legacy as well. A lot of data, money's involved. I mean all the wrappings of transformation stories there. >> Yeah, and it's great. I mean, the MSRB and Mark in particular really had the right mindset of understanding that, we all talk about migrating to the cloud. That's really just the beginning. Like it's really about once you're in the cloud, the aperture that opens up the art of the possible and what you can really do. And the MSRB is like right on all of it, right? It's all about data. It's all about transformation, but I think the key for that transformational success that we've seen, is understanding that the organization needs to change too. And that we need to enable that organization to really be productive and deliver on that mission in a cloud first world. >> Well, Mark, I want to get into this 'cause this has been a big part of my reporting this past year during the pandemic and maybe the year earlier. I saw the public sector in particular really forced it to change. >> Yeah. >> Cultural shift instantly, they had no choice. It was a forcing function and there was the haves and have nots, the ones who have done the work, put their toe in the water, invested in some technology, knew about cloud and then ones that weren't, and they were thrown in the water. They had to figure out how to swim very quickly. So take us through the importance of that because we heard today and even in the keynote with Swami on stage from Amazon saying governance could be an enabler, not an inhibitor. So you're in this world of obviously muni-bonds, I'm sure there's a lot of compliance involved. So, take us through the journey, how you guys changed the culture? What was the outcome? Take us a quick highlight on the whole process. >> Absolutely, so, for the MSRB, the cloud migration was always about way more than just moving our applications from our servers to AWS's servers. This was an opportunity for the organization to put in place a cultural transformation. And that's the power of this opportunity for the MSRB. We were able to make a commitment to our people, which we did right at the outset, that we were going to bring all of our people with us on this journey to the cloud. This was a major investment in re-skilling and retraining our staff. We didn't have staff who had experienced migrating applications to the cloud. We didn't have software engineers who had prior experience working in cloud native environments. We trained them and we made that commitment to do that and to bring all of our people along. And that has enabled the MSRB to create a culture of innovation, of teamwork. It also allowed us to break down some silos within our organization. Not only within the IT organization, but between IT and business, it was a transformational opportunity. >> I mean, effecting change is hard, what was the learnings? When did you realize it's working? (John laughs) >> So having completed the migration itself, one of my fears was we've just literally spent millions of dollars investing in our staff, re-skilling and retraining them. We've just gone through a very technical, highly complex migration. These are people who are in high demand. Not to mention that AWS decided to put HQ2 right outside of Washington DC, announced plans to hire 10,000 people over the next 10 years. So I was worried on the other side of the migration that we would have a talent drain, and the best proof that I have that we've got our cultural transformation underway and going in the right direction is we didn't see that brain drain. We have staff that want to stay at the MSRB, that are excited about being able to continue to learn about new technologies, staff that are excited to be kind of on the cutting edge of financial regulation and being a part of building the future of the MSRB. >> Okay, there's a purpose there, I mean, I think this is, this highlights this whole conference here at re:Invent. I was just talking to someone off camera during lunch and like, it's an Amazon learning Conference as they say that their humble is learning, but it's also a thought leadership conference because they're introducing new stuff that's actually like, it gets the juices flowing and you're like, wait a minute, I can do more things. So, it's got that kind of conference, ted kind of vibe to it, plus it's real. >> I think that's one of the best benefits that we saw as part of this program that, and we talk a lot about how to infuse innovation into the fabric of your DNA and organization, and I don't think that personified itself anywhere that I've seen as well as at the MSRB. Mark was talking about people wanting to stay and work there. I'll even, I think he's understating it. People were excited about the process-- >> Yeah, they want to come to work everyday. >> There was competitions going on, on who was going to get certified. There was challenges about who's going to learn the most cloud and that desire to really continuously improve and bring those new innovations was unparalleled that I've seen. What Mark and the MSRB don't have the luxury of just keeping pace with those that they regulate. They've got to stay ahead. >> Yeah. >> And if you're going to stay ahead, you've got to have that innovative culture and you've got to take change as something that isn't this big mountain to climb, but something that's actually exciting to do every day. And I think it really, really came out in the program here. >> That's one of the things I think it's one of the smartest moves you can make and I think you've made it, by getting the people on the right wave of technology is a retention bonus. >> Absolutely. >> It's not just keeping them happy 'cause if you're working on cool stuff, it's fun. >> Right. >> But if you get them on the right way where they're constantly learning, and then they've to be a part of something. >> Yeah. >> This cloud migration, I think that's a real retention thing. Do you agree, you've seen the same thing? >> Yeah, absolutely. Its such a motivator to know that our staff is front and center leading the charge in transforming the MSRB. Not only culturally but also digitally. >> Yeah. >> And bringing us into the future. >> Okay, so I got to put you on the spot because I'm want to put my evil genius hat on for a second. Okay, I want to make money, I'm a FinTech arbitrager, I want to get in and work the muni-bond data angle, obviously worry about, you've got a lot of oversight, governance, regulation. Can you move fast enough to protect the data to make sure things are stable? Take us through that because there's a lot of money involved talking about like a serious part of our economy and a financial system. >> Yeah. >> It's critical infrastructure. >> Yeah. >> So, you got to also have that balance of innovation and compliance and governance without getting in the way. >> Absolutely. >> Take us through how you handle that. >> Absolutely, as a financial regulator that provides the market with its technology infrastructure, failure is not an option nor is falling behind the times. We have to evolve with our evolving market. And the pace of change is moving faster and faster. If you look at today, what's different about the MSRB being in the cloud than route being on-prem in our data centers, for our stakeholders, we don't have customers as a financial regulatory we have stakeholders, the entities that we regulate and the entities that we protect, our stakeholders will see systems that are more available. In the first 12 months of operations in the cloud, we achieved over 99.98% system availability. Performance has improved in our own internal benchmark tests, our systems are running 30% faster than they were and then finally our systems are more secure. This is a hard one to quantify or to explain or to kind of deliver to customers, but I-- >> There's no ROI conversation when you've been hacked. >> Exactly, I am-- >> Its only a disaster. >> But I am confident that our systems are more secure today in the cloud, than they were on-prem in our data centers. >> Yeah, Chris, this is a huge thing. I'm not going to rant a little bit, I'll do a side rant, but everyone who watches theCUBE knows I'm kind of a digital hawk. I truly believe that the red line needs to be changed because we are being attacked at a cyber level and almost like the, I get to see people being excited to work there because it's almost like the military, you got to protect. There's so much downsized, not so much justification of ROI. This is critical infrastructure, financial systems and databases. And there's no malice, there's no government forces to protect you. >> I mean, Mark said it well, failure isn't an option, right? And I think what we're seeing and why everyone is really rapidly moving to the cloud is you cannot get that level of cybersecurity, you cannot get that real time information access, and then run your models to look for trends of where the threats are maybe coming from, and proactively address those threats. You can't do that in a legacy infrastructure model on-prem, you've got to embrace the power of the cloud and the services that the AWS cloud provides to be able to truly try to stay ahead. I mean, you have to bring that innovation every day in your lunch bag and say, how are we going to use these tools that only the cloud affords us to bring security to the forefront? >> And John, can I add on that point? 'Cause I think it's an important one around security. In the legacy environment, in our data centers, the MSRB was handling security by ourselves, and I think one of the biggest lessons learned for us is pick your partners carefully. >> Yes. >> We chose AWS and we chose Accenture Federal Services and we've now tripled our investments in security, both what Amazon is investing in their infrastructure, we've also have AFS providing managed security services for the MSRB in addition to our own security team. So we've literally tripled our security. >> It's interesting and I think that's one of the reasons why you mentioned the retention thing and why people are happy is, it attracts a certain kind of individual to work there. It's the elite tech athlete, we call them, because they like, want the action, the young kids there, they want the tech, they don't want to be boring. So, what better wave to ride when you know there's a lot to protect, again, back to the cyber, this is huge cultural shift in the new generation coming in versus the old IT. The old IT was okay, we're operational, keep the lights on, add some servers, now it's like a lot more is at stake. >> Yeah. >> Okay, great, I know we don't have a lot of time left, but I do want to get the data question. I have to ask you-- >> Sure. >> You're a data company as well, you got to watch the data, what's the vision and data? How are you looking at the data with your team? >> So data is the future of the MSRB and we will remain a financial regulator and write the rules that regulate this market, that's our core mission and we will always do that. We will also always be a technology firm that provides the technology infrastructure for this market. But in the future what the cloud has enabled us to do is to become a data company. We serve as the central repository of market data for this $4 trillion market. And we now, thanks to almost infinite scalable computing power storage, we now have the ability to leverage cloud tools like artificial intelligence, machine learning, to actually get at an unlock insight from the vast amounts of market data that we have and deliver that to the industry that we regulate and serve. >> And you guys have so much headroom because Chris, with Graviton3-- >> Yep. >> And the Stack, you can actually write the apps built for the performance, for your needs. >> That's right. >> Yes. >> For the data needs, 'cause that's your advantage. >> That's right. >> Yeah, it's just incredible. I just find it like, I haven't seen anything like this since the shift from client server to inter networking back in the 90s where you saw a sea change of capabilities just completely change over, it's been pretty incredible. >> Yeah. >> Okay, final word. Just re:Invent, what do you guys think? >> This is my first business trip since the pandemic started and it's fantastic to be with people, to see people to do this in person instead of virtually, so thank you for this opportunity. >> I know, I felt so amazed. Chris, what about you, what's your take? >> It's wonderful to be here, it's great being back, back out in the world I guess. >> Yep >> Getting to meet with Mark, where we're not looking at a screen at each other, meeting with peers, but also just the collaboration and innovation you're going to get in an environment like this and the energy that it brings, you just can't match that. So it's been a great show so far and I'm looking forward to the rest of it. >> The phrase I hear a lot on theCUBE, also I say it a lot, a kid in the candy store 'cause there's so much coming out, just the capabilities, you're starting to see more ease of use, more infrastructure as code now, data as code, a lot of great stuff, all part of the cloud transformation. So great for coming on and sharing the story, Mark, I appreciate it. >> Thank you John. >> It's good to hear about your awesome program, Chris, thanks for coming on too. >> Yep, thanks for having us. >> Appreciate it, okay, Cube Coverage here in Las Vegas. I'm John Furrier, you're watching theCUBE, the leader in global tech coverage, thanks for watching. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Dec 2 2021

SUMMARY :

and Mark Kim, the CEO a pleasure to be here. Thanks for coming, first of all, for the opportunity to I mean all the wrappings of I mean, the MSRB and Mark in particular and maybe the year earlier. and even in the keynote And that has enabled the and going in the right direction it gets the juices into the fabric of your come to work everyday. and that desire to really that isn't this big mountain to climb, That's one of the things I think 'cause if you're working and then they've to be I think that's a real retention thing. is front and center leading the charge Okay, so I got to put you on the spot and compliance and governance and the entities that we protect, when you've been hacked. But I am confident that our systems and almost like the, I get to see people and the services that the MSRB was handling for the MSRB in addition It's the elite tech athlete, we call them, I have to ask you-- and deliver that to the industry And the Stack, you can For the data needs, since the shift from client server Just re:Invent, what do you guys think? and it's fantastic to be with people, I know, I felt so amazed. back out in the world I guess. and the energy that it brings, and sharing the story, It's good to hear about the leader in global tech

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Jay Carney, AWS | AWS Public Sector Summit 2019


 

>> Narrator: Live from Washington D.C., it's theCUBE. Covering AWS Public Sector Summit. Brought to you by Amazon Web Services. >> Welcome back, everyone, to Washington D.C. and theCUBE's live coverage of AWS Public Sector Summit. I'm your host, Rebecca Knight, alongside John Furrier. We are joined by Jay Carney. He is the senior vice president global corporate affairs Amazon and AWS. Thank you so much for coming on theCUBE. >> Thank you so much for having me. It's great to be here. >> You are just coming from a panel with Senator Mark Warner of Virginia, where the topic was regulation and tech. I want to hear what was talked about and what your thoughts were there. >> Sure, there were a lot of topics, including the HQ2, which as you know, we're locating in northern Virginia. Senator Warner has a very specific interest in that, and we talked about that a lot. One thing that he's involved in, he's the vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, the leading democrat on the committee, and he takes these issue very seriously. He's very focused on, especially social media, but tech in general and national security concerns, as well as issues around deep fake news and fake news and the like. Now, a lot of that isn't our territory as a business, but we think that where we do fall into scrutiny for regulation, we welcome the scrutiny. We're a big company, obviously, and we're very focused on serving our customers. Part of delivering for our customers means ensuring that we work with elected officials and regulators and pass that scrutiny well. We'll see what the future brings in different spaces. Our concern, or our hope in general, if it's around privacy or other areas of tech regulation, that uniformity is obviously preferable to having, say, 50 state laws, whether it's around facial recognition technology or broader privacy initiatives. Senator Warner's supportive of a federal legislation, as a lot of folks are both sides of the aisle. >> Jay one of the things that you guys live every day at Amazon, and following you guys for the past nine, ten years now for theCUBE, is you're willing to be misunderstood as a company to continue the long game. Jeff Bezos talked about the long game all the time. Doesn't look at stock prices, all those kind of quips, but the innovation engine has been very strong, and with digital transformation now at an all time high, new value is being created in new ways that some people don't understand. You guys are on a constant mission to educate. Here in D.C., what's clear to me is this awakening of this value proposition, and in some cases, it's not very good, the value. Weaponizing is a word we've heard. Big tech is kind of under a lot of conversations, but there's a lot of good things happening. You guys create a lot of value as a company-- >> Sure, and I think the industry at large creates a lot of value. I think we need to ensure, we, the American people, American citizenry, and on our behalf, those elected officials who ultimately make the decisions, that as we scrutinize and explore regulating some of these arenas, that we do it in a way that creates public benefit, that prevents, wherever possible, misuse of technology, but that continues to allow the kind of innovation that's made the United States the center of technological innovation over the last 30 or 40 years. That's not an easy job, but I think that folks in tech need to work with and collaborate with regulators and lawmakers to talk about how to do that because you wouldn't want, I mean, a good example, I think is technological innovation is value neutral, usually. It's a new service or a new product that can do something. It itself is just a product, so it doesn't have a conscience. It's self moral. How you use it is really what determines whether it's something that's good or bad. Many technologies can be used for good or for ill. We have a service at AWS, a facial recognition service. We're certainly not the only company that provides that service to customers. Thus far, since Amazon recognition has been around, we've had reports of thousands of positive uses, finding missing children, breaking up human sex trafficking, human trafficking rings, assisting law enforcement in positive ways. We haven't heard yet any cases of abuses by law enforcement, but we certainly understand that that potential exists, and we encourage regulators and lawmakers to look closely at that. We've put forth publicly guidelines that we think would be useful as they build a legislative, a regulatory framework. >> (mumbles) asking last night even was saying you guys are very open. He wasn't hiding behind any kind of stories. How do we talk to regulators? We want to embrace those conversations. He wasn't saying, "We want to be regulated." He didn't say that, but he wasn't hiding from the fact that these conversations we need to have. >> I think we understand that the potential misuse of some technology is real. We've seen it in other countries, for example, in ways that violate civil liberties. We want to make sure that in this democracy, that we have an infrastructure in place, a regulatory infrastructure, that continues to allow innovation to blossom but protects the civil liberties of people in the United States. We're a global company, but we started off, and we are an American company, and we care deeply about those issues as a company. >> I think that that's really the big question, is how would this regulatory process work? You're talking about having these conversations, particularly around unintended consequences of these new technologies and services. How would it work? Particularly, someone like you who was in government, now in the private sector, at what point are these conversations taking place, and how might it work? At the innovation stage? At the creation, you know what I mean? Just now that we're really getting into it. >> In some cases, there's real progress being made. On privacy for example, all of your viewers no GDPR in Europe was the first multinational comprehensive privacy regulation that's been implemented. In the United States, we don't have a federal law yet. California's taken steps, has passed a bill, and other states are looking at it. We think for U.S. competitiveness, one law is better than 50 laws. We think that we're fully compliant with GDPR, and it actually was not as complicated for us to meet the compliance requirements as it might've been for other tech companies because of the nature of our business in the European Union. There are aspects of GDPR that I think are unnecessarily bureaucratic or clunky, so there's ways to take that as a base and improve it so that the privacy concerns are rightfully addressed, but innovation continues at pace. >> How about antitrust? We had a conversation a couple years ago to reinvent around antitrust. You made a comment to me, we're faster, ship faster, lower cheaper price, lower prices, how are people harmed? There's been a lot of young academics who are challenging the old antitrust definition. Does digital recast itself in antitrust? This is a conversation that think tanks are starting to have now around what does that mean for the modern era, or modernizing government, including laws of regulation? Your thoughts on that. >> I'm not a lawyer. I'm careful to speak authoritatively where I don't know all the details. Consumer harm is the standard. For all the reasons that you described, our mission as a company is to reward the customer with more convenience, more selection, and lower prices. Certainly, we fulfill that mission and don't meet that standard when it comes to any way you might look at that competitively. Even more broadly, there's a misconception about Amazon. Because we're a consumer-facing business primarily, and because we are involved in a lot of different things, some more successfully than others, that we're perceived as bigger than we are. The fact is retail, our original business, our core business, is the biggest marketplace there is. In the United States, we're less than 4% of retail, and we're not even the biggest retailer in the United States. Cloud, AWS, we're here at the Public Sector Summit. >> You've got competition-- >> We have intense, high quality competition, and deep-pocketed competition. As you know, and your viewers know this, the cloud revolution is in its early stages. The opportunity there is enormous, and we're just getting started. There'll be plenty of winners in this space, so again, I don't see any way that you might look at it, that there would be competitive issues. Also, there's a perception that Amazon itself is singular, so that you buy from Amazon, therefore you're not buying from somebody else, but in fact, when we opened Marketplace, I think in 2001, we opened the website to other sellers. What used to be 100% Amazon product and inventory for sale on amazon.com, has now, 2019, risen to over 55% not being Amazon. Third-party sellers, small and medium sized businesses, more than a million of them in the United States, sell in our store and get access to all the customers we have through our store. That side of our business is growing much faster than the Amazon retail business, and I think it demonstrates the value proposition for all of the small and medium sized businesses. >> Yeah, we've got time for one more question, for Rebecca and I, one, you might have one. As Steve Jobs once said, technology, liberal arts, you've got the nice street signs kind of intersecting, I think that plays now more than ever societal impact has become a huge part of the conversation around tech, tech impact. You're a policy expert. You've been studying it. You're living in D.C. The policy game seems to be more important now than ever before around tech and the participation of technology companies in policy, not just hiring a policy firm, or a team to do it, actively engage and be, as an ingredient of the company. Is there enough people (laughs) that can actually do that, one, and what are some of the key policy opportunities are out there for either young individuals, like my daughter, or other young people coming out of college? Because it seems to me the game is shaping into a new direction. >> The space is fascinating because these issues really are front and center right now around questions around technology and how to ensure that as it continues to evolve that it does so in a way that allows for innovation but also protects private, civil liberties, and the like. You can't be in a more exciting space if you're going to be in the private sector engaging in policy. Even if you're in government, if you're on that side, it's a very interesting space to be in. All of it, tech has grown up, the internet has grown up, and there's no question that with that more attention is being paid. That's fine and appropriate. >> More responsibility and accountability. >> More responsibility, sure. >> I just have one more final thing in this. Because of your vantage point of someone who is in a famously tech savvy administration, the Obama Administration, and then we also see lawmakers questioning Mark Zuckerberg, seemingly not understanding how Facebook makes money, do lawmakers get it? >> I think a lot of lawmakers do. I was just with one, Mark Warner, from Virginia, U.S. senator, former telecomm executive and investor. He very much gets it. The caricature is, I think, exaggerated, but look, that's our job. It's our job, it's the press', it's everybody... One thing we do here with the team we have in D.C. is be a resource of information, try to explain, here's what's happening. Here's how our model works. Here's how the technology works. I think that can only help as regulators and lawmakers decide how they want to approach these problems. >> A lot of innovation opportunities. Just the CIA deal alone is set off from a gestation period, now growth around cloud acceleration. >> I think it demonstrates in a way we're very customer focused, and that is especially true when it comes to our national security agencies and defense agencies, but also that security's our first concern at AWS, as well as at broader Amazon. We're glad to have those customers. >> Thanks for coming by. >> Yup, thanks a lot. >> Yes, excellent. Thanks so much, Jay. >> Thank you. >> I'm Rebecca Knight for John Furrier. Please stay tuned for more of theCUBE AWS Public Sector. We will have Theresa Carlson coming up next. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Jun 11 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by Amazon Web Services. He is the senior vice president It's great to be here. and what your thoughts were there. legislation, as a lot of folks are both sides of the aisle. Jay one of the things that you guys live every day but that continues to allow from the fact that these conversations a regulatory infrastructure, that continues to allow At the creation, you know what I mean? In the United States, we don't have a federal law yet. This is a conversation that think tanks are starting to have For all the reasons that you described, for all of the small and medium sized businesses. and the participation of technology companies in policy, that as it continues to evolve that it does so and accountability. and then we also see lawmakers questioning It's our job, it's the press', it's everybody... Just the CIA deal alone is set off from a gestation period, but also that security's our first concern at AWS, Thanks so much, Jay. We will have Theresa Carlson coming up next.

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Stu Miniman, 2018 in Review | CUBE Conversation


 

>> From the SiliconANGLE media office, in Boston, Massachusetts, it's the CUBE. Now, here's your host, Stu Miniman. Hi, CUBE nation, I'm Sam Kahane. Thanks for watching the CUBE. Due to popular demand from the community, I will be interviewing the legendary Stu Miniman, here today. He is S-T-U on Twitter. Stu and I are going to be digging in to the 2019 predictions, and also recapping 2018 for you here. So, Stu, let's get into it a little bit. 2018, can you set the stage? How many events did you go to? How many interviews did you conduct? >> Boy, Sam, it's tough to look back. We did so much with the CUBE this year. I, personally, did over 20 shows, and somewhere between 400 and 450 interviews, out of, we as a team did over a 100 shows, over 2000 interviews. So, really great to be in the community, and immerse ourselves, drink from the fire hose, and some of the data. (laughs) >> So, over 400 interviews this year, that's amazing. What about some of the key learnings from 2018? Yeah, Sam,my premise when I'm going out is, how are we maturing? My background, as you know, Sam, I'm an infrastructure guy. My early training was in networking. I worked on virtualization, and I've been riding this wave of cloud for about the last 10 years. So, about two years ago, it was, software companies, how are they living in these public clouds? Amazon, of course, the dominant player in the marketplace, but we know it will be a multi-cloud world. And the update, for 2018, is we've gone from, how do I live in those public clouds, to how are we maturing? We call it hybrid clouds, or multi-cloud, but living between these worlds. We saw the rise in Kubernetes, as a piece of it, but customers have lots of environments, and how they get their arms around that, is a serious challenge out there, today. So, how are the suppliers and communities, and the systems integration, helping customers with this really challenging new environment, that we have today. >> I'd love to hear any OMG moments from you. What surprised you the most this year? >> It's interesting, when I wanna think about some of the big moves in the industry, I mean, we had the largest software acquisition in tech history. IBM, the company you used to work for, Sam, buying Red Hat, a company I've worked with, for about 20 years, for 34 billion dollars. I mean, Red Hat has been the poster child for open source, and the exemplar of that. It was something that was like, wow, this is a big deal. We've been talking for a long time, how important developers are, and how important open source is, and there's nothing like seeing Big Blue, a 107-year-old company, putting in huge dollars, to really, not just validate, cause IBM's been working in open source, working with Linux for a long time, but how important this is to the future. And that sits right at that core of that multi-cloud world. Red Hat wants to position itself to live in a lot of those environments, not just for Linux, but the Middleware, Kubernetes is a big play. We saw a number of acquisitions in the space there. Red Hat bought CoreOS for $250 million. VMware bought Heptio, and was kind of surprised, at the sticker shock, $550 million. Great team, we know the Heptio team well. We talked to them, some of the core people, back when they were at Google. But, some big dollars are being thrown around, in this space, and, as you said, the big one in the world is Amazon. One of the stories that everybody tracked all year was the whole hq2 thing. It kind of struck me as funny, as Amazon is in Seattle. I actually got to visit Seattle, for the first time, this year, and somebody told me, if you look at the top 50 companies that have employees in Seattle, of course, Amazon is number one, but you need to take number two through 43, and add them together, to make them as big as Amazon. Here in Boston, there's a new facility going up, with 5,000 employees. I know they're going to have 25,000 in Long Island City, right in the Queens, in New York City, as well as Crystal City, right outside of DC, 25,000. But, the realization is that, of course, Amazon's going to have data centers, in pretty much every country, and they're going to have employees all around the world. This doesn't just stay to the US, but Amazon, overall. So, Amazon, just a massive employer. I know so many people who have joined them. (laughs) Some that have left them. But, almost everything that I talk about, tends to come back to Amazon, and what there are doing, or how people are trying to compete, or live in that ecosystem. >> You're always talking to the community. What are some of the hottest topics you're hearing out there? >> So, living in this new world, how are we dealing with developers? A story that I really liked, my networking background, the Cisco DevNet team, led by Suzie Wee, is a really phenomenal example, and one of my favorite interviews of the year. I actually got to talk to Suzie twice this year. We've known her for many years. She got promoted to be a Senior Vice President, which is a great validation, but what she built is a community from the ground up. It took about four years to build this platform, and it's not about, "Oh, we have some products, and developers love it.", but it's the marketplace that they live in, really do have builders there. It's the most exciting piece of what's happening at Cisco. My first show for 2019 will be back at Cisco, live in Barcelona, and Cisco going through this massive transformation, to be the dominant networking company. When they talk about their future, it is as a software company. That actually, it blew my mind, Sam. You know, Cisco is the networking company. When they say, "When you think of us, "five to ten years from now, "you won't think of us as a networking company. "You'll think of us as a software company." That's massive. They were one of the four horsemen of the internet era. And, if Cisco is making that change, everything changes. IBM, people said if they don't make this move for Red Hat, is there danger in the future? So, everything is changing so fast, it is one of the things that everybody tries to sort out and deal with. I've got some thoughts on that, which I'm sure we'll get to later on. >> (laughs) As is Suzie Wee one of your top interviews of 2018, could you give your top three interviews? >> First of all, my favorite, Sam, is always when I get to talk to the practitioners. A few of the practitioners I love talking to, at the Nutanix show in New Orleans this year, I talked to Vijay Luthra, with Northern Trust. My co-host of the show was Keith Townsend. Keith, Chicago guy, said, "Northern Trust is one "of the most conservative financial companies", and they are all-in on containerization, modernized their application. It is great to see a financial company that is driving that kind of change. That's kind of a theme I think you'll see, Sam. Another, one, was actually funny enough, Another Nutanix show, at London, had the Manchester City Council. So, the government, what they're doing, how they're driving change, what they're doing with their digital transformation, how they're thinking of IOT. Some of my favorite interviews I've done the last few years, have been in the government, because you don't think of government as innovating, but, they're usually resource-constrained. They have a lot of constituencies, and therefore, they need to do this. The Amazon public sector show was super-impressive. Everything from, I interviewed a person from the White House Historical Society. They brought on Jackie O's original guidebook, of being able to tour the White House. So, some really cool human interest, but it's all a digital platform on Amazon. What Amazon is doing in all of the industry-specific areas, is really impressive. Some of these smaller shows that we've done, are super-impressive. Another small show, that really impressed me, is UiPath, robotic process automation, or RPA, been called the gateway drug to AI, really phenomenal. I've got some background in operations, and one of the users on the program was talking about how you could get that process to somewhere around 97 to 98% compliance, and standardize, but when they put in RPA, they get it to a full six sigma, which is like 99.999%, and usually, that's something that just humans can't do. They can't just take the variation out of a process, with people involved. And, this has been the promise of automation, and it's a theme. One of my favorite questions, this year, has been, we've been talking about things like automation, and intelligence in systems, for decades, but, now, with the advent of AI machine learning, we can argue whether these things are actually artificial intelligence, in what they are learning, but the programming and learning models, that can be set up and trained, and what they can do on their own, are super-impressive, and really poised to take the industry to the next level. >> So, I wanna fast forward to 2019, but before we do so, anything else that people need to know about 2018? >> 2018, Sam, it's this hybrid multi-cloud world. The relationship that I think we spend the most time talking about, is we talked a lot about Amazon, but, VMware. VMware now has over 600,000 customers, and that partnership with VMware is really interesting. The warning, of course, is that Amazon is learning a lot from Vmware, When we joke with my friends, we say, "Okay, you've learned a lot from them means that "maybe I don't need them in the long term." But in the short term, great move for VMware, where they've solidified their position with customers. Customers feel happy as to where they live, in that multi-cloud environment, and I guess we throw out these terms like hybrid, and multi, and things like that, but when I talk to users, they're just figuring out their digital transformation. They're worried about their business. Yes, they're doing cloud, so sassify what you can, put in the public cloud what makes sense, and modernize. Beware of lift and shift, it's really not the answer. It could be a piece of the overall puzzle, to be able to modernize and pull things apart. An area, I always try to keep ahead of what the next bleeding-edge thing is, Sam. A thing I've been looking at, deeply, the last two years, has been serverless. Serverless is phenomenal. It could just disrupt everything we're talking about, and, Amazon, of course, has the lead there. So, it was kind of an undercurrent discussion at the KubeCon Show, that we were just at. Final thing, things are changing all the time, Sam, and it is impossible for anybody to keep up on all of it. I get the chance to talk to some of the most brilliant people, at some of the most amazing companies, and even those, you know, the PhD's, the people inventing stuff, they're like, "I can't keep up with what's going on at my company, "let alone what's going on in the industry." So, that's the wrong thing. Of course, one of the things we helped to do, is to extract the signal from the noise, help people distill that. We put it into video, we put it into articles, we put it into podcasts, to help you understand some of the basics, and where you might wanna go to learn more. So, we're all swimming in this. You know, the only constant, Sam, in the industry is change. >> Absolutely. (laughing in unison) >> So, things are changing. The whole landscape, as you said, is changing. Going into 2019, what should people expect? Any predictions from you? Any big mergers and acquisitions you might see? >> It's amazing, Sam. The analogy I always use is, when you have the hundred year flood, you always say, "Oh gosh, we got through it, "and we should be okay." No, no, no, the concern is, if you have the hundred year flood, or the big earthquake, the chances are that you're going to have maybe something of the same magnitude, might even be more or less, but rather soon. A couple of years ago, Dell bought EMC, largest acquisition in tech history. We spent a lot of time analyzing it. By the way, Dell's gonna go public, December 28. Interesting move, billions of dollars. As Larry Ellison said, "Michael Dell, "he's no dummy when it comes to money.' He is going to make, personally, billions of dollars off of this transaction, and, overall, looks good for the Dell technologies family, as they're doing. So, that acquisition, the Red Hat acquisition, yeah, we're probably gonna see a 10-to-20 billion dollar acquisition this year. I'm not sure who it is. There's a lot of tech IPOs on the horizon. The data protection space is one that we've kept a close eye on. From what I hear, Zeam, who does over a billion dollars a year, not looking to go public. Rubrik, on the other hand, somewhere in the north of 200 million dollars worth of revenue, I kind of remember 200, 250 in run rate, right now, likely going to go public in 2019. Could somebody sweep in, and buy them before they go public? Absolutely. Now, I don't think Rubrik's looking to be acquired. In that space, you've got Rubrik, you've got Cohesity, you've got a whole lot of players, that it has been a little bit frothy, I guess you'd say. But, customers are looking for a change in how they're doing things, because their environments are changing. They've got lots of stuff in sass, gotta protect that data. They've got things all over the cloud, and that data issue is core. When we actually did our predictions for 2018, data was at the center of everything, when I talked about Wikibon. It was just talking to Peter Burris and David Floyer, and they said there is some hesitancy in the enterprise, like, I'm using Salesforce, I'm using Workday I'm using ServiceNow. We hear all the things about Facebook giving my data away, Google, maybe the wrong people own data, there's that concern I want to pull things back. I always bristle a little bit, when you talk about things like repatriation, and "I'm not gonna trust the cloud." Look, the public clouds are more secure, than my data centers are in general, and they're changing and updating much faster. One of the biggest things we have, in IT, is that I put something in, and making changes is tough. Change, as we said, is the only thing constant. It was something I wrote about. Red Hat, actually, is a company that has dealt with a lot of change. Anybody that sells anything with Linux, or Kubernetes, there are so many changes happening, on not only weekly, but a daily basis, that they help bring a little bit of order, and adult supervision, to what most people would say is chaos out there. That's the kind of thing we need more in the industry, is I need to be able to manage that change. A line I've used many times is, you don't go into a company and say, "Hey, what version of Azure are you running?" You're running whatever Microsoft says is the latest and greatest. You don't have to worry about Patch Tuesday, or 08. I've got that things that's gonna slow down my system for awhile. Microsoft needs to make that invisible to me. They do make that thing invisible to me. So does Amazon, so does Google. >> What's your number one company to watch, this upcoming year. Is it Amazon, Sam? Look, Amazon is the company at the center of it all. Their ecosystem is amazing. While Amazon adds more in revenue, than the number two infrastructure player does in revenue. So, look, in the cloud space, it is not only Amazon's world. There definitely is a multi-cloud world. I went to the Microsoft show for the first time, this year, and Microsoft's super-impressive. They focus on your business applications, and their customers love it. Office 365 really helped move everybody towards sass, in a big way, and it's a big service industry. Microsoft's been a phenomenal turnaround story, the last couple of years. Definitely want to dig in more with that ecosystem, in 2019 and beyond. But, Amazon, you know, we could do more shows of the CUBE, in 2019, than we did our first couple of years. They have, of course, Amazon re:Invent, our biggest show of the year, but their second year, it's about 20 shows, that they do, and we're increasing those. I've been to the New York City Summit, and the San Francisco Summit. I've already mentioned their Public Sector Summit. Really, really, really good ecosystems, phenomenal users, and I already told you how I feel about talking to users. It's great to hear what they're doing, and those customers are moving things around. Google, love doing the Google show. We'll be back there in April. Diane Greene is one of the big guests of the year, for us this year. I was sorry to miss it in person, 'cause I actually have some background. I worked with Diane. Back before EMC bought VMware. I had the pleasure of working with Vmware, when they were, like, a hundred person company. Sam, one of the things, I look back at my career, and I'm still a little bit agog. I mean, I was in my mid-20s, working in this little company, of about 100 people, signed an NDA, started working with them, and that's VMware, with 600,000 customers. I've watched their ascendancy. It's been one of the pleasures of my career. There's small ones, heck. Nutanix I've mentioned a couple of times. I started working them when they were real small. They have over a billion in revenue. New Cure, since the early days. Some companies have done really well. The cloud is really the center of gravity of what I watch. Edge computing we got into a bit. I'm surprised we got almost 20 minutes into this conversation, without mentioning it. That, the whole IOT space, and edge computing, really interesting. We did a fun show with PTC, here in Boston. Got to talk to the father of AI, the father of virtual reality. It's like all these technologies, many of which have been bouncing around for a couple of decades. How are they gonna become real? We've got a fun virtual reality place right next door. The guy running the cameras for us is a huge VR enthusiast. How much will those take the next step? And, how much are things stalling out? I worry, was having conversations. Autonomous vehicles, we're even looking at the space. Been talking about it. Will it really start to accelerate? Or have we hit road blocks, and it's gonna get delayed. Some of these are technologies, some of these are policies in place, in governments and the like, and that's still one of the things that slows down crowded options. You know, GDPR was the big discussion, leading into the beginning of 2018. Now, we barely talk about it. There's more regulations coming, in California and the like, but we do need to worry about some of those macro-economical and political things that sometimes get in the way, of some of the technology pieces. >> I'd love to put something out into the universe, here. If you could interview anyone in the world, who would it be? Let's see if we can make it happen. It's amazing to me, Sam, some of the interviews we've done. I got a one-on-one with Michael Dell this year. It was phenomenal, Michael was one. It took us about three or four years before we got Michael on the program, the first time. Now, we have him two or three times a year. Really, to get to talk to him. There is the founder culture John Furrier always talks about. Some of these founders are very different. Michael, amazing, got to speak to him a couple of times. There's something that makes him special, and there's a reason why he's a billionaire, and he's done very well for himself. So, that was one. Furrier also interviewed John Chambers, who is one of the big gets I was looking at. I was jealous that I wasn't able to get there. I got to interview one of my favorite authors this year, Walter Isaacson, at the shows. When I look at, Elon Musk, of course, as a technologist, is, I'm amazed. I read his bio, I've heard some phenomenal interviews with him. Kara Swisher did a phenomenal sit-down on her podcast with him. Even the 60 Minutes interview was decent this year. >> The Joe Rogan one was great >> Yeah, so, you'd want to be able to sit down. I wouldn't expect Elon to be a 15-minute, rapid-fire conversation, like we usually have. But, we do some longer forms, sit down. So he would be one. Andrew Jassy, we've interviewed a number of times now. Phenomenal. We've got to get Bezos on the program. Some of the big tech players out there. Look, Larry Ellison's another one that we haven't had on the program. We've had Mark Hurd on the program, We've had lots of the Oracle executives. Oracle's one that you don't count out. They still have so many customers, and have strong power in new issues, So there are some big names. I do love some of the authors, that we've had on the program, some thought leaders in the space. Every time we go to a show, it's like, I was a little disappointed I didn't get to interview Jane Goodall, when she was at a show. Things like that. So, we ask, and never know when you can get 'em. A lot of times, it's individual stories of the users, which are phenomenal, and there's just thousands of good stories. That's why we go to some small shows, and make sure we always have some editorial coverage. So that, if their customers are comfortable sharing their story, that's the foundation our research was founded on. Peers sharing with their peers. Some of the most powerful stories of change, and taking advantage of new technologies, and really transforming, not just business, but health care and finance, and government. There's so much opportunity for innovation, and drivers in the marketplace today. >> Stu, I love it. Thanks for wrapping up 2018 for us, and giving us the predictions. CUBE nation, you heard it here. We gotta get Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, and Larry Ellison on the CUBE this year. We could use your help. Stu, thank you, and CUBE nation, thank you for watching. (electronic techno music)

Published Date : Dec 21 2018

SUMMARY :

Stu and I are going to be digging in drink from the fire hose, and some of the data. Amazon, of course, the dominant player in the marketplace, I'd love to hear any OMG moments from you. and the exemplar of that. What are some of the hottest topics it is one of the things that everybody tries What Amazon is doing in all of the industry-specific areas, I get the chance to talk to some (laughing in unison) The whole landscape, as you said, is changing. One of the biggest things we have, in IT, Diane Greene is one of the big guests of the year, Even the 60 Minutes interview was decent this year. and drivers in the marketplace today. on the CUBE this year.

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