Thijs Ebbers & Arno Vonk, ING | KubeCon + CloudNativeCon NA 2022
>>Good morning, brilliant humans. Good afternoon or good evening, depending on your time zone. My name is Savannah Peterson and I'm here live with the Cube. We are at CubeCon in Detroit, Michigan. And joining me is my beautiful co-host, Lisa, how you feeling? Afternoon of day three. >>Afternoon day three. We've had such great conversations. We have's been fantastic. The momentum has just been going like this. I love it. >>Yes. You know, sometimes we feel a little low when we're at the end of a conference. Not today. Don't feel that that way at all, which is very exciting. Just like the guests that we have up for you next. Kind of an unexpected player when we think about technology. However, since every company, one of the themes is every company is trying to be a software company. I love that we're talking to I n G. Joining us today is Ty Evers and Arno vk. Welcome to the show gentlemen. Thank >>You very much. Glad to be you. Thank you. >>Yes, it's wonderful. All the way in from Amsterdam. Probably some of the farthest flying folks here for this adventure. Starting off. I forgot what's going on with the shirts guys. You match very well. Tell, tell everyone. >>Well these are our VR code shirts. VR code is basically the player of our company to get people interested as an IT person in banking. Right? Actually, people don't think banking is a good place to work as an IT professional, but actually this, and we are using the OC went with these nice logos to get it attention. >>I love that. So let's actually, let's just talk about that for a second. Why is it such an exciting role to be working in technology at a company like I N G or traditional bank? >>I N G is a challenging environment. That's how do you make an engineer happy, basically give them a problem to solve. So we have lots and lots of problems to solve. So that makes it challenging. But yeah, also rewarding. And you can say a lot of things about banks and with looking at the IT perspective, we are doing amazing things in I and that's what we talked about. Can >>You, can you tell us any of those amazing things or are they secrets? >>Think we talked about last Tuesday at S shift commons conference. Yeah, so we had two, two presentations I presented with my coho sand on my journey over the last three years. So what has IG done? Basically building a secure container hosting platform. Yeah. How do we live a banking cot with cloud native technology and together with our coho young villa presented actually showed it by demo making life and >>Awesome >>In person. So we were not just presenting, >>It's not all smoke and mirrors. It's >>Not smoke and mirror, which we're not presenting our fufu marketing block now. We actually doing it today. And that's what we wanted to share here. >>Well, and as consumers we expect we can access our banking on any device 24 by seven. I wanna be able to do all my transactions in a way that I know is secure. Obviously security's a huge thing there, but talk about I n G Bank aren't always been around for a very long time. Talk about this financial institution as a software company. Really obviously a lot of challenges to solve, a lot of opportunity. But talk about what it's like working for a history and bank that's really now a tech company. >>Yes. It's been really changing as a bank to a tech company. Yeah. We have a lot of developers and operators and we do deliver offer. We OnPrem, we run in the public. So we have a huge engineers and people around to make our software. Yes. And I am responsible for the i Container Ocean platform and we deliver that the name space as a surface and as a real, real secure environment. So our developers, all our developers in, I can request it, but they only get a name space. Yeah, that's very important there. They >>Have >>Resources and all sort of things. Yeah. And it is, they cannot access it. They can only access it by one wifi. So, >>So Lisa and I were chatting before we brought you up here. Name space as a service. This is a newer term for us. Educate us. What does that mean? >>Basically it means we don't give a full cluster to our consumers, right? We only give them basically cpu, memory networking. That's all they need to host application. Everything else we abstract away. And especially in a banking context where compliance is a big thing, you don't need to do compliance for an entire s clusterized developer. It's really saves development time for the colleagues in the bank. It >>Decreases the complexity of projects, which is a huge theme here, especially at scale. I can imagine. I mean, my gosh, you're serving so many different people, it probably saves you time. Let's talk about regulation. What, how challenging is that for you as technologists to balance in all the regulations around banking and FinTech? It's, it's, it's, it's not like some of these kind of wild, wild west industries where we can just go out and play and prototype and do whatever we want. There's a lot of >>Rules. There's a lot of rules. And the problem is you have legislation and you have the real world. Right. And you have to find something in, they're >>Not the same thing. >>You have to find something in between with both parties on the stands and cannot adhere to. Yeah. So the challenge we had, basically we had to wide our, in our own container security standards to prove that the things we were doing were the white things to be in control as a bank because there was no market standard for container security. So basically we took some input from this. So n did a lot of good work. We basically added some things on top to be valid for a bank in Europe. So yeah, that's what we did. And the nice thing is today we take all the boxes we defined back in 2019. >>Hey, so you what it's, I guess, I guess the rules are a little bit easier when you get to help define them. Yep. Yeah. That it feels like a very good strategic call >>And they makes sense. Yeah. Right. Because the hardest problem is try to be compliant for something which doesn't make sense. Right, >>Right. Arnold, talk about, let's double click on namespace as a service. You talked about what that is, but give us a little bit of information on why I N G really believes this is the right approach for this company. >>It's protects for the security that developers doing things they don't shoot. Yeah. They cannot access their store anymore when it is running in production. And that is the most, most important. That is, it is immutable running in our platform. >>Excellent. Talk about both of you. How long have you, have you both been at I n G for a long time? >>I've been with I N G since September, 2001. So that's more than 20 years >>Now. Long time. Ana, what about you? >>Before 2000 already before. >>So both of your comment on that's a long time. Yeah. Talk about the culture of innovation that's at I N G to be able to move at such speed and be groundbreaking in what you're, how you're using technology, what, what's the appetite like at the bank to embrace new and emerging technologies? >>So we are really looking, basically the, the mantra of the bank is to help our customers get a step ahead in life and in business. And we do that by one superior customer service and secondly, sustainability at the heart. So anything which contributes to those targets, you can go to your manager and if you can make goods case why it contributes most of the cases you get some time or some budgets or even some additional colleagues to help you out and give it a try require from a culture perspective required open to trying things out before we reach production. Once you go to production. Yeah. Then we are back to being a bank and you need to take all the boxes to make really sure that we are confident with our customers data and basically we're still a bank but a lot of is possible. >>A lot. It is possible. And there's the customer on the other end who's expecting, like I said earlier, that they can access their data any time that they want, be able to do any transaction they want, making sure the content that's delivered to them is relevant, that it's secure. Obviously with, that's the biggest challenge especially is we think about how many generations are alive today and and those that aren't tech savvy. Yeah. Have challenges with that. Talk about what the bank's dedication is to ensuring from a security perspective that its customers don't have anything to worry about. >>That's always a thin line between security and the user experience. So I n g, like every other bank needs to make choices. Yes. We want the really ease of customers and take the risk that somebody abuses it or do we make it really, really secure and alienate part of our customer base. And that's an ongoing, that's a, that's a a hard, >>It's a trade off. That's >>A line. >>So it's really hard. Interesting part is in Netherlands we had some debates about banks closing down locations, but the moment we introduced our mobile weapon iPads, basically the debates became a lot quieter because a lot of elderly people couldn't work with an iPhone. It turned out they were perfectly fine with a well-designed iPad app to do their banking. Really? >>Okay. >>But that's already learning from like 15 years ago. >>What was the, what was the product roadmap on that? So how, I mean I can imagine you released a mobile app, you're not really thinking that. >>That's basically, I think that was a heavy coincidence. We just, Yeah, okay. Went out to design a very good mobile app. Yeah. And then looking out afterwards at the statistics we say, hey, who was using this way? We've got somebody who's signing on and I dunno the exact age, but it was something like somebody of 90 plus who signed on to use that mobile app. >>Wow. Wow. I mean you really are the five different generations living and working right now. Designing technology. Everybody has to go to the bank whether we are fans of our bank or we're not. Although now I'm thinking about IG as a bank in general. Y'all have a a very good attitude about it. What has kept you at the company for over 20 years? That is we, we see people move around, especially in this technology industry. Yes. Yeah. You know, every two to three years. Sometimes obviously you're in positions of leadership, they're obviously taking good care of you. But I mean multiple decades. Why have you stuck? >>Well first I didn't have the same job in I N D for two decades. Nice. So I went around the infrastructure domain. I did storage initially I did security, I did solution design and in the end I ended up in enterprise architecture. So yeah, it's not like I stuck 20 years in the same role. So every so years >>Go up the ladder but also grow your own skill sets. >>Explore. Yeah. >>So basically I think that's what's every, everybody should be thinking in these days. If you're in a cloud head industry, if you're good at it, you can out quite a nice salary. But it also means that you have some kind of obligation to society to make a difference. And I think, yeah, >>I wouldn't say that everybody feels that way. I >>Need to make a difference with I N G A difference for being more available to our consumers, be more secure to, to our consumers. I, I think that's what's driving me to stick with the company. >>What about you R Now? >>Yes, for me it's very important. Every two, three years are doing new things. I can work with the latest technology so I become really, really innovative so that it is the place to be. >>Yeah. You sort of get that rotation every two to three years with the different tools that you're using. Speaking of or here we're at Cuan, we're talking cloud native, we're talking Kubernetes. Do you think it's possible to, I'm coming back to the regulations. Do you think it's possible to get to banking grade security with cloud native Tech? >>Initially I said we would be at least as secure traditional la but last Tuesday we've proven we can get more secure than situational it. So yeah, definitely. Yes. >>Awesome. I mean, sounds like you proved it to yourself too, which is really saying something. >>Well we actually have Penta results and of course I cannot divulge those, but I about pretty good. >>Can you define, I wanna kind of double book on thanking great security, define what that is, thanking great security and how could other industries aim to Yeah, >>Hit that, that >>Standard. I want security everywhere. Especially my bank. The >>Architecture is zero privilege. So you hear a lot about lease privilege in all the security talks. That's not what you should be aiming for. Zero privilege is what you should be aiming for. And once you're at zero privileged environments, okay, who can leak data because no natural person has access to it. Even if you have somebody invading your infrastructure, there are no privileges. They cannot do privilege escalations. Yeah. So the answer for me is really clear. If you are handling customer data, if you're and customer funds aim for zero privilege architecture, >>What, what are you most excited about next? What's next for you guys? What's next for I n G? What are we gonna be talking about when we're chatting to you Right here? Atan next year or in Amsterdam actually, since we're headed that way in the spring, which is fun. Yes. >>Happy to be your host in Amsterdam. The >>Other way around. We're holding you to that. You've talked about how fun the culture is. Now you're gonna ask, she and I we need, but we need the tee-shirts. We, we obviously need a matching outfit. >>Definitely. We'll arrange some teachers for you as well. Yeah, no, for me, two highlights from this com. The first one was kcp. That can potentially be a paradigm change on how we deal with workloads on Kubernetes. So that's very interesting. I don't know if you see any implementations by next year, but it's definitely something. Looks >>Like we had them on the show as well. Yeah. So it's, it's very fun. I'm sure, I'm sure they'll be very flattered that you just just said. What about you Arnoldo that got you most excited? >>The most important for me was talking to a lot of Asian is other people. What if they thinking how we go forward? So the, the, the community and talk to each other. And also we found those and people how we go forward. >>Yeah, that's been a big thing for us here on the cube and just the energy, the morale. I mean the open source community is so collaborative. It creates an entirely different ethos. Arna. Ty, thank you so much for being here. It's wonderful to have you and hear what I n g is doing in the technology space. Lisa, always a pleasure to co-host with you. Of course. And thank you Cube fans for hanging out with us here on day three of Cuban Live from Detroit, Michigan. My name is Savannah Peterson and we'll see you up next for a great chat coming soon.
SUMMARY :
And joining me is my beautiful co-host, Lisa, how you feeling? I love it. Just like the guests that we have up for you next. Glad to be you. I forgot what's going on with the shirts guys. VR code is basically the player of our company So let's actually, let's just talk about that for a second. So we have lots and lots of problems to solve. How do we live a banking cot with cloud native technology and together So we were not just presenting, It's not all smoke and mirrors. And that's what we wanted to share here. Well, and as consumers we expect we can access our banking on any device 24 So we have a huge engineers and people around to And it is, they cannot access it. So Lisa and I were chatting before we brought you up here. Basically it means we don't give a full cluster to our consumers, right? What, how challenging is that for you as technologists And the problem is you have legislation and So the challenge we had, basically we had to wide our, in our own container security standards to prove Hey, so you what it's, I guess, I guess the rules are a little bit easier when you get to help define them. Because the hardest problem is try to be compliant for something You talked about what that is, And that is the most, most important. Talk about both of you. So that's more than 20 years Ana, what about you? So both of your comment on that's a long time. of the cases you get some time or some budgets or even some additional colleagues to help you out and making sure the content that's delivered to them is relevant, that it's secure. abuses it or do we make it really, really secure and alienate part of our customer It's a trade off. but the moment we introduced our mobile weapon iPads, basically the debates became a So how, I mean I can imagine you released a mobile app, And then looking out afterwards at the statistics we say, What has kept you at the company for over 20 years? I did solution design and in the end I ended up in enterprise architecture. Yeah. that you have some kind of obligation to society to make a difference. I wouldn't say that everybody feels that way. Need to make a difference with I N G A difference for being more available to our consumers, technology so I become really, really innovative so that it is the place to be. Do you think it's possible to get to we can get more secure than situational it. I mean, sounds like you proved it to yourself too, which is really saying something. I want security everywhere. So you hear a lot about lease privilege in all the security talks. What are we gonna be talking about when we're chatting to you Right here? Happy to be your host in Amsterdam. We're holding you to that. I don't know if you see any implementations by What about you Arnoldo that got you most excited? And also we And thank you Cube fans for hanging out with us here on day three of Cuban Live from Detroit,
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Dennis Van Velzen & Robert De Bock, ING Bank | AnsibleFest 2019
>>live from Atlanta, Georgia. It's the Q covering answerable best 2019. Brought to you by Red hat. >>Hey, welcome back to the Cuban Live coverage in simple fest. Two days of coverage. Day one, wrapping up. I'm John forwards. Accused Too many men. My guest co host today, our next two guests at his van. Van Velzen. Okay, welcome to the Cube. You're an engineer at I n G Bank and Robert de Bock, product owner, engineer I n g. Bank. Hey, guys, Thanks for coming on. Thank you. Have the practitioner on. Well, first of all, we have a lot of great feedback from the practitioners here. And also people in deploying answerable and other other cool Dev ops Tools on automation is at the top of the list. Yes, More efficient. Getting things done. Focus. You got satisfaction in job because things go awaiting time savings. I'm saving security drives a conversation and re skilling opportunities. Love. These are cutting edge. Things you got to do is take a minute to explain what you guys do. What a night. What a night. Angie bank. >>Yeah. I work in a team that provides redhead images for other teams. in 90 to consume to use two insane she ate way. Also live from playbooks, amendable code and rolls to manage those things. And he's very scattered, which sort of decentralized, which is a good thing. In my opinion, it's ready for scaling. In that case, I used to work with Dennis are lots in the tower team, so take it away. >>Okay, so I still work at the answer, built our squad What we do, it's ah, We make sure that the instable tower service keeps running 24 7 and we also ensure that we, uh, provide updates next to all this. We also have unanswerable community where we basically support our end users, which are their love. So, uh, from some numbers, I heard we have 1200 applications teams that are using our service. Um, and they all have, like, answerable playbook, sensible rolls, questions, difficulties with, uh, with anything. And we're basically there to support them as well. >>So 1200 teams are using answerable, Yes, inside the bank. Yes. Yeah, like >>it's set up very decentralized. And I think what I hear from instable fest that is not very common. I still think it's very good thing to do. We try to basically give these teams all the tools they need to do their stuff on. What I hear hear mostly is that there's essential team off administrators pushing the buttons for them. Towers. Great answer was great in that case, I think, for our case is really it's a perfect fit. >>E guess help Explain. Is this do you provide? You know, he said it's not centralized, but is this you know, here's best practices here. Some play boat out. How do you end? You support them? Because they're a little bit those relationships. >>Okay. Okay. Um so what we do is we basically all the rules and get ah ah, good lap. So it's an own premise. Get environment. You can search in this. Get for rules. Uh, not like all rules are easily to be found when searching for them. So that's why there are these communities to share what you have made. Um, >>plus these teams, they can themselves pick and choose. Some will try to rewrite everything That's fine. Others can can benefit from existing coat, so it's just a good trick. Thio enable these team to participate on it really different. Some people make it all themselves another >>next to this. So we basically have these 12 on the teams do their own thing. But next to this, we also have a self service portal where they can choose, like from, uh, generic finks like us. But your machine at new disc. So New capacity Cp use memory. That's all being done through a portal s so they don't need to do anything on their own for this they can, but most of them choose the easy way off using this portal. This portal basically doesn't a vehicle to instable tower, which executes a sensible playbook and some other stuffs. Maybe some AP eyes. And this is one of the things you guys create A manage these books. So, um >>and if you go back in time so the alternative way, which we happily got rid off, is to do it ourselves. I think it was before we we work together. Way had batch weekends, for example, and it >>was no very different. No life. Oh, that's working on weekends, >>weekends and, for example, he used to patch machine some 10,000 or so, and we were not aware what was important. What? Not so you you'd stop the whole pitch. Oh, this machine has a problem. Let's stop everything in focus and that's >>not important. Was like a complete order. >>And the other way around Also this machine. I guess it's not that important. Let's just >>continue this >>Sunday morning. Oh, my God. Everything's broken. >>Can you give us a little flavor of kind of the spectrum of solutions that you leverage answerable on >>tap? Yeah. We, uh I think what we see Moses for Lennox machines, eso fetching is a big one. We got a second operation, so there's a few of them. The deployment also depends on and small. So if you order a new machine, answer was involved somewhere to do to make it happen on network on board and the Windows teams are very interested. I'm not sure if we notice on board yet. To >>be honest, I know we did some book in the boss so a couple of months ago, using wind around when you needed set on policies there, But you can see that the networking teams were getting more momentum. Uh, five. There's some suffer suffer to find switches Bob. I don't know. The, uh Never mind the name, but ah, you can see some momentum in the in the networking. Uh, it's not Morgan departments >>configuration network networking with the activists. So that's where the action is in the >>network. Um, there were some cool talks also here on five workshops. So you can see there is, um, that there is some attention on these modules and integrations as well. >>What's your guy's goal here for the show? What brought you here? I'll see Big user. >>Yeah. So what do you think was like sharing our own thing? We did. They talk this morning. Ah, regarding and programming A really cool we wanted to share. It is this behavioral thing, and and >>we'll talk about take a minute and programming. >>So, um, basically, it's, ah programming with the whole team and making sure that you get something done with all the knowledge in the team. So you don't have to align off the words or if some other if you're Kulik says from basically session, you can do better using this staying. It's all, um it's It's all done during the decision >>as basically a good way to get a team up to speed. So in a team that's probably a few few people that are very quick and understand the concept and few starters or so So >>you guys decentralized, which makes sense for scale. I get that. So this sounds like you can operate decentralized, but where danceable. You can still have that common a book Switch >>teams, for example. So it used to be very specific. H team would have their own type of coat. Now that more answers used people can switch a little easier to to another product of surface because the languages have lied, shared, steal it, steal. It's quite >>well happy with this, right? I am. I really, really have to work on the weekend. That's good. I think >>the good thing is that you have one generic way of working. So his playbook is readable by all engineers. And if you want to learn this thing, you just do the inevitable course. So you know what this thing is? A mosque and roll, and it's all like >>way. We do see horrible >>koto. Come on, don't throw your college under the bus. But here's the international tough question can see is what we have been here. I want you guys to test this. We hear that there's a lot of time savings involved. Yes, with answer. True or false. That's true order of magnitude. What? What kind of saving way talking about? I >>think it depends on the thing because we saw a huge I don't know, except numbers. But this this os patching that Really? Really Uh, >>yes. Now, especially waas. Two people working a full time basically collecting, who needs to do what? The win. And then for a weekend, 10 15 people or so. So, uh, that's reduced now to sort of nothing. Yes, some maintenance to that playbook and roll. But I mean, yeah, it's difficult to express what message? So >>no one's getting phone call? Hey, come in on the weekend. So 15 people on the weekend jam and then to Fulton will just managing it all Go away. >>Yeah, not needed, but not needed. But they basically they can do something else, so those people are still there. But now they're not doing Os patching and doing all the excel sheets and keeping order off. The systems are important, and this shall be the first, and then they because way are basically doing the thing they know better. This application team knows their dependency, so they know they. But first I need to patch the database machine and then there during the front end or Andi. It's difficult to do this so they do it themselves. >>That's Dev Ops. That's that's the way it's supposed to be, right? >>So you've matured this thes deployments over time. As you look back, What key learnings do you have that maybe you'd recommend to your peers toe? You know how things could run a little bit smoother >>next time, a good amount of time. So they're stools. That's not the problem, So answer is great, but there's others to their great Give it time to sink in with the people. So you start something and you have to have a pretty strong team to do the long the long stretch with it and give it some time, maybe a year or so before everyone's on board it. In our case, in the beginning, we spend lots of time on this community model where we basically organized small meet ups or get together, too, show things or to hear problems and try to express them. That really helped a lot. And by now it's starting to get normal, more normal. So all the teams do sensible, basically. And problem starts slowly disappearing. Also. So So >>one of the things, um, that will be better. Probably in our scenario. Housekeeping metrics. So what are the improvements over time? I don't know how to measure this. No, no, no aspect. But it will be better if you had, like, better numbers like we did hair Very good. Or this is something like, what did the community thing bring way indirectly what the results are Because the engineers are doing things really, really things. They're really patching the replication. And they're really, um, restarting their own machines, for example, when there is something wrong. Whatever. Um, but our days related to our community thing or all that's really related to Sensible Tower >>last. I think we we are very technical focus. So So we like it as a nerd, so to say, to do things but what the business value is, for example, I'm not so interested or less interested so way typically, like the technology, so it could be good to have some someone onboard and your team that says, Yeah, but this is the problem. It's crossed. This amount of money and that solved now are improved. >>Well, they assume the applications are doing a good job. So you guys helped those guys out. They get to do their own thing. They do the heavy lifting. They're doing the coding anyway for those guys that were coming in managing full time on the 15 or so on the weekend. What are they doing now? >>Most are spread across. All the application teams go back. But the other side there is now it's our team that was not there s. So that's the price you have to pay. And that's a serious team. I mean, it's far six people now 86 people and 100 machines or so. So it is a serious amount of time, but it makes it at least much more constant. So people are not surprised by machines being patched, and Monday they come back into the half broken or so. So it's a lot more control now, so I don't know if you can express it in price, but at least it's more stable >>more consistent. >>Well, one of the things that we hear here and I want to get your thoughts as we wrap up is as you go forward, you got answerable 1200 teams using it. You got a lot of collaboration. The work cultures change. Sounds like a shower. Team steps service everything else. So some scale building out what's next? Because as it becomes a platform. Okay, you have to enable something. There has value there. Okay, technical nerd value and then business value >>scaling, uh, because we continuously see this thing growing like more application teams are adapting answerable, invincible tower. So, um, right now we have, like, a cluster. We have different clusters running. Go into much detail, but we can see that the load is getting higher and higher, so we need to skill. Um, and this is sort of difficult, but red. That is really supporting in this because they're going to change some things at the application level two to allow scaling even better. Um, >>plus, also, for most teams, they're starting their configuration. Everything is coat process. They're not there yet. As soon as they discover the power of it, I'm sure that's being used a lot. A lot more. And plus, there's other countries that are going to be connected. So you have a lot of work >>because your engineering doing some getting down and dirty with the code, automating everything. >>Yeah. Yeah. So, um, what else do we >>Oh, what's the coolest thing you've done that you've automated? >>Uh >>uh, Pick your favorite. >>So but the child during Encircle Tower and with answerable, um, let me think about this. >>I I really like the patching that saved us so much work. And, uh, I think also one of the next goes to make much more simpler. So we as a company, we're complex and the people also like complexity. That's wrong. We should change >>that. Patching up our >>offense, Melissa Simplicity. So we should really use that. >>You don't want any open holes in the network housely and assistance >>about your previous question. Like I have sort of a finger and all these small things. So it's sort of what I did. It's more like an A team thing. We created the OS patch playbooks, the configure stuff, the second day offs. So we did this as a team >>like sports but the playbooks together run the play. Some defense on security >>and programming. So you're doing >>this as a team, which is very cool. Has a scoreboard look good? Winning? >>Yeah, Yeah, yeah, yeah. We're looking at the graphite. Uh, it's girl. >>Final question. How you enjoying the show here? Having a good time? What's the vibe here? What's it like here? Share for the people who aren't here. What's going on? What's the vibe with >>a conversation? It's great. We went to some sessions yesterday really technical stuff with developers. And this was really amazing because you heard details that that are not in the India in the talks today and tomorrow. Um, yeah, it's great. It's great community. It's just I really I really enjoy it because you can. It's You can have, like one on one conversations go into depth. I was showing something I created, and this guy's we'll hold. This is really great in the It's cool. It's just if you it's really great. It's really >>cool. Really? Yeah, for me also, it feels like coming home, So I know these people and I think the first day, the collaboration day, what's it called and I'm not sure you community, that's it's great because it's been a bit rough and unpolished in today's more polished and more presented and prepared to, uh, both are great. >>Good. Give the hard feedback. >>Yeah, you meet all the people. So, for example, I used instable a lot, and then I'm getting up. I see all these names. Like, who would that be there walking here and shake hands like, Oh, that's >>why guys like your code looking good. Yeah. Looks good. A contributor. Summit contributed. Okay. Sorry. After it for >>anyone that goes to visit that day, too. That's just great. >>It's great to see people face to face that, you know, online for their digital identity or the code >>you can You can't complain about stuff out on. Do you know that you don't hurt them or something with just commenting on get like after this issue and this issue and this issue. Then you can see them in person. And then you >>him a high five assault, you know? Hey, >>it's really very cool. >>Guys. Great conversations were coming on cue. Thanks, Dennis. Appreciate Robert. Thanks for coming on. Skew coverage here Day one of two days of live coverage here inside the Cube here in Atlanta, Georgia for Ansel Fest is the cute I'm John 1st 2 minute. Thanks for watching.
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Brought to you by Red hat. Things you got to do is take a minute to explain what you guys do. in 90 to consume to use two insane she ate way. it's ah, We make sure that the instable tower service keeps running So 1200 teams are using answerable, Yes, inside the bank. And I think what I hear from instable fest that is not he said it's not centralized, but is this you know, here's best practices here. So that's why there are these communities to share what you have made. Thio enable these team to participate on it really different. And this is one of the things you guys create A manage these books. I think it was before we we work together. Oh, that's working on weekends, Not so you you'd stop the whole pitch. not important. And the other way around Also this machine. So if you order a new machine, answer was involved somewhere to do to mind the name, but ah, you can see some momentum in the in the networking. So that's where the action is in the So you can see there is, um, that there is some attention on these modules What brought you here? It is this behavioral thing, and and So you don't have to align off the words or if some other if So in a team that's probably a few few So this sounds like you can operate decentralized, So it used to be very specific. I really, really have to work on the weekend. the good thing is that you have one generic way of working. We do see horrible I want you guys to test this. think it depends on the thing because we saw a huge I So So 15 people on the weekend jam and then to Fulton It's difficult to do this What key learnings do you have that maybe you'd recommend to your peers toe? So answer is great, but there's others to their great Give it time to sink in with the But it will be better if you had, like, better numbers like we did hair it as a nerd, so to say, to do things but what the business value is, for example, So you guys helped those guys out. So it's a lot more control now, so I don't know if you can express it in price, Well, one of the things that we hear here and I want to get your thoughts as we wrap up is as you go forward, That is really supporting in this because they're going to change some things at So you have a lot of work So but the child during Encircle Tower and with answerable, um, I I really like the patching that saved us so much work. that. So we should really use that. So we did this as a team like sports but the playbooks together run the play. So you're doing this as a team, which is very cool. We're looking at the graphite. What's the vibe with And this was really amazing because you heard details that that are not in and I think the first day, the collaboration day, what's it called and I'm not sure you Yeah, you meet all the people. why guys like your code looking good. anyone that goes to visit that day, too. And then you Atlanta, Georgia for Ansel Fest is the cute I'm John 1st 2 minute.
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Veda Bawo, Raymond James & Althea Davis, ING Bank | MIT CDOIQ 2019
>> From Cambridge Massachusetts, it's the CUBE, covering MIT Chief Data Officer and Information Quality Symposium 2019. Brought to you by silicon angle media. >> Welcome back to Cambridge Massachusetts everybody you're watching the cube. The leader in live tech coverage. The cubes two day coverage of MIT's CDOIQ. The chief data officer information quality event. Thirteenth year we started here in 2013. I'm Dave Vallante with my co-host Paul Gillin. Veda Bawo. Bowo. Bawo. Sorry Veda Bawo is here. Did I get that right? >> That's close enough. >> The director of data governance at Raymond James and Althea Davis the former chief data officer of ING bank challengers and growth markets. Ladies welcome to the cube thanks so much for coming on. >> Thank you. >> Thank you. >> Hi Vita, talk about your role at Raymond James. Relatively new role for you? >> It is a relatively new role. So I recently left fifth third bank as their managing director of data governance and I've moved on to Raymond James in sunny Florida. And I am now the director of data governance for Raymond James. So it's a global financial services company they do asset wealth management, investment banking, retail banking. So I'm excited, I'm very excited about it. >> So we've been talking all day and actually several years about how the chief data officer role kind of emerged from the back office of the data governance. >> Mmm >> And the information quality and now its come you know front and center. And actually we've seen a full circle because now it's all about data quality again. So Althea as the former CDO right is that a fair assessment that it sort of came out of the ashes of the back room. >> Yeah, I mean its definitely a fair assessment. That's where we got started. That's how we got our budgets that's how we got our teams. However, now we have to serve many masters. We have to deal with all of the privacy, we have to deal with the multiple compliancies. We have to deal with the data operations and we have to deal with all of the new, sexy emerging technologies. So to do AI and data science you need a lot of data. You need data rich. You need it to be knowledge management, you need it to be information management. And it needs to be intelligent. So we need to actually raise the bar on what we do and at the same time get the credibility from our sea sweet peers. >> Well I think we no longer have the. We don't have the luxury of being just a cost center anymore . >> No. >> Right, we have to generate revenue. So it's about data monetization. It's about partnering with our businesses to make sure that we're helping to drive strategy and deliver results for the broader organization. >> So you got to hit the bottom line. >> Yeah. >> Either raise revenue or cut costs >> Yeah absolutely >> You know directly that can be tangibly monetized. >> Exactly keep them out of jail. Right. Save money >> That too. >> Save money, make money. (inaudible laughter) keep them out of jail. >> Like both CDO's you do not study for this career path because it didn't exist a few years ago. So talk about your backgrounds and how you came to come into this role Veda. >> Yeah absolutely so you know you talked about you know data kind of starting in the bowels of the back office. So I am that person right. So I am an accountant by training. So I am the person who is non legally entity controllership by book journal entries I've closed the books. I've done regulatory reporting so I know what it feels like to have to deal with dirty data every single month end, every single quarter end right. And I know the pain of having to cleanse it and having to deal with our business partners and having experienced that gave me the passion to want to do better. Right so I want to influence my partners upstream to do better as well as to take away some of the pain points that my teams experiencing over and over again it really was groundhog day. So that really made me feel passionate about going into the data discipline. Right and so you know the benefit is great it's not an easy journey but yeah out of accounting finance and that kind of back office operational support was boring right. A data evangelist and some passionate were about it. >> Which made sense because you have to have quality. >> Absolutely. >> Consistency. You have to have so called single version of the truth. >> Absolutely because you look regularly there's light for the financial reports to be accurate. All the time. (laughter) >> Exactly >> How about you? >> I came at it from a totally different angle. I was a marketeer so I was a business manager, a marketeer I was working with the big retail brands you know the Nikes and the Levi's strauss's of the world. So I came to it from a value chain perspective from marketing you know from rolling out retail chains across Europe. And I went from there as a line management position and all the pains of the different types of data we needed and then did quite a bit of consulting with some of the big consultancies accenture. And then rolled more into the data migration so dealing with those huge change projects and having teams from all of the world. And knowing the pains what all of the guys didn't want to work on. I got it all on my plate. But it put me in position to be a really solid chief data officer. >> Somebody it was called like data chicks or something like that (laughter) and I snuck in I was like the lone >> Data chicks >> I was like the lone data dude >> You can be a data chick. It's okay no judgement here. >> And so one of the things that one of the CDO's said there. She was a woman obviously. And she said you know I think that and the stat was there was a higher proportion of women as CDO's than there were across tech which is like I don't know fifty seventeen percent. And she's positive that the reason was because it's like a thankless job that nobody wants and so I just wonder as woman CDO your thoughts on that is that true. >> Well first of all we're the newest to the table right so you're the new kid on the block it doesn't matter if you're man or woman you're the new kid on the block so you know the CFO's got the four thousand year history behind him or her. The CIO or CTO they've got the fifty, sixty year up on us. So we're new. So you have to calve out your space and I do think that a lot of women by nature like to take on things big. To do things that other people don't want to do. So I can see how women kind of fell into that. But, at the same time you know data it's an asset and it is the newest asset. And it's definitely misunderstood. So I do think that you know women you know we kind of fell into it but it was actually something that happened good for women because there's a big future in data. >> Well let's just be realistic right. Woman have unique skillset. I may be a little bias but we have a unique skillset. We're able to solve problems creatively. Right there's no one size fits all solution for data. There's no accounting pronouncement that tells me how to handle and manage my data. Right I have to kind of figure it out as I go along and pivot when something doesn't work. I think that's something that is very natural to women. >> Yeah. >> I think that contributes to us kind of taking on these roles. >> Can I just do a little survey here (laughter) We hear that the chief data officer of function is defined differently at different organizations. Now you both are in financial services. You both have a chief data function. Are you doing the same thing? (laughter) >> Absolutely not! (laughter) >> You know this is data by design. I mean I'm getting lucky I've had teams that go the whole gammon right so. From the compliancy side through to the data operations through to all of the like I said the exotics, sexy you know emerging technologies stuff with the data scientists. So I've had the whole thing. I've also had my last position at ING bank I had to you know lead a team of chief data officers across three different continents Australia, Asia and also Eastern and Western Europe. So it's totally different than you know maybe another company that they've only got to chief data officer working on data quality and data governance. >> So again another challenge of being the new kid on the block right. Defining roles and responsibilities. There's no one globally, universally accepted definition of what a chief data officer should do. >> Right >> Right is data science in or out are analytics in or out. Right. >> Security sometimes. >> Security right sometimes privacy is it or out. Do you have operational responsibilities or are you truly just a second line governance function right? There's a mixed bag out there in the industry. I don't know that we have one answer that we know for sure is true. But I do know for sure is that data is not an IT function. >> Well okay. That's really important. >> It's not an IT asset. >> Yeah. >> I want to say that it's not an IT asset. It is an information asset or a data asset which is a different asset than an IT asset or a financial asset or a human asset. >> But and that's the other big change is that fifteen. Ten to fifteen years ago data was assumed to be a liability right. >> Mmm. >> Federal rules set up a civil procedure we got to get rid of the data or you know we're going to get sued. Number one and number two is that data because it's digital you know people say data is the new oil. I always say it's not. It's more important than oil. >> It's like blood. >> Oil you can only use in one use case. Data you can reuse over and over again. >> Reuse, reuse perpetual. It goes on and on and on. And every time you reuse it the value increases. So I would agree with you it is not the new oil. It is much bigger than that and it needs to I mean I know from some of my colleagues in the profession. We talk about borrowing from other more mature disciplines to make data management, information management and knowledge management much more robust and be much more professional. We also need to be more professional about it as the data leaders. >> So when you're a little panel today. One of the things that you guys addressed is what keeps the CDO up at night. >> Yes >> I presume it's data. (laughter) >> No, no, no. >> It's our payers that don't get it. (laughter) >> That's what keeps us up at night. >> Its the sponsors that keep us up at night. (laughter) So what was that discussion like? >> So yeah I mean it was a lively discussion. Um, great attendance at the panel so we appreciate everyone who came out and supported. >> Full house. >> Definitely a full house. Great reviews so far. >> Yep. >> Okay, so the thing that definitely keeps folks up at night and I'm going to start with my standard one which is quality. Right you can have all of the fancy tools, right you can have a million data scientists but if the quality is not good or sufficient. Then you're no where. So quality is fundamentally the thing that the CDO has to always pay attention to. And there's no magic you know pill or magic right potion that's going to make the quality right. It's something that the entire organization has a rally around. And it's not a one thing done right it has to be a sustainable approach to making sure the quality is good enough so that you can actually reap the benefits or derive the value right from your data. >> Absolutely and I would say you know following on from the quality and I consider that trustworthiness of the data. I would say as a chief data officer you're coming to the table. You're coming to the executive table you need to bring it all so you need to be impactful. You need to be absolutely relevant to your peers. You also need to be able to make their teams in a position to act. So it needs to be actionable. And if you don't have all of that combination with the trustworthiness you're dead in the water. So it is a hard act and that's why there is a high attrition for chief data officers. You know it's a hard job. But I think it's very much worthwhile because this particular asset this new asset we haven't been able to even scratch the surface of what it could mean for us a society and for commercial organizations or government organizations. >> To your point it's not a technology problem when Mark Ramsay who was surveying the audience this morning. He said you know why have we had so many failures and the first hand that went up said. It's because of relations with the database. >> And I wanted to say it's not a technology problem. >> It's a hearts, minds and haves >> Absolutely. Absolutely. You couldn't make an impact to your data landscape without changing your technology. >> You said at the outset how important it is for you to show a bottom line impact. >> Right >> What's one project you've worked on or that you've led in your tenure that did that. >> If we're talking about for example I can't say specifics but if we're looking at one of institutions I worked at in an insurance firm and we looked at the customer journey. So we worked with some of the different departments that traditionally did not get access to data for them to be able to be effective at their jobs. But they wanted to do in marketing was create actually new products to make you know increase the wallet from the existing customers other things they wanted to do was for example, when there were problems with the customers instead of customer you know leaving you know the journey they were able to bring them back in by getting access to the data. So we either gave them insight like you know looking back to make sure that things didn't happen wrong the next time or we helped them giving them information so they could develop new products so this is all about going to market. So that's absolutely bottom line. It's not just all cost efficiency and products to begin . >> Yeah pipeline. (laughter) >> And that's really valid but you know. >> Absolutely so I'll give you one example where the data organization partnered with our data scientists. To try to figure out the best location for various branches. For that particular institution. And it was taking right trillions of data points right about current footprint as well as other information about geographic information that was out there publicly available. Taking that and using the analytics to figure out okay where should we have our branches, our ATM's etc... and then conslidating the footprint or expanding where appropriate. So that is bottom line impact for sure. >> I remember in the early part of the two thousands I remember reading a Harvard business review article about gut feel trumps data every time. But that's an example where no way. >> Nope. >> You could never do better with the gut than that example that you just gave. >> Absolutely. >> Veda. I want to ask you a question. I don't know if you've heard Mark Ramsays talk this morning but he sort of. He sort of declared that data governance was over. >> Mmm. >> And as the director of data governance >> Never! >> I wondered if you would disagree with that. >> Never! >> Look. >> Were you surprised? >> It's just like saying that I should stop brushing my teeth. Right I always will have to maintain a certain level of data hygiene. And I don't think that employees and executives and organizations have reached a level of maturity where I can trust them to maintain that level of hygiene independently. And therefore I need a governance function. I need to check to make sure you brush your teeth in the morning and in the evening. Right and I need you to go for your annual exam to make sure you don't have any cavities that weren't detected. Right so I think that there's still a role for governance to play. It will evolve over time for sure. Right as you know the landscape changes but I think there's still a role right for like governance. >> And that wasn't my takeaway part. I think he said that basically enterprise data warehouse fail massive data management fail. The single data model failed so we punted to governance and that's not going to solve the enterprise data problem. >> I think it's a one leg in the stool. It's one leg in the stool. ` >> Yeah I think I would really sum it up as a monolithic data storage approach failed. Like that. And then our attention went to data governance but that's not going to solve it either. Look, data management is about twelve different data capabilties it's a discipline so we give the title data governance but it means multiple things. And I think that if we're more educated and we have more confidence on what we're doing on those different areas. Plus information and knowledge management then we're way ahead of the game. I mean knowledge graphs and semantics. That puts companies you know at the top of that you know corporate inequality gap that we're looking at right now. Where you know companies are you know five and thousand times more valuable then their competition and the gap is just going to get bigger considering if some of those companies at the bottom of the gap are you know just keep on doing the same thing. >> I agree I was just trying to get you worked up. (laughter) >> Well you did. >> It's going to be a different kind of show. >> But that point you're making. Microsoft, Apple, Amazon and Google, Facebook. Top five companies in terms of market cap. And they're all data companies. They surpass all the financial services, all the energy companies, all the manufacturers. >> And Alibaba same thing. >> Oh yeah. >> They're doing the same thing. >> They're coming right up there. With four or five hundred billion. >> They're all doing the knowledge approach. They're doing all of this stuff and that's a much more comprehensive approach to looking at it as a full spectrum and if we keep on in the financial industry or any industry keep on just kind of looking at little bits and pieces. It's not going to work. It's a lot of talk but there's no action. >> We are losing right. I know that Fintechs are right fringing upon are territory. Right if Amazon can provide a credit card or lend you money or extend you credit. They're now functioning as a traditional bank would. If we're not paying attention to them as real competitors. We've lost the battle. >> That's a really important point you're making because it's all digital now. >> Absolutely. >> You used to be you'd never see companies traverse industries and now you see it Apple pay and Amazon and healthcare. >> Yeah. >> And government organizations teaming up with corporations and individuals. Everything is free flowing so that means the knowledge and the data and the information also needs to flow freely but it needs to be managed. >> Now you're into a whole realm of privacy and security. >> And regulations right. Regulations for the non right traditional banks. So we're doing banking transactions. >> Do you think traditional banks will lose control over the payment systems? >> If they don't move with the time they will. If they don't. I mean it's not something that's going to happen tomorrow but you know there is a category of bank called Challenger banks so there's a reason. You know even within their own niche there's a group of banks. >> I mean not even just payments right. Think about cash transactions like if I do money transfer am I going to my traditional bank to do it or am I going to cashapp. >> I think it's interesting particularly in the retail banking business where you know one banking app looks pretty much like other and people don't go to branches anymore and so that brand affinity that used to exist is harder and harder to maintain and I wonder what role does data play in reestablishing that connection. >> Well for me right I get really excited and sometimes annoyed when I can open up my app for my bank and I can see the pie chart of my spending. They're using my data to inform me about my behaviors sometimes a good story, sometimes a bad story. But they're using it to inform me. That's making me more loyal to that particular institution right so I can also link all of my financial accounts in that one institutions app and I can see a full list of all of my credit cards, all of my loans, all of my investments in one stop shopping. That's making me go to their app more often versus the other options that are out there. So I think we can use the data in order to endear the customer source but we have to be smart about it. >> That's the accountant in you. I just refuse to not look. (laughter) >> You can afford to not look. I can't. >> Thank you. >> Thanks for riling us up. >> Alright thank you for watching everybody we'll be right back with our next guest right after this short break. You're watching the cube from MIT in Boston, Cambridge. Right back. (atmospheric music)
SUMMARY :
Brought to you by silicon angle media. Did I get that right? and Althea Davis the former chief data officer Hi Vita, talk about your role at Raymond James. And I am now the director of data of the data governance. So Althea as the former CDO right is that So to do AI and data science you need a lot of data. We don't have the luxury of being and deliver results for the broader organization. Right. keep them out of jail. you came to come into this role Veda. And I know the pain of having to cleanse it You have to have so called single version of the truth. light for the financial reports to be accurate. So I came to it from a value chain perspective You can be a data chick. And she's positive that the reason was because But, at the same time you know data it's an asset Right I have to kind of figure it out as I go along I think that contributes to us kind of We hear that the chief data officer of function I had to you know lead a team of chief data officers the new kid on the block right. Right is data science in or out are I don't know that we have one answer that we know That's really important. I want to say that it's not an IT asset. But and that's the other big change is that fifteen. we got to get rid of the data or you know Data you can reuse over and over again. So I would agree with you it is not the new oil. One of the things that you guys addressed I presume it's data. It's our payers that don't get it. Its the sponsors that keep us up at night. Um, great attendance at the panel so we appreciate Great reviews so far. the thing that the CDO has to always pay attention to. So it needs to be actionable. and the first hand that went up said. You couldn't make an impact to your data it is for you to show a bottom line impact. or that you've led in your tenure that did that. actually new products to make you know increase (laughter) Absolutely so I'll give you one example I remember in the early part of the two thousands than that example that you just gave. He sort of declared that data governance was over. I need to check to make sure you brush your and that's not going to solve the enterprise data problem. It's one leg in the stool. and the gap is just going to get bigger considering I agree I was just trying to get you worked up. all the energy companies, all the manufacturers. They're coming right up there. It's not going to work. I know that Fintechs are right fringing upon are territory. That's a really important point you're industries and now you see it and the data and the information also needs to Regulations for the non right traditional banks. I mean it's not something that's going to happen tomorrow am I going to my traditional bank to do it banking business where you know one banking app looks and I can see the pie chart of my spending. I just refuse to not look. You can afford to not look. Alright thank you for watching everybody we'll
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Chris Bannocks, ING & Steven Eliuk, IBM | IBM CDO Fall Summit 2018
(light music) >> Live from Boston. It's theCUBE. Covering IBM Chief Data Officer Summit. Brought to you by IBM. >> Welcome back everyone, to theCUBE's live coverage of the IBM CDO Summit here in Boston, Massachusetts. I'm your host, Rebecca Night. And I'm joined by my co-host, Paul Gillen. We have two guests for this segment. We have Steven Eliuk, who is the Vice President of Deep Learning Global Chief Data Officer at IBM. And Christopher Bannocks, Group Chief Data Officer at IMG. Thanks so much for coming on theCUBE. >> My pleasure. >> Before we get started, Steve, I know you have some very important CUBE fans that you need-- >> I do. >> To give a shout out to. Please. >> For sure. So I missed them on the last three runs of CUBE, so I'd like to just shout out to Santiago, my son. Five years old. And the shortest one, which is Elana. Miss you guys tons and now you're on the air. (all laughing) >> Excellent. To get that important piece of business out. >> Absolutely. >> So, let's talk about Metadata. What's the problem with Metadata? >> The one problem, or the many (chuckles)? >> (laughing) There are a multitude of problems. >> How long ya got? The problem is, it's everywhere. And there's lots of it. And bringing context to that and understanding it from enterprise-wide perspective is a huge challenge. Just connecting to it finding it, or collecting centrally and then understanding the context and what it means. So, the standardization of it or the lack of standardization of it across the board. >> Yeah, it's incredibly challenging. Just the immense scale of metadata at the same time dealing with metadata as Chris mentioned. Just coming up with your own company's glossary of terms to describe your own data. It's kind of step one in the journey of making your data discoverable and governed. Alright, so it's challenging and it's not well understood and I think we're very early on in these stages of describing our data. >> Yeah. >> But we're getting there. Slowly but surely. >> And perhaps in that context it's not only the fact that it's everywhere but actually we've not created structural solutions in a consistent way across industries to be able to structure it and manage it in an appropriate way. >> So, help people do it better. What are some of the best practices for creating, managing metadata? >> Well you can look at diff, I mean, it's such a broad space you can look at different ones. Let's just take the work we do around describing our data and we do that for for the purposes of regulation. For the purposes of GDPR et cetera et cetera. It's really about discovering and providing context to the data that we have in the organization today. So, in that respect it's creating a catalog and making sure that we have the descriptions and the structures of the data that we manage and use in the organization and to give you perhaps a practical example when you have a data quality problem you need to know how to fix it. So, you store, so you create and structure metadata around well, where does it come from, first of all. So what's the journey it's taken to get to the point where you've identified that there's a problem. But also then, who do we go to to fix it? Where did it go wrong in the chain? And who's responsible for it? Those are very simple examples of the metadata around, the transformations the data might have come through to get to its heading point. The quality metrics associated with it. And then, the owner or the data steward that it has to be routed back to to get fixed. >> Now all of those are metadata elements >> All of those, yeah. >> Right? >> 'Cause we're not really talking about the data. The data might be a debit or a credit. Something very simple like that in banking terms. But actually it's got lots of other attributes associated with it which essentially describe that data. So, what is it? Who owns it? What are the data quality metrics? How do I know whether what it's quality is? >> So where do organizations make mistakes? Do they create too much metadata? Do they create poor, is it poorly labeled? Is it not federated? >> Yes. (all laughing) >> I think it's a mix of all of them. One of the things that you know Chris alluded to and you might of understood is that it's incredibly labor-intensive task. There's a lot of people involved. And when you get a lot of people involved in sadly a quite time-consuming, slightly boring job there's errors and there's problem. And that's data quality, that's GDPR, that's government owned entities, regulatory issues. Likewise, if you can't discover the data 'cause it's labeled wrong, that's potential insight that you've now lost. Because that data's not discoverable to a potential project that's looking for similar types of data. Alright, so, kind of step one is trying to scribe your metadata to the organization. Creating a taxonomy of metadata. And getting everybody on board to label that data whether it be short and long descriptions, having good tools et cetera. >> I mean look, the simple thing is... we struggle as... As a capability in any organization we struggle with these terms, right? Metadata, well ya know, if you're talking to the business they have no idea what you're talking about. You've already confused them the minute you mentioned meta. >> Hashtag. >> Yeah (laughs) >> It's a hashtag. >> That's basically what it is. >> Essentially what it is it's just data about data. It's the descriptive components that tell you what it is you're dealing with. If you just take a simple example from finance; An interest rate on it's own tells you nothing. It could be the interest rate on a savings account. It can the interest rate on a bond. But on its own you have no clue, what you're talking about. A maturity date, or a date in general. You have to provide the context. And that is it's relationships to other data and the contexts that it's in. But also the description of what it is you're looking at. And if that comes from two different systems in an organization, let's say one in Spain and one in France and you just receive a date. You don't know what you're looking at. You have not context of what you're looking at. And simply you have to have that context. So, you have to be able to label it there and then map it to a generic standard that you implement across the organization in order to create that control that you need in order to govern your data. >> Are there standards? I'm sorry Rebecca. >> Yes. >> Are there standards efforts underway industry standard why difference? >> There are open metadata standards that are underway and gaining great deal of traction. There are an internally use that you have to standardize anyway. Irrespective of what's happening across the industry. You don't have the time to wait for external standards to exist in order to make sure you standardize internally. >> Another difficult point is it can be region or country specific. >> Yeah. >> Right, so, it makes it incredibly challenging 'cause every region you might work in you might have to have a own sub-glossary of terms for that specific region. And you might have to control the export of certain data with certain terms between regions and between countries. It gets very very challenging. >> Yeah. And then somehow you have to connect to it all to be able to see what it all is because the usefulness of this is if one system calls exactly the same, maps to let's say date. And it's local definition of that is maturity date. Whereas someone else's map date to birthdate you know you've got a problem. You just know you've got a problem. And exposing the problem is part of the process. Understanding hey that mapping's wrong guys. >> So, where do you begin? If your mission is to transform your organization to be one that is data-centric and the business side is sort of eyes glazing over at the mention of metadata. What kind of communication needs to happen? What kind of teamwork, collaboration? >> So, I mean teamwork and collaboration are absolutely key. The communication takes time. Don't expect one blast of communication to solve the problem. It is going to take education and working with people to actually get 'em to realize the importance of things. And to do that you need to start something. Just the communication of the theory doesn't work. No one can ever connect to it. You have to have people who are working on the data for a reason that is business critical. And you need have them experience the problem to recognize that metadata is important. Until they experience the problem you don't get the right amount of traction. So you have to start small and grow. >> And you can use potentially the whip as well. Governance, the regulatory requirements that's a nice one to push things along. That's often helpful. >> It's helpful, but not necessarily popular. >> No, no. >> So you have to give-- >> Balance. >> We're always struggling with that balance. There's a lot of regulation that drives the need for this. But equally, that same regulation essentially drives all of the same needs that you need for analytics. For good measurement of the data. For growth of customers. For delivering better services to customers. All of these things are important. Just the web click information you have that's all essentially metadata. The way we interact with our clients online and through mobile. That's all metadata. So it's not all whip or stick. There's some real value that is in there as well. >> These would seem to be a domain that is ideal for automation. That through machine learning contextualization machines should be able to figure a lot of this stuff out. Am I wrong? >> No, absolutely right. And I think there's, we're working on proof of concepts to prove that case. And we have IBM AMG as well. The automatic metadata generation capability using machine learning and AI to be able to start to auto-generate some of this insight by using existing catalogs, et cetera et cetera. And we're starting to see real value through that. It's still very early days but I think we're really starting to see that one of the solutions can be machine learning and AI. For sure. >> I think there's various degrees of automation that will come in waves for the next, immediately right now we have certain degrees where we have a very small term set that is very high confidence predictions. But then you want to get specific to the specificity of a company which have 30,000 terms sometimes. Internally, we have 6,000 terms at IBM. And that level of specificity to have complete automation we're not there yet. But it's coming. It's a trial. >> It takes time because the machine is learning. And you have to give the machine enough inputs and gradually take time. Humans are involved as well. It's not about just throwing the machine at something and letting it churn. You have to have that human involvement. It takes time to have the machine continue to learn and grow and give it more terms. And give it more context. But over time I think we're going to see good results. >> I want to ask about that human-in-the-loop as IBM so often calls it. One of the things that Nander Paul Bendery was talking about is how the CDO needs to be a change engine in chief. So how are the rank and file interpreting this move to automation and increase in machine learning in their organizations? Is it accepted? It is (chuckles) it is a source of paranoia and worry? >> I think it's a mix. I think we're kind of blessed at least in the CDO at IBM, the global CDO. Is that everyone's kind of on board for that mission. That's what we're doing >> Right, right. >> There's team members 25, 30 years on IMBs roster and they're just as excited as I am and I've only been there for 16 months. But it kind of depends on the project too. Ones that have a high impact. Everyone's really gung ho because we've seen process times go from 90 days down to a couple of days. That's a huge reduction. And that's the governance regulatory aspects but more for us it's a little bit about we're looking for the linkage and availability of data. So that we can get more insights from that data and better outcomes for different types of enterprise use cases. >> And a more satisfying work day. >> Yeah it's fun. >> That's a key point. Much better to be involved in this than doing the job itself. The job of tagging and creating metadata associated with the vast number of data elements is very hard work. >> Yeah. >> It's very difficult. And it's much better to be working with machine learning to do it and dealing with the outliers or the exceptions than it is chugging through. Realistically it just doesn't scale. You can't do this across 30,000 elements in any meaningful way or a way that really makes sense from a financial perspective. So you really do need to be able to scale this quickly and machine learning is the way to do it. >> Have you found a way to make data governance fun? Can you gamify it? >> Are you suggesting that data governance isn't fun? (all laughing) Yes. >> But can you gamify it? Can you compete? >> We're using gamification in various in many ways. We haven't been using it in terms of data governance yet. Governance is just a horrible word, right? People have really negative connotations associated with it. But actually if you just step one degree away we're talking about quality. Quality means better decisions. And that's actually all governance is. Governance is knowing where your data is. Knowing who's responsible for fixing if it goes wrong. And being able to measure whether it's right or wrong in the first place. And it being better means we make better decisions. Our customers have better engagement with us. We please our customers more and therefore they hopefully engage with us more and buy more services. I think we should that your governance is something we invented through the need for regulation. And the need for control. And from that background. But realistically it's just, we should be proud about the data that we use in the organization. And we should want the best results from it. And it's not about governance. It's about us being proud about what we do. >> Yeah, a great note to end on. Thank you so much Christopher and Steven. >> Thank you. >> Cheers. >> I'm Rebecca Night for Paul Gillen we will have more from the IBM CDO Summit here in Boston coming up just after this. (electronic music)
SUMMARY :
Brought to you by IBM. of the IBM CDO Summit here in Boston, Massachusetts. To give a shout out to. And the shortest one, which is Elana. To get that important piece of business out. What's the problem with Metadata? And bringing context to that It's kind of step one in the journey But we're getting there. it's not only the fact that What are some of the best practices and the structures of the data that we manage and use What are the data quality metrics? (all laughing) One of the things that you know Chris alluded to I mean look, the simple thing is... It's the descriptive components that tell you Are there standards? You don't have the time to wait it can be region or country specific. And you might have to control the export And then somehow you have to connect to it all What kind of communication needs to happen? And to do that you need to start something. And you can use potentially the whip as well. but not necessarily popular. essentially drives all of the same needs that you need machines should be able to figure a lot of this stuff out. And we have IBM AMG as well. And that level of specificity And you have to give the machine enough inputs is how the CDO needs to be a change engine in chief. in the CDO at IBM, the global CDO. But it kind of depends on the project too. Much better to be involved in this And it's much better to be Are you suggesting And the need for control. Yeah, a great note to end on. we will have more from the IBM CDO Summit here in Boston
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Ferd Scheepers, ING Group | IBM Think 2018
>> Narrator: Live from Las Vegas, It's the CUBE covering IBM Think 2018, brought to you by IBM. >> Welcome back to the CUBE. We are live at the inaugural IBM Think 2018 event. I'm Lisa Martin, with my co-host Dave Vellante, and we are excited to be joined by one of the keynotes at this inaugural event, Ferd Scheepers, the Chief Information Architect from ING Group. Welcome to the CUBE. >> Thank you very much. Pleasure to be here. >> So, you already mentioned you are doing you said six sessions. I know at least one of them is a keynote. >> Correct. >> So, you've been to IBM events before. You're going to be talking in the cloud and data campus as they call it. Tell us, though, about what you have been doing as really one of the leaders for the last five years of ING becoming a data-driven company. And, also tell us what does data-driven mean to ING? >> Sure, so let's start with the latter. What does data-driven mean for ING? There may be different opinions within ING even, but for me, it's very much, we use data, and make it accessible for everybody in the company to help them drive their decision-making, and at the same time, we use that same data also to help our customers get more understanding of what they actually do with ING, and maybe even outside of ING, and use that data to help them get better services from ING at the right point in time with the right quality they can expect to really elevate our service level to our customers, but also drive decision-making internally. So, how do we do that? Well, very much by driving a data architecture, an information architecture, that started about six years ago when we work together with IBM to create something we now call the ING data lake architecture, which was very much about making it possible for us to bring all those data sources that we have in the company together, qualify them with business terms so that people could actually understand what they were, making sure that we came up with a common language across the bank, so that across all those different lines of business, all those countries, we actually had a common understanding of what we meant with, say, customer. I mean, that sounds very natural for a bank to understand what a customer is, but you might have very different definitions, based on where you come from, and which country. >> Okay, so I have to ask you about some of that data mall and that data journey, because the financial services business, it's always been a data business, but a lot of years ago, maybe even still today, many organizations data exists in silos. So, you talked about making data and data sources accessible to everybody in the company, so they could utilize it, but I'm very curious as to how you went about, basically, busting down the silos of data. What did you have to go through to do that, and do you feel like your employees and your customers actually now do have access to that data as you envisioned? >> I would say we're not there yet, we're on a journey, and that journey has been ongoing for about five years. But, the journey very much started by actually creating the architecture, which was the easy part, but then selling the architecture. And, selling the architecture actually means that you have to go to a different stakeholders with very different stories. So, what's in it for them? What's in it for your CIO's? Well, an easier landscape, a lot of automation, where in the past they had to do manual things, being in control, meaning all the risk items to go down. What's in it for the business sides? Well, that well-articulated business meeting around data, that empowerment of actually the business sides to own the data, to be able to say who has access to it, and what they can do with it. So, it was really about selling this architecture with many different presentations, with many different stakeholders, and then actually building this. The most important thing that I've always said to anybody who asked me, "Why is this successful at ING?" We planned something six years ago, and we've been driving this journey continuously for the last six years in that same direction, and that is really the key to it. If you believe you can do this journey, and have a value after a year, and then you're done, it doesn't work that way. It's a long journey. It takes a lot of investments, and it pays off after you've done that investment after many years. >> So, the joke is, of course, that we all hear, that the data lake turns into a data swamp. So, you went into this, thinking about getting value, obviously, out of the data. How did you make the data not stagnate? What kind of challenges do you have in that regard? >> I think that one of the main things that we did when we came up with this whole architecture is to say from day one, it is a data lake that is governance. Even though we didn't use the word that much, because a few years ago, governance may not have been the most popular term to use. But, in essence, it's what we did. Everything that we have in our data lake is identified. It is governed with different levels of governance. When you talk about customer data, you want to know all the different details about: What is a salary? Does an account includes the accrued interest? All these kinds of things. When you start talking about, maybe, log data, it's a lesser level of governance, but for every asset we have in our data lake, we know what it is, who owns it, more or less, high level, what it means, and in a lot of assets the more key assets of the bank, we know in all the details what's there, and that actually makes sure you don't get into a data swamp, 'cause data swamp pretty much is what a lot of companies, that one that said: Data lake equals a loop, equals put in bits and bytes, and then later you can't find it anymore. >> And, those data sets are categorized? >> They are. >> You've auto-categorized them at the point of creation, or use. Is that right, that's automated? >> We have still a lot of manual activities, but we actually more and more trying to automate this, so taking a lot of data discovery tools, where we look at the data the moment we ingest it into the data lake, we try to auto-classify what it means, and actually even tie it into business terms that we've defined. But, it's still partly also a manual thing, because as a bank, you probably have thousands of things that you could describe on a business term level, and we're still growing through that process of actually classifying everything. >> What about the policies associated with that? That, presumably, is automated for retention, or deletion, or movement, or archiving, or? >> Absolutely, yes. >> That's automated, right? >> Absolutely, yes. So, that ties into the business terms, so we do everything on business term level. So the moment we talk about customer, we have a policy that is on customer, or customer name, or whatever. No matter where that physical asset is, and even which kind of technology it is, it is driven all from that policy on the business term level. >> You have published quite a bit with IBM on data lakes. I mentioned that you are speaking at this event. What are some of the key learnings, as you are now in fifth or sixth year of this journey to Dave's question earlier that you can share about how to not turn a data lake into a data swamp, with maintaining a quality in meeting those internal stakeholder needs and expectations? >> One of the complexes that you see in all major organizations, is that we have, like any other technology out there. I mean, even though we're a good friend of IBM, we don't only have IBM technology. One of the challenges that you have is, the moment you go into the different organizations, or units within your company, they all use different technologies and nobody wants to give it up. But, you don't have a choice, because at this moment, and, you know, that might change over the next few years. The only way to be in control of your entire data landscape is to limit yourself in the technologies that you use, and actually to make sure that you drive the governance from a central perspective and use the technology stack, framework, whatever you want to call it that actually ties governance directly into the technology, into that way that you handle the data. If you think you can do that with every technology out there, and it magically all works together, or you want to do the integration, I would advise against that. I think it's way too much of a challenge, and one of the things I'll actually be presenting upon here at this conference is about open meta data. So a way for us to actually start opening this up and bringing meta data, which in essence means governance, to a more heterogeneous landscape, which is one of the major drivers why we're investing in this ourselves. Even though we like the IBM technology, we still, now and then, want to play with tools from other vendors, or maybe with open source technologies, and it needs to add up. It needs to be governed as well. So, this is a major investment for us, and I think this is something that everybody should have a look upon. >> I want to ask you about innovation and governance, 'cause they're kind of counterpoised, in a lot of people minds, but you were hinting earlier that it used to be a bad word, but maybe we could start getting value out of our governance framework. We got a great studio audience, I'm going to be like a broken record to these guys. I've been saying all morning that innovation is going to come from data. You've got a data lake: Machine intelligence or artificial intelligence, and cloud, at scale, whether it's private or public cloud. So, first question is: Governance and innovation. Are they at odds? And, how do you address that? >> So, I would say they're not at odds, but I do think that the moment you start looking at innovation, you need to take governance as something that is always top of mind. Actually, I think that what we've done so far, by investing heavily into a governed data lake, has helped us with being innovative, because the data foundation is there. The moment you want to look at data that you have within the company, if it's well qualified, if it's known, you know the quality of it, you know where it is, it actually makes it way easier to use enough of this technology to work with the data, because you don't have that problem of trying to find where everything is. I think that's been one of the biggest problems with all the innovation projects that I've seen. You start with this great idea, then you bring it into a company, then everybody says, "Ho, ho, ho, ho. "Not with my data." We have all the data together. We know where it is. We know what to use it for, and, we can actually say that the moment people start playing with their data, within a very well-defined set of rules, that's great. The moment we start bringing that innovation to production, we go to the steps to see whether that actually makes sense, whether we want to change the technology, or whether we need to bring a next level of governance in there. But, because we have everything under control, we can way easily actually play with innovation. >> So, governance brings data quality, data quality brings conviction of your decision-making. Okay, I get that. What about the cloud piece? We talked off-camera. Public cloud, not so much. How do you get scale economies, network effects, etcetera? >> One of the challenges that we've been facing is that the moment to start bringing a lot of technology in your own company, and you have to deploy all of that, it's the issue of bringing all that life cycle management into your organization. It's just a challenge. We've got literally I don't know how many teams, we'll say five, six, seven teams that do nothing else but bring life cycle managements, related updates towards our data lake. I love the cloud's idea, that actually all that stuff is taken away by somebody else. They do they updates, they do the life cycle management. I have a clear separation of my compute versus my storage. That's all the good stuff that cloud brings to me. The scalability, the elasticity, all of that stuff. I can't do all that in public cloud. I mean, we have a lot of customer data, we are very, very sensitive, you know, being from Europe, and especially being in the Netherlands. Now, all the privacy of our customers, so we don't want to bring everything to public clouds, but private cloud as it is today, especially with things like what's now being announced as the IBM Cloud Private for data, bringing a lot of those containerized ways of delivering new technologies into our organization. We did a POC with that, from three months to a few hours. That's the kind of stuff I'm looking for, and now also the metering comes in there, and we can start paying for it in a different way, not by just having a license for a product, with a number, of course, but but actually have that dynamic scaling, even in what we pay for. That has really enabled us to do a lot of new things, and that brings a lot of value. >> Can you touch on that business alcem that you just mentioned a minute ago from three months to three hours? Give a little more context there, that was with IBM Cloud Private for data. >> So, what we did, actually, we did the proof of concept together with IBM, where we looked at a product, in this case, just to try it out, which was Data Sage. In the past, when we have a new version of Data Sage, it will take us, literally, months to get that new version in production, even if it's a small fix, because, in all honesty, the way that the different fixes depend upon each other, the complexity of playing through that, it just takes forever, and it never goes right from day one. What we did is we brought the Data Sage containers into our own private cloud, which happens to be called IPC instead of ICP, which led to a lot of confusion during the whole POC, and we managed to show that we could actually bring the containers from IBM into our old cloud environments, and, literally, we could show that we could do an update in hours. That same update, going through normal process of installing it, doing all the different patches there are for each other, with some of them conflicting, testing it, making sure it all works literally, months. It's a huge success for us. >> So, thinking about the the data journey that you went on, if you had a Mulligan? Does Mulligan translate into your native tongue? Do-over, Mulligan, golf term, right? Pot-shot, take another one. If you had a do-over, what would you do differently? What kind of advice would you give to your colleagues? >> I think I wouldn't change a fundamental step in what we did. I think what we did, the journey was okay. What I probably would have done different is actually, two things. One is, there was and still has quite some focus on creating this ING language, which we call the ING Esperanto, which is one thing we need. We need to have a definition that is cross-country, cross-lines of business, and just like a common understanding. But, it has also translated quite a bit into becoming like an attempt to economical data model. I think we should have shied away a little bit from that and kept it at a definition level a little bit more. The second thing that I probably would have done different, is that instead of trying to do a lot of work together only with IBM, I would have probably invited a second partner from day one, just to make sure this is even more of an industry standard thing. We tried to publish together. We've done a lot of work together, but actually I think that everything we've built shouldn't be an ING proprietary thing. It should be something that's open-source, and we're actually doing that now, more and more. A lot of the stuff we've built, we're pushing to open source, which I think is the right way, because at the end of the day, what we've built is plumbing, and a banker's not in the business of plumbing. We're in the business of helping our customers to achieve great things, and all the stuff behind the scenes, all the plumbing, is something I'd rather buy, and get off the shelf, than I build it myself. >> So, last question, I've heard a number of things about what ING has achieved in terms of a lot of operational efficiencies. You mentioned that this is a journey, and that's probably also another key piece for people who want to learn from you that this is something that is going to take time. Last question, though. You mentioned the word control earlier, and how you had to get buy-in from a lot of stakeholders who probably felt very tied lines divisive to their data. Recommendations and advice for truly building a data-driven culture of a company that's several decades old. >> I would say, go to the highest level in your company and make sure your CEO puts this on the messages to the outside world. I think that one of the biggest achievements we had at some point in time is that our CEO, Ralph Hamers, he talks to the world and he says, "We love analytics. "We want to be a technology company, and we think "analytics is one of the most important things we do, "because it's the best way for us to actually "help our customers to be "a step ahead in life from business." The moment you have that message and you explain it that way to the world, nobody within your company will actually say, "This is a bad idea," 'cause if the boss says so, even within a Dutch organization, everybody buys into it. So, I think just go to your the highest manager in your company, get them on board, get them to speak on it publicly, and you're set. >> Well, Ferd, thanks so much for sharing what you have achieved so far at ING in your current role, and for also sharing your recommendations and advice, lessons learned. We appreciate your time. >> Thank you very much. >> And, good luck on your keynote, and all of your other speaking sessions this week. >> Ferd: Thank you, yeah. And, for Dave Vellante, I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching the CUBE, live on day one of the inaugural IBM Think 2018. Stick around. Dave and I will be right back after a short break.
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brought to you by IBM. We are live at the inaugural IBM Think 2018 event. Thank you very much. So, you already mentioned you are doing Tell us, though, about what you have been doing and at the same time, we use that same data also and do you feel like your employees and your customers and that is really the key to it. So, the joke is, of course, that we all hear, the most popular term to use. at the point of creation, or use. the moment we ingest it into the data lake, So the moment we talk about customer, we have a policy What are some of the key learnings, as you are now One of the challenges that you have is, in a lot of people minds, but you were hinting earlier that the moment people start playing with their data, What about the cloud piece? That's all the good stuff that cloud brings to me. that you just mentioned a minute ago of installing it, doing all the different patches the data journey that you went on, We're in the business of helping our customers to and how you had to get buy-in from a lot of stakeholders "analytics is one of the most important things we do, what you have achieved so far and all of your other speaking sessions this week. live on day one of the inaugural IBM Think 2018.
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Show Wrap | KubeCon + CloudNativeCon NA 2022
(bright upbeat music) >> Greetings, brilliant community and thank you so much for tuning in to theCUBE here for the last three days where we've been live from Detroit, Michigan. I've had the pleasure of spending this week with Lisa Martin and John Furrier. Thank you both so much for hanging out, for inviting me into the CUBE family. It's our first show together, it's been wonderful. >> Thank you. >> You nailed it. >> Oh thanks, sweetheart. >> Great job. Great job team, well done. Free wall to wall coverage, it's what we do. We stay till everyone else-- >> Savannah: 100 percent. >> Everyone else leaves, till they pull the plug. >> Lisa: Till they turn the lights out. We're still there. >> Literally. >> Literally last night. >> Still broadcasting. >> Whatever takes to get the stories and get 'em out there at scale. >> Yeah. >> Great time. >> 33. 33 different segments too. Very impressive. John, I'm curious, you're a trend watcher and you've been at every single KubeCon. >> Yep. >> What are the trends this year? Give us the breakdown. >> I think CNCF does this, it's a hard job to balance all the stakeholders. So one, congratulations to the CNCF for another great KubeCon and CloudNativeCon. It is really hard to balance bringing in the experts who, as time goes by, seven years we've been all of, as you said, you get experts, you get seniority, and people who can be mentors, 60% new people. You have vendors who are sponsoring and there's always people complaining and bitching and moaning. They want this, they want that. It's always hard and they always do a good job of balancing it. We're lucky that we get to scale the stories with CUBE and that's been great. We had some great stories here, but it's a great community and again, they're inclusive. As I've said before, we've talked about it. This year though is an inflection point in my opinion, because you're seeing the developer ecosystem growing so fast. It's global. You're seeing events pop up, you're seeing derivative events. CNCF is at the center point and they have to maintain the culture of developer experts, maintainers, while balancing the newbies. And that's going to be >> Savannah: Mm-hmm. really hard. And they've done a great job. We had a great conversation with them. So great job. And I think it's going to continue. I think the attendance metric is a little bit of a false positive. There's a lot of online people who didn't come to Detroit this year. And I think maybe the combination of the venue, the city, or just Covid preferences may not look good on paper, on the numbers 'cause it's not a major step up in attendance. It's still bigger, but the community, I think, is going to continue to grow. I'm bullish on it. >> Yeah, I mean at least we did see double the number of people that we had in Los Angeles. Very curious. I think Amsterdam, where we'll be next with CNCF in the spring, in April. I think that's actually going to be a better pulse check. We'll be in Europe, we'll see what's going on. >> John: Totally. >> I mean, who doesn't like Amsterdam in the springtime? Lisa, what have been some of your observations? >> Oh, so many observations. The evolution of the conference, the hallway track conversations really shifting towards adjusting to the enterprise. The enterprise momentum that we saw here as well. We had on the show, Ford. >> Savannah: Yes. We had MassMutual, we had ING, that was today. Home Depot is here. We are seeing all these big companies that we know and love, become software companies right before our eyes. >> Yeah. Well, and I think we forget that software powers our entire world. And so of course they're going to have to be here. So much running on Kubernetes. It's on-prem, it's at the edge, it's everywhere. It's exciting. Woo, I'm excited. John, what do you think is the number one story? This is your question. I love asking you this question. What is the number one story out KubeCon? >> Well, I think the top story is a combination of two things. One is the evolution of Cloud Native. We're starting to see web assembly. That's a big hyped up area. It got a lot of attention. >> Savannah: Yeah. That's kind of teething out the future. >> Savannah: Rightfully so. The future of this kind of lightweight. You got the heavy duty VMs, you got Kubernetes and containers, and now this web assembly, shows a trajectory of apps, server-like environment. And then the big story is security. Software supply chain is, to me, was the number one consistent theme. At almost all the interviews, in the containers, and the workflows, >> Savannah: Very hot. software supply chain is real. The CD Foundation mentioned >> Savannah: Mm-hmm. >> they had 16,000 vulnerabilities identified in their code base. They were going to automate that. So again, >> Savannah: That was wild. >> That's the top story. The growth of open source exposes potential vulnerabilities with security. So software supply chain gets my vote. >> Did you hear anything that surprised you? You guys did this great preview of what you thought we were going to hear and see and feel and touch at KubeCon, CloudNativeCon 2022. You talked about, for example, the, you know, healthcare financial services being early adopters of this. Anything surprise either one of you in terms of what you predicted versus what we saw? Savannah, let's start with you. >> You know what really surprised me, and this is ironic, so I'm a community gal by trade. But I was really just impressed by the energy that everyone brought here and the desire to help. The thing about the open source community that always strikes me is, I mean 187 different countries participating. You've got, I believe it's something like 175,000 people contributing to the 140 projects plus that CNCF is working on. But that culture of collaboration extends far beyond just the CNCF projects. Everyone here is keen to help each other. We had the conversation just before about the teaching and the learnings that are going on here. They brought in Detroit's students to come and learn, which is just the most heartwarming story out of this entire thing. And I think it's just the authenticity of everyone in this community and their passion. Even though I know it's here, it still surprises me to see it in the flesh. Especially in a place like Detroit. >> It's nice. >> Yeah. >> It's so nice to see it. And you bring up a good point. It's very authentic. >> Savannah: It's super authentic. >> I mean, what surprised me is one, the Wasm, or web assembly. I didn't see that coming at the scale of the conversation. It sucked a lot of options out of the room in my opinion, still hyped up. But this looks like it's got a good trajectory. I like that. The other thing that surprised me that was a learning was my interview with Solo.io, Idit, and Brian Gracely, because he's a CUBE alumni and former host of theCUBE, and analyst at Wikibon, was how their go-to-market was an example of a modern company in Covid with a clean sheet of paper and smart people, they're just doing things different. They're in Slack with their customers. And I walked away with, "Wow that's like a playbook that's not, was never, in the go-to-market VC-backed company playbook." I thought that was, for me, a personal walk away saying that's important. I like how they did that. And there's a lot of companies I think could learn from that. Especially as the recession comes where partnering with customers has always been a top priority. And how they did that was very clever, very effective, very efficient. So I walked away with that saying, "I think that's going to be a standard." So that was a pleasant surprise. >> That was a great surprise. Also, that's a female-founded company, which is obviously not super common. And the growth that they've experienced, to your point, really being catalyzed by Covid, is incredibly impressive. I mean they have some massive brand name customers, Amex, BMW for example. >> Savannah: Yeah. >> Great point. >> And I interviewed her years ago and I remember saying to myself, "Wow, she's impressive." I liked her. She's a player. A player for sure. And she's got confidence. Even on the interview she said, "We're just better, we have better product." And I just like the point of view. Very customer-focused but confident. And I just took, that's again, a great company. And again, I'm not surprised that Brian Gracely left Red Hat to go work there. So yeah, great, great call there. And of course other things that weren't surprising that I predicted, Red Hat continued to invest. They continue to bring people on theCUBE, they support theCUBE but more importantly they have a good strategy. They're in that multicloud positioning. They're going to have an opportunity to get a bite at the apple. And I what I call the supercloud. As enterprises try to go and be mainstream, Cloud Native, they're going to need some help. And Red Hat is always has the large enterprise customers. >> Savannah: What surprised you, Lisa? >> Oh my gosh, so many things. I think some of the memorable conversations that we had. I love talking with some of the enterprises that we mentioned, ING Bank for example. You know, or institutions that have been around for 100 plus years. >> Savannah: Oh, yeah. To see not only how much they've innovated and stayed relevant to meet the demands of the consumer, which are only increasing, but they're doing so while fostering a culture of innovation and a culture that allows these technology leaders to really grow within the organization. That was a really refreshing conversation that I think we had. 'Cause you can kind of >> Savannah: Absolutely. think about these old stodgy companies. Nah, of course they're going to digitize. >> Thinking about working for the bank, I think it's boring. >> Right? >> Yeah. And they were talking about, in fact, those great t-shirts that they had on, >> Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. were all about getting more people to understand how fun it is to work in tech for ING Bank in different industries. You don't just have to work for the big tech companies to be doing really cool stuff in technology. >> What I really liked about this show is we had two female hosts. >> Savannah: Yeah. >> How about that? Come on. >> Hey, well done, well done on your recruitment there, champ. >> Yes, thank you boss. (John laughs) >> And not to mention we have a really all-star production team. I do just want to give them a little shout out. To all the wonderful folks behind the lines here. (people clapping) >> John: Brendan. Good job. >> Yeah. Without Brendan, Anderson, Noah, and Andrew, we would be-- >> Of course Frank Faye holding it back there too. >> Yeah, >> Of course, Frank. >> I mean, without the business development wheels on the ship we'd really be in an unfortunate spot. I almost just swore on television. We're not going to do that. >> It's okay. No one's regulating. >> Yeah. (all laugh) >> Elon Musk just took over Twitter. >> It was a close call. >> That's right! >> It's going to be a hellscape. >> Yeah, I mean it's, shit's on fire. So we'll just see what happens next. I do, I really want to talk about this because I think it's really special. It's an ethos and some magic has happened here. Let's talk about Detroit. Let's talk about what it means to be here. We saw so many, and I can't stress this enough, but I think it really matters. There was a commitment to celebrating place here. Lisa, did you notice this too? >> Absolutely. And it surprised me because we just don't see that at conferences. >> Yeah. We're so used to going to the same places. >> Right. >> Vegas. Vegas, Vegas. More Vegas. >> Your tone-- >> San Francisco >> (both laugh) sums up my feelings. Yes. >> Right? >> Yeah. And, well, it's almost robotic but, and the fact that we're like, oh Detroit, really? But there was so much love for this city and recognizing and supporting its residents that we just don't see at conferences. You uncovered a lot of that with your swag-savvy segments, >> Savannah: Yeah. >> And you got more of that to talk about today. >> Don't worry, it's coming. Yeah. (laughs) >> What about you? Have you enjoyed Detroit? I know you hadn't been here in a long time, when we did our intro session. >> I think it's a bold move for the CNCF to come here and celebrate. What they did, from teaching the kids in the city some tech, they had a session. I thought that was good. >> Savannah: Loved that. I think it was a risky move because a lot of people, like, weren't sure if they were going to fly to Detroit. So some say it might impact the attendance. I thought they did a good job. Their theme, Road Ahead. Nice tie in. >> Savannah: Yeah. And so I think I enjoyed Detroit. The weather was great. It didn't rain. Nice breeze outside. >> Yeah. >> The weather was great, the restaurants are phenomenal. So Detroit's a good city. I missed some hockey games. I'd love to see the Red Wings play. Missed that game. But we always come back. >> I think it's really special. I mean, every time I talked to a company about their swag, that had sourced it locally, there was a real reason for this story. I mean even with Kasten in that last segment when I noticed that they had done Carhartt beanies, Carhartt being a Michigan company. They said, "I'm so glad you noticed. That's why we did it." And I think that type of, the community commitment to place, it all comes back to community. One of the bigger themes of the show. But that passion and that support, we need more of that. >> Lisa: Yeah. >> And the thing about the guests we've had this past three days have been phenomenal. We had a diverse set of companies, individuals come on theCUBE, you know, from Scott Johnston at Docker. A really one on one. We had a great intense conversation. >> Savannah: Great way to kick it off. >> We shared a lot of inside baseball, about Docker, super important company. You know, impressed with companies like Platform9 it's been around since the OpenStack days who are now in a relevant position. Rafi Systems, hot startup, they don't have a lot of resources, a lot of guerilla marketing going on. So I love to see the mix of startups really contributing. The big players are here. So it's a real great mix of companies. And I thought the interviews were phenomenal, like you said, Ford. We had, Kubia launched on theCUBE. >> Savannah: Yes. >> That's-- >> We snooped the location for KubeCon North America. >> You did? >> Chicago, everyone. In case you missed it, Bianca was nice enough to share that with us. >> We had Sarbjeet Johal, CUBE analyst came on, Keith Townsend, yesterday with you guys. >> We had like analyst speed dating last night. (all laugh) >> How'd that go? (laughs) >> It was actually great. One of the things that they-- >> Did they hug and kiss at the end? >> Here's the funny thing is that they were debating the size of the CNC app. One thinks it's too big, one thinks it's too small. And I thought, is John Goldilocks? (John laughs) >> Savannah: Yeah. >> What is John going to think about that? >> Well I loved that segment. I thought, 'cause Keith and Sarbjeet argue with each other on Twitter all the time. And I heard Keith say before, he went, "Yeah let's have it out on theCUBE." So that was fun to watch. >> Thank you for creating this forum for us to have that kind of discourse. >> Lisa: Yes, thank you. >> Well, it wouldn't be possible without the sponsors. Want to thank the CNCF. >> Absolutely. >> And all the ecosystem partners and sponsors that make theCUBE possible. We love doing this. We love getting the stories. No story's too small for theCUBE. We'll go with it. Do whatever it takes. And if it wasn't for the sponsors, the community wouldn't get all the great knowledge. So, and thank you guys. >> Hey. Yeah, we're, we're happy to be here. Speaking of sponsors and vendors, should we talk a little swag? >> Yeah. >> What do you guys think? All right. Okay. So now this is becoming a tradition on theCUBE so I'm very delighted, the savvy swag segment. I do think it's interesting though. I mean, it's not, this isn't just me shouting out folks and showing off t-shirts and socks. It's about standing out from the noise. There's a lot of players in this space. We got a lot of CNCF projects and one of the ways to catch the attention of people walking the show floor is to have interesting swag. So we looked for the most unique swag on Wednesday and I hadn't found this yet, but I do just want to bring it up. Oops, I think I might have just dropped it. This is cute. Is, most random swag of the entire show goes to this toothbrush. I don't really have more in terms of the pitch there because this is just random. (Lisa laughs) >> But so, everyone needs that. >> John: So what's their tagline? >> And you forget these. >> Yeah, so the idea was to brush your cloud bills. So I think they're reducing the cost of-- >> Kind of a hygiene angle. >> Yeah, yeah. Very much a hygiene angle, which I found a little ironic in this crowd to be completely honest with you. >> John: Don't leave the lights on theCUBE. That's what they say. >> Yeah. >> I mean we are theCUBE so it would be unjust of me not to show you a Rubik's cube. This is actually one of those speed cubes. I'm not going to be able to solve this for you with one hand on camera, but apparently someone did it in 17 seconds at the booth. Knowing this audience, not surprising to me at all. Today we are, and yesterday, was the t-shirt contest. Best t-shirt contest. Today we really dove into the socks. So this is, I noticed this trend at KubeCon in Los Angeles last year. Lots of different socks, clouds obviously a theme for the cloud. I'm just going to lay these out. Lots of gamers in the house. Not surprising. Here on this one. >> John: Level up. >> Got to level up. I love these 'cause they say, "It's not a bug." And anyone who's coded has obviously had to deal with that. We've got, so Star Wars is a huge theme here. There's Lego sets. >> John: I think it's Star Trek. But. >> That's Star Trek? >> John: That's okay. >> Could be both. (Lisa laughs) >> John: Nevermind, I don't want to. >> You can flex your nerd and geek with us anytime you want, John. I don't mind getting corrected. I'm all about, I'm all about the truth. >> Star Trek. Star Wars. Okay, we're all the same. Okay, go ahead. >> Yeah, no, no, this is great. Slim.ai was nice enough to host us for dinner on Tuesday night. These are their lovely cloud socks. You can see Cloud Native, obviously Cloud Native Foundation, cloud socks, whole theme here. But if we're going to narrow it down to some champions, I love these little bee elephants from Raft. And when I went up to these guys, I actually probably would've called these my personal winner. They said, again, so community focused and humble here at CNCF, they said that Wiz was actually the champion according to the community. These unicorn socks are pretty excellent. And I have to say the branding is flawless. So we'll go ahead and give Wiz the win on the best sock contest. >> John: For the win. >> Yeah, Wiz for the win. However, the thing that I am probably going to use the most is this really dope Detroit snapback from Kasten. So I'm going to be rocking this from now on for the rest of the segment as well. And I feel great about this snapback. >> Looks great. Looks good on you. >> Yeah. >> Thanks John. (John laughs) >> So what are we expecting between now and KubeCon in Amsterdam? >> Well, I think it's going to be great to see how they, the European side, it's a chill show. It's great. Brings in the European audience from the global perspective. I always love the EU shows because one, it's a great destination. Amsterdam's going to be a great location. >> Savannah: I'm pumped. >> The American crowd loves going over there. All the event cities that they choose are always awesome. I missed Valencia cause I got Covid. I'm really bummed about that. But I love the European shows. It's just a little bit, it's high intensity, but it's the European chill. They got a little bit more of that siesta vibe going on. >> Yeah. >> And it's just awesome. >> Yeah, >> And I think that the mojo that carried throughout this week, it's really challenging to not only have a show that's five days, >> but to go through all week, >> Savannah: Seriously. >> to a Friday at 4:00 PM Eastern Time, and still have the people here, the energy and all the collaboration. >> Savannah: Yeah. >> The conversations that are still happening. I think we're going to see a lot more innovation come spring 2023. >> Savannah: Mm-hmm. >> Yeah. >> So should we do a bet, somebody's got to buy dinner? Who, well, I guess the folks who lose this will buy dinner for the other one. How many attendees do you think we'll see in Amsterdam? So we had 4,000, >> Oh, I'm going to lose this one. >> roughly in Los Angeles. Priyanka was nice enough to share with us, there was 8,000 here in Detroit. And I'm talking in person, we're not going to meddle this with the online. >> 6500. >> Lisa: I was going to say six, six K. >> I'm going 12,000. >> Ooh! >> I'm going to go ahead and go big I'm going to go opposite Price Is Right. >> One dollar. >> Yeah. (all laugh) That's exactly where I was driving with it. I'm going, I'm going absolutely all in. I think the momentum here is building. I think if we look at the numbers from-- >> John: You could go Family Feud >> Yeah, yeah, exactly. And they mentioned that they had 11,000 people who have taken their Kubernetes course in that first year. If that's a benchmark and an indicator, we've got the veteran players here. But I do think that, I personally think that the hype of Kubernetes has actually preceded adoption. If you look at the data and now we're finally tipping over. I think the last two years we were on the fringe and right now we're there. It's great. (voice blares loudly on loudspeaker) >> Well, on that note (all laugh) On that note, actually, on that note, as we are talking, so I got to give cred to my cohosts. We deal with a lot of background noise here on theCUBE. It is a live show floor. There's literally someone on an e-scooter behind me. There's been Pong going on in the background. The sound will haunt the three of us for the rest of our lives, as well as the production crew. (Lisa laughs) And, and just as we're sitting here doing this segment last night, they turned the lights off on us, today they're letting everyone know that the event is over. So on that note, I just want to say, Lisa, thank you so much. Such a warm welcome to the team. >> Thank you. >> John, what would we do without you? >> You did an amazing job. First CUBE, three days. It's a big show. You got staying power, I got to say. >> Lisa: Absolutely. >> Look at that. Not bad. >> You said it on camera now. >> Not bad. >> So you all are stuck with me. (all laugh) >> A plus. Great job to the team. Again, we do so much flow here. Brandon, Team, Andrew, Noah, Anderson, Frank. >> They're doing our hair, they're touching up makeup. They're helping me clean my teeth, staying hydrated. >> We look good because of you. >> And the guests. Thanks for coming on and spending time with us. And of course the sponsors, again, we can't do it without the sponsors. If you're watching this and you're a sponsor, support theCUBE, it helps people get what they need. And also we're do a lot more segments around community and a lot more educational stuff. >> Savannah: Yeah. So we're going to do a lot more in the EU and beyond. So thank you. >> Yeah, thank you. And thank you to everyone. Thank you to the community, thank you to theCUBE community and thank you for tuning in, making it possible for us to have somebody to talk to on the other side of the camera. My name is Savannah Peterson for the last time in Detroit, Michigan. Thanks for tuning into theCUBE. >> Okay, we're done. (bright upbeat music)
SUMMARY :
for inviting me into the CUBE family. coverage, it's what we do. Everyone else leaves, Lisa: Till they turn the lights out. Whatever takes to get the stories you're a trend watcher and What are the trends this and they have to maintain the And I think it's going to continue. double the number of people We had on the show, Ford. had ING, that was today. What is the number one story out KubeCon? One is the evolution of Cloud Native. teething out the future. and the workflows, Savannah: Very hot. So again, That's the top story. preview of what you thought and the desire to help. It's so nice to see it. "I think that's going to be a standard." And the growth that they've And I just like the point of view. I think some of the memorable and stayed relevant to meet Nah, of course they're going to digitize. I think it's boring. And they were talking about, You don't just have to work is we had two female hosts. How about that? your recruitment there, champ. Yes, thank you boss. And not to mention we have John: Brendan. Anderson, Noah, and Andrew, holding it back there too. on the ship we'd really It's okay. I do, I really want to talk about this And it surprised going to the same places. (both laugh) sums up my feelings. and the fact that we're that to talk about today. Yeah. I know you hadn't been in the city some tech, they had a session. I think it was a risky move And so I think I enjoyed I'd love to see the Red Wings play. the community commitment to place, And the thing about So I love to see the mix of We snooped the location for to share that with us. Keith Townsend, yesterday with you guys. We had like analyst One of the things that they-- And I thought, is John Goldilocks? on Twitter all the time. to have that kind of discourse. Want to thank the CNCF. And all the ecosystem Speaking of sponsors and vendors, in terms of the pitch there Yeah, so the idea was to be completely honest with you. the lights on theCUBE. Lots of gamers in the obviously had to deal with that. John: I think it's Star Trek. (Lisa laughs) I'm all about, I'm all about the truth. Okay, we're all the same. And I have to say the And I feel great about this snapback. Looks good on you. (John laughs) I always love the EU shows because one, But I love the European shows. and still have the people here, I think we're going to somebody's got to buy dinner? Priyanka was nice enough to share with us, I'm going to go ahead and go big I think if we look at the numbers from-- But I do think that, I know that the event is over. You got staying power, I got to say. Look at that. So you all are stuck with me. Great job to the team. they're touching up makeup. And of course the sponsors, again, more in the EU and beyond. on the other side of the camera. Okay, we're done.
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Saad Malik & Tenry Fu, Spectro Cloud | KubeCon + CloudNativeCon NA 2022
>>Hey everybody. Welcome back. Good afternoon. Lisa Martin here with John Feer live in Detroit, Michigan. We are at Coon Cloud Native Con 2020s North America. John Thank is who. This is nearing the end of our second day of coverage and one of the things that has been breaking all day on this show is news. News. We have more news to >>Break next. Yeah, this next segment is a company we've been following. They got some news we're gonna get into. Managing Kubernetes life cycle has been a huge challenge when you've got large organizations, whether you're spinning up and scaling scale is the big story. Kubernetes is the center of the conversation. This next segment's gonna be great. It >>Is. We've got two guests from Specter Cloud here. Please welcome. It's CEO Chenery Fu and co-founder and it's c g a co-founder Sta Mallek. Guys, great to have you on the program. Thank >>You for having us. My pleasure. >>So Timary, what's going on? What's the big news? >>Yeah, so we just announced our Palace three this morning. So we add a bunch, a new functionality. So first of all we have a Nest cluster. So enable enterprise to easily provide Kubernete service even on top of their existing clusters. And secondly, we also support seamlessly migration for their existing cluster. We enable them to be able to migrate their cluster into our CNC for upstream Kubernete distro called Pallet extended Kubernetes, GX K without any downtime. And lastly, we also add a lot of focus on developer experience. Those additional capability enable developer to easily onboard and and deploy the application for. They have test and troubleshooting without, they have to have a steep Kubernetes lending curve. >>So big breaking news this morning, pallet 3.0. So you got the, you got the product. This is a big theme here. Developer productivity, ease of use is the top story here. As developers are gonna increase their code velocity cuz they're under a lot of pressure. This infrastructure's getting smarter. This is a big part of managing it. So the toil is now moving to the ops. Steves are now dev teams. Security, you gotta enable faster deployment of apps and code. This is what you guys solve while you getting this right. Is that, take us through that specific value proposition. What's the, what are the key things on in this news release? Yeah, >>You're exactly right. Right. So we basically provide our solution to platform engineering ship so that they can use our platform to enable Kubernetes service to serve their developers and their application ship. And then in the meantime, the developers will be able to easily use Kubernetes or without, They have to learn a lot of what Kubernetes specific things like. So maybe you can get in some >>Detail. Yeah. And absolutely the detail about it is there's a big separation between what operations team does and the development teams that are using the actual capabilities. The development teams don't necessarily to know the internals of Kubernetes. There's so much complexity when it comes, comes into it. How do I do things like deployment pause manifests just too much. So what our platform does, it makes it really simple for them to say, I have a containerized application, I wanna be able to model it. It's a really simple profile and from there, being able to say, I have a database service. I wanna attach to it. I have a specific service. Go run it behind the scenes. Does it run inside of a Nest cluster? Which we'll talk into a little bit. Does it run into a host cluster? Those are happen transparently for >>The developer. You know what I love about this? What you guys are doing in the news, it really points out what I love about DevOps. Because cloud, let's face a cloud early adopters, we're all the hardcore cloud folks as it goes mainstream. With Kubernetes, you start to see like words like platform engineering. I mean I love that term. That means as a platform, it's been around for a while. For people who are building their own stuff, that means it's gonna scale and enable people to enable value, build on top of it, move faster. This platform engineering is becoming now standard in enterprises. It wasn't like that before. What's your eyes reactions that, How do you see that evolving faster? Or do you believe that or what's your take on >>It? Yeah, so I think it's starting from the DevOps op team, right? That every application team, they all try to deploy and manage their application under their own ING infrastructure. But very soon all these each application team, they start realize they have to repeatedly do the same thing. So these will need to have a platform engineering team to basically bring some of common practice to >>That. >>And some people call them SREs like and that's really platform >>Engineering. It is, it is. I mean, you think about like Esther ability to deploy your applications at scale and monitoring and observability. I think what platform engineering does is codify all those best practices. Everything when it comes about how you monitor the actual applications. How do you do c i CD your backups? Instead of not having every single individual development team figuring how to do it themselves. Platform engineer is saying, why don't we actually build policy that we can provide as a service to different development teams so that they can operate their own applications at scale. >>So launching Pellet 3.0 today, you also had a launch in September, so just a few weeks ago. Talk about what these two announcements mean from Specter Cloud's perspective in terms of proof points, what you're delivering to the end users and the value that they're getting from that. >>Yeah, so our goal is really to help enterprise to deploy and around Kubernetes anywhere, right? Whether it's in cloud data center or even at Edge locations. So in September we also announce our HV two capabilities, which enable very easy deployment of Edge Kubernetes, right at at at any any location, like a retail stores restaurant, so on and so forth. So as you know, at Edge location, there's no cloud endpoint there. It's not easy to directly deploy and manage Kubernetes. And also at Edge location there's not, it's not as secure as as cloud or data center environment. So how to make the end to end system more secure, right? That it's temper proof, that is also very, very important. >>Right. Great, great take there. Thanks for explaining that. I gotta ask cuz I'm curious, what's the secret sauce? Is it nested clusters? What's, what's the core under the hood here on 3.0 that people should know about it's news? It's what's, what's the, what's that post important >>To? To be honest, it's about enabling developer velocity. Now how do you enable developer velocity? It's gonna be able for them to think about deploying applications without worrying about Kubernetes being able to build this application profiles. This NEA cluster that we're talking about enables them, they get access to it in complete cluster within seconds. They're essentially having access to be able to add any operations, any capabilities without having the ability to provision a cluster on inside of infrastructure. Whether it's Amazon, Google, or OnPrem. >>So, and you get the dev engine too, right? That that, that's a self-service provisioning in for environments. Is that, Yeah, >>So the dev engine itself are the capabilities that we offer to developers so that they can build these application profiles. What the application profiles, again they define aspects about, my application is gonna be a container, it's gonna be a database service, it's gonna be a helm chart. They define that entire structure inside of it. From there they can choose to say, I wanna deploy this. The target environment, whether it becomes an actual host cluster or a cluster itself is irrelevant to them. For them it's complete transparent. >>So transparency, enabling developer velocity. What's been some of the feedback so far? >>Oh, all developer love that. And also same for all >>The ops team. If it's easy and goods faster and the steps >>Win-win team. Yeah, Ops team, they need a consistency. They need a governance, they need visibility, but in the meantime, developers, they need the flexibility then theys or without a steep learning curve. So this really, >>So So I hear a lot of people say, I got a lot of sprawl, cluster sprawl. Yeah, let's get outta hand does, let's solve that. How do you guys solve that problem? Yeah, >>So the Neste cluster is a profit answer for that. So before you nest cluster, for a lot of enterprise to serving developers, they have to either create a very large TED cluster and then isolated by namespace, which not ideal for a lot of situation because name stay namespace is not a hard isolation and also a lot of global resource like CID and operator does not work in space. But the other way is you give each developer a separate, a separate ADE cluster, but that very quickly become too costly. Cause not every developer is working for four, seven, and half of the time your, your cluster is is a sit there idol and that costs a lot of money. So you cluster, you'll be able to basically do all these inside the your wholesale cluster, bring the >>Efficiency there. That is huge. Yeah. Saves a lot of time. Reduces the steps it takes. So I take, take a minute, my last question to you to explain what's in it for the developer, if they work with Spec Cloud, what is your value? What's the pitch? Not the sales pitch, but like what's the value pitch that >>You give them? Yeah, yeah. And the value for us is again, develop their number of different services and teams people are using today are so many, there are so many different languages or so many different libraries there so many different capabilities. It's too hard for developers to have to understand not only the internal development tools, but also the Kubernetes, the containers of technologies. There's too much for it. Our value prop is making it really easy for them to get access to all these different integrations and tooling without having to learn it. Right? And then being able to very easily say, I wanna deploy this into a cluster. Again, whether it's a Nest cluster or a host cluster. But the next layer on top of that is how do we also share those abilities with other teams. If I build my application profile, I'm developing an application, I should be able to share it with my team members. But Henry saying, Hey Tanner, why don't you also take a look at my app profile and let's build and collaborate together on that. So it's about collaboration and be able to move >>Really fast. I mean, more develops gotta be more productive. That's number one. Number one hit here. Great job. >>Exactly. Last question before we run out Time. Is this ga now? Can folks get their hands on it where >>Yes. Yeah. It is GA and available both as a, as a SaaS and also the store. >>Awesome guys, thank you so much for joining us. Congratulations on the announcement and the momentum that Specter Cloud is empowering itself with. We appreciate your insights on your time. >>Thank you. Thank you so much. Right, pleasure. >>Thanks for having us. For our guest and John Furrier, Lisa Martin here live in Michigan at Co con Cloud native PON 22. Our next guests join us in just a minute. So stick around.
SUMMARY :
This is nearing the end of our second day of coverage and one of the things that has been Kubernetes is the center of the conversation. Guys, great to have you on the program. You for having us. So enable enterprise to easily provide Kubernete service This is what you guys solve while you getting this right. So maybe you can get in some So what our platform does, it makes it really simple for them to say, Or do you believe that or what's your take on application team, they start realize they have to repeatedly do the same thing. I mean, you think about like Esther ability to deploy your applications at So launching Pellet 3.0 today, you also had a launch in September, So how to make the end to end system more secure, right? the hood here on 3.0 that people should know about it's news? It's gonna be able for them to think about deploying applications without worrying about Kubernetes being able So, and you get the dev engine too, right? So the dev engine itself are the capabilities that we offer to developers so that they can build these application What's been some of the feedback so far? And also same for all If it's easy and goods faster and the steps but in the meantime, developers, they need the flexibility then theys or without So So I hear a lot of people say, I got a lot of sprawl, cluster sprawl. for a lot of enterprise to serving developers, they have to either create a So I take, take a minute, my last question to you to explain what's in it for the developer, So it's about collaboration and be able to move I mean, more develops gotta be more productive. Last question before we run out Time. as a SaaS and also the store. Congratulations on the announcement and the momentum that Specter Cloud is Thank you so much. So stick around.
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Sean Scott, PagerDuty | PagerDuty Summit 2022
>> Welcome back to theCube's coverage of PagerDuty Summit 22. Lisa Martin with you here on the ground. I've got one of our alumni back with me. Sean Scott joins me, the Chief Product Officer at PagerDuty. It's great to have you here in person. >> Super great to be here in person. >> Isn't it nice? >> Quite a change, quite a change. >> It is a change. We were talking before we went live about it. That's that readjustment to actually being with another human, but it's a good readjustment to have >> Awesome readjustment. I've been traveling more and more in the past few weeks and just speaking the offices, seeing the people the energy we get is the smiles, it's amazing. So it's so much better than just sitting at your home and. >> Oh, I couldn't agree more. For me it's the energy and the CEO of DocuSign talked about that with Jennifer during her fireside chat this morning, but yes, finally, someone like me who doesn't like working from home but as one of the things that you talked about in your keynote this morning was the ways traditionally that we've been working are no longer working. Talk to me about the future of work. What does it look like from PagerDuty's lens? >> Sure. So there's a few things. If we just take a step back and think about, what your day looks like from all the different slacks, chats, emails, you have your dashboards, you have more slacks coming in, you have more emails coming in, more chat and so just when you start the day off, you think you know what you're doing and then it kind of blows up out of the gate and so what we're all about is really trying to revolutionize operations so how do you help make sense of all the chaos that's happening and how do you make it simpler so you can get back to doing the more meaningful work and leave the tedium to the machines and just automate. >> That would be critical. One of the things that such an interesting dynamic two years that we've had obviously here we are in San Francisco with virtual event this year but there's so many problems out there that customer landscape's dealing with the great resignation. The data deluge, there's just data coming in everywhere and we have this expectation when we're on the consumer side, that we're going to be that a business will know us and have enough context to make us that the next best offer that actually makes sense but now what we're seeing is like the great resignation and the data overload is really creating for many organizations, this operational complexity that's now a problem really amorphously across the organization. It's no longer something that the back office has to deal with or just the front office, it's really across. >> Yeah, that's right. So you think about just the customer's experience, their expectations are higher than ever. I think there's been a lot of great consumer products that have taught the world, what good looks like, and I came from a consumer background and we measured the customer experience in milliseconds and so customers talking about minutes or hours of outages, customers are thinking in milliseconds so that's the disconnect and so, you have to be focused at that level and have everybody in your organization focused, thinking about milliseconds of customer experience, not seconds, minutes, hours, if that's where you're at, then you're losing customers. And then you think about, you mentioned the great resignation. Well, what does that mean for a given team or organization? That means lost institutional knowledge. So if you have the experts and they leave now, who's the experts? And do you have the processes and the tools and the runbooks to make sure that nothing falls on the ground? Probably not. Most of the people that we talk to, they're trying to figure it out as they go and they're getting better but there's a lot of institutional knowledge that goes out the door when people leave. And so part of our solution is also around our runbook automation and our process automation and some of our announcements today really help address that problem to keep the business running, keep the operations running, keep everything kind of moving and the customers happy ultimately and keep your business going where it needs to go. >> That customer experience is critical for organizations in every industry these days because we don't to your point. We'll tolerate milliseconds, but that's about it. Talk to me about you did this great keynote this morning that I had a chance to watch and you talked about how PagerDuty is revolutionizing operations and I thought, I want you to be able to break that down for this audience who may not have heard that. What are those four tenants or revolutionizing operations that PagerDuty is delivering to ORGS? >> Sure, so it starts with the data. So you mentioned the data deluge that's happening to everybody, right? And so we actually do, we integrate with over 650 systems to bring all that data in, so if you have an API or webhook, you can actually integrate with PagerDuty and push this data into PagerDuty and so that's where it starts, all these integrations and it's everything from a develop perspective, your CI/CD pipelines, your code repositories, from IT we have those systems are instrumented as well, even marketing, more tech stacks we can actually instrument and pull data in. The next step is now we have all this data, how do we make sense of it? So, we think we have machine learning algorithms that really help you focus your attention and kind of point you to the really relevant work, part of that is also noise suppression. So, our algorithms can suppress noise about 98% of the noise can just be eliminated and that helps you really focus where you need to spend your time 'cause if you think about human time and attention, it's pretty expensive and it's probably one of your company's most precious resources is that human time and so you want the humans doing the really meaningful work. Next step is automation, which is okay. We want the humans doing the special work, so what's the TDM? What's the toil that we can get rid of and push that to the machines 'cause machines are really good at doing very easy, repetitive task and there's a lot of them that we do day in, day out. The next step is just orchestrating the work and putting, getting everybody in the organization on the same page and that's where this morning I talked about our customer service operations product into the customer service is on the front lines and they're often getting signals from actual customers that nobody else in the organization may not even be aware of it yet So, I was running a system before and all our metrics are good and you get a customer feedback saying, "This isn't working for me," and you go look at the metrics and your dashboards and all looks good and then you go back and talk to the customer some more and they're like, "No, it's still not working," and you go back to your data, you're back to your dashboards, back to your metrics and sure enough, we had an instrumentation issue but the customer was giving us that feedback and so customer service is really on the front lines and they're often the kind of the unsung heroes for your customers but they're actually really helping and make sure that everything, the right signals are coming to the dev team, to the owners that own it and even in the case when you think you have everything instrumented, you may be missing something and that's where they can really help but our customer service operations product really helps bring everybody on the same page and then as the development teams and the IT teams and the SRA has pushed information back to customer service, then they're equipped, empowered to go tell the customer, "Okay, we know about the issue. Thank you." We should have it up in the next 30 minutes or whatever it is, five minutes, hopefully it's faster than longer, but they can inform the customer so to help that customer experience as opposed to the customer saying, "Oh, I'm just going to go shop somewhere else," or "I'm going to go buy somewhere else or do something else." And the last part is really around, how do we really enable our customers with the best practices? So those million users, the 21,000 companies in organizations we're working with, we've learned a lot around what good looks like. And so we've really embedded that back into our product in terms of our service standards which is really helps SRES and developers set quality standards for how services should be implemented at their company and then they can actually monitor and track across all their teams, what's the quality of the services and this team against different teams in their organization and really raise the quality of the overall system. >> So for businesses and like I mentioned, DocuSign was on this morning, I know some great brand customers that you guys have. I've seen on the website, Peloton Slack, a couple that popped out to me. When you're able to work with a customer to help them revolutionize operations, what are some of the business impacts? 'Cause some of the things that jump out to me would be like reduction in churn, retention rate or some of those things that are really overall impactful to the revenue of a business. >> Absolutely. And so there's a couple different parts of it. One is, all the work what PagerDuty is known for is orchestrating the work for a service outage or a website outage and so that's actually easy to measure 'cause you can measure your revenue that's coming in or missed revenue and how much we've shortened that. So that's the, I guess that's our kind of the history and our legacy but now we've moved into a lot of the cost side as well. So, helping customers really understand from an outage perspective where to focus our time as opposed to just orchestrating the work. Well now, we can say, we think we have a new feature we launched last year called Probable Origin. So when you have an outage, we can actually narrow in where we think the outage and just give you a few clues of this looks anomalous, for example. So let's start here. So that still focus on the top line and then from an automation perspective, there's lots and lots of just toil and noise that people are dealing with on a day in, day out basis and then some of it's easy work, some of it's harder work. One of the ones I really like is our automated diagnostics. So, if you have an incident, one of the first things you have to do is you have to go gather telemetry of what's actually happening on the servers, to say, is the CPU look good? Does the memory look good? Does the disc look good? Does the network look good? And that's all perfect work for automation. And so we can run our automated diagnostics and have all that data pumped directly into the incident so when the responder engages, it's all right there waiting for them and they don't have to go do all that basic task of getting data, cutting and pasting into the incident or if you're using one of those old ticketing systems, cutting and pacing into a a tickety system, it's all right there waiting for you. And that's on average 15 minutes during an outage of time that's saved. And the nice thing about that is that can all be kicked off at time zero so you can actually call from our event orchestration product, you can call directly into automation actions right there when that event first comes in. So you think about, there's a warning for a CPU and instantly it kicks off this diagnostics and then within seconds or even minutes, it's in the incident waiting for you to take action. >> One of the things that you also shared this morning that I loved was one of the stats around customer sale point that they had 60 different alerts coming in and PagerDuty was able to reduce that to one alert. So, 60 X reduction in alerts, getting rid of a lot of noise allowing them to focus on really those probably key high escalations that are going to make the biggest impact to their customers and to their business. >> That's right. You think about, you have a high severity incident like they actually had a database failure and so, when you're in the heat of the moment and you start getting these alerts, you're trying to figure out, is that one incident? Is it 10 incidents? Is it a hundred incidents that I'm having to deal with? And you probably have a good feeling like there's, I know it's probably this thing but you're not quite sure and so, with our machine learning we're able to eliminate a lot of the noise and in this case it was, going from 60 alerts down to one, just to let you know, this is the actual incident, but then also to focus your attention on where we think may be the cause and you think about all the different teams that historically have been had to pull in for a large scale incident. We can quickly narrow into the root cause and just get the right people involved. So we don't have these conference bridges of a hundred people on which you hear about. When these large cottages happen that everyone's on a call across the entire company and it's not just the dev teams and IT teams, you have PR, you have legal, you have everybody's involved in these. And so the more that we can workshop their work and get smarter about using machine learning, some of these other technologies then the more efficient it is for our customers and ultimately the better it is for their customers. >> Right and hopefully, PR, HR, legal doesn't have to be some of those incident response leaders that right now we're seeing across the organization. >> Exactly. Exactly. >> So when you're talking with customers and some of the things that you announced, you mentioned automated actions, incident workflows, what are you hearing from the voice of the customer as the chief product officer and what influence did that have in terms of this year's vision for the PagerDuty Summit? >> Sure. We listen to our customers all the time. It's one of our leadership principles and really trying to hear their feedback and it was interesting. I got sent some of the chat threads during the keynote afterwards, and there's a lot of excitement about the products we announced. So the first one is incident workflows, and this is really, it's a no code workflow based on or a recent acquisition of a company called Catalytic and what it does is it's, you can think of as kind of our next generation of response plays so you can actually go in and and build a workflow using no code tooling to say, when this incident happens or this type of incident happens, here's what that process looks like and so back to your original comment around the great resignation that loss institutional knowledge, well now, you're building all this into your processes through your incident response. And so, I think the incident workflows, if you want to create a incident specific slack channel or an incident specific zoom bridge, or even just in status updates, all that is right there for you and you can use our out of the box orchestrations or you can define your own 'cause we have back to the, our customer list, we have some of the biggest companies in the world, as customers and we have a very opinionated product and so if you're new to the whole DevOps and full service ownership, we help you through that. But then, a lot of our companies are evolving along that continuum, the operational maturity model continuum. And at the other end, we have customers that say "This is great, but we want to extend it. We want to like call this person or send this or update this system here." And so that's where the incident workflows is really powerful and it lets our customers just tailor it to their processes and really extend it for them. >> And that's GA later this year? >> Later this year, yes, we'll start ING probably the next few months and then GA later this year. >> Got it. Last question, as we're almost out of time here, what are some of the things that as you talk to customers day in and day out, as you see you saw the chats from this morning's live keynote, the excitement, the trust that PagerDuty is building with its customers, its partners, et cetera, What excites you about the future? >> So it's really why I came to PagerDuty. I've been here about a year and a half now, but revolutionizing operations, that's a big statement and I think we need it. I think Jennifer said in her keynote today, work is broken and I think our data, we surveyed our customers earlier this year and 42% of the respondents were working more hours in 2021 compared to 2020. And I don't think anyone goes home and if I could only work more hours, I think there's some and if I could only do more of this like TDM, the TDM, more toils, if I could only do more of that, I think life would be so good. We don't hear that. We don't hear that a lot. We hear about there's a lot of noise. We have a massive attrition that every company does. That's the type of feedback that we get and so we're really, that's what gets me excited about, the tools that we're building that and especially when I think just seeing the chat even this morning about some of the announcements, it shows we've been listening and it shows the excitement in our customers when they're, lots of I'm going to use this tool, that tool, I can just use PagerDuty which is awesome. >> The momentum is clear and it's palpable and I love being a part of that. Thank you so much Sean for joining me on theCube this afternoon, talking about what's new, what's exciting and how you guys are fixing work that's broken that validated me thinking the work was broken so thank you. >> Happy to be here and thanks for having me. >> My pleasure. For Sean Scott. I'm Lisa Martin, you're watching theCube's coverage of PagerDuty Summit 22 on the ground from the San Francisco. (soft music)
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It's great to have you here in person. but it's a good readjustment to have and just speaking the offices, and the CEO of DocuSign talked about that and leave the tedium to the that the back office has to deal with and the tools and the runbooks and I thought, I want you to and even in the case 'Cause some of the things and so that's actually easy to measure and to their business. and it's not just the across the organization. Exactly. and so back to your original comment and then GA later this year. that as you talk to and 42% of the respondents the work was broken Happy to be here and of PagerDuty Summit 22 on the
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Michael Dell, Dell Technologies | Dell Technologies World 2022
>>The cube presents, Dell technologies world brought to you by Dell. >>Hello. Welcome to the cube here at Dell tech world. I'm John furry host of the cube with Dave Alon here with Michael Dell, the CEO of Dell technologies cube alumni comes on every year. We have the cube here. It's been two years. Michael, welcome to the cube. Get to see you. >>Hey, John, Dave, great to be with you guys. Thanks for being here. Wonderful to be back here in Vegas with >>You. Well, great to be in person two years ago, we had the cue with the pandemic a lot's happened. We were talking end to end solutions here at Dell tech world in person two years ago, pandemic hits. Thank God you had all that supply for the, for the people having the remote remote end to work now back in person. What's it look like now with, with Dell tech end to end, the edge is important. What's the story, >>You know, edge is, is the physical world. And if you, if you step back from clouds and, you know, multi-cloud, you sort of think about what is the purpose of a cloud or a data center? Well, it's to take data out of the physical world and move it to this place, to somehow enhance it or do something with it and create business value and hopefully create better outcomes. Well, it turns out that, you know, increasingly a lot of that data is gonna stay in the physical world and all of those nodes are gonna be connected. They're gonna be intelligent and we're seeing it in manufacturing and retail and healthcare, transportation, logistics. We're seeing this rapidly intelligent edge being formed. And then of course, with the new networks, the 5g we're seeing, you know, all, all this develop. And so here on the show floor, we're showing a lot of those solutions, but our customers are, are highly engaged. And certainly we think that's a, a big, a big growth factor for the next decade. >>And it's been ING to watch the transformation of the it world and cloudification and the as service, uh, consumption model, which you guys are putting out there has been very successful, but cloud operations is more prominent now on premises and edge and cloud. So the combination of cloud on-premise and edge hardware matters more now than ever before Silicon advances, um, abstraction layers from modern cloud native applications are what people are focused on. What's the story that you cite to the CIOs saying, we're here to help you with that new architecture cloud multi-cloud on premise and edge. What's the main story for you guys with the customers? >>Well, you know, customers want to go faster, right? And they want to accelerate their transformation. And so they wanna shift more resources over to developers, to applications, to access their data, to create competitive advantage. And so we talk a lot about the value line and what are those things below the value line, where we can provide that as a service on a consumption based model and accelerate their transformation, kind of, you know, do for them what we've done inside our own business. And, you know, it's absolutely resonating. We're seeing great growth there. People continue to, to need the solutions, but as we can automate the management and deployment of infrastructure and make it super easy, it gives them a lot of cycles back. >>You know, Michael, my, the favorite part, my favorite part of your book was you were in, I think you were in his, in his home court, in his dining room at Carl Icahn's house. And you said, well, why don't you just buy the company? And then you'll do what you're doing. I I'll buy it back for cheaper. Now, thankfully, you didn't have to do that. Cuz you had an environment of low interest rates and you obviously took it into the other direction, added tremendous value, 101 billion in revenue last year, 17% revenue growth, which was out astounding. When you think about that, um, now we're entering a new chapter with VMware untethered of course you're the chairman of both companies. So how should we think about the new Dell what's next? >>Well, so look, we, we have some unbelievable core businesses, right? We have our client system business and we've all learned during these last two years, how incredibly important it is to enable and empower your workforce with the right tools in the remote and high hybrid work. And we're showing off all kinds of new innovations here. That's a huge business force continues to grow, continues to be super important. Then we have our ISG, the cloud data center, the network of the future, the edge, you know, the, the sort of epicenter of where we're embracing, consumption based business models. That's absolutely huge. Then we have these new, new businesses that we're building with telco with edge, put it all together. It's a 1.3 trillion Tam that we operate in, as you said, more than a hundred billion dollars last year. So there's plenty of room for us to continue to grow and, and expand. And you know, as we make this shift to outcomes, it's obviously more valuable for customers and that, you know, increases our opportunity, increases the, the value we can create for all our stakeholders. >>And number one, number one, share in PCs, by the way, congratulations, again, hit that milestone. All of our gamer, uh, fans in our discord want to know what's the hottest chips coming. What's the fastest machines. What, how's the monitors coming? They want faster, cheaper. What's the coolest, uh, monitors out there right now and, and machines. >>Well, uh, you know, what what's, what's amazing is the, the pace of innovation continues to improve. So whether it's in the GPU, the CPU, the, the resolution, I I'm pretty partial to our 41, uh, display 11 million pixels of fun. And look, I mean, we, we it's, it's, it's clear that people are more productive when they have large screens and all the performance is enabling photo realistic, uh, you know, uh, gaming and photo realistic, everything. And these are immersive experiences. And, you know, again, uh, what companies have figured out to bring it back to, to, to a little bit of business here, John, is that when you, uh, give people the right tools, they're more productive, they're more engaged and look, people are smart. They know what tools are available. And, you know, uh, the thing that actually is most representative of how a person thinks about the tools they have at their organization is actually the thing that's right in front of 'em. And so, you know, this ability for us to provide a pool set of solutions for organizations to keep their workforce productive, to run their applications and infrastructure securely anywhere they want. That's, that's a winning proposition. >>Michael trust was a big theme of your keynote yesterday. And when you acquired EMC and got VMware, it really changed the dynamic with regard to your ability to, into new parts of organizations. You became a much more strategic supplier. I, I would argue. And now with VMware as a separate company, do you feel like you have built up over the, you know, five or whatever years that muscle memory you kinda earn that trust. So how do you see the customer relationship with that regard to that integration that they, they loved the eco. So system competitors might not have loved it so much, but the customers really did love. In fact, the, the U S a, a gentleman yesterday kind of mentioned that, how do you see it? >>You know, customers, uh, are not as interested in the balance sheet and what you know, where different holdings are, what they, they want things to work together, right? And they want partnerships in ecosystems. And certainly, you know, with VMware, even before the combination, we had a powerful partnership. It obviously solidified in a super special way. And now we have this first and best relationship and I've remained the chairman of VMware and super excited about their future. But our ecosystem is incredibly broad. And you see that here in this show floor, and again, making things work together better and more effectively building these engineered solutions that allow people to very quickly deploy the kind of capabilities they want, whether it's, you know, snowflake now working with the on premise and the edge data and more of these, you know, multi-cloud, uh, eco of systems that are being built. It's not gonna be just one company >>You called the edge a couple years ago. You're really prominent in your, in your speeches. And your keynotes data also is a big theme. You mentioned data now, data engineering seems to be the hottest track of, of, of students graduating with data engineering skills, not data science, data engineering, large scale data as code concepts. So what's your vision now with data, how's that fitting into the solutions and the role of data, obviously data protection with cybersecurity data as code is becoming really part of that next big thing. >>Yeah. I mean, if, if you look at anything that is interesting in the world today, uh, at the center of it is data, right? Whether it's the blockchain or the defi or the AI drug discovery, or the autonomous vehicles or whatever you wanna do, there's data in, in, in the middle of that. And of course with that data, well, you've gotta manage it. You, you need compute engines, right? You need to be able to protect it, secure it. And, you know, that's kind of what we do, and we're not going to create all those solutions, but we are gonna be an enabling layer to allow that data to be accessed no matter, you know, where, where it is. And, and, and of course, you know, leading in storage continues to be a super important part of our business. Number one, larger than number two than number three, number four, combined, and, and most of number five as well, and, and growing share. And, and you saw today, the software defined innovations, allowing that, you know, data layer to exist across the edge, the colos, the OnPrem, and the public clouds >>Throughout a stat yesterday. I can't remember if it was a keynote of the analyst round table, but it was 9 million cell towers. And if I heard, right, you kinda look at those as potential data centers talk about that's >>Right. It it's actually 7 million, but, but probably will be 9 million and not, not too long, I don't have the update, but so yeah, the public clouds all together is about 600 data centers. They're about 7 million cellular base stations in the world. Every single one of those is becoming a, you know, multi access, edge compute node. And what are they putting in there? They're putting many data centers of compute and GPS and storage. And, you know, 5g is not about, uh, connecting people that was 4g and before 5g is about connecting things. And there are way more things than there are people, right? And, uh, you know, this, this, this edge is, is rapidly developing. You'll also have private 5g and you'll have, you know, again, embedded intelligence I believe is gonna be in everything this next decade is going to be about that intelligent, connected future, taking that data, turning it into useful outsides in insights and outcomes. And, you know, lots of new businesses will be existing. Businesses will be transformed and also disrupted. >>Yeah. I mean, I think that's so right on and not to pat ourselves on the back day, but we called that edge distributed computing a couple years ago on the cube. And that's, what's turning into the home with COVID you saw that become a workplace, basically compute center, these compute nodes, tying it together as we, what everyone's talking about right now. So as customers say, okay, I want to keep my operations steady, steady, and secure. How do I glue it together? How do I bring these compute node together? That seems to be the top question on, on top of people's minds. And they want it to be cloud native, which means they want it to run cloud-like and they want to connect these compute node together. That's a big discussion point. What's your view on, >>Well, you know, if you, if you sort of have a, a cloud here, a cloud there cloud everywhere, and you, you know, have lots of different Kubernetes frameworks, uh, and you've got, you know, everything is, is spread out, it's a disaster, right? And, and, and it's, it's a, it's a, it's a real challenge to manage all that. So what people are trying to do is create ruthless standardization. It's like, how do you drive cost out and get speed? It's ruthless standardization create consistent environments where you can operate the across all the different domains that, that you want. And so, uh, you know, this is what we're bringing together in, in, in the capabilities that we're delivering. >>And that chaos is great opportunity for you. Um, how are you feeling about VMware these days, new team, uh, give us the update there. >>Yeah. The team is doing well. You know, I think the tons message is resonating. You know, people want Kubernetes and, and, and container based apps, for sure. That's the main, you know, growth in, in, in, in, in new, in new workloads. Uh, but they also want it to work with what they have. Yeah. And they don't want it to be locked into one particular infrastructure. So software finding everything, making it run in all the public clouds, you know, we've had a great success with VxRail, you know, that, that absolutely continues. We have, uh, 200,000 plus nodes, 15,000 customers and growing, we have edge satellite nodes and we continue to work together in SD wan in software defined networking in VMware cloud foundation, uh, you know, expressed, uh, in, in, in all locations. >>You know, one of the things that we've been seeing with the trend towards, um, future of work, which is a big theme, here is a lot of managed services are popping up where the complexity is so ha high that customers want to manage services. Uh, and also the workforce of it's kind of changing. You got a younger generation coming in, how do you see that future of the workforce? The next level? It's not gonna be like, yesterday's it, it's gonna be distributed computing dashboard based. And then you've got these managed services, you know, need to have the training and expertise maybe to run something at scale. How do, how do you see that connecting? Cuz that seems to be another big trend people are talking about, Hey, it's complex someone manage it for me. And I want ease of views. I want the easy button in it. >>Yeah. Well we we've all been at this a while. So we can remember, you know, the beginnings of converged infrastructure and then hyperconverged, which wasn't that long go. And now we have consumption based business models. These are all along the trajectory of the easy button that you're talking about and customers really thinking about the value line, where are the things that really differentiate and add value for their business. And it's not below the value line in those infrastructure areas are creating that easy button with appliances, with consumption based models and allowing them to deploy the scarce resources. They have to the things that really drive their unique differe. And you know, if you look at our managed services flex on demand, all the sort of ancestors and predecessors of apex, those have been great businesses for us. And now with apex, we're kind of industrializing this and, and making it, you know, at scale for all >>Customers, you know, the three of us, we go back, we, we, our first interactions with you separately, we're in the nine. And then we reconnected in the 2012. I think it was Tarkin Mayer had a little breakout session with CIOs. You brought us to early on a Dell tech world in Austin. And of course it was, >>It was just Dell world. Then Dell >>Four, we had Dell tech, you and then EMC world in 2010 was our first cube. And now that's all come together here in Las Vegas. So, you know, it's been great. Uh, the three of us come together and so really appreciate that. Yeah. >>Awesome. Absolutely awesome. >>Well, you know, really appreciate you guys being here, the wonderful work you do in thank you in, you know, bringing out the, the, the stories and, and showing off and helping us show off the innovations that, you know, our team has been working on. You know, during the past year >>It's been great in conversations and, and on a personal note, it's been great to have, uh, chat with all the top people and your company. Appreciate it. Um, someone told me to ask you this question, I want to ask you, you, we've all seen waves of innovation cycles up and down. We're kind of on one. Now you're seeing an inflection point, this next gen, uh, computing and, and web three cultural shit F with workforces and distributed computing decentralization. You mentioned that DFI earlier, how do you see this wave coming? Cause we've seen cycles come and go.com. Bubble kind of looks the same as the web three NFTs and stuff. Now it seems to be Look different, but how do you see this next wave? Cuz looking back on all the other ones that you you have lived through and you rode >>Well. So, you know, the, the way I see it is is, uh, to some extent, these are like foundational layers that have to be built for the next phase to occur. And if you look at the sort of new companies that are being founded today, and we see a lot of those, you, you, you, you see'em, we invest in a bunch of 'em, you know, they're, they're not going and, and kind of redoing the old foundational layers, they're going deeply into vertical businesses and, and disrupting and adding value on top of those. And I think that's, that's really the, the point of, of technology, right? It's enabling human progress us in, in all fields, it's making us healthier. It's making us safer. It's making us more successful in everything that, that we as humans do. And so all these layers of technology are enabling further progress and I think it's absolutely gonna continue. It's all been super exciting. Yeah. You know, so far for the first several decades, but as I, as I believe it, it's, it's just a pre-game show. >>And it's clear your strategy is, is, is really building that foundation of a layer, hardening it, but making it flexible enough, anybody read your book, you're a technology, visionary. A lot of people put you in a, you know, finance bucket, but you can, you can see that you can connect the dots. And that's what you're doing with your foundation of layers. You that's where you're making the bets, isn't it? Uh, you don't can't predict the future. You've said that many times, but you can sort of see where it's going and be prepared for >>It. Well, you, you, you know, you think about any company in, in the industry or any public sector organization, right? Uh, they're, they're, they're wanting to evolve more quickly and transform more quick, more quickly. Right. And we can give them an infrastructure or set of tools, a set of capabilities to help them go faster. >>Yeah. And the other one thing in the eighties, when you started Dell and we were in college, there was no open source really then if look at the growth of open source, talk about those layers, open source, better Silicon GPS, faster, cheap >>More now and now we even have, uh, open source instruction sets for processors. So I mean the whole world's changing. It's exciting. You have people around the world working together. I mean, when you see our development teams, uh, whether they're in Israel or Ireland or Bangalore or Singapore, Hopton Austin, Silicon valley, you know, Taiwan, they're, they're all, they're all collaborating together and, you know, driving, driving innovation and, and, and our business is not that dissimilar from our customers >>Like great to have you in the queue. Great. To have a physical event. People are excited. I'm talking to people, Hey, haven't been back in Vegas in two years. Thanks for having this event. Great to see you. Thanks for coming on the cube. >>Absolutely. Thank you guys. >>Michael Dell here in the cube CEO of Dell technologies. I'm John far, Dave Volante. We'll be right back, more live coverage here at Dell tech world.
SUMMARY :
I'm John furry host of the cube with Dave Alon here with Michael Hey, John, Dave, great to be with you guys. Thank God you had all that supply for the, for the people having the remote remote end to work now Well, it turns out that, you know, What's the story that you cite to the CIOs saying, we're here to help you with that new architecture cloud Well, you know, customers want to go faster, right? And you said, well, why don't you just buy the company? And you know, as we make this shift to outcomes, And number one, number one, share in PCs, by the way, congratulations, again, hit that milestone. all the performance is enabling photo realistic, uh, you know, uh, And now with VMware as a separate company, do you feel like you have built up the kind of capabilities they want, whether it's, you know, snowflake now working with the on premise and how's that fitting into the solutions and the role of data, obviously data protection with cybersecurity And, and, and of course, you know, And if I heard, right, you kinda look at those as potential data centers talk about of those is becoming a, you know, multi access, And that's, what's turning into the home with COVID you saw that And so, uh, you know, this is what we're bringing together Um, how are you feeling about VMware these days, everything, making it run in all the public clouds, you know, How do, how do you see that connecting? So we can remember, you know, the beginnings of converged infrastructure Customers, you know, the three of us, we go back, we, we, our first interactions with you separately, It was just Dell world. So, you know, it's been great. Well, you know, really appreciate you guys being here, the wonderful work you do in thank you in, Cuz looking back on all the other ones that you you have And if you look at the sort of new companies that are being founded today, you know, finance bucket, but you can, you can see that you can connect the dots. And we can give them an source really then if look at the growth of open source, talk about those layers, open source, you know, driving, driving innovation and, and, and our business is not that dissimilar from our Like great to have you in the queue. Thank you guys. Michael Dell here in the cube CEO of Dell technologies.
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AWS Summit San Francisco 2022
More bottoms up and have more technical early adopters. And generally speaking, they're free to use. They're free to try. They're very commonly community source or open source companies where you have a large technical community that's supporting them. So there's a, there's kind of a new normal now I think in great enterprise software and it starts with great technical founders with great products and great bottoms of emotions. And I think there's no better place to, uh, service those people than in the cloud and uh, in, in your community. >>Well, first of all, congratulations, and by the way, you got a great pedigree and great background, super smart, but Myer of your work and your, and, and your founding, but let's face it. Enterprise is hot because digital transformation is all companies there's no, I mean, consumer is enterprise now, everything is what was once a niche. No, I won't say niche category, but you know, not for the faint of heart, you know, investors, >>You know, it's so funny that you say that enterprise is hot because you, and I feel that way now. <laugh> but remember, like right now there's also a tech and VC conference in Miami <laugh> and it's covering cryptocurrencies and FCS and web three. So I think beauty is definitely in the eye of the beholder <laugh> but no, I, I will tell you, >>Ts is one big enterprise, cuz you gotta have imutability you got performance issues. You have, I IOPS issues. >>Well, and, and I think all of us here that are, uh, may maybe students of history and have been involved in open source in the cloud would say that we're, you know, much of what we're doing is, uh, the predecessors of the web web three movement. And many of us I think are contributors to the web three >>Movement. The hype is definitely one web three. Yeah. >>But, >>But you know, >>For sure. Yeah, no, but now you're taking us further east of Miami. So, uh, you know, look, I think, I, I think, um, what is unquestioned with the case now? And maybe it's, it's more obvious the more time you spend in this world is this is the fastest growing part of enterprise software. And if you include cloud infrastructure and cloud infrastructure spend, you know, it is by many measures over, uh, $500 billion in growing, you know, 20 to 30% a year. So it it's a, it's a just incredibly fast, well, >>Let's get, let's get into some of the cultural and the, the shifts that are happening, cuz again, you, you have the luxury of being in enterprise when it was hard, it's getting easier and more cooler. I get it and more relevant <laugh> but there's also the hype of like the web three, for instance, but you know, for, uh, um, um, the CEO snowflake, okay. Has wrote a book and Dave Valenti and I were talking about it and uh, Frank Luman has says, there's no playbooks. We always ask the CEOs, what's your playbook. And he's like, there's no playbook, situational awareness, always Trump's playbooks. So in the enterprise playbook, oh, higher, a direct sales force and SAS kind of crushed that now SAS is being redefined, right. So what is SAS is snowflake assassin or is that a platform? So again, new unit economics are emerging, whole new situation, you got web three. So to me there's a cultural shift, the young entrepreneurs, the, uh, user experience, they look at Facebook and say, ah, you know, they own all my data and you know, we know that that cliche, um, they, you know, the product. So as this next gen, the gen Z and the millennials come in and our customers and the founders, they're looking at things a little bit differently and the tech better. >>Yeah. I mean, I mean, I think we can, we can see a lot of common across all successful startups and the overall adoption of technology. Um, and, and I would tell you, this is all one big giant revolution. I call it the user driven revolution. Right. It's the rise of the user. Yeah. And you might say product like growth is currently the hottest trend in enterprise software. It's actually like growth, right. They're one and the same. So sometimes people think the product, uh, is what is driving growth. >>You just pull the product >>Through. Exactly, exactly. And so that's that I, that I think is really this revolution that you see, and, and it does extend into things like cryptocurrencies and web three and, you know, sort of like the control that is taken back by the user. Um, but you know, many would say that, that the origins of this, but maybe started with open source where users were contributors, you know, contributors were users and looking back decades and seeing how it, how it fast forward to today. I think that's really the trend that we're all writing. It's enabling these end users. And these end users in our world are developers, data engineers, cybersecurity practitioners, right. They're really the, and they're really the, the beneficiaries and the most, you know, kind of valued people in >>This. I wanna come back to the data engineers in a second, but I wanna make a comment and get your reaction to, I have a, I'm a gen Xer technically. So for not a boomer, but I have some boomer friends who are a little bit older than me who have, you know, experienced the sixties. And I have what been saying on the cube for probably about eight years now that we are gonna hit digital hippie revolution, meaning a rebellion against in the sixties was rebellion against the fifties and the man and, you know, summer of love. That was a cultural differentiation from the other one other group, the predecessors. So we're kind of having that digital moment now where it's like, Hey boomers, Hey people, we're not gonna do that anymore. You, we hate how you organize shit. >>Right. But isn't this just technology. I mean, isn't it, isn't it like there used to be the old adage, like, you know, you would never get fired for buying IBM, but now it's like, you obviously probably would get fired if you bought IBM. And I mean, it's just like the, the, I think, I think >>During the mainframe days, those renegades were breaking into Stanford, starting the home group. So what I'm trying to get at is that, do you see the young cultural revolution also, culturally, just, this is my identity NFTs to me speak volumes about my, I wanna associate with NFTs, not single sign on. Well, >>Absolutely. And, and I think like, I think you're hitting on something, which is like this convergence of, of, you know, societal it'll trends with technology trends and how that manifests in our world is yes. I think like there is unquestionably almost a religion yeah. Around the way in which a product is built. Right. And we can use open source, one example of that religion. Some people will say, look, I'll just never try a product in the cloud if it's not open source. Yeah. I think cloud, native's another example of that, right? It's either it's, you know, it either is cloud native or it's not. And I think a lot of people will look at a product and say, look, you know, you were not designed in the cloud era. Therefore I just won't try you. And sometimes, um, like it or not, it's a religious decision, right? Yeah. It's so it's something that people just believe to be true almost without, uh, necessarily caring >>About data. Data drives all decision making. Let me ask you this next question. As a VC. Now you look at pitch, well, you've been a VC for many years, but you also have the founder entrepreneurial mindset, but you can get empathize with the founders. You know, hustle is a big part of the, that first founder check, right? You gotta convince someone to part with their ch their money and the first money in which you do a lot of it's about believing in the person. So faking it till you make it is hard. Now you, the data's there, you either have it cloud native, you either have the adaption or traction. So honesty is a big part of that pitch. You can't fake it. >>Oh, AB absolutely. You know, there used to be this concept of like the persona of an entrepreneur. Right. And the persona of the entrepreneur would be, you know, so somebody who was a great salesperson or somebody who tell a great story, and I still think that that's important, right. It still is a human need for people to believe in narratives and stories. Yeah. But having said that you're right. The proof is in the pudding, right. At some point you click download and you try the product and it does what it says it gonna it's gonna do, or it doesn't, or it either stands up to the load test or it doesn't. And so I, I feel like in the new economy that we live in, really, it's a shift from maybe the storytellers and the creators to, to the builders, right. The people that know how to build great product. And in some ways the people that can build great product yeah. Stand out from the crowd. And they're the ones that can build communities around their products. And, you know, in some ways can, um, you know, kind of own more of the narrative of because their product begins exactly >>The volume you back to the user led growth. >>Exactly. And it's the religion of, I just love your product. Right. And I, I, I, um, Doug song is the founder of du security used to say, Hey, like, you know, the, the really like in today's world of like consumption based software, like the user is only gonna give you 90 seconds to figure out whether or not you're a company that's easy to do business with. Right. And so you can say, and do all the things that you want about how easy you are to work with. But if the product isn't easy to install, if it's not easy to try, if it's not, if, if the it's gotta speak to the, >>Speak to the user, but let me ask a question now that for the people watching, who are maybe entrepreneurial entre, preneurs, um, masterclass here in session. So I have to ask you, do you prefer, um, an entrepreneur come in and say, look at John. Here's where I'm at. Okay. First of all, storytelling's fine with you an extrovert or introvert, have your style, sell the story in a way that's authentic, but do you, what do you prefer to say? Here's where I'm at? Look, I have an idea. Here's my traction. I think here's my MVP prototype. I need help. Or do, do you wanna just see more stats? What's the, what's the preferred way that you like to see entrepreneurs come in and engage? >>There's tons of different styles, man. I think the single most important thing that every founder should know is that we, we don't invest in what things are today. We invest in what we think something will become. Right. And I think that's why we all get up in the morning and try to build something different, right? It's that we see the world a different way. We want it to be a different way. And we wanna work every single moment of the day to try to make that vision a reality. So I think the more that you can show people where you want to be the, of more likely somebody is gonna align with your vision and, and wanna invest in you and wanna be along for the ride. So I, I wholeheartedly believe in showing off what you got today, because eventually we all get down to like, where are we and what are we gonna do together? But, um, no, I, you gotta >>Show the >>Path. I think the single most important thing for any founder and VC relationship is that they have the same vision. Uh, if you have the same vision, you can, you can get through bumps in the road, you can get through short term spills. You can all sorts of things in the middle. The journey can happen. Yeah. But it doesn't matter as much if you share the same long term vision, >>Don't flake out and, and be fashionable with the latest trends because it's over before you can get there. >>Exactly. I think many people that, that do what we do for a living, we'll say, you know, ultimately the future is relatively easy to predict, but it's the timing that's impossible to predict. <laugh> so you, you know, you sort of have to balance the, you know, we, we know that the world is going in this way and therefore we're gonna invest a lot of money to try to make this a reality. Uh, but some times it happens in six months. Sometimes it takes six years. Sometimes it takes 16 years. Uh, >>What's the hottest thing in enterprise that you see the biggest wave that people should pay attention to that you're looking at right now with Bel partners, Tebel dot your site. What's the big wave. What's your big >>Wave. There's three big trends that we invest in. And the they're the only things we do day in, day out one is the explosion and open source software. So I think many people think that all software is unquestionably moving to an open source model in some form or another yeah. Tons of reasons to debate whether or not that is gonna happen, an alwa timeline >>Happening forever. >>But, uh, it is, it is accelerating faster than we've ever seen. So I, I think it's, it's one big, massive wave that we continue to ride. Um, second is the rise of data engineering. Uh, I think data engineering is in and of itself now, a category of software. It's not just that we store data. It's now we move data and we develop applications on data. And, uh, I think data is in and of itself as big of a market as any of the other markets that we invest in. Uh, and finally, it's the gift that keeps on giving. I've spent my entire career in it. We still feel that security is a market that is underinvested. It is, it continues to be the place where people need to continue to invest and spend more money. Yeah. Uh, and those are the three major trends that we run >>And security, you think we all need a dessert do over, right? I mean, do we need you do over in security or is what's the core problem? I, >>I, I keep using this word underinvested because I think it's the right way to think about the problem. I think if you, I think people generally speaking, look at cybersecurity as an add-on. Yeah. But if you think about it, the whole economy is moving online. And so in, in some ways like security is core to protecting the digital economy. And so it's, it shouldn't be an afterthought, right? It should be core to what everyone is doing. And that's why I think relative to the trillions of dollars that are at stake, uh, I believe the market size for cybersecurity is run $150 billion. And it still is a fraction of what we're, >>What we're and national security even boom is booming now. So you get the convergence of national security, geopolitics, internet digital that's >>Right. You mean arguably, right? I mean, arguably again, it's the area of the world that people should be spending more time and more money given what to stake. >>I love your thesis. I gotta, I gotta say, you gotta love your firm. Love. You're doing we're big supporters, your mission. Congratulations on your entrepreneurial venture. And, uh, we'll be, we'll be talking and maybe see a Cuban. Uh, absolutely not. Certainly EU maybe even north Americans in Detroit this year. >>Huge fan of what you guys are doing here. Thank you so much for helping me on the show. >>Guess be VC Johnson here on the cube. Check him out. Founder for founders here on the cube, more coverage from San Francisco, California. After this short break, stay with us. Everyone. Welcome to the cue here. Live in San Francisco. K warn you for AWS summit 2022 we're live we're back with events. Also we're virtual. We got hybrid all kinds of events. This year, of course, summit in New York city is happening this summer. We'll be there with the cube as well. I'm John. Again, John host of the cube. Got a great guest here, Justin Kobe owner, and CEO of innovative solutions. Their booth is right behind us. Justin, welcome to the cube. >>Thank you. Thank you for having me. >>So we're just chatting, uh, uh, off camera about some of the work you're doing. You're the owner of and CEO. Yeah. Of innovative. Yeah. So tell us the story. What do you guys do? What's the elevator pitch. >>Yeah. <laugh> so the elevator pitch is we are, uh, a hundred percent focused on small to mid-size businesses that are moving to the cloud, or have already moved to the cloud and really trying to understand how to best control security, compliance, all the good stuff that comes along with it. Um, exclusively focused on AWS and, um, you know, about 110 people, uh, based in Rochester, New York, that's where our headquarters is, but now we have offices down in Austin, Texas, up in Toronto, uh, Canada, as well as Chicago. Um, and obviously in New York, uh, you know, the business was never like this, uh, five years ago, um, founded in 1989, made the decision in 2018 to pivot and go all in on the cloud. And, uh, I've been a part of the company for about 18 years, bought the company about five years ago. And it's been a great ride. >>It's interesting. The manages services are interesting with cloud cause a lot of the heavy liftings done by a of us. So we had Matt on your team on earlier talking about some of the edge stuff. Yeah. But you guys are a managed cloud service. You got cloud advisory, you know, the classic service that's needed, but the demands coming from cloud migrations and application modernization, but obviously data is a huge part of it. Huge. How is this factoring into what you guys do and your growth cuz you guys are the number one partner on the SMB side for edge. Yeah. For AWS, you got results coming in. Where's the, where's the forcing function. What's the pressure point. What's the demand like? >>Yeah. It's a great question. Every CEO I talk to, that's a small mids to size business. They're all trying to understand how to leverage technology better to help either drive a revenue target for their own business, uh, help with customer service as so much has gone remote now. And we're all having problems or troubles or issues trying to hire talent. And um, you know, tech is really at the, at the forefront and the center of that. So most customers are coming to us and they're of like, listen, we gotta move to the cloud or we move some things to the cloud and we want to do that better. And um, there's this big misnomer that when you move to the cloud, you gotta automatically modernize. Yeah. And what we try to help as many customers understand as possible is lifting and shifting, moving the stuff that you maybe currently have OnPrem and a data center to the cloud first is a first step. And then so, uh, progressively working through a modernization strategy is always the better approach. And so we spend a lot of time with small to mid-size businesses who don't have the technology talent on staff to be able to do >>That. Yeah. And they want to get set up. But the, the dynamic of like latency is huge. We're seeing that edge product is a big part of it. This is not a one-off happening around everywhere. It is not it's manufacturing, it's the physical plant or location >>Literally. >>And so, and you're seeing more IOT devices. What's that like right now from a challenge and problem statement standpoint, are the customers, not staff, is the it staff kind of old school? Is it new skills? What's the core problem. And you guys solve >>In the SMB space. The core issue nine outta 10 times is people get enamored with the latest and greatest. And the reality is not everything that's cloud based. Not all cloud services are the latest and greatest. Some things have been around for quite some time and our hardened solutions. And so, um, what we try to do with, to technology staff that has traditional on-prem, uh, let's just say skill sets and they're trying to move to a cloud-based workload is we try to help those customers through education and through some practical, let's just call it use case. Um, whether that's a proof of concept that we're doing or whether that's, we're gonna migrate a small workload over, we try to give them the confidence to be able to not, not necessarily go it alone, but, but to, to, to have the, uh, the Gusto and to really have the, um, the, the opportunity to, to do that in a wise way. Um, and what I find is that most CEOs that I talk to yeah. Feel like, listen, at the end of the day, I'm gonna be spending money in one place or another, whether that's on primer in the cloud, I just want know that I'm doing that way. That helps me grow as quickly as possible status quo. I think every, every business owner knows that COVID taught us anything that status quo is, uh, is, is no. No. Good. >>How about factoring in the, the agility and speed equation? Does that come up a lot? It >>Does. I think, um, I think there's also this idea that if, uh, if we do a deep dive analysis and we really take a surgical approach to things, um, we're gonna be better off. And the reality is the faster you move with anything cloud based, the better you are. And so there's this assumption that we gotta get it right the first time. Yeah. In the cloud, if you start down your journey in one way and you realize midway that it's not the right, let's just say the right place to go. It's not like buying a piece of iron that you put in the closet and now you own it in the cloud. You can turn those services on and off. It's a, gives you a much higher density for making decisions and failing >>Forward. Well actually shutting down the abandoning, the projects that early, not worrying about it, you got it mean most people don't abandon stuff cuz they're like, oh, I own it. >>Exactly. >>And they get, they get used to it. Like, and then they wait too long. >>That's exactly. >>Yeah. Frog and boiling water, as we used to say, oh, it's a great analogy. So I mean, this, this is a dynamic. That's interesting. I wanna get more thoughts on it because like I'm a, if I'm a CEO of a company, like, okay, I gotta make my number. Yeah. I gotta keep my people motivated. Yeah. And I gotta move faster. So this is where you guys come in. I get the whole thing. And by the way, great service, um, professional services in the cloud right now are so hot because so hot, you can build it and then have option optionality. You got path decisions, you got new services to take advantage of. It's almost too much for customers. It is. I mean, everyone I talked to at reinvent, that's a customer. Well, how many announcements did Andy jazzy announcer Adam? You know, the 5,000 announcement or whatever. They did huge amounts. Right. Keeping track of it all. Oh, is huge. So what's the, what's the, um, the mission of, of your company. How does, how do you talk to that alignment? Yeah. Not just processes. I can get that like values as companies, cuz they're betting on you and your people. >>They are, they are >>Values. >>Our mission is, is very simple. We want to help every small to midsize business leverage the power of the cloud. Here's the reality. We believe wholeheartedly. This is our vision that every company is going to become a technology company. So we go to market with this idea that every customer's trying to leverage the power of the cloud in some way, shape or form, whether they know it or don't know it. And number two, they're gonna become a 10 a company in the process of that because everything is so tech-centric. And so when you talk about speed and agility, when you talk about the, the endless options and the endless permutations of solutions that a customer can buy in the cloud, how are you gonna ask a team of one or two people in your it department to make all those decisions going it alone or trying to learn it as you go, it only gets you so far working with a partner. >>I'll just give you some perspective. We work with about a thousand small to midsize business customers. More than 50% of those customers are on our managed services. Meaning they know that we have their back and we're the safety net. So when a customer is saying, right, I'm gonna spend a couple thousand and dollars a month in the cloud. They know that that bill, isn't gonna jump to $10,000 a month going in alone. Who's there to help protect that. Number two, if you have a security posture and let's just say your high profile and you're gonna potentially be more vulnerable to security attacks. If you have a partner that's offering you some managed services. Now you, again, you've got that backstop and you've got those services and tooling. We, we offer, um, seven different products, uh, that are part of our managed services that give the customer the tooling, that for them to go out and buy on their own for a customer to go out today and go buy a new Relic solution on their own. It, it would cost 'em a four, >>The training alone would be insane. A risk factor. I mean the cost. Yes, absolutely opportunity cost is huge, >>Huge, absolutely enormous training and development. Something. I think that is often, you know, it's often overlooked technologists. Typically they want to get their skills up. They, they love to get the, the stickers and the badges and the pins, um, at innovative in 2018. When, uh, when we, he made the decision to go all in on the club, I said to the organization, you know, we have this idea that we're gonna pivot and be aligned with AWS in such a way that it's gonna really require us all to get certified. My executive assistant at the time looks at me. She said, even me, I said, yeah, even you, why can't you get certified? Yeah. And so we made, uh, a conscious, it wasn't requirement. It still isn't today to make sure everybody in the company has the opportunity to become certified. Even the people that are answering the phones at the front >>Desk and she could be running the Kubernetes clusters. I >>Love it. It's >>Amazing. >>But I'll tell you what, when that customer calls and they have a real Kubernetes issue, she'll be able to assist and get >>The right people with. And that's a cultural factor that you guys have. So, so again, this is back to my whole point out SMBs and businesses in general, small and large it staffs are turning over the gen Z and millennials are in the workforce. They were provisioning top of rack switches. Right. First of all. And so if you're a business, there's also the, I call the buildout, um, uh, return factor, ROI piece. At what point in time as an owner, SMB, do I get to ROI? Yeah. I gotta hire a person to manage it. That person's gonna have five zillion job offers. Yep. Uh, maybe who knows? Right. I got cyber security issues. Where am I gonna find a cyber person? Yeah. A data compliance. I need a data scientist and a compliance person. Right. Maybe one in the same. Right. Good luck. Trying to find a data scientist. Who's also a compliance person. Yep. And the list goes on. I can just continue. Absolutely. I need an SRE to manage the, the, uh, the sock report and we can pen test. Right. >>Right. >>These are, these are >>Like critical issues. >>This is just like, these are the table stakes. >>Yeah. And, and every, every business owner's thinking about this, >>That's, that's what, at least a million in loading, if not three or more Just to get that app going. Yeah. Then it's like, where's the app. Yeah. So there's no cloud migration. There's no modernization on the app side. No. And they remind AI and ML. >>That's right. That's right. So to try to go it alone, to me, it's hard. It it's incredibly difficult. And the other thing is, is there's not a lot of partners, so the partner, >>No one's raising their hand boss. I'll do all that exactly. In the it department. >>Exactly. >>So like, can we just call up, uh, you know, our old vendor that's >>Right. <laugh> right. Our old vendor. I like it, >>But that's so true. I mean, when I think about how, if I was a business owner starting a business today and I had to build my team, um, and the amount of investment that it would take to get those people skilled up and then the risk factor of those people now having the skills and being so much more in demand and being recruited away, that's a real, that's a real issue. And so how you build your culture around that is, is very important. It's something that we talk about every, with every one of our small to mid-size >>Businesses. So just, I want get, I want to get your story as CEO. Okay. Take us through your journey. You said you bought the company and your progression to, to being the owner and CEO of innovative yeah. Award winning guys doing great. Uh, great bet on a good call. Yeah. Things are good. Tell your story. What's your journey? >>It's real simple. I was, uh, I was a sophomore at the Rochester Institute of technology in 2003. And, uh, I knew that I, I was going to school for it and I, I knew I wanted to be in tech. I didn't know what I wanted to do, but I knew I didn't wanna code or configure routers and switches. So I had this great opportunity with the local it company that was doing managed services. We didn't call it at that time innovative solutions to come in and, uh, jump on the phone and dial for dollars. I was gonna cold call and introduced other, uh, small to midsize businesses locally in Rochester, New York go to Western New York, um, who innovative was now. We were 19 people at the time. Yeah. I came in, I did an internship for six months and I loved it. I learned more in those six months than I probably did in my first couple of years at, uh, at RT long story short. >>Um, for about seven years, I worked, uh, to really help develop, uh, sales process and methodology for the business so that we could grow and scale. And we grew to about 30 people. And, um, I went to the owners at the time in 2000 and I was like, Hey, I'm growing the value of this business. And who knows where you guys are gonna be another five years? What do you think about making me an owner? And they were like, listen, you got long ways before you're gonna be an owner. But if you stick it out in your patient, we'll, um, we'll work through a succession plan with you. And I said, okay, there were four other individuals at the time that were gonna also buy the business with me. >>And they were the owners, no outside capital, >>None zero, well, 2014 comes around. And, uh, the other folks that were gonna buy into the business with me that were also working at innovative for different reasons. They all decided that it wasn't for them. One started a family. The other didn't wanna put capital in. Didn't wanna write a check. Um, the other had a real big problem with having to write a check. If we couldn't make payroll, I'm like, well, that's kind of like, if we're own, we're gonna have to like cover that stuff. <laugh> so >>It's called the pucker factor. >>Exactly. So, uh, I sat down with the CEO in early 2015 and, uh, we made the decision that I was gonna buy the three partners out, um, go through an earn out process, uh, coupled with, uh, an interesting financial strategy that wouldn't strap the BI cuz they cared very much. The company still had the opportunity to keep going. So in 2016 I bought the business, um, became the sole owner. And, and at that point we, um, we really focused hard on what do we want this company to be? We had built this company to this point. Yeah. And, uh, and by 2018 we knew that pivoting all going all in on the cloud was important for us. And we haven't looked back. >>And at that time, the proof points were coming clearer and clearer 2012 through 15 was the early adopters, the builders, the startups and early enterprises. Yes. The capital ones of the world. Exactly the, uh, and those kinds of big enterprises. The GA I don't wanna say gamblers, but ones that were very savvy. The innovators, the FinTech folks. Yep. The hardcore glass eating enterprises >>Agreed, agreed to find a small to midsize business to migrate completely to the cloud is as infrastructure was considered, that just didn't happen as often. Um, what we were seeing where the, a lot of our small to midsize business customers, they wanted to leverage cloud based backup, or they wanted to leverage a cloud for disaster recovery because it lent itself. Well, early days, our most common cloud customer though, was the customer that wanted to move messaging and collaboration. The, the Microsoft suite to the cloud. And a lot of 'em dipped their toe in the water. But by 2017 we knew infrastructure was around the corner. Yeah. And so, uh, we only had two customers on AWS at the time. Um, and we, uh, we, we made the decision to go all in >>Justin. Great to have you on the cube. Thank you. Let's wrap up. Uh, tell me the hottest product that you have. Is it migrations? Is the app modernization? Is it data? What's the hot product and then put a plugin for the company. Awesome. >>So, uh, there's no question. Every customer is looking migrate workloads and try to figure out how to modernize for the future. We have very interesting, sophisticated yet elegant funding solutions to help customers with the cash flow, uh, constraints that come along with those migrations. So any SMB that's thinking about migrating into the cloud, they should be talking innovative solutions. We know how to do it in a way that allows those customer is not to be cash strapped and gives them an opportunity to move forward in a controlled, contained way so they can modernize. So >>Like insurance, basically for them not insurance class in the classic sense, but you help them out on the, on the cash exposure. >>Absolutely. We are known for that and we're known for being creative with those customers and being empathetic to where they are in their journey. >>And that's the cloud upside is all about doubling down on the variable win that's right. Seeing the value and ING down on it. Absolutely not praying for it. Yeah. <laugh> all right, Justin. Thanks for coming on. You really appreciate >>It. Thank you very much for having me. >>Okay. This is the cube coverage here live in San Francisco, California for AWS summit, 2022. I'm John for your host. Thanks for watching. We're back with more great coverage for two days after this short break >>Live on the floor in San Francisco for Aus summit. I'm John for host of the cube here for the next two days, getting all the actual back in person we're at AWS reinvent a few months ago. Now we're back events are coming back and we're happy to be here with the cube. Bring all the action. Also virtual. We have a hybrid cube, check out the cube.net, Silicon angle.com for all the coverage. After the event. We've got a great guest ticking off here. Matthew Park, director of solutions, architecture with innovation solutions. The booth is right here. Matthew, welcome to the cube. >>Thank you very much. I'm glad to be here. >>So we're back in person. You're from Tennessee. We were chatting before you came on camera. Um, it's great to be back through events. It's >>Amazing. This is the first, uh, summit I've been to, to in what two, three >>Years. That's awesome. We'll be at the, uh, a AWS summit in New York as well. A lot of developers and the big story this year is as developers look at cloud going distributed computing, you got on premises, you got public cloud, you got the edge. Essentially the cloud operations is running everything devs sec ops, everyone kind of sees that you got containers, you got Benet, he's got cloud native. So the, the game is pretty much laid out. Mm-hmm <affirmative> and the edge is with the actions you guys are number one, premier partner at SMB for edge. >>That's >>Right. Tell us about what you guys doing at innovative and, uh, what you do. >>That's right. Uh, so I'm the director of solutions architecture. Uh, me and my team are responsible for building out the solutions. The at our around, especially the edge public cloud for us edge is anything outside of an AWS availability zone. Uh, we are deploying that in countries that don't have AWS infrastructure in region. They don't have it. Uh, give >>An example, >>Uh, example would be Panama. We have a customer there that, uh, needs to deploy some financial tech data and compute is legally required to be in Panama, but they love AWS and they want to deploy AWS services in region. Uh, so they've taken E EKS anywhere. We've put storage gateway and, uh, snowball, uh, in region inside the country and they're running or FinTech on top of AWS services inside Panama. >>You know, what's interesting, Matthew is that we've been covering Aw since 2013 with the cube about their events. And we watched the progression and jazzy was, uh, was in charge and became the CEO. Now Adam slaps in charge, but the edge has always been that thing they've been trying to avoid. I don't wanna say trying to avoid, of course, Amazon would listens to the customer. They work backwards from the customer. We all know that. Uh, but the real issue was they were they're bread and butters EC two and S three. And then now they got tons of services and the cloud is obviously successful and seeing that, but the edge brings up a whole nother level. >>It does >>Computing. >>It >>Does. That's not centralized in the public cloud now they got regions. So what is the issue with the edge what's driving? The behavior. Outpost came out as a reaction to competitive threats and also customer momentum around OT, uh, operational technologies. And it merging. We see with the data at the edge, you got five GM having. So it's pretty obvious, but there was a slow transition. What was the driver for the edge? What's the driver now for edge action for AWS >>Data in is the driver for the edge. Data has gravity, right? And it's pulling compute back to where the customer's generating that data and that's happening over and over again. You said it best outpost was a reaction to a competitive situation. Whereas today we have over 15 AWS edge services and those are all reactions to things that customers need inside their data centers on location or in the field like with media companies. >>Outpost is interesting. We always use the riff on the cube, uh, cause it's basically Amazon in a box, pushed in the data center, running native, all this stuff, but now cloud native operations are kind of becoming standard. You're starting to see some standard. Deepak syncs group is doing some amazing work with opensource Raul's team on the AI side, obviously, uh, you got SW who's giving the keynote tomorrow. You got the big AI machine learning big part of that edge. Now you can say, okay, outpost, is it relevant today? In other words, did outpost do its job? Cause EKS anywhere seems to be getting a lot of momentum. You see local zones, the regions are kicking ass for Amazon. This edge piece is evolving. What's your take on EKS anywhere versus say outpost? >>Yeah, I think outpost did its job. It made customers that were looking at outpost really consider, do I wanna invest in this hardware? Do I, do I wanna have, um, this outpost in my datas center, do I want to manage this over the long term? A lot of those customers just transitioned to the public cloud. They went into AWS proper. Some of those customers stayed on prem because they did have use cases that were, uh, not a good fit for outpost. They weren't a good fit. Uh, in the customer's mind for the public AWS cloud inside an availability zone now happening is as AWS is pushing these services out and saying, we're gonna meet you where you are with 5g. We're gonna meet you where you are with wavelength. We're gonna meet you where you are with EKS anywhere. Uh, I think it has really reduced the amount of times that we have conversations about outposts and it's really increased. We can deploy fast. We don't have to spin up outpost hardware can go deploy EKS anywhere in your VMware environment. And it's increasing the speed of adoption >>For sure. Right? So you guys are making a lot of good business decisions around managed cloud service. That's right. Innovative. Does that get the cloud advisory, the classic professional services for the specific edge piece and, and doing that outside of the availability zones and regions for AWS, um, customers in these new areas that you're helping out are they want cloud, like they want to have modernization a modern applications. Obviously they got data machine learning and AI, all part of that. What's the main product or, or, or gap that you're filling for AWS, uh, outside of their availability zones or their regions that you guys are delivering. What's the key is that they don't have a footprint. Is it that it's not big enough for them? What's the real gap. What's why, why are you so successful? >>So what customers want when they look towards the cloud is they want to focus on what's making them money as a business. They wanna focus on their applications. They wanna focus on their customers. So they look towards AWS cloud and a AWS. You take the infrastructure, you take, uh, some of the higher layers and we'll focus on our revenue generating business, but there's a gap there between infrastructure and revenue generating business that innovative slides into, uh, we help manage the AWS environment. Uh, we help build out these things in local data centers for 32 plus year old company. We have traditional on-premises people that know about deploying hardware that know about deploying VMware to host EKS anywhere. But we also have most of our company totally focused on the AWS cloud. So we're that gap in helping deploy these AWS services, manage them over the long term. So our customers can go to just primarily and totally focusing on their revenue generating business. So >>Basically you guys are basically building AWS edges, >>Correct? >>For correct companies, correct? Mainly because the, the needs are there, you got data, you got certain products, whether it's, you know, low latency type requirements, right. And then they still work with the regions, right. It's all tied together, right. Is that how it >>Works? Right. And, and our customers, even the ones in the edge, they also want us to build out the AWS environment inside the availability zone, because we're always gonna have a failback scenario. If we're gonna deploy fin in the Caribbean, we're gonna talk about hurricanes. And we're gonna talk about failing back into the AWS availability zones. So innovative is filling that gap across the board, whether it be inside the AWS cloud or on the AWS edge. >>All right. So I gotta ask you on the, since you're at the edge in these areas, I won't say underserved, but developing areas where now have data and you have applications that are tapping into that, that requirement. It makes total sense. We're seeing that across the board. So it's not like it's a, it's an outlier it's actually growing. Yeah. There's also the crypto angle. You got the blockchain. Are you seeing any traction at the edge with blockchain? Because a lot of people are looking at the web three in these areas like Panama, you mentioned FinTech. And in, in the islands there a lot of, lot of, lot of web three happening. What's your, what your view on the web three world right now, relative >>To we, we have some customers actually deploying crypto, especially, um, especially in the Caribbean. I keep bringing the Caribbean up, but it's, it's top of my mind right now we have customers that are deploying crypto. A lot of, uh, countries are choosing crypto to underlie parts of their central banks. Yeah. Um, so it's, it's up and coming. Uh, I, I have some, you know, personal views that, that crypto is still searching for a use case. Yeah. And, uh, I think it's searching a lot and, and we're there to help customers search for that use case. Uh, but, but crypto, as a, as a, uh, technology, um, lives really well on the AWS edge. Yeah. Uh, and, and we're having more and more people talk to us about that. Yeah. And ask for assistance in the infrastructure, because they're developing new cryptocurrencies every day. Yeah. It's not like they're deploying Ethereum or anything specific. They're actually developing new currencies and, and putting them out there on >>It's interesting. I mean, first of all, we've been doing crypto for many, many years. We have our own little, um, you know, project going on. But if you look talk to all the crypto people that say, look, we do a smart contract, we use the blockchain. It's kind of over a lot of overhead and it's not really their technical already, but it's a cultural shift, but there's underserved use cases around use of money, but they're all using the blockchain just for like smart contracts, for instance, or certain transactions. And they go to Amazon for the database. Yeah. <laugh> they all don't tell anyone we're using a centralized service. Well, what happened to decentralized? >>Yeah. And that's, and that's the conversation performance issue. Yeah. And, and it's a cost issue. Yeah. And it's a development issue. Um, so I think more and more as, as some of these, uh, currencies maybe come up, some of the smart contracts get into, uh, they find their use cases. I think we'll start talking about how does that really live on, on AWS and, and what does it look like to build decentralized applications, but with AWS hardware and services. >>Right. So take me through, uh, a use case of a customer Matthew around the edge. Okay. So I'm a customer, pretend I'm a customer, Hey, you know, I'm, we're in an underserved area. I want to modernize my business. And I got my developers that are totally peaked up on cloud, but we've identified that it's just a lot of overhead latency issues. I need to have a local edge and serve my a, I also want all the benefit of the cloud. So I want the modern, and I wanna migrate to the cloud for all those cloud benefits and the goodness of the cloud. What's the answer. >>Yeah. Uh, big thing is, uh, industrial manufacturing, right? That's, that's one of the best use cases, uh, inside industrial manufacturing, we can pull in many of the AWS edge services we can bring in, uh, private 5g, uh, so that all the, uh, equipment that, that manufacturing plant can be hooked up, they don't have to pay huge overheads to deploy 5g it's, uh, better than wifi for the industrial space. Um, when we take computing down to that industrial area, uh, because we wanna do pre-procesing on the data. Yeah. We want to gather some analytics. We deploy that with a regular commercially available hardware running VMware, and we deploy EKS anywhere on that. Inside of that manufacturing plant, we can do pre-procesing on things coming out of the robotics, depending on what we're manufacturing. Right. And then we can take those refined analytics and for very low cost with maybe a little bit longer latency transmit those back, um, to the AWS availability zone, the, the standard >>For data, data lake, or whatever, >>To the data lake. Yeah. Data lake house, whatever it might be. Um, and we can do additional data science on that once it gets to the AWS cloud. Uh, but a lot of that, uh, just in time business decisions, just time manufacturing decisions can all take place on an AWS service or services inside that manufacturing plant. And that's, that's one of the best use cases that we're >>Seeing. And I think, I mean, we've been seeing this on the queue for many, many years, moving data around is very expensive. Yeah. But also compute going to the data that saves that cost yeah. On the data transfer also on the benefits of the latency. So I have to ask you, by the way, that's standard best practice now for the folks watching don't move the data unless you have to. Um, but those new things are developing. So I wanna ask you what new patterns are you seeing emerging once this new architecture's in place? Love that idea, localize everything right at the edge, manufacturing, industrial, whatever, the use case, retail, whatever it is. Right. But now what does that change in the, in the core cloud? There's a, there's a system element here. Yeah. What's the new pattern. There's >>Actually an organizational element as well, because once you have to start making the decision, do I put this compute at the point of use or do I put this compute in the cloud? Uh, now you start thinking about where business decisions should be taking place. Uh, so not only are you changing your architecture, you're actually changing your organization because you're thinking, you're thinking about a dichotomy you didn't have before. Uh, so now you say, okay, this can take place here. Uh, and maybe, maybe this decision can wait. Right. And then how do I visualize that? By >>The way, it could be a bot tube doing the work for management. Yeah. <laugh> exactly. You got observability going, right. But you gotta change the database architecture on the back. So there's new things developing. You've got more benefit. There >>Are, there are, and we have more and more people that, that want to talk less about databases and want to talk about data lakes because of this. They want to talk more about customers are starting to talk about throwing away data. Uh, you know, for the past maybe decade. Yeah. It's been store everything. And one day we will have a data science team that we hire in our organization to do analytics on this decade of data. And well, >>I mean, that's, that's a great point. We don't have time to drill into, maybe we do another session this, but the one pattern we're seeing come of the past year is that throwing away data's bad. Even data lakes that so-called turn into data swamps, actually, it's not the case. You look at data, brick, snowflake, and other successes out there. And even time series data, which may seem irrelevant efforts over actually matters when people start retrain their machine learning algorithms. Yep. So as data becomes co as we call it in our last showcase, we did a whole whole an event on this. The data's good in real time and in the lake. Yeah. Because the iteration of the data feeds the machine learning training. Things are getting better with the old data. So it's not throw away. It's not just business benefits. Yeah. There's all kinds of new scale. There >>Are. And, and we have, uh, many customers that are running petabyte level. Um, they're, they're essentially data factories on, on, on premises, right? They're, they're creating so much data and they're starting to say, okay, we could analyze this, uh, in the cloud, we could transition it. We could move petabytes of data to AWS cloud, or we can run, uh, computational workloads on premises. We can really do some analytics on this data transition, uh, those high level and sort of raw analytics back to AWS run 'em through machine learning. Um, and we don't have to transition 10, 12 petabytes of data into AWS. >>So I gotta end the segment on a, on a, kind of a, um, fun, I was told to ask you about your personal background on premise architect, Aus cloud, and skydiving instructor. How does that all work together? What tell, what does this mean? >>Yeah. Uh, I, >>You jumped out a plane and got a job. You got a customer to jump >>Out kind of. So I was, you jumped out. I was teaching Scott eing, uh, before I, before I started in the cloud space, this was 13, 14 years ago. I was a, I still am a Scott I instructor. Uh, I was teaching Scott eing and I heard out of the corner of my ear, uh, a guy that owned an MSP that was lamenting about, um, you know, storing data and how his customers are working. And he can't find enough people to operate all these workloads. So I walked over and said, Hey, this is, this is what I went to school for. Like, I'd love to, you know, I was living in a tent in the woods, teaching skydiving. I was like, I'd love to not live in a tent in the woods. So, uh, I started in the first day there, we had a, and, uh, EC two had just come out <laugh> um, and, uh, like, >>This is amazing. >>Yeah. And so we had this discussion, we should start moving customers here. And, uh, and that totally revolutionized that business, um, that, that led to, uh, that that guy actually still owns a skydiving airport. But, um, but through all of that, and through being in on premises, migrated me and myself, my career into the cloud, and now it feels like, uh, almost, almost looking back and saying, now let's take what we learned in the cloud and, and apply those lessons and those services to premises. >>So it's such a great story. You know, I was gonna, you know, you know, the, the, the, the whole, you know, growth mindset pack your own parachute, you know, uh, exactly. You know, the cloud in the early days was pretty much will the shoot open. Yeah. It was pretty much, you had to roll your own cloud at that time. And so, you know, you, you jump on a plane, you gotta make sure that parachute is gonna open. >>And so was Kubernetes by the way, 2015 or so when, uh, when that was coming out, it was, I mean, it was, it was still, and I, maybe it does still feel like that to some people, right. Yeah. But, uh, it was, it was the same kind of feeling that we had in the early days of AWS, the same feeling we have when we >>It's much now with you guys, it's more like a tandem jump. Yeah. You know, but, but it's a lot of, lot of this cutting stuff like jumping out of an airplane. Yeah. You guys, the right equipment, you gotta do the right things. Exactly. >>Right. >>Matthew, thanks for coming on the cube. Really appreciate it. Absolutely great conversation. Thanks for having me. Okay. The cubes here, lot in San Francisco for AWS summit, I'm John for your host of the cube. Uh, we'll be at a summit in New York coming up in the summer as well. Look up for that. Look at this calendar for all the cube, actually@thecube.net. We'll right back with our next segment after this break. >>Okay. Welcome back everyone to San Francisco live coverage here, we're at the cube, a summit 2022. We're back in person. I'm John furry host of the cube. We'll be at the, a us summit in New York city this summer, check us out then. But right now, two days in San Francisco getting all coverage, what's going on in the cloud, we got a cube alumni and friend of the cube, my dos car CEO, investor, a Sierra, and also an investor and a bunch of startups, angel investor. Gonna do great to see you. Thanks for coming on the cube. Good to see you. Good to see you, Pam. Cool. How are you? Good. >>How are you? >>So congratulations on all your investments. Uh, you've made a lot of great successes, uh, over the past couple years, uh, and your company raising, uh, some good cash as Sarah so give us the update. How much cash have you guys raised? What's the status of the company product what's going on? First >>Of all, thank you for having me. We're back to be business with you never while after. Great to see you. Um, so is a company started around four years back. I invested with a few of the investors and now I'm the CEO there. Um, we have raised close to a hundred million there. Uh, the investors are people like nor west Menlo, true ventures, coast, lo ventures, Ram Shera, and all those people, all known guys that Antibe chime Paul Mayard web. So a whole bunch of operating people and, uh, Silicon valley vs are involved. >>And has it gone? >>It's going well. We are doing really well. We are going almost 300% year over year. Uh, for last three years, the space ISR is going after is what I call the applying AI for customer service. It operations, it help desk the same place I used to work at ServiceNow. We are partners with ServiceNow to take, how can we argument for employees and customers, Salesforce, and ServiceNow to take it to the next stage? Well, >>I love having you on the cube, Dave and I, and Dave Valenti as well loves having you on too, because you not only bring the entrepreneurial CEO experience, you're an investor. You're like a, you're like a guest analyst. <laugh>, >>You know, >>You >>Get, the comment is fun to talk to you though. >>You get the commentary, you, your, your finger on the pulse. Um, so I gotta ask you obviously, AI and machine learning, machine learning AI, or you want to phrase it. Isn't every application. Now, AI first, uh, you're seeing a lot of that going on. You're starting to see companies build the modern applications at the top of the stack. So the cloud scale has hit. We're seeing cloud out scale. You predicted that we talked about in the cube many times. Now you have that past layer with a lot more services and cloud native becoming a standard layer. Containerizations growing Docker just raised a hundred million on our $2 billion valuation back from the dead after they pivoted from an enterprise services. So open source developers are booming. Um, where's the action. I mean, is there data control, plane emerging, AI needs data. There's a lot of challenges around this. There's a lot of discussions and a lot of companies being funded observability there's 10 million observability companies. Data is the key. This is what's your angle on this. What's your take. Yeah, >>No, look, I think I'll give you the view that I see, right? I, from my side, obviously data is very clear. So the things that room system of record that you and me talked about, the next layer is called system of intelligence. That's where the AI will play. Like we talk cloud native, it'll be called AI. NA NA is a new buzzword and using the AI for customer service, it operations. You talk about observability. I call it AI ops, applying AOPs for good old it operation management, cloud management. So you'll see the AOPs applied for whole list of, uh, application from observability doing the CMDB, predicting the events insurance. So I see a lot of work clicking for AIOps and AI service desk. What needs to be helped desk with ServiceNow BMC <inaudible> you see a new ALA emerging as a system of intelligence. Uh, the next would be is applying AI with workflow automation. So that's where you'll see a lot of things called customer workflows, employee workflows. So think of what UI path automation, anywhere ServiceNow are doing, that area will be driven with AI workflows. So you'll see AI going >>Off is RPA a company is AI, is RPA a feature of something bigger? Or can someone have a company on RPA UI S one will be at their event this summer? Um, or is it a product company? I mean, I mean, RPA is almost, should be embedded in everything. >>It's a feature. It is very good point. Very, very good thinking. So one is, it's a category for sure. Like, as we thought, it's a category, it's an area where RPA may change the name. I call it much more about automation, workflow automation, but RPA and automation is a category. Um, it's a company also, but that automation should be a, in every area. Yeah. Like we call cloud NA and AI NATO it'll become automation. NA yeah. And that's your thinking. >>It's almost interesting me. I think about the, what you're talking about what's coming to mind is I'm kind having flashbacks to the old software model of middleware. Remember at middleware, it was very easy to understand it was middleware. It sat between two things and then the middle and it was software was action. Now you have all kinds of workflows abstractions everywhere. Right? So multiple databases, it's not a monolithic thing. Right? Right. So as you break that down, is this the new modern middleware? Because what you're talking about is data workflows, but they might be siloed or they integrated. I mean, these are the challenges. This is crazy. What's the, >>So don't about the databases become all polyglot databases. I call this one polyglot automation. So you need automation as a layer, as a category, but you also need to put automation in every area, like, as you were talking about, it should be part of ServiceNow. It should be part of ISRA, like every company, every Salesforce. So that's why you see MuleSoft and Salesforce buying RPA companies. So you'll see all the SaaS companies could cloud companies having an automation as a core. So it's like how you have a database and compute and sales and networking. You'll also will have an automation as a layer <inaudible> inside every stack. >>All right. So I wanna shift gears a little bit and get your perspective on what's going on behind us. You can see, uh, behind us, you got the expo hall. You got, um, we're back to vents, but you got, you know, am Clume Ove, uh, Dynatrace data dog, innovative all the companies out here that we know, we interview them all. They're trying to be suppliers to this growing enterprise market. Right. Okay. But now you also got the entrepreneurial equation. Okay. We're gonna have John Sado on from Deibel later today. He's a former NEA guy and we always talk to Jerry, Jen, we know all the, the VCs. What does the startups look like? What does the state of the, in your mind, cause you, I know you invest the entrepreneurial founder situation. Cloud's bigger. Mm-hmm <affirmative> global, right? Data's part of it. You mentioned data's. Yes. Basically. Data's everything. What's it like for a first an entrepreneur right now who's starting a company. What's the white space. What's the attack plan. How do they get in the market? How do they engineer everything? >>Very good. So I'll give it to, uh, two things that I'm seeing out there. Remember leaders, how Amazon created the startups 15 years back, everybody built on Amazon now, Azure and GCP. The next layer would be is people don't just build on Amazon. They're gonna build it on top of snowflake. Companies are snowflake becomes a data platform, right? People will build on snowflake. Right? So I see my old boss flagman try to build companies on snowflake. So you don't build it just on Amazon. You build it on Amazon and snowflake. Snowflake will become your data store. Snowflake will become your data layer. Right? So I think that's the next level of <inaudible> trying to do that. So if I'm doing observability AI ops, if I'm doing next level of Splunk SIM, I'm gonna build it on snowflake, on Salesforce, on Amazon, on Azure, et cetera. >>It's interesting. You know, Jerry Chan has it put out a thesis of a couple months ago called castles in the cloud where your Mo is what you do in the cloud. Not necessarily in, in the, in the IP. Um, Dave LAN and I had last reinvent, coined the term super cloud, right? He's got a lot of traction and a lot of people throwing, throwing mud at us, but we were, our thesis was, is that what Snowflake's doing? What Goldman S Sachs is doing. You starting to see these clouds on top of clouds. So Amazon's got this huge CapEx advantage, and guys, Charles Fitzgerald out there who we like was kind of shitting on us saying, Hey, you guys terrible, they didn't get it. Like, yeah, I don't think he gets it, but that's a whole, can't wait to debate him publicly on this. <laugh> cause he's cool. Um, but snowflake is on Amazon. Now. They say they're on Azure now. Cause they've got a bigger market and they're public, but ultimately without a AWS snowflake doesn't exist. And, and they're reimagining the data warehouse with the cloud, right? That's the billion dollar opportunity. It >>Is. It is. They both are very tight. So imagine what Frank has done at snowflake and Amazon. So if I'm a startup today, I want to build everything on Amazon where possible whatever is, I cannot build. I'll make the pass layer. Remember the middle layer pass will be snowflake so I can build it on snowflake. I can use them for data layer if I really need to size build it on force.com Salesforce. Yeah. Right. So I think that's where you'll see. So >>Basically the, if you're an entrepreneur, the, the north star in terms of the, the outcome is be a super cloud. >>It is, >>That's the application on another big CapEx ride, the CapEx of AWS or cloud, >>And that reduce your product development, your go to market and you get use the snowflake marketplace to drive your engagement. Yeah. >>Yeah. How are, how is Amazon and the clouds dealing with these big whales, the snowflakes of the world? I mean, I know they got a great relationship, uh, but snowflake now has to run a company they're public. Yeah. So, I mean, I'll say, I think they had Redshift. Amazon has got Redshift. Um, but Snowflake's a big customer in the, they're probably paying AWS, I think big bills too. So >>Joe on very good. Cause it's like how Netflix is and Amazon prime, right. Netflix runs on Amazon, but Amazon has Amazon prime that co-optation will be there. So Amazon will have Redshift, but Amazon is also partnering with, uh, snowflake to have native snowflake data warehouses or data layer. So I think depending on the application use case, you have to use each of the above. I think snowflake is here for a long term. Yeah. Yeah. So if I'm building an application, I want to use snowflake then writing from stats. >>Well, I think that it comes back down to entrepreneurial hustle. Do you have a better product? Right. Product value will ultimately determine it as long as the cloud doesn't, you know, foreclose, your, you that's right with some sort of internal hack. Uh, but I think, I think the general question that I have is that I, I think it's okay to have a super cloud like that because the rising tide is still happening at some point, when does the rising tide stop and do the people shopping up their knives, it gets more competitive or is it just an infinite growth? So >>I think it's growth. You call it cloud scale, you invented the word cloud scale. So I think look, cloud will continually agree, increase. I think there's as long as there more movement from on, uh, OnPrem to the classical data center, I think there's no reason at this point, the rumor, the old lift and shift that's happening in like my business. I see people lift and shifting from the it operations. It helpless, even the customer service service now and, uh, ticket data from BMCs CAS like Microfocus, all those workloads are shifted to the cloud, right? So cloud ticketing system is happening. Cloud system of record is happening. So I think this train has still a long way to go >>Made. I wanna get your thoughts for the folks watching that are, uh, enterprise buyers are practitioners, not suppliers to the more market, feel free to text me or DMing. The next question's really about the buying side, which is if I'm a customer, what's the current, um, appetite for startup products, cuz you know, the big enterprises now and you know, small, medium, large and large enterprise are all buying new companies cuz a startup can go from zero to relevant very quickly. So that means now enterprises are engaging heavily with startups. What's it like what's is there a change in order of magnitude of the relationship between the startup selling to, or growing startup selling to an enterprise? Um, have you seen changes there? I mean I'm seeing some stuff, but why don't get your thoughts on that? What, >>No, it is. If I growing by or 2007 or eight, when I used to talk to you back then and Amazon started very small, right? We are an Amazon summit here. So I think enterprises on the average used to spend nothing with startups. It's almost like 0% or 1% today. Most companies are already spending 20, 30% with startups. Like if I look at a CIO or line of business, it's gone. Yeah. Can it go more? I think it can in the next four, five years. Yeah. Spending on the startups. >>Yeah. And check out, uh, AWS startups.com. That's a site that we built for the startup community for buyers and startups. And I want to get your reaction because I reference the URL cause it's like, there's like a bunch of companies we've been promoting because the solutions that startups have actually are new stuff. Yes. It's bending, it's shifting for security or using data differently or um, building tools and platforms for data engineering. Right. Which is a new persona that's emerging. So you know, a lot of good resources there. Um, and goes back now to the data question. Now, getting back to your, what you're working on now is what's your thoughts around this new, um, data engineering persona, you mentioned AIOps, we've been seeing AIOps IOPS booming and that's creating a new developer paradigm that's right. Which we call coin data as code data as code is like infrastructure is code, but it's for data, right? It's developing with data, right? Retraining machine learnings, going back to the data lake, getting data to make, to do analysis, to make the machine learning better post event or post action. So this, this data engineers like an SRE for data, it's a new, scalable role we're seeing. Do you see the same thing? Do you agree? Um, do you disagree or can you share >>Yourself a lot of first is I see the AIOP solutions in the future should be not looking back. I need to be like we are in San Francisco bay. That means earthquake prediction. Right? I want AOPs to predict when the outages are gonna happen. When there's a performance issue. I don't think most AOPs vendors have not gone there yet. Like I spend a lot of time with data dog, Cisco app Dyna, right? Dynatrace, all this solution. We will go future towards predict to proactive solution with AOPs. But what you bring up a very good point on the data side. I think like we have a Amazon marketplace and Amazon for startup, there should be data exchange where you want to create for AOPs and AI service desk. Customers are give the data, share the data because we thought the data algorithms are useless. I can them, but I gotta train them, modify them, tweak them, make them >>Better, >>Make them better. Yeah. And I think their whole data exchange is the industry has not thought through something you and me talk many times. Yeah. Yeah. I think the whole, that area is very important. >>You've always been on, um, on the Vanguard of data because, uh, it's been really fun. Yeah. >>Going back to big data days back in 2009, you know, >>Look at, look how much data Rick has grown. >>It is. They doubled the >>Key cloud air kinda went private. So good stuff, man. What are you working on right now? Give a, give a, um, plug for what you're working on. You'll still investing. >>I do still invest, but look, I'm a hundred percent on ISRA right now. I'm the CEO there. Yeah. Okay. So right. ISRA is my number one baby right now. So I'm looking at that growing customers and my customers are some of them, you like it's zoom auto desk McAfee, uh, grand to so all the top customers, um, mainly for it help desk customer service. AIOps those are three product lines and going after enterprise and commercial deals. >>And when should someone buy your product? What's what's their need? What category is it? >>I think they look whenever somebody needs to buy the product is if you need AOP solution to predict, keep your lights on predict is one area. If you want to improve employee experience, you are using a slack teams and you want to automate all your workflows. That's another value problem. Third is customer service. You don't want to hire more people to do it. Some of the areas where you want to scale your company, grow your company, eliminate the cost customer service. >>Great stuff, man. Great to see you. Thanks for coming on. Congratulations on the success of your company and your investments. Thanks for coming on the cube. Okay. I'm John fur here at the cube live in San Francisco for day one of two days of coverage of Aish summit 2022. And we're gonna be at Aus summit in San, uh, in New York in the summer. So look for that on this calendar, of course go to eight of us, startups.com. I mentioned that it's decipher all the hot startups and of course the cube.net and Silicon angle.com. Thanks for watching. We'll be back more coverage after this short break. >>Okay. Welcome back everyone. This the cubes coverage here in San Francisco, California, a Davis summit, 2022, the beginning of the event season, as it comes back, little bit smaller footprint, a lot of hybrid events going on, but this is actually a physical event, a summit in new York's coming in the summer. We'll be there too with the cube on the set. We're getting back in the groove psych to be back. We were at reinvent, uh, as well, and we'll see more and more cube, but you're can see a lot of virtual cube outta hybrid cube. We wanna get all those conversations, try to get more interviews, more flow going. But right now I'm excited to have Corey Quinn here on the back on the cube chief cloud economists with bill group. He's the founder, uh, and chief content person always got great angles, fun comedy, authoritative Corey. Great to see you. Thank >>You. Thanks. Coming on. Sure is a lot of words to describe is shit posting, which is how I describe what I tend to do. Most days, >>Shit posting is an art form now. And if you look at mark, Andrew's been doing a lot of shit posting lately. All a billionaires are shit hosting, but they don't know how to do it. Like they're not >>Doing it right? So there's something opportunity there. It's like here's how to be even more obnoxious and incisive. It's honestly the most terrifying scenario for anyone is if I have that kind of budget to throw at my endeavors, it's like, I get excited with a nonsense I can do with a $20 gift card for an AWS credit compared to, oh well, if I could buy a midsize island, do begin doing this from, oh, then we're having fun. >>This shit posting trend. Interesting. I was watching a thread go on about, saw someone didn't get a job because of their shit posting and the employer didn't get it. And then someone on this side I'll hire the guy cuz I get that's highly intelligent shit posting. So for the audience that doesn't know what shit posting is, what is shit posting? >>It's more or less talking about the world of enter prize technology, which even that sentence is hard to finish without falling asleep and toppling out of my chair in front of everyone on the livestream. But it's doing it in such a way that brings it to life that says the quiet part. A lot of the audience is thinking, but generally doesn't say either because they're polite or not a jackass or more prosaically are worried about getting fired for better or worse. I don't don't have that particular constraint, >>Which is why people love you. So let's talk about what you, what you think is, uh, worthy and not worthy in the industry right now, obviously, uh, coupons coming up in Spain, which they're having a physical event, you see the growth of cloud native Amazon's of all the Adams, especially new CEO. Andy's move on to be the chief of all Amazon. Just so I'm the cover of was it time met magazine? Um, he's under a lot of stress. Amazon's changed. Invoice has changed. What's working. What's not, what's rising, what's falling. What's hot. What's not, >>It's easy to sit here and criticize almost anything. These folks do. They're they're effectively in a fishbowl, but I have trouble imagining the logistics. It takes to wind up handling the catering for a relatively downscale event like this one this year, let alone running a 1.7 million employee company having to balance all the competing challenges and pressures and the rest. I, I just can't fathom what it would be like to look at all of AWS. And it's, it's sprawling immense that dominates our entire industry and say, okay, this is a good start, but I, I wanna focus on something with a broader remit. What is that? How do you even get into that position? And you can't win once you're there. All you can do is hold onto the tiger and hope you don't get mold. >>Well, there's a lot of force for good conversations. Seeing a lot of that going on, Amazon's trying to port eight of us is trying to portray themselves as you know, the Pathfinder, you know, you're the pioneer, um, force for good. And I get that and I think that's a good angle as cloud goes mainstream. There's still the question of, we had a guy on just earlier, who was a skydiving instructor and we were joking about the early days of cloud. Like that was like skydiving, build a parachute open, you know, and now same kind of thing. As you move to edge, things are like reliable in some areas, but still new, new fringe, new areas. That's crazy. Well, >>Since the last time we've spoken, uh, Steve Schmidt is now the CISO for all of Amazon and his backfill replacement. The AWS CISO is CJ. Moses who as a hobby races, a as a semi-pro race car driver to my understanding, which either, I don't know what direction to take that in either. This is what he does to relax or ultimately, or ultimately it's. Huh? That, that certainly says something about risk assessment. I'm not entirely sure what, but okay. <laugh> either way, sounds like more exciting. Like I better >>Have a replacement ready <laugh> I, in case something goes wrong on the track, highly >>Available >>CSOs. I gotta say one of the things I do like in the recent trend is that the tech companies are getting into the formula one, which I was never a fan of until I watched that Netflix series. But when you look at the formula one, it's pretty cool. Cause it's got some tech angles, I get the whole data instrumentation thing, but the most coolest thing about formula one is they have these new rigs out. Yeah. Where you can actually race in east sports with other people in pure simulation of the race car. You gotta get the latest and videographic card, but it's basically a tricked out PC with amazing monitors and you have all the equipment of F1 and you're basically simulating racing. >>Oh, it's great too. And I can see the appeal of these tech companies getting into it because these things are basically rocket shifts. When those cars go, like they're sitting there, we can instrument every last part of what is going on inside that vehicle. And then AWS crops up. And we can bill on every one of those dimensions too. And it's like slow down their hasty pudding one step at a time. But I do see the appeal. >>So I gotta ask you about, uh, what's going on in your world. I know you have a lot of great success. We've been following you in the queue for many, many years. Got a great newsletter, check out Corey Quinn's newsletter, uh, screaming in the cloud program. Uh, you're on the cutting edge and you've got a great balance between really being snarky and, and, and really being delivering content. That's exciting, uh, for people, uh, with a little bit of an edge, um, how's that going? Uh, what's the blowback, any blowback late? Has there been uptick? What was, what are some of the things you're hearing from your audience, more Corey, more Corey. And then of course the, the PR team's calling you >>The weird thing about having an audience beyond a certain size is far and away as a landslide. The most common response I get is silence where it's high. I'm emailing an awful lot of people at last week in AWS every week and okay. They must not have heard me it. That is not actually true. People just generally don't respond to email because who responds to email newsletters. That sounds like something, a lunatic might do same story with response to live streams and podcasts. It's like, I'm gonna call into that am radio show and give them a piece of my mind. People generally don't do >>That. We should do that. Actually. I think you're people would call in, oh, >>I, I think >>I guarantee we had that right now. People would call in and say, Corey, what do you think about X? >>Yeah. It not, everyone understands the full context of what I do. And in fact, increasingly few people do and that's fine. I, I keep forgetting that sometimes people do not see what I'm doing in the same light that I do. And that's fine. Blowback has been largely minimal. Honestly, I am surprised about anything by how little I have gotten over the last five years of doing this, but it would be easier to dismiss me if I weren't generally. Right. When, okay, so you launch this new service and it seems pretty crappy to me cuz when I try and build something, it falls over and begs for help. And people might not like hearing that, but it's what customers are finding too. Yeah. I really am the voice of the >>Customer. You know, I always joke with Dave Alane about how John Fort's always at, uh, um, reinvent getting the interview with jazzy now, Andy we're there, you're there. And so we have these rituals at the events. It's all cool. Um, one of the rituals I like about your, um, your content is you like to get on the naming product names. Um, and, and, and, and, and kind of goof on that. Now why I like is because I used to work at ETT Packard where they used to name things as like engineers, HP 1 0, 0 5, or we can't call, we >>Have a new monitor. How are we gonna name it? Throw the wireless keyboard down the stairs again. And then there you go. Yeah. >>It's and the old joke at HP was if they, if they invented SU sushi, they'd say, yeah, we can't call sushi. It's cold, dead fish. That's what it is. And so the joke was cold. Dead fish is a better name than sushi. So you know is fun. So what's the, what are the, how's the Amazon doing in there? Have they changed their naming, uh, strategy, uh, on some of their, their >>Producting. So they're going in different directions. When they named Amazon Aurora, they decided to explore a new theme of Disney princesses as they go down those paths. And some things are more descriptive. Some people are clearly getting bonused on number of words, they can shove into it. Like the better a service is the longer it's name. Like AWS systems manager, session manager is a great one. I love the service ridiculous name. They have a systems manager, parameter store, which is great. They have secrets manager, which does the same thing. It's two words less, but that one costs money in a way that systems manage your parameter store does not. It's fun. >>What's your, what's your favorite combination of acronyms >>Combination >>Of gots. You got EMR, you got EC two, you got S3 SQS. Well, RedShift's not an acronym you >>Gets is one of my personal favorites because it's either elastic block store or elastic bean stock, depending entirely on the context of the conversation, they >>Shook up bean stock or is that still around? Oh, >>They never turn anything off. They're like the anti Google, Google turns things off while they're still building it. Whereas Amazon is like, well, we built this thing in 2005 and everyone hates it, but while we certainly can't change it, now it has three customers on it. John three <laugh>. Okay. Simple BV still haunts our dreams. >>I, I actually got an email on, I saw one of my, uh, servers, all these C twos were being deprecated and I got an email I'm I couldn't figure out. Why can you just like roll it over? Why, why are you telling me? Just like, give me something else. All right. Okay. So let me talk about, uh, the other things I want to ask you, is that like, okay. So as Amazon better in some areas where do they need more work in your opinion? Because obviously they're all interested in new stuff and they tend to like put it out there for their end to end customers. But then they've got ecosystem partners who actually have the same product. Yes. And, and this has been well documented. So it's, it's not controversial. It's just that Amazon's got a database Snowflake's got out database service. So Redshift, snowflake data breach is out there. So you got this co-op petition. Yes. How's that going? And what do you hearing about the reaction to any of that stuff? >>Depends on who you ask. They love to basically trot out a bunch of their partners who will say nice things about them. And it very much has heirs of, let's be honest, a hostage video, but okay. Cuz these companies do partner with, and they cannot afford to rock the boat too far. I'm not partnered with anyone. I can say what I want. And they're basically restricted to taking away my birthday at worse so I can live with that. >>All right. So I gotta ask about multicloud. Cause obviously the other cloud shows are coming up. Amazon hated that word multicloud. Um, a lot of people though saying, you know, it's not a real good marketing word. Like multicloud sounds like, you know, root canal. Mm-hmm <affirmative> right. So is there a better description for multicloud? >>Multiple single >>Cloudant loves that term. Yeah. >>You know, you're building in multiple single points of failure, do it for the right reasons or don't do it as a default. I believe not doing it is probably the right answer. However, and if I were, if I were Amazon, I wouldn't want to talk about my multi-cloud either as the industry leader, let's talk about other clouds, bad direction to go in from a market cap perspective. It doesn't end well for you, but regardless of what they want to talk about, or don't want to talk about what they say, what they don't say, I tune all of it out. And I look at what customers are doing and multi-cloud exists in a variety of forms. Some brilliant, some brain dead. It depends a lot on, but my general response is when someone gets on stage from a company and tells me to do a thing that directly benefits their company. I am skeptical at best. Yeah. When customers get on stage and say, this is what we're doing because it solves problems. That's when I shut up and listen. >>Yeah, course. Awesome. Corey, I gotta ask you a question cause I know you we've been, you know, fellow journeyman and the, and the cloud journey going to all the events and then the pandemic hit. We now in the third year, who knows what it's gonna gonna end. Certainly events are gonna look different. They're gonna be either changing footprint with the virtual piece, new group formations. Community's gonna emerge. You've got a pretty big community growing and it's growing like crazy. What's the weirdest or coolest thing or just big changes you've seen with the pandemic, uh, from your perspective, cuz you've been in the you're in the middle of the whitewater rafting. You've seen the events you circle offline. You saw the online piece, come in, you're commentating, you're calling balls and strikes in the industry. You got a great team developing over there. Duck build group. What's the big aha moment that you saw with the pandemic. Weird, funny, serious, real in the industry and with customers what's >>Accessibility. Reinvent is a great example. When in the before times it's open to anyone who wants to attend, who can pony up two grand and a week in Las Vegas and get to Las Vegas from wherever they happen to be by moving virtually suddenly it, it embraces the reality that talent is evenly. Distributed. Opportunity is not. And that means that suddenly these things are accessible to a wide swath of audience and potential customer base and the rest that hadn't been invited to the table previously, it's imperative that we not lose that. It's nice to go out and talk to people and have people come up and try and smell my hair from time to time, I smelled delightful. Let me assure you. But it was, but it's also nice to be. >>I have a product for you if you want, you know? Oh, >>Oh excellent. I look forward to it. What is it? Pudding? Why not? <laugh> >>What else have you seen? So when accessibility for talent. Yes. Which by the way is totally home run. What weird things have happened that you've seen? Um, that's >>Uh, it's, it's weird, but it's good that an awful lot of people giving presentation have learned to tighten their message and get to the damn point because most people are not gonna get up from a front row seat in a conference hall, midway through your Aing talk and go somewhere else. But they will change a browser tab and you won't get them back. You've gotta be on point. You've gotta be compelling if it's going to be a virtual discussion. Yeah. >>And you turn off your iMessage too. >>Oh yes. It's always fun in the, in the meetings when you're ho to someone and their colleague is messaging them about, should we tell 'em about this? And I'm sitting there reading it and it's >>This guy is really weird. Like, >>Yes I am and I bring it into the conversation and then everyone's uncomfortable. It goes, wow. Why >>Not? I love when my wife yells at me over I message. When I'm on a business call, like, do you wanna take that about no, I'm good. >>No, no. It's better off. I don't the only entire sure. It's >>Fine. My kids text. Yeah, it's fine. Again, that's another weird thing. And, and then group behavior is weird. Now people are looking at, um, communities differently. Yes. Very much so, because if you're fatigued on content, people are looking for the personal aspect. You're starting to see much more of like yeah. Another virtual event. They gotta get better. One and two who's there. >>Yeah. >>The person >>That's a big part of it too is the human stories are what are being more and more interesting. Don't get up here and tell me about your product and how brilliant you are and how you built it. That's great. If I'm you, or if I wanna work with you or I want to compete with you or I want to put on my engineering hat and build it myself. Cause why would I buy anything? That's more than $8. But instead, tell me about the problem. Tell me about the painful spot that you specialize in. Yeah. Tell me a story there. >>I, I think >>That gets a glimpse in a hook and makes >>More, more, I think you nailed it. Scaling storytelling. Yes. And access to better people because they don't have to be there in person. I just did a thing. I never, we never would've done the queue. We did. Uh, Amazon stepped up in sponsors. Thank you, Amazon for sponsoring international women's day, we did 30 interviews, APAC. We did five regions and I interviewed this, these women in Asia, Pacific eight, PJ, they call for in this world. And they're amazing. I never would've done those interviews cuz I never, would've seen 'em at an event. I never would've been in pan or Singapore, uh, to access them. And now they're in the index, they're in the network. They're collaborating on LinkedIn. So a threads are developing around connections that I've never seen before. Yes. Around the content. >>Absolutely >>Content value plus and >>Effecting. And that is the next big revelation of this industry is going to realize you have different companies. And, and I Amazon's case different service teams all competing with each other, but you have the container group and you have the database group and you have the message cuing group. But customers don't really want to build things from spare parts. They want a solution to a problem. I want to build an app that does Twitter for pets or whatever it is I'm trying to do. I don't wanna basically have to pick and choose and fill my shopping cart with all these different things. I want something that's gonna basically give me what I'm trying to get as close to turnkey as possible. Moving up the stack. That is the future. And just how it gets here is gonna be >>Well we're here at Corey Quinn, the master of the master of content here in the a ecosystem. Of course we we've been following up from the beginning. His great guy, check out his blog, his site, his newsletter screaming podcast. Corey, final question for, uh, what are you here doing? What's on your agenda this week in San Francisco and give a plug for the duck build group. What are you guys doing? I know you're hiring some people what's on the table for the company. What's your focus this week and put a plug in for the group. >>I'm here as a customer and basically getting outta my cage cuz I do live here. It's nice to actually get out and talk to folks who are doing interesting things at the duck bill group. We solved one problem. We fixed the horrifying AWS bill, both from engineering and architecture, advising as well as negotiating AWS contracts because it turns out those things are big and complicated. And of course my side media projects last week in aws.com, we are, it it's more or less a content operation where I in my continual and ongoing love affair with the sound of my own voice. >><laugh> and you're good. It's good content it's on, on point fun, Starky and relevant. So thanks for coming to the cube and sharing with us. Appreciate it. No >>Thank you button. >>You. Okay. This the cube covers here in San Francisco, California, the cube is back going to events. These are the summits, Amazon web services summits. They happen all over the world. We'll be in New York and obviously we're here in San Francisco this week. I'm John fur. Keep, keep it right here. We'll be back with more coverage after this short break. Okay. Welcome back everyone. This's the cubes covers here in San Francisco, California, we're live on the show floor of AWS summit, 2022. I'm John for host of the cube and remember AWS summit in New York city coming up this summer, we'll be there as well. And of course reinvent the end of the year for all the cube coverage on cloud computing and AWS two great guests here from the APN global APN Sege chef Jenko and Jeff Grimes partner lead Jeff and Sege is doing partnerships global APN >>AWS global startup program. Yeah. >>Okay. Say that again. >>AWS. We'll start >>Program. That's the official name. >>I love >>It too long, too long for me. Thanks for coming on. Yeah, >>Of course. >>Appreciate it. Tell us about what's going on with you guys. What's the, how was you guys organized? You guys we're obviously we're in San Francisco bay area, Silicon valley, zillions of startups here, New York. It's got another one we're gonna be at tons of startups. A lot of 'em getting funded, big growth and cloud big growth and data secure hot in all sectors. >>Absolutely. >>So maybe, maybe we could just start with the global startup program. Um, it's essentially a white glove service that we provide to startups that are built on AWS. And the intention there is to help identify use cases that are being built on top of AWS. And for these startups, we want to pro vibe white glove support in co building products together. Right. Um, co-marketing and co-selling essentially, um, you know, the use cases that our customers need solved, um, that either they don't want to build themselves or are perhaps more innovative. Um, so the, a AWS global startup program provides white glove support. Dedicat at headcount for each one of those pillars. Um, and within our program, we've also provided incentives, programs go to market activities like the AWS startup showcase that we've built for these startups. >>Yeah. By the way, AWS startup, AWS startups.com is the URL, check it out. Okay. So partnerships are key. Jeff, what's your role? >>Yeah. So I'm responsible for leading the overall effort for the AWS global startup program. Um, so I've got a team of partner managers that are located throughout the us, uh, managing a few hundred startup ISVs right now. <laugh> >>Yeah, you got a >>Lot. We've got a lot. >>There's a lot. I gotta, I gotta ask a tough question. Okay. I'm I'm a startup founder. I got a team. I just got my series a we're grown. I'm trying to hire people. I'm super busy. What's in it for me. Yeah. What do you guys bring to the table? I love the white glove service, but translate that what's in it for what do I get out of it? What's >>A story. Good question. I focus, I think. Yeah, because we get, we get to see a lot of partners building their businesses on AWS. So, you know, from our perspective, helping these partners focus on what, what do we truly need to build by working backwards from customer feedback, right? How do we effectively go to market? Because we've seen startups do various things, um, through trial and error, um, and also just messaging, right? Because oftentimes partners or rather startups, um, try to boil the ocean with many different use cases. So we really help them, um, sort of laser focus on what are you really good at and how can we bring that to the customer as quickly as possible? >>Yeah. I mean, it's truly about helping that founder accelerate the growth of their company, right. And there's a lot that you can do with AWS, but focus is truly the key word there because they're gonna be able to find their little piece of real estate and absolutely deliver incredible outcomes for our customers. And then they can start their growth curve there. >>What are some of the coolest things you've seen with the APN that you can share publicly? I know you got a lot going on there, a lot of confidentiality. Um, but you know, we're here a lot of great partners on the floor here. I'm glad we're back at events. Uh, a lot of stuff going on digitally with virtual stuff and, and hybrid. What are some of the cool things you guys have seen in the APN that you can point to? >>Yeah, absolutely. I mean, I can point to few, you can take them. So, um, I think what's been fun over the years for me personally, I came from a startup brand sales at an early stage startup and, and I went through the whole thing. So I have a deep appreciation for what these guys are going through. And what's been interesting to see for me is taking some of these early stage guys, watching them progress, go public, get acquired and see that big day mm-hmm <affirmative>, uh, and being able to point to very specific items that we help them to get to that point. Uh, and it's just a really fun journey to watch. >>Yeah. I, and part of the reason why I really, um, love working at the AWS, uh, global startup program is working with passionate founders. Um, I just met with a founder today that it's gonna, he's gonna build a very big business one day, um, and watching them grow through these stages and supporting that growth. Um, I like to think of our program as a catalyst for enterprise is sort of scale. Yeah. Um, and through that we provide visibility, credibility and growth opportunities. >>Yeah. A lot, a lot of partners too. What I found talking to staff founders is when they have that milestone, they work so hard for it. Whether it's a B round C round Republic or get bought. Yeah. Um, then they take a deep breath and they look back at wow, what a journey it's been. So it's kind of emotional for sure. But still it's a grind. Right? You gotta, I mean, when you get funding, it's still day one. You don't stop. It's no celebrate, you got a big round or valuation. You still gotta execute >>And look it's hypercompetitive and it's brutally difficult. And our job is to try to make that a little less difficult and navigate those waters. Right. Where ever everyone's going after similar things. >>Yeah. And I think as a group element too, I observe that startups that I, I meet through the APN has been interesting because they feel part of AWS. Yeah, totally. As a group of community, as a vibe there. Um, I know they're hustling, they're trying to make things happen. But at the same time, Amazon throws a huge halo effect. I mean, that's a huge factor. I mean, you guys are the number one cloud in the business, the growth in every sector is booming. Yeah. And if you're a startup, you don't have that luxury yet. And look at companies like snowflake that built on top of AWS. I mean, people are winning by building on AWS. >>Yeah. And our, our, our program really validates their technology first. So we have, what's all the foundation's technical review that we put all of our startups through before we go to market. So that when enterprise customers are looking at startup technology, they know that it's already been vetted. And, um, to take that a step further and help these partners differentiate, we use programs like the competency programs, the DevOps competencies, the security competency, which continues to help, um, provide sort of a platform for these startups, help them differentiate. And also there's go to market benefits that are associated with that. >>Okay. So let me ask the, the question that's probably on everyone's mind, who's watching, certainly I asked this a lot. There's a lot of companies startups out there who makes the cut, is there a criteria cut? It's not like it's sports team or anything, but like sure. Like there's activate program, which is like, there's hundreds of thousands of startups out there. Not everyone is at the APN. Right? Correct. So ISVs again, that's a whole nother, that's a more mature partner that might have, you know, huge market cap or growth. How, how do you guys focus? How do you guys focus? I mean, you got a good question, you know, thousand flowers blooming all the time. Is there a new way you guys are looking at it? I know there's been some talk about restructure or, or new focus. What's the focus. >>Yeah. It's definitely not an easy task by any means. Um, but you know, I recently took over this role and we're really trying to establish focus areas, right. So obviously a lot of the ISVs that we look after are infrastructure ISVs. That's what we do. Uh, and so we have very specific pods that look after different type of partners. So we've got a security pod, we've got a DevOps pod, we've got core infrastructure, et cetera. And really, we're trying to find these ISVs that can solve, uh, really interesting AWS customer. >>You guys have a deliberate, uh, focus on these pillars. So what infrastructure, >>Security, DevOps, and data and analytics, and then line of business >>Line, business line business, like web >>Marketing, business apps, >>Owner type thing. Exactly. >>Yeah, exactly. >>So solutions there. Yeah. More solutions and the other ones are like hardcore. So infrastructure as well, like storage back up ransomware kind of stuff, or, >>Uh, storage, networking. >>Okay. Yeah. The classic >>Database, et cetera. Right. >>And so there's teams on each pillar. >>Yep. So I think what's, what's fascinating for the startups that we cover is that they've got, they truly have support from a build market sell perspective, right. So you've got someone who's technical to really help them get the technology, figured out someone to help them get the marketing message dialed and spread, and then someone to actually do the co-sell, uh, day to day activities to help them get in front of customers. >>Probably the number one request that we always ask for Amazon is can wish that sock report, oh, download it on the console, which we use all the time. <laugh> exactly. But security's a big deal. I mean, you know, ask the res are evolving, that role of DevOps is taking on dev SecOps. Um, I, I can see a lot of customers having that need for a relationship to move things faster. Do you guys provide like escalation or is that a part of a service or that not part of, uh, uh, >>Yeah, >>So the partner development manager can be an escalation for absolutely. Think of that. 'em as an extension of your business inside of AWS. >>Great. And you guys, how is that partner managers, uh, measure >>On those three pillars? Right. Got it. Are we billing, building valuable use cases? So product development go to market, so go to market activities, think blog, posts, webinars, case studies, so on and so forth. And then co-sell not only are we helping these partners win their current opportunities that they are sourcing, but can we also help them source net new deals? Yeah. Right. That's very, >>I mean, top asked from the partners is get me in front of customers. Right. Um, not an easy task, but that's a huge goal of ours to help them grow their top line. >>Right. Yeah. In fact, we had some interviews here on the cube earlier talking about that dynamic of how enterprise customers are buying. And it's interesting, a lot more POCs. I have one partner here that you guys work with, um, on observability, they got a huge POC with capital one mm-hmm <affirmative> and the enterprises are engaging the star ups and bringing them in. So the combination of open source software enterprises are leaning into that hard and bringing young growing startups in mm-hmm <affirmative>. Yep. So I could see that as a huge service that you guys can bring people in. >>Right. And they're bringing massively differentiated technology to the table. The challenge is they just might not have the brand recognition. The, at the big guys have mm-hmm <affirmative>. And so that's, our job is how do you get that great tech in front of the right situations? >>Okay. So my next question is about the show here, and then we'll talk globally. So here in San Francisco sure. You know, Silicon valley bay area, San Francisco bay area, a lot of startups, a lot of VCs, a lot of action. Mm-hmm <affirmative> so probably a big market for you guys. Yeah. So what's exciting here in SF. And then outside of SF, you guys have a global pro, have you see any trends that are geography based or is it sure areas more mature? There's certain regions that are better. I mean, I just interviewed a company here. That's doing, uh, a AWS edge really well in these cases. It's interesting that these, the partners are filling a lot of holes and gaps in the opportunities with a AWS. So what's exciting here. And then what's the global perspective. >>Yeah, totally. So obviously see a ton of partners from the bay area that we support. Um, but we're seeing a lot of really interesting technology come out of AMEA specifically. Yeah. Uh, and making a lot of noise here in the United States, which is great. Um, and so, you know, we definitely have that global presence and, and starting to see super differentiated technology come out of those regions. >>Yeah. Especially Tel Aviv. Yeah. >>Amy and real quick before you get into surge. It's interesting. The VC market in, in Europe is hot. They've got a lot of unicorns coming in. We've seen a lot of companies coming in. They're kind of rattling their own, you know, cage right now. Hey, look at us. Let's see if they crash, you know, but we don't see that happening. I mean, people have been predicting a crash now in, in the startup ecosystem for least a year. It's not crashing. In fact, funding's up. >>Yeah. The pandemic was hard on a lot of startups for sure. Yeah. Um, but what we've seen is many of these startups, they, as quickly as they can grow, they can also pivot as, as, as well. Um, and so I've actually seen many of our startups grow through the demo because their use cases are helping customers either save money, become more operationally efficient and provide value to leadership teams that need more visibility into their infrastructure during a pandemic. >>It's an interesting point. I talked to Andy jazzy and Adam Celski both say the same thing during the pandemic. Necessity's the mother of all invention. Yep. And startups can move fast. So with that, you guys are there to assist if I'm a startup and I gotta pivot cuz remember iterate and pivot, iterate and pivot. So you get your economics, that's the playbook of the ventures and the models. >>Exactly. How >>Do you guys help me do that? Give me an example of what me through. Pretend me, I'm a start up. Hey, I'm on the cloud. Oh my God. Pandemic. They need video conferencing. Hey cube. Yeah. What do I need? Search? What, what do >>I do? That's a good question. First thing is just listen. Yeah. I think what we have to do is a really good job of listening to the partner. Um, what are their needs? What is their problem statement? Where do they want to go at the end of the day? Um, and oftentimes because we've worked with, so how many successful startups that have come out of our program, we have, um, either through intuition or a playbook determined what is gonna be the best path forward and how do we get these partners to stop focusing on things that will eventually, um, just be a waste of time. Yeah. And, or not provide, or, you know, bring any fruit to the table, which, you know, essentially revenue. >>Well, we love startups here in the cube because one, um, they have good stories, they're oil and cutting edge, always pushing the envelope and they're kind of disrupting someone else. Yeah. And so they, they have an opinion. They don't mind sharing on camera. So love talking to startups. We love working with you guys on our startups. Showcases startups.com. Check out AWS startups.com and she got the showcase. So is, uh, final word. I'll give you guys the last word. What's the bottom line bumper sticker for AP globe. The global APN program summarize the opportunity for startups, what you guys bring to the table and we'll close it out. Totally. We'll start >>With you. Yeah. I think the AWS global startup programs here to help companies truly accelerate their business full stop. Right. And that's what we're here for. Love it. >>It's a good way to, it's a good way to put it. Dato yeah. >>All right. Thanks for coming out. Thanks John. Great to see you love working with you guys. Hey, startups need help. And the growing and huge market opportunities, the shift cloud scale data engineering, security infrastructure, all the markets are exploding in growth because of the digital transformation of realities here, open source and cloud. I'll making it happen here in the cube in San Francisco, California. I'm John furrier, your host. Thanks for >>Watching Cisco, John. >>Hello and welcome back to the Cube's live coverage here in San Francisco, California for AWS summit, 2022. I'm John for host of the cube. Uh, two days of coverage, AWS summit, 2022 in New York city coming up this summer will be there as well. Events are back. The cube is back of course, with the cube virtual cube hybrid, the cube.net. Check it out a lot of content this year more than ever a lot more cloud data cloud native, modern applic is all happening. Got a great guest here. Jeremy Burton, Cub alumni, uh, CEO of observe Inc in the middle of all the cloud scale, big data observability, Jeremy. Great to see you. Thanks. >>Coming on. Always great to come and talk to you on the queue, man. It's been been a few years, so, >>Um, well you, you got your hands. You're in the trenches with great startup, uh, good funding, great board, great people involved in the observability Smith hot area, but also you've been a senior executive president of Dell EMC. Um, 11 years ago you had a vision and you actually had an event called cloud meets big data. Um, yeah. And it's here, you predicted it 11 years ago. Um, look around it's cloud meets big data. >>Yeah. I mean the, the cloud thing I think, you know, was, was probably already a thing, but the big data thing I do claim credit for, for sort of catching that bus early, um, you know, we, we were on the, the, the bus early and, and I think it was only inevitable. Like, you know, if you could bring the economics and the compute of cloud to big data, you, you could find out things you could never possibly imagine. >>So you're close to a lot of companies that we've been covering deeply snowflake, obviously you involved, uh, at the board level, the other found, you know, the people there, uh, cloud, you know, Amazon, you know, what's going on here? Yeah. You're doing a startup as the CEO at the helm, uh, chief of observ, Inc, which is an observability, which is to me in the center of this confluence of data engineering, large scale integrations, um, data as code integrating into applications. I mean, it's a whole nother world developing, like you see with snowflake, it means snowflakes is super cloud as we call it. So a whole nother wave is here. What's your, what's this wave we're on what's how would you describe the wave? >>Well, a couple of things, I mean, people are, I think right in more software than, than ever before are why? Because they've realized that if, if you don't take your business online and offer a service, then you become largely irrelevant. And so you you've got a whole set of new applications. I think, I think more applications now than any point. Um, not, not just ever, but the mid nineties, I always looked at as the golden age of application development. Now, back then people were building for windows. Well, well now they're building for things like AWS is now the platform. Um, so you've got all of that going on. And then at the same time, the, the side effect of these applications is they generate data and lots of data. And the, you know, there's sort of the transactions, you know, what you bought today are something like that. But then there's what we do, which is all the telemetry, all the exhaust fumes. And I think people really are realizing that their differentiation is not so much their application. It's their understanding of the data. Can, can I understand who my best customers are, what I sell today. If people came to my website and didn't buy, then why not? Where did they drop off all of that? They wanna analyze. And, and the answers are all in the data. The question is, can you understand it >>In our last startup showcase, we featured data as code one of the insights that we got out of that, and I wanna get your opinion on our reaction to is, is that data used to be put into a data lake and turns into a data swamp or throw into the data warehouse. And then we'll do some queries, maybe a report once in a while. And so data, once it was done, unless it was real time, even real time was not good anymore after real time. That was the old way. Now you're seeing more and more, uh, effort to say, let's go look at the data, cuz now machine learning is getting better. Not just train once mm-hmm <affirmative> they're iterating. Yeah. This notion of iterating and then pivoting, iterating and pivoting. Yeah, that's a Silicon valley story. That's like how startups work, but now you're seeing data being treated the same way. So now you have another, this data concept that's now yeah. Part of a new way to create more value for the apps. So this whole, this whole new cycle of >>Yeah. >>Data being reused and repurposed and figured out and yeah, >>Yeah. I'm a big fan of, um, years ago. Uh, uh, just an amazing guy, Andy McAfee at the MIT C cell labs I spent time with and he, he had this line, which still sticks to me this day, which is look I'm I'm. He said I'm part of a body, which believes that everything is a matter of data. Like if you have enough data, you can answer any question. And, and this is going back 10 years when he was saying these kind of things and, and certainly, you know, research is on the forefront. But I think, you know, starting to see that mindset of the, the sort of MIT research be mainstream, you know, in enterprises, they they're realizing that. Yeah, it is about the data. You know, if I can better understand my data better than my competitor, then I've got an advantage. And so the question is is, is how, what, what technologies and what skills do I need in my organization to, to allow me to do that. >>So let's talk about observing you the CEO of, okay. Given you've seen the ways before you're in the front lines of observability, which again is in the center of all this action what's going on with the company. Give a quick minute to explain, observe for the folks who don't know what you guys do. What's the company doing? What's the funding status, what's the product status and what's the customer status. Yeah. >>So, um, we realized, you know, a handful of years ago, let's say five years ago that, um, look, the way people are building applications is different. They they're way more functional. They change every day. Uh, but in some respects they're a lot more complicated. They're distributed. They, you know, microservices architectures and when something goes wrong, um, the old way of troubleshooting and solving problems was not gonna fly because you had SA so much change going into production on a daily basis. It was hard to tell like where the problem was. And so we thought, okay, it's about time. Somebody looks at the exhaust fumes from this application and all the telemetry data and helps people troubleshoot and make sense of the problems that they're seeing. So, I mean, that's observability, it's actually a term that goes back to the 1960s. It was a guy called, uh, Rudolph like, like everything in tech, you know, it's, it's a reinvention of something from years gone by. >>Um, there's a guy called, um, Rudy Coleman in 1960s coiner term and, and, and the term was being able to determine the state of a system by looking at its external outputs. And so we've been going on this for, uh, the best part of four years now. Um, it took us three years just to build the product. I think, I think what people don't appreciate these days often is the barrier to entry in a lot of these markets is quite high. You, you need a lot of functionality to have something that's credible with a customer. Um, so yeah, this last year we, we, we did our first year selling, uh, we've got about 40 customers now. Um, we just we've got great investors for the hill ventures. Uh, I mean, Mike SP who was, you know, the, the guy who was the, really, the first guy in it snowflake and the, the initial investor were fortunate enough to, to have Mike and our board. And, um, you know, part of the observed story is closely knit with snowflake all of that time with your data, you know, we, we store in there. >>So I want to get, uh, yeah. Pivot to that. Mike SP snowflake, Jeremy Burton, the cube kind of, kind of same thinking this idea of a super cloud or what snowflake became. Yeah. Snowflake is massively successful on top of AWS. Mm-hmm <affirmative> and now you're seeing startups and companies build on top of snowflake. Yeah. So that's become an entrepreneurial story that we think that to go big in the cloud, you can have a cloud on a cloud, uh, like as Jerry, Jerry Chan and Greylock calls it, castles in the cloud where there are moats in the cloud. So you're close to it. I know you, you're doing some stuff with snowflake. So as a startup, what's your view on building on top of say a snowflake or an AWS, because again, you gotta go where the data is. You need all the data. >>Yeah. So >>What's your take on that? I mean, >>Having enough gray hair now, um, you know, again, in tech, I think if you wanna predict the future, look at the past. And, uh, you know, 20 years ago, 25 years ago, I was at a, a smaller company called Oracle and an Oracle was the database company. And, uh, their, their ambition was to manage all of the world's transactional data. And they built on a platform or a couple of platforms, one, one windows, and the other main one was Solaris. And so at that time, the operating system was the platform. And, and then that was the, you know, ecosystem that you would compete on top of. And then there were companies like SAP that built applications on top of Oracle. So then wind the clock forward 25 years gray hairs. <laugh> the platform, isn't the operating system anymore. The platform is AWS, you know, Google cloud. I gotta probably look around if I say that in. Yeah, >>It's okay. Columbia, but hyperscale. Yeah. CapX built out >>That is the new platform. And then snowflake comes along. Well, their aspiration is to manage all of the, not just human generated data, but machine generated data in the world of cloud. And I think they they've done an amazing job are doing for the, I'd say, say the, the big data world, what Oracle did for the relational data world, you know, way back 25 years ago. And then there are folks like us come along and, and of course my ambition would be, look, if, if we can be as successful as an SAP building on top of snowflake, uh, as, as they were on top of Oracle, then, then we'd probably be quite happy, >>Happy. So you're building on top of snowflake, >>We're building on top of snowflake a hundred percent. And, um, you know, I've had folks say to me, well, aren't you worried about that? Isn't that a risk? It's like, well, that that's a risk. You're >>Still on the board. >>Yeah. I'm still on the board. Yeah. That's a risk I'm prepared to take. I am more on snowing. >>It sounds well, you're in a good spot. Stay on the board, then you'll know what's going on. Okay. No, yeah. Serious one. But the, this is a real dynamic. It is. It's not a one off its >>Well, and I do believe as well that the platform that you see now with AWS, if you look at the revenues of AWS is in order of magnitude, more than Microsoft was 25 years ago with windows mm-hmm <affirmative>. And so I've believe the opportunity for folks like snowflake and, and folks like observe it. It's an order of magnitude more than it was for the Oracle and the SAPs of the old world. >>Yeah. And I think this is really, I think this is something that this next generation of entrepreneurship is the go big scenario is you gotta be on a platform. Yeah. >>It's quite easy >>Or be the platform, but it's hard. There's only like how seats were at that table left >>Well value migrates up over time. So, you know, when the cloud thing got going, there were probably 10, 20, 30, you know, rack space and there's 1,000,001 infrastructure, a service platform as a service. My, my old, uh, um, employee EMC, we had pivotal, you know, pivotal was a platform as a service. Don't hear so much about it these days, but initially there's a lot of players and then it consolidates. And then to, to like extract, uh, a real business, you gotta move up, you gotta add value, you gotta build databases, then you gotta build applications. So >>It's interesting. Moving from the data center of the cloud was a dream for starters within if the provision, the CapEx. Yeah. Now the CapEx is in the cloud. Then you build on, on top of that, you got snowflake. Now you got on top of that. >>The assumption is almost that compute and storage is free. I know it's not quite free. Yeah. It's almost free, but you can, you know, as an application vendor, you think, well, what can I do if I assume compute and storage is free, that's the mindset you've gotta get >>Into. And I think the platform enablement to value. So if I'm an entrepreneur, I'm gonna get a series us multiple of value in what I'm paying. Yeah. Most people don't even blanket their Avis pills unless they're like massively huge. Yeah. Then it's a repatriation question or whatever discount question, but for most startups or any growing company, the Amazon bill should be a small factor. >>Yeah. I mean, a lot of people, um, ask me, uh, like, look you build in on snowflake. Um, you, you know, you, you, you're gonna be, you're gonna be paying their money. How, how, how, how does that work with your business model? If you're paying their money, you know, do, do you have a viable business? And it's like, well, okay. I, we could build a database as well and observe, but then I've got half the development team working on something that will never be as good as snowflake. And so we made the call early on that. No, no, we, we want a eight above the database. Yeah. Right. Snowflake are doing a great job of innovating on the database and, and the same is true of something like Amazon, like, like snowflake could have built their own cloud and their own platform, but they didn't. >>Yeah. And what's interesting is that Dave <inaudible> and I have been pointing this out and he's obviously a more on snowflake. I've been looking at data bricks, um, and the same dynamics happening, the proof is the ecosystem. Yeah. I mean, if you look at Snowflake's ecosystem right now and data bricks it's exploding. Right. I mean, the shows are selling out the floor. Space's book. That's the old days at VMware. Yeah. The old days at AWS. >>Well, and for snowflake and, and any platform from VI, it's a beautiful thing because, you know, we build on snowflake and we pay them money. They don't have to sell to us. Right. And we do a lot of the support. And so the, the economics work out really, really well. If you're a platform provider and you've got a lot of >>Ecosystems. Yeah. And then also you get, you get a, um, a trajectory of, uh, economies of scale with the institutional knowledge of snowflake integrations, right. New product, you're scaling a step function with them. >>Yeah. I mean, we manage 10 petabytes of data right now. Right. When I, when I, when I arrived at EMC in 2010, we had, we had one petabyte customer. And, and so at observe, we've been only selling the product for a year. We have 10 petabytes of data under management. And so been able to rely on a platform that can manage that is inve >>You know, well, Jeremy great conversation. Thanks for sharing your insights on the industry. Uh, we got a couple minutes left, um, put a plug in for observe. What do you guys know? You got some good funding, great partners. I don't know if you can talk about your, your, your POC customers, but you got a lot of high ends folks that are working with you. You getting in traction. >>Yeah. Yeah. Scales >>Around the corner. Sounds like, are you, is that where you are scale? >>We've got a big that that's when coming up in two or three weeks, we've got, we've got new funding, um, which is always great. Um, the product is, uh, really, really close. I think, as a startup, you always strive for market fit, you know, which is at which point can you just start hiring salespeople? And the revenue keeps going. We're getting pretty close to that right now. Um, we've got about 40 SaaS companies that run on the platform. They're almost all AWS Kubernetes, uh, which is our sweet spot to begin with, but we're starting to get some really interesting, um, enterprise type customers. We're, we're, you know, F five networks we're POC in right now with capital one, we got some interest in news around capital one coming up. I, I can't share too much, but it's gonna be exciting. And, and like I said, so hill continue to, to, >>I think capital one's a big snowflake customer as well. Right. >>They were early in one of the things that attracted me to capital one was they were very, very good with snowflake early on. And, and they put snowflake in a position in the bank where they thought that snowflake could be successful. And, and today that, that is one of Snowflake's biggest accounts, >>Capital, one, very innovative cloud, obviously Atos customer, and very innovative, certainly in the CISO and CIO, um, on another point on where you're at. So you're, Prescale meaning you're about to scale, >>Right? >>So you got POCs, what's that trajectory look like? Can you see around the corner? What's, what's going on? What's on, around the corner. That you're, that you're gonna hit this straight and narrow and, and gas it fast. >>Yeah. I mean, the, the, the, the key thing for us is we gotta get the product. Right. Um, the nice thing about having a guy like Mike Pfizer on the board is he doesn't obsess about revenue at this stage. His questions that the board are always about, like is the product, right? Is the product right? Is the product right? Have you got the product right? And cuz we know when the product's right, we can then scale the sales team and, and the revenue will take care of itself. Yeah. So right now all the attention is on the product. Um, the, this year, the exciting thing is we we're, we're adding all the tracing visualizations. So people will be able to the kind of things that by in the day you could do with the new relics and AppDynamics, the last generation of, of APM tools, you're gonna be able to do that within observe. And we've already got the logs and the metrics capability in there. So for us this year is a big one, cuz we sort of complete the trifecta, you know, the, the >>Logs, what's the secret sauce observe. What if you had the, put it into a, a, a sentence what's the secret sauce? >>I, I, I think, you know, an amazing founding engineering team, uh, number one, I mean, at the end of the day, you have to build an amazing product and you have to solve a problem in a different way. And we've got great long term investors and, and the biggest thing our investors give is it actually, it's not just money. It gives us time to get the product, right. Because if we get the product right, then we can get the growth. >>Got it. Final question. While I got you here, you've been on the enterprise business for a long time. What's the buyer landscape out there. You got people doing POCs on capital one scale. So we know that goes on. What's the appetite at the buyer side for startups and what are their requirements that you're seeing? Uh, obviously we're seeing people go in and dip into the startup pool because new ways to refactor their, this restructure. So, so a lot of happening in cloud, what's the criteria. How are enterprises engaging in with startups? >>Yeah. I mean, enterprises, they know they've gotta spend money transforming the business. I mean, this was, I almost feel like my old Dell or EMC self there, but, um, what, what we were saying five years ago is happening. Um, everybody needs to figure out a way to take their business to this digital world. Everybody has to do it. So the nice thing from a startup standpoint is they know at times they need to risk or, or take a bet on new technology in order to, to help them do that. So I think you've got buyers that a have money, uh, B it prepared to take risks and it's, it's a race against time to you'll get their, their offerings in this, a new digital footprint. >>Final, final question. What's the state of AWS. Where do you see them going next? Obviously they're continuing to be successful. How does cloud 3.0, or they always say it's day one, but it's more like day 10, but what's next for Aw. Where do they go from here? Obviously they're doing well. They're getting bigger and bigger. Yeah, >>Better. It's an amazing story. I mean, you know, we're, we're on AWS as well. And so I, I think if they keep nurturing the builders and the ecosystem, then that is their superpower. They, they have an early leads. And if you look at where, you know, maybe the likes of Microsoft lost the plot in the, in the late nineties, it was, they stopped, uh, really caring about developers in the folks who were building on top of their ecosystem. In fact, they started buying up their ecosystem and competing with people in their ecosystem. And I see with AWS, they, they have an amazing headstart and if they did more, you know, if they do more than that, that's, what's gonna keep this juggernaut rolling for many years to come. >>Yeah. They got the Silicon and got the stack. They're developing Jeremy Burton inside the cube, great resource for commentary, but also founding with the CEO of a company called observing in the middle of all the action on the board of snowflake as well. Um, great startup. Thanks for coming on the cube. Always a pleasure. Okay. Live from San Francisco. It's to cube. I'm John for your host. Stay with us more coverage from San Francisco, California after the short break. >>Hello. Welcome back to the cubes coverage here live in San Francisco, California. I'm John furrier, host of the cubes cube coverage of AWS summit 2022 here in San Francisco. We're all the developers are the bay air at Silicon valley. And of course, AWS summit in New York city is coming up in the summer. We'll be there as well. SF and NYC cube coverage. Look for us. Of course, reinforcing Boston and re Mars with the whole robotics, AI. They all coming together. Lots of coverage stay with us today. We've got a great guest from Bel VC. John founding partner, entrepreneurial venture is a venture firm. Your next act, welcome to the cube. Good to see you. >>Good to see you, man. I feel like it's been forever since we've been able to do something in person. Well, >>I'm glad you're here because we run into each other all the time. We've known each other for over decade. Um, >>It's been at least 10 years, >>At least 10 years more. And we don't wanna actually go back as bring back the old school web 1.0 days. But anyway, we're in web three now. So we'll get to that in a second. We, >>We are, it's a little bit of a throwback to the path though, in my opinion, >>It's all the same. It's all distributed computing and software. We ran each other in cube con. You're investing in a lot of tech startup founders. Okay. This next level, next gen entrepreneurs have a new makeup and it's software. It's hardcore tech in some cases, not hardcore tech, but using software to take an old something old and make it better new, faster. So tell us about Bel what's the firm. I know you're the founder, uh, which is cool. What's going on. Explain >>What you, I mean, you remember I'm a recovering entrepreneur, right? So of course I, I, >>No, you're never recovering. You're always entrepreneur >>Always, but we are also always recovering. So I, um, started my first company when I was 24. If you remember, before there was Facebook and friends, there was instant messaging. People were using that product at work every day, they were creating a security vulnerability between their network and the outside world. So I plugged that hole and built an instant messaging firewall. It was my first company. The company was called IM logic and we were required by Symantec. Uh, then spent 12 years investing in the next generation of software companies, uh, early investor in open source companies and cloud companies and spent a really wonderful years, uh, at a firm called NEA. So I, I feel like my whole life I've been either starting enterprise software companies or helping founders start enterprise software companies. And I'll tell you, there's never been a better time than right now to start an enterprise software company. >>So, uh, the passion for starting a new firm was really a recognition that founders today that are starting an enterprise software company, they, they tend to be, as you said, a more technical founder, right? Usually it's a software engineer or a builder mm-hmm <affirmative>, uh, they are building that are serving a slightly different market than what we've traditionally seen in enterprise software. Right? I think traditionally we've seen it buyers or CIOs that have agendas and strategies, which, you know, purchase software that is traditionally bought and sold tops down. But you know, today I think the most successful enterprise software companies are the ones that are built more bottoms up and have more technical early adopters. And generally speaking, they're free to use. They're free to try. They're very commonly community source or open source companies where you have a large technical community that's supporting them. So there's a, there's kind of a new normal now I think in great enterprise software. And it starts with great technical founders with great products and great bottoms of motions. And I think there's no better place to, uh, service those people than in the cloud and uh, in, in your community. >>Well, first of all, congratulations, and by the way, you got a great pedigree and great background. You're super smart admire of your work and your, and, and your founding, but let's face it. Enterprise is hot because digital transformation is, is all companies there's no, I mean, consumer is enterprise now. Everything is what was once a niche, not, I won't say niche category, but you know, not for the faint of heart, you know, investors, >>You know, it's so funny that you say that enterprise is hot because you, and I feel that way now. But remember, like right now, there's also a giant tech in VC conference in Miami <laugh> and it's covering cryptocurrencies and FCS and web three. So I think beauty is definitely in the eye of the beholder <laugh> but no, I, I will tell you, well, >>MFTs is one big enterprise, cuz you gotta have imutability you got performance issues. You have, I IOPS issues. >>Well, and, and I think all of us here that are of may, maybe students of his stream have been involved in open source in the cloud would say that we're, you know, much of what we're doing is, uh, the predecessors of the web web three movement. And many of us I think are contributors to the web three >>Movement. The hype is definitely web >>Three. Yeah. But, >>But you know, >>For sure. Yeah, no, but now you're taking us further east to Miami. So, uh, you know, look, I think, I, I think, um, what is unquestioned with the case and maybe it's, it's more obvious the more time you spend in this world is this is the fastest growing part of enterprise software. And if you include cloud infrastructure and cloud infrastructure spend, you know, it is by many measures over, uh, $500 billion in growing, you know, 20 to 30 a year. So it it's a, it's a just incredibly fast >>Let's getting, let's get into some of the cultural and the, the shifts that are happening, cuz again, you, you have the luxury of being in enterprise when it was hard, it's getting easier and more cooler. I get it and more relevant <laugh> but there's also the hype of like the web three, for instance, but you know, for, uh, um, um, the CEO snowflake, okay. Has wrote a book and Dave Valenti and I were talking about it and uh, Frank Lutman has says, there's no playbooks. We always ask the CEOs, what's your playbook. And he's like, there's no playbook, situational awareness, always Trump's playbooks. So in the enterprise playbook, oh, hire a direct sales force and sass kind of crushed that now SAS is being redefined, right. So what is SAS? Is snowflake a SAS or is that a platform? So again, new unit economics are emerging, whole new situation, you got web three. So to me there's a cultural shift, the young entrepreneurs, the, uh, user experience, they look at Facebook and say, ah, you know, and they own all my data. And you know, we know that that cliche, um, they, you know, the product. So as this next gen, the gen Z and the millennials come in and our customers and the founders, they're looking at things a little bit differently and the tech better. >>Yeah. I mean, I mean, I think we can, we can see a lot of commonalities across all six of startups and the overall adoption of technology. Uh, and, and I would tell you, this is all one big giant revolution. I call it the user driven revolution. Right. It's the rise of the user. Yeah. And you might say product like growth is currently the hottest trend in enterprise software. It's actually user like growth, right. They're one in the same. So sometimes people think the product, uh, is what is driving. >>You just pull the product >>Through. Exactly, exactly. And so that's that I, that I think is really this revolution that you see, and, and it does extend into things like cryptocurrencies and web three and, you know, sort of like the control that is taken back by the user. Um, but you know, many would say that, that the origins of this movement may be started with open source where users were contributors, you know, contributors were users and looking back decades and seeing how it, how it fast forward to today. I think that's really the trend that we're all writing and it's enabling these end users. And these end users in our world are developers, data engineers, cybersecurity practitioners, right. They're really the users. And they're really the, the offic and the most, you know, kind of valued people in >>This. I wanna come back to the data engineers in a second, but I wanna make a comment and get your reaction to, I have a, I'm a gen Xer technically. So for not a boomer, but I have some boomer friends who are a little bit older than me who have, you know, experienced the sixties. And I've, I've been saying on the cube for probably about eight years now that we are gonna hit a digital hippie Revolut, meaning a rebellion against in the sixties was rebellion against the fifties and the man and, you know, summer of love. That was a cultural differentiation from the other one of group, the predecessors. So we're kind of having that digital moment now where it's like, Hey boomers, Hey people, we're not gonna do that anymore. We hate how you organize shit. >>Right. But isn't this just technology. I mean, isn't it, isn't it like there used to be the old adage, like, you know, you would never get fired for buying IBM, but now it's like, you obviously probably would get fired if you bought IBM. And I mean, it's just like the, the, I think, I think >>During the mainframe days, those renegades were breaking into Stanford, starting the home brew club. So what I'm trying to get at is that, do you see the young cultural revolution also, culturally, just, this is my identity NFTs to me speak volumes about my, I wanna associate with NFTs, not single sign on like, well, >>Absolutely. And, and I think like, I think you're hitting on something, which is like this convergence of, of, you know, societal trends with technology trends and how that manifests in our world is yes. I think like there is unquestionably almost a religion around the way in which a product is built. Right. And we can use open source. One example of that religion. Some people say, look, I'll just never try a product in the cloud if it's not open source. Yeah. I think cloud, native's another example of that, right? It's either it's, you know, it either is cloud native or it's not. And I think a lot of people will look at a product and say, look, you know, you were not designed in the cloud era. Therefore I just won't try you. And sometimes, um, like it or not, it's a religious decision, right? It's, it's something that people just believe to be true almost without, uh, necessarily. I mean, >>The data drives all decision making. Let me ask you this next question. As a VC. Now you look at pitch, well, you've been a VC for many years, but you also have the founder entrepreneurial mindset, but you can empathize with the founders. You know, hustle is a big part of the, that first founder check, right? You gotta convince someone to part with their ch their money and the first money in which you do a lot of is about believing in the first. So faking it till you make it is hard. Now you, the data's there, you either have it cloud native, you either have the adaption or traction. So honesty is a big part of that pitch. You can't fake it. Oh, >>AB absolutely. You know, there used to be this concept of like the persona of an entrepreneur, right. And the persona of the entrepreneur would be, you know, somebody who was a great salesperson or somebody who tell a great story. And I still think that that's important, right. It still is a human need for people to believe in narratives and stories. Yeah. But having said that you're right. The proof is in the pudding, right. At some point you click download and you try the product and it does what it says it's gonna, it's gonna do, or it doesn't, or it either stands up to the load test or it doesn't. And so I, I feel like in this new economy, that're, we live in really, it's a shift from maybe the storytellers and the creators to, to the builders, right. The people that know how to build great product. And in some ways the people that can build great product yeah. Stand out from the crowd. And they're the ones that can build communities around their products. And, you know, in some ways can, um, you know, kind of own more of the narrative because their product begin for exactly >>The volume you back to the user led growth. >>Exactly. And it's the religion of, I just love your product. Right. And I, I, I, um, Doug song is the founder of du security used to say, Hey, like, you know, the, the really like in today's world of like consumption based software, like the user is only gonna give you 90 seconds to figure out whether or not you're a company that's easy to do business with for right. And so you can say, and do all the things that you want about how easy you are to work with. But if the product isn't easy to install, if it's not easy to try, if it's not, if, if the it's gotta speak to the, >>Exactly. Speak to the user. But let me ask a question now that for the people watching, who are maybe entrepreneurial entre entrepreneurs, um, masterclass here is in session. So I have to ask you, do you prefer, um, an entrepreneur to come in and say, look at John. Here's where I'm at. Okay. First of all, storytelling's fine. Whether you're an extrovert or introvert, have your style, sell the story in a way that's authentic, but do you, what do you prefer to say? Here's where I'm at? Look, I have an idea. Here's my traction. I think here's my MVP prototype. I need help. Or do you wanna just see more stats? What's the, what's the preferred way that you like to see entrepreneurs come in and engage? >>There's tons of different styles, man. I think the single most important thing that every founder should know is that we, we don't invest in what things are today. We invest in what we think will become, right. And I think that's why we all get up in the morning and try to build something different, right? It's that we see the world a different way. We want it to be a different way, and we wanna work every single moment of the day to try to make that vision a reality. So I think the more that you can show people where you want to be, the more likely somebody is gonna to align with your vision and, and want to invest in you and wanna be along for the ride. So I, I wholeheartedly believe in showing off what you got today, because eventually we all get down to like, where are we and what are we gonna do together? But, um, no, I, you gotta show the path. I think the single most important thing for any founder and VC relationship is that they have the same vision. Uh, if you have the same vision, you can, you can get through bumps in the road, you can get through short term spills. You can all sorts of things in the middle of the journey can happen. Yeah. But it doesn't matter as much if you share the same long term vision, >>Don't flake out and, and be fashionable with the, the latest trends because it's over before you even get there. >>Exactly. I think many people that, that do what we do for a living will say, you know, ultimately the future is relatively easy to predict, but it's the timing that's impossible to predict. So you, you know, you sort of have to balance the, you know, we, we know that the world is going this way and therefore we're gonna invest a lot of money to try to make this a reality. Uh, but sometimes it happens ins six months. Sometimes it takes six years. Sometimes it takes 16 years. Uh, >>What's the hottest thing in enterprise that you see the biggest wave that people should pay attention to that you're looking at right now with Tebel partners, Tebel dot your site. What's the big wave. What's your big >>Wave. There there's three big trends that we invest in. And then the, the only things we do day in day out one is the explosion at open source software. So I think many people think that all software is unquestionably moving to an open source model in some form or another yeah. Tons of reasons to debate whether or not that is gonna happen an alwa timeline happening forever, but it is, it is accelerating faster than we've ever seen. So I, I think it's its one big mass of wave that we continue to ride. Um, second is the rise of data engineering. Uh, I think data engineering is in and of itself now a category of software. It's not just that we store data. It's now we move data and we develop applications on data. And, uh, I think data is in and of itself as big of a market as any of the other markets that we invest in. Uh, and finally it's the gift that keeps on giving. I've spent my entire career in it. We still feel that security is a market that is underinvested. It is, it continues to be the place where people need to continue to invest and spend more money. Yeah. Uh, and those are the three major trends that we run >>And security, you think we all need a do over, right? I mean, do we need a do over in security or is what's the core problem? I, >>I, I keep using this word underinvested because I think it's the right way to think about the problem. I think if you, I think people generally speaking, look at cyber security as an add-on. Yeah. But if you think about it, the whole like economy is moving online. And so in, in some ways like security is core to protecting the digital economy. And so it's, it shouldn't be an afterthought, right? It should be core to what everyone is doing. And that's why I think relative to the trillions of dollars that are at stake, uh, I believe the market size for cybersecurity is around 150 billion and it still is a fraction of what >>We're, what we're and even boom is booming now. So you get the convergence of national security, geopolitics, internet digital >>That's right. You mean arguably, right. Arguably again, it's the area of the world that people should be spending more time and more money given what to stake. >>I love your thesis. I gotta, I gotta say you gotta love your firm. Love who you're doing. We're big supporters of your mission. Congrat is on your entrepreneurial venture. And uh, we'll be, we'll be talking and maybe see a Cuban. Uh, >>Absolutely >>Not. Certainly EU maybe even north America's in Detroit this year. >>Huge fan of what you guys are doing here. Thank you so much for helping me on the show. >>Des bell VC Johnson here on the cube. Check him out. Founder for founders here on the cube, more coverage from San Francisco, California, after the short break, stay with us. Hey everyone. Welcome to the cue here. Live in San Francisco, California for AWS summit, 2022 we're live we're back with events. Also we're virtual. We got hybrid all kinds of events. This year, of course, 80% summit in New York city is happening this summer. We'll be there with the cube as well. I'm John. Again, John host of the cube. Got a great guest here. Justin Colby, owner and CEO of innovative solutions they booth is right behind us. Justin, welcome to the cube. >>Thank you. Thank you for having me. >>So we're just chatting, uh, off camera about some of the work you're doing. You're the owner of and CEO. Yeah. Of innovative. Yeah. So tell us the story. What do you guys do? What's the elevator pitch. Yeah. >><laugh> so the elevator pitch is we are, uh, a hundred percent focused on small to midsize businesses that are moving to the cloud or have already moved to the cloud and really trying to understand how to best control, cost, security, compliance, all the good stuff, uh, that comes along with it. Um, exclusively focused on AWS and, um, you know, about 110 people, uh, based in Rochester, New York, that's where our headquarters is. But now we have offices down in Austin, Texas up in Toronto, uh, Canada, as well as Chicago. Um, and obviously in New York, uh, you know, the, the business was never like this, uh, five years ago, um, founded in 1989, made the decision in 2018 to pivot and go all in on the cloud. And, uh, I've been a part of the company for about 18 years, bought the company about five years ago. And it's been a great ride. >>It's interesting. The manages services are interesting with cloud cause a lot of the heavy liftings done by AWS. So we had Matt on your team on earlier talking about some of the edge stuff. Yeah. But you guys are a managed cloud service. You got cloud advisory, you know, the classic service that's needed, but the demands coming from cloud migrations and application modernization and obviously data is a huge part of it. Huge. How is this factoring into what you guys do and your growth cuz you guys are the number one partner on the SMB side for edge. Yeah. For AWS, you got results coming in. Where's the, where's the forcing function. What's the pressure point. What's the demand like? Yeah. >>It's a great question. Every CEO I talk to, that's a small to mid-size business. I'll try and understand how to leverage technology better to help either drive a revenue target for their own business, uh, help with customer service as so much has gone remote now. And we're all having problems or troubles or issues trying to hire talent. And um, you know, tech is really at the, at the forefront and the center of that. So most customers are coming to us and they're like, listen, we gotta move to the out or we move some things to the cloud and we want to do that better. And um, there's this big misnomer that when you move to the cloud, you gotta automatically modernize. Yeah. And what we try to help as many customers understand as possible is lifting and shifting, moving the stuff that you maybe currently have OnPrem and a data center to the cloud first is a first step. And then, uh, progressively working through a modernization strategy is always the better approach. And so we spend a lot of time with small to midsize businesses who don't have the technology talent on staff to be able to do >>That. Yeah. They want to get set up. But the, the dynamic of like latency is huge. We're seeing that edge product is a big part of it. This is not a one-off happening around everywhere. It is. And it's not, it's manufacturing, it's the physical plant or location >>Literally. >>And so, and you're seeing more IOT devices. What's that like right now from a challenge and problem statement standpoint, are the customers, not staff, is the it staff kind of old school? Is it new skills? What's the core problem you guys solve >>The SMB space. The core issue nine outta 10 times is people get enamored with the latest and greatest. And the reality is not everything that's cloud based. Not all cloud services are the latest and greatest. Some things have been around for quite some time and are hardened solutions. And so, um, what we try to do with technology staff that has additional on-prem, uh, let's just say skill sets and they're trying to move to a cloud-based workload is we try to help those customers through education and through some practical, let's just call it use case. Um, whether that's a proof of concept that we're doing or whether that's, we're gonna migrate a small workload over, we try to give them the confidence to be able to not, not necessarily go it alone, but to, to, to have the, uh, the Gusto and to really have the, um, the, the opportunity to, to do that in a wise way. Um, and what I find is that most CEOs that I talk to, yeah, they're like, listen, the end of the day, I'm gonna be spending money in one place or another, whether that's OnPrem or in the cloud. I just want to know that I'm doing that in a way that helps me grow as quickly as possible status quo. I think every, every business owner knows that COVID taught us anything that status quo is, uh, is, is no. No. Good. >>How about factoring in the, the agility and speed equation? Does that come up a lot? It >>Does. I think, um, I think there's also this idea that if, uh, if we do a deep dive analysis and we really take a surgical approach to things, um, we're gonna be better off. And the reality is the faster you move with anything cloud based, the better you are. And so there's this assumption that we gotta get it right the first time. Yeah. In the cloud, if you start the, on your journey in one way, and you realize midway that it's not the right, let's just say the right place to go. It's not like buying a piece of iron that you put in the closet and now you own it in the cloud. You can turn those services on and off. It's a, gives you a much higher density for making decisions and failing >>Forward. Well actually shutting down the abandoning, the projects that early and not worrying about it, you got it. I mean, most people don't abandon stuff cuz they're like, oh, I own it. >>Exactly. >>And they get, they get used to it. Like, and then they wait too long. >>That's exactly. Yeah. >>Frog and boiling water as we used to say so, oh, it's a great analogy. So I mean this, this is a dynamic that's interesting. I wanna get more thoughts on it because like I'm a, if I'm a CEO of a company, like, okay, I gotta make my number. Yeah. I gotta keep my people motivated. Yeah. And I gotta move faster. So this is where you guys come in. I get the whole thing. And by the way, great service, um, professional services in the cloud right now are so hot because so hot, you can build it and then have option optionality. You got path decisions, you got new services to take advantage of. It's almost too much for customers. It is. I mean, everyone I talk to at reinvent, that's a customer. Well, how many announcements did Andy jazzy announcer Adam, you know, five, a thousand announcement or whatever they did with huge amounts. Right. Keeping track of it all. Oh, is huge. So what's the, what's the, um, the mission of, of your company. How does, how do you talk to that alignment? Yeah. Not just product. I can get that like values as companies, cuz they're betting on you and your people. >>They are, they are >>The values. >>Our mission is, is very simple. We want to help every small to mid-size business, leverage the power of the cloud. Here's the reality. We believe wholeheartedly. This is our vision that every company is going to become a technology company. So we go to market with this idea that every customer's trying to leverage the power of the cloud in some way, shape or form, whether they know it or don't know it. And number two, they're gonna become a tech company in the pro of that because everything is so tech-centric. And so when you talk about speed and agility, when you talk about the, the endless options and the endless permutations of solutions that a customer can buy in the cloud, how are you gonna ask a team of one or two people in your it department to make all those decisions going it alone or trying to learn it as you go, it only gets you so far working with a partner. >>I'll just give you some perspective. We work with about a thousand small to midsize business customers. More than 50% of those customers are on our managed services. Meaning know that we have their back and we're the safety net. So when a customer is saying, all right, I'm gonna spend a couple thousand dollars a month in the cloud. They know that that bill, isn't gonna jump to $10,000 a month going on loan. Who's there to help protect that. Number two, if you have a security posture and let's just say you're high profile and you're gonna potentially be more vulnerable to security attack. If you have a partner that's offering you some managed services. Now you, again, you've got that backstop and you've got those services and tooling. We, we offer, um, seven different products that are part of our managed services that give the customer the tooling, that for them to go out and buy on their own for a customer to go out today and go buy a new Relic solution on their own, it would cost 'em a fortune. If >>It's training alone would be insane. A risk factor not mean the cost. Yes, absolutely. Opportunity cost is huge, >>Huge, absolutely enormous training and development. Something. I think that is often, you know, it's often overlooked technologists. Typically they want to get their skills up. Yeah. They, they love to get the, the stickers and the badges and the pins, um, at innovative in 2018, when, uh, when we made the decision to go all on the club, I said to the organization, you know, we have this idea that we're gonna pivot and be aligned with AWS in such a way that it's gonna really require us all to get certified. My executive assistant at the time looks at me. She said, even me, I said, yeah, even you, why can't you get certified? Yeah. And so we made, uh, a conscious decision. It wasn't requirement isn't today to make sure everybody in the company has the opportunity to become certified. Even the people that are answering the phones at the front desk >>And she could be running the Kubernetes clusters. I >>Love it. It's amazing. So I'll tell you what, when that customer calls and they have a real Kubernetes issue, she'll be able to assist and get the right >>People involved. And that's a cultural factor that you guys have. So, so again, this is back to my whole point about SMBs and BIS is in general, small and large. It staffs are turning over the gen Z and millennials are in the workforce. They were provisioning top of rack switches. Right. First of all. And so if you're a business, there's also the, I call the build out, um, uh, return factor, ROI piece. At what point in time as an owner or SMB, do I get the why? Yeah. I gotta hire a person to manage it. That person's gonna have five zillion job offers. Yep. Uh, maybe who knows? Right. I got cyber security issues. Where am I gonna find a cyber person? Yeah. A data compliance. I need a data scientist and a compliance person. Right. Maybe one in the same. Right. Good luck. Trying to find a data scientist. Who's also a compliance person. Yep. And the list goes on. I can just continue. Absolutely. I need an SRE to manage the, the, uh, the sock report and we can pen test. Right. >>Right. >>These are, these are >>Like critical issues. This >>Is just like, these are the table stakes. >>Yeah. And, and every, every business owner's thinking about this, that's, >>That's what, at least a million in bloating, if not three or more Just to get that going. Yeah. Then it's like, where's the app. Yeah. So there's no cloud migration. There's no modernization on the app side now. Yeah. No. And nevermind AI and ML. That's >>Right. That's right. So to try to go it alone, to me, it's hard. It's incredibly difficult. And the other thing is, is there's not a lot of partners, so the partner, >>No one's raising their hand boss. I'll do all that exactly. In the it department. >>Exactly. >>Like, can we just call up, uh, you know, our old vendor that's >>Right. <laugh> right. Our old vendor. I like >>It, >>But that's so true. I mean, when I think about how, if I were a business owner starting a business today and I had to build my team, um, and the amount of investment that it would take to get those people skilled up and then the risk factor of those people now having the skills and being so much more in demand and being recruited away, that's a real, that's a real issue. And so how you build your culture around that is, is very important. And it's something that we tell, talk about every, with every one of our small to mid-size >>Businesses. So just, I wanna get, I want to get your story as CEO. Okay. Take us through your journey. You said you bought the company and your progression to, to being the owner and CEO of innovative yeah. Award winning guys doing great. Uh, great bet on a good call. Yeah. Things are good. Tell your story. What's your journey? >>It's real simple. I was, uh, I was a sophomore at the Rochester Institute of technology in 2003. And, uh, I knew that I, I was going to school for it and I, I knew I wanted to be in tech. I didn't know what I wanted to do, but I knew I didn't wanna code or configure routers and switches. So I had this great opportunity with the local it company that was doing managed services. We didn't call it at that time innovative solutions to come in and, uh, jump on the phone and dial for dollars. I was gonna cold call and introduce other, uh, small to midsize businesses locally in Rochester, New York go to Western New York, um, who innovative was now. We were 19 people at the time. And I came in, I did an internship for six months and I loved it. I learned more in those six months that I probably did in my first couple of years at, uh, at RT long story short. >>Um, for about seven years, I worked, uh, to really help develop, uh, sales process and methodology for the business so that we could grow and scale. And we grew to about 30 people. And, um, I went to the owners at the time in 2010 and I was like, Hey, on the value of this business and who knows where you guys are gonna be another five years, what do you think about making me an owner? And they were like, listen, you got long ways before you're gonna be an owner, but if you stick it out in your patient, we'll, um, we'll work through a succession plan with you. And I said, okay, there were four other individuals at the time that were gonna also buy into the business with me. >>And they were the owners, no outside capital, none >>Zero, well, 2014 comes around. And, uh, the other folks that were gonna buy into the business with me that were also working at innovative for different reasons, they all decided that it wasn't for them. One started a family. The other didn't wanna put capital in. Didn't wanna write a check. Um, the other had a real big problem with having to write a check. If we couldn't make payroll, I'm like, well, that's kind of like if we're owners, we're gonna have to like cover that stuff. <laugh> so >>It's called the pucker factor. >>Exactly. So, uh, I sat down with the CEO in early 2015, and, uh, we made the decision that I was gonna buy the three partners out, um, go through an early now process, uh, coupled with, uh, an interesting financial strategy that wouldn't strap the business, cuz they cared very much. The company still had the opportunity to keep going. So in 2016 I bought the business, um, became the sole owner. And, and at that point we, um, we really focused hard on what do we want this company to be? We had built this company to this point. Yeah. And, uh, and by 2018 we knew that pivoting going all in on the cloud was important for us and we haven't looked back. >>And at that time the proof points were coming clearer and clearer 2012 through 15 was the early adopters, the builders, the startups and early enterprises. Yes. The capital ones of the world. Exactly. And those kinds of big enterprises, the GA I don't wanna say gamblers, but ones that were very savvy. The innovators, the FinTech folks. Yep. The hardcore glass eating enterprises >>Agreed, agreed to find a small to mid-size business, to migrate completely to the cloud as, as infrastructure was considered. That just didn't happen as often. Um, what we were seeing where a lot of our small to mid-size as customers, they wanted to leverage cloud-based backup or they wanted to leverage a cloud for disaster recovery because it lent itself. Well, early days, our most common cloud customer though, was the customer that wanted to move messaging and collaboration, the Microsoft suite to the cloud. And a lot of 'em dipped their toe in the water. But by 2017 we knew infrastructure was around the corner. Yeah. And so, uh, we only had two customers on AWS at the time. Um, and we, uh, we, we made the decision to go all in >>Justin. Great to have you on the cube. Thank you. Let's wrap up. Uh, tell me the hottest product that you have. Is it migrations? Is it the app modernization? Is it data? What's the hot product and then put a plug in for the company. Awesome. >>So, uh, there's no question. Every customer is looking to migrate workloads and try to figure out how to modernize for the future. We have very interesting, sophisticated yet elegant funding solutions to help customers with the cash flow, uh, constraints that come along with those migrations. So any SMB that's thinking about migrating to the cloud, they should be talking innovative solutions. We know how to do it in a way that allows those customers not to be cash strap and gives them an opportunity to move forward in a controlled, contained way so that they can modernize. >>So like insurance, basically for them not insurance class in the classic sense, but you help them out on the, on the cash exposure. >>Absolutely. We are known for that and we're known for being creative with those customers and being empathetic to where they are in their journey. >>And that's the cloud upside is all about doubling down on the variable wind. That's right. Seeing the value and Ling down on it. Absolutely not praying for it. Yeah. <laugh> all right, Justin. Thanks for coming on. You really appreciate it. >>Thank you very much for having me. >>Okay. This is the cube coverage here live in San Francisco, California for AWS summit, 2022. I'm John for your host. Thanks for watching. We're back with more great coverage for two days after this short break, >>Live on the floor and see San Francisco for a AWS summit. I'm John ferry, host of the cube here for the next two days, getting all the action we're back in person. We're at a AWS reinvent a few months ago. Now we're back. Events are coming back and we're happy to be here with the cube. Bring all the action. Also virtual. We have a hybrid cube. Check out the cube.net, Silicon angle.com for all the coverage. After the event. We've got a great guest ticking off here. Matthew Park, director of solutions, architecture with innovation solutions. The booth is right here. Matthew, welcome to the cube. >>Thank you very much. I'm glad to be >>Here. So we're back in person. You're from Tennessee. We were chatting before you came on camera. Um, it's great to have to be back through events. >>It's amazing. This is the first, uh, summit I've been to and what two, three years. >>It's awesome. We'll be at the UHS summit in New York as well. A lot of developers and a big story this year is as developers look at cloud going distributed computing, you got on premises, you got public cloud, you got the edge. Essentially the cloud operations is running everything dev sec ops, everyone kind of sees that you got containers, you got Kubernetes, you got cloud native. So the game is pretty much laid out mm-hmm <affirmative> and the edge is with the actions you guys are number one, premier partner at SMB for edge. >>That's right. >>Tell us about what you guys doing at innovative and, uh, what you do. >>That's right. Uh, so I'm the director of solutions architecture. Uh, me and my team are responsible for building out the solutions that are around, especially the edge public cloud for us edge is anything outside of an AWS availability zone. Uh, we are deploying that in countries that don't have AWS infrastructure in region. They don't have it. Uh, give an example, uh, example would be Panama. We have a customer there that, uh, needs to deploy some financial tech and compute is legally required to be in Panama, but they love AWS and they want to deploy AWS services in region. Uh, so they've taken E EKS anywhere. We've put storage gateway and, uh, snowball, uh, in region inside the country and they're running their FinTech on top of AWS services inside Panama. >>You know, it's interesting, Matthew is that we've been covering a, since 2013 with the cube about their events. And we watched the progression and jazzy was, uh, was in charge and became the CEO. Now Adam's in charge, but the edge has always been that thing they've been trying to avoid. I don't wanna say trying to avoid, of course, Amazon would listen to the customers. They work backwards from the customer. We all know that. Uh, but the real issue was they were they're bread and butters EC two and S three. And then now they got tons of services and the cloud is obviously successful and seeing that, but the edge brings up a whole nother level. >>It does computing. It >>Does. That's not centralized in the public cloud now they got regions. So what is the issue at the edge what's driving the behavior. Outpost came out as a reaction to competitive threats and also customer momentum around OT, uh, operational technologies. And it merging. We see that the data at the edge, you got 5g having. So it's pretty obvious, but there's a slow transition. What was the driver for the edge? What's the driver now for edge action for AWS >>Data is the driver for the edge. Data has gravity, right? And it's pulling compute back to where the customer's generating that data and that's happening over and over again. You said it best outpost was a reaction to a competitive situation where today we have over 15 AWS edge services and those are all reactions to things that customers need inside their data centers on location or in the field like with media companies. >>Outpost is interesting. We always used to riff on the cube cause it's basically Amazon and a box pushed in the data center, running native, all the stuff, but now cloud native operations are kind of becoming standard. You're starting to see some standard Deepak syncs. Group's doing some amazing work with open source Rauls team on the AI side, obviously, uh, you got SW, he was giving the keynote tomorrow. You got the big AI machine learning big part of that edge. Now you can say, okay, outpost, is it relevant today? In other words, did outpost do its job? Cause EKS anywhere seems to be getting a lot of momentum. You see local zones, the regions are kicking ass for Amazon. This edge piece is evolving. What's your take on EKS anywhere versus say outpost? >>Yeah, I think outpost did its job. It made customers that were looking at outpost really consider, do I wanna invest in this hardware? Do I, do I wanna have, um, this outpost in my data center, do I want to manage this over the long term? A lot of those customers just transitioned to the public cloud. They went into AWS proper. Some of those customers stayed on prem because they did have use cases that were, uh, not a good fit for outposts. They weren't a good fit. Uh, in the customer's mind for the public AWS cloud inside an availability zone. Now what's happening is as AWS is pushing these services out and saying, we're gonna meet you where you are with 5g. We're gonna meet you where you are with wavelength. We're gonna meet you where you are with EKS anywhere. Uh, I think it has really reduced the amount of times that we have conversations about outposts and it's really increased. We can deploy fast. We don't have to spin up outpost hardware. We can go deploy EKS anywhere or in your VMware environment. And it's increasing the speed of adoption >>For sure. Right? So you guys are making a lot of good business decisions around managed cloud service. That's right. Innovative as that you get the cloud advisory, the classic professional services for the specific edge piece and, and doing that outside of the availability zones and regions for AWS, um, customers in, in these new areas that you're helping out are, they want cloud, like they want to have modernization a modern applications. Obviously they got data machine learning and AI, all part of that. What's the main product or, or, or gap that you're filling for AWS, uh, outside of their availability zones or their regions that you guys are delivering. What's the key is it. They don't have a footprint. Is it that it's not big enough for them? What's the real gap. What's why, why are you so successful? >>So what customers want when they look towards the cloud is they want to focus on, what's making them money as a business. They want on their applications. They want to focus on their customers. So they look towards AWS cloud and say, AWS, you take the infrastructure. You take, uh, some of the higher layers and we'll focus on our revenue generating business, but there's a gap there between infrastructure and revenue generating business that innovative slides into, uh, we help manage the AWS environment. Uh, we help build out these things in local data centers for 32 plus year old company. We have traditional on-premises people that know about deploying hardware that know about deploying VMware to host EKS anywhere. But we also have most of our company totally focused on the AWS cloud. So we're filling that gap in helping of these AWS services, manage them over the long term. So our customers can go to just primarily and totally focusing on their revenue generating business. So >>Basically you guys are basically building AWS edges, >>Correct? >>For correct companies, correct? Mainly because the, the needs are there, you got data, you got certain products, whether it's, you know, low latency type requirements, right. And then they still work with the regions, right. It's all tied together, right. Is that how it works? Right. >>And, and our customers, even the ones in the edge, they also want us to build out the AWS environment inside the availability zone, because we're always gonna have a failback scenario. If we're gonna deploy FinTech in the Caribbean, we talk about hurricanes and we're gonna talk about failing back into the AWS availability zones. So innovative is filling that gap across the board, whether it be inside the AWS cloud or on the AWS edge. >>All right. So I gotta ask you on the, since you're at the edge in these areas, I won't say underserved, but developing areas where you now have data and you have applications that are tapping into that, that required. It makes total sense. We're seeing that across the board. So it's not like it's, it's an outlier it's actually growing. Yeah. There's also the crypto angle. You got the blockchain. Are you seeing any traction at the edge with blockchain? Because a lot of people are looking at the web three in these areas like Panama, you mentioned FinTech. And in, in the islands there a lot of, lot of, lot of web three happening. What's your, what's your view on the web three world right now, relative >>To we, we have some customers actually deploying crypto, especially, um, especially in the Caribbean. I keep bringing the Caribbean up, but it's, it's top of my mind right now we have customers that are deploying crypto. A lot of, uh, countries are choosing crypto to underlie parts of their central banks. Yeah. Um, so it's, it's up and coming a, uh, I, I have some, you know, personal views that, that crypto is still searching for a use case. Yeah. And, uh, I think it's searching a lot and, and we're there to help customers search for that use case. Uh, but, but crypto, as a, as a, uh, technology, um, lives really well on the AWS edge. Yeah. Uh, and, and we're having more and more people talk to us about that. Yeah. And ask for assistance in the infrastructure, because they're developing new cryptocurrencies every day. Yeah. It's not like they're deploying Ethereum or anything specific. They're actually developing new currencies and, and putting them out there on it's >>Interesting. I mean, first of all, we've been doing crypto for many, many years. We have our own little, um, you know, projects going on. But if you look talk to all the crypto people that say, look, we do a smart concept. We use the blockchain. It's kind of over a lot of overhead and it's not really their technical already, but it's a cultural shift, but there's underserved use cases around use of money, but they're all using the blockchain, just for this like smart contracts for instance, or certain transactions. And they go into Amazon for the database. Yeah. <laugh> they all don't tell anyone we're using a centralized service, but what happened to decentralized. >>Yeah. And that's, and that's the conversation performance issue. Yeah. And, and it's a cost issue. Yeah. And it's a development issue. Um, so I think more and more as, as some of these, uh, currencies maybe come up, some of the smart contracts get into, uh, they find their use cases. I think we'll start talking about how does that really live on, on AWS and, and what does it look like to build decentralized applications, but with AWS hardware and services. >>Right. So take me through, uh, a use case of a customer, um, Matthew around the edge. Okay. So I'm a customer, pretend I'm a customer, Hey, you know, I'm, we're in an underserved area. I want to modernize my business. And I got my developers that are totally peaked up on cloud. Um, but we've identified that it's just a lot of overhead latency issues. I need to have a local edge and serve my ad. And I also want all the benefit of the cloud. So I want the modernization and I wanna migrate to the cloud for all those cloud benefits and the goodness of the cloud. What's the answer. Yeah. >>Uh, big thing is, uh, industrial manufacturing, right? That's, that's one of the best use cases, uh, inside industrial manufacturing, we can pull in many of the AWS edge services we can bring in, uh, private 5g, uh, so that all the, uh, equipment inside that, that manufacturing plant can be hooked up. They don't have to pay huge overheads to deploy 5g it's, uh, better than wifi for the industrial space. Um, when we take computing down to that industrial area, uh, because we wanna do pre-procesing on the data. Yeah. We want to gather some analytics. We deploy that with, uh, regular commercial available hardware running VMware, and we deploy EKS anywhere on that. Uh, inside of that manufacturing plant, uh, we can do pre-procesing on things coming out of the, uh, the robotics that depending on what we're manufacturing, right. Uh, and then we can take those refined analytics and for very low cost with maybe a little bit longer latency transmit those back, um, to the AWS availability zone, the, the standard for >>Data, data lake, or whatever, to >>The data lake. Yeah. Data lake house, whatever it might be. Um, and we can do additional data science on that once it gets to the AWS cloud. Uh, but a lot of that, uh, just in time business decisions, just in time, manufacturing decisions can all take place on an AWS service or services inside that manufacturing plant. And that's, that's one of the best use cases that we're >>Seeing. And I think, I mean, we've been seeing this on the queue for many, many years, moving data around is very expensive. Yeah. But also compute going to the data that saves that cost yep. On the data transfer also on the benefits of the latency. So I have to ask you, by the way, that's standard best practice now for the folks watching don't move the data, unless you have to, um, those new things are developing. So I wanna ask you what new patterns are you seeing emerging once this new architecture's in place? Love that idea, localize everything right at the edge, manufacturing, industrial, whatever, the use case, retail, whatever it is. Right. But now what does that change in the, in the core cloud? This is a, there's a system element here. Yeah. What's the new pattern. There's >>Actually an organizational element as well, because once you have to start making the decision, do I put this compute at the point of use or do I put this compute in the cloud out? Uh, now you start thinking about where business decisions should be taking place. Uh, so not only are you changing your architecture, you're actually changing your organization because you're thinking, you're thinking about a dichotomy you didn't have before. Uh, so now you say, okay, this can take place here. Uh, and maybe maybe decision can wait. Right? Yeah. Uh, and then how do I visualize that? By >>The way, it could be a bot too, doing the work for management. Yeah. <laugh> exactly. You got observability going, right. But you gotta change the database architecture on the back. So there's new things developing. You've got more benefit. There >>Are, there are. And, and we have more and more people that, that want to talk less about databases and want to talk more about data lakes because of this. They want to talk more about customers are starting to talk about throwing away data, uh, you know, for the past maybe decade. Yeah. It's been store everything. And one day we will have a data science team that we hire in our organization to do analytics on this decade of data. And >>Well, I mean, that's, that's a great point. We don't have time to drill into, maybe we do another session on this, but the one pattern was income of the past year is that throwing away data's bad. Even data lakes that so-called turn into data swamps, actually, it's not the case. You look at data, brick, snowflake, and other successes out there. And even time series data, which may seem irrelevant efforts over actually matters when people start retrain their machine learning algorithms. Yep. So as data becomes code, as we call it our lab showcase, we did a whole, whole, that event on this. The data's good in real time and in the lake. Yeah. Because the iteration of the data feeds the machine learning training. Things are getting better with the old data. So it's not throw away. It's not just business benefits. Yeah. There's all kinds of new scale. There >>Are. And, and we have, uh, many customers that are run petabyte level. Um, they're, they're essentially data factories on, on, uh, on premises, right? They're, they're creating so much data and they're starting to say, okay, we could analyze this, uh, in the cloud, we could transition it. We could move petabytes of data to the AWS cloud, or we can run, uh, computational workloads on premises. We can really do some analytics on this data transition, uh, those high level and sort of raw analytics back to AWS run 'em through machine learning. Um, and we don't have to transition 10, 12 petabytes of data into AWS. >>So I gotta end the segment on a, on a kind of a, um, fun note. I was told to ask you about your personal background on premise architect, a cloud and skydiving instructor. <laugh> how does that all work together? What tell, what does this mean? Yeah. >>Uh, you >>Jumped out a plane and got a job. You, you got a customer to jump out >>Kind of. So I was jump, I was teaching Scott eing, uh, before I, before I started in the cloud space, this was 13, 14 years ago. I was a, I still am a Scott I instructor. Yeah. Uh, I was teaching Scott eing and I heard out of the corner of my ear, uh, a guy that owned an MSP that was lamenting about, um, you know, storing data and, and how his cus customers are working. And he can't find enough people to operate all these workloads. So I walked over and said, Hey, this is, this is what I went to school for. Like, I'd love to, you know, uh, I was living in a tent in the woods teaching scout. I think I was like, I'd love to not live in a tent in the woods. So, uh, uh, I started in the first day there, uh, we had a, a discussion, uh, EC two, just come out <laugh> um, and, uh, like, >>This is amazing. >>Yeah. And so we had this discussion, we should start moving customers here. And, uh, and that totally revolutionized that business, um, that, that led to, uh, that that guy actually still owns a skydiving airport. But, um, but through all of that and through being an on premises migrated me and myself, my career into the cloud, and now it feels like, uh, almost, almost looking back and saying, now let's take what we learned in the cloud and, and apply those lessons and those services to >>It's. So it's such a great story, you know, I was gonna, you know, you know, the, the, the, the whole, you know, growth mindset pack your own parachute, you know, uh, exactly. You know, the cloud in the early day was pretty much will the shoot open. Yeah. It was pretty much, you had to roll your own cloud at that time. And so, you know, you, you jump on a plane, you gotta make sure that parachute is gonna open. >>And so was Kubernetes by the way, 2015 or so when, um, when that was coming out, it was, I mean, it was, it was still, and I, maybe it does still feel like that to some people. Right. But, uh, it was, it was the same kind of feeling that we had in the early days, AWS, the same feeling we have when we >>It's pretty much now with you guys, it's more like a tandem jump. Yeah. You know, but, but it's a lot of, lot of this cutting edge stuff, like jumping out of an airplane. Yeah. You guys, the right equipment, you gotta do the right things. Exactly. >>Right. >>Matthew, thanks for coming on the cube. Really appreciate it. Absolutely great conversation. Thanks for having me. Okay. The cubes here live and San Francisco for summit. I'm John Forry host of the cube. Uh, we'll be at a summit in New York coming up in the summer as well. Look up for that. look@thiscalendarforallthecubeactionatthecube.net. We'll be right back with our next segment after this break. >>Okay. Welcome back everyone to San Francisco live coverage here, we're at the cube a be summit 2022. We're back in person. I'm John fury host to the cube. We'll be at the eight of his summit in New York city. This summer, check us out then. But right now, two days in San Francisco, getting all the coverage what's going on in the cloud, we got a cube alumni and friend of the cube, my dudes, car CEO, investor, a Sierra, and also an investor and a bunch of startups, angel investor. Gonna do great to see you. Thanks for coming on the cube. Good to see you. Good to see you, sir. Chris. Cool. How are, are you >>Good? How are you? >>So congratulations on all your investments. Uh, you've made a lot of great successes, uh, over the past couple years, uh, and your company raising, uh, some good cash as Sarah. So give us the update. How much cash have you guys raised? What's the status of the company product what's going on? First >>Of all, thank you for having me back to be business with you. Never great to see you. Um, so is a company started around four years back. I invested with a few of the investors and now I'm the CEO there. Um, we have raised close to a hundred million there. Uh, the investors are people like Norwes Menlo, Tru ventures, coast, lo ventures, Ram Sheam and all those people, all well known guys. The Andy Beckel chime, Paul Mo uh, main web. So a whole bunch of operating people and, uh, Silicon valley VCs are involved >>And has it come? >>It's going well. We are doing really well. We are going almost 300% year over year. Uh, for last three years, the space ISR is going after is what I call the applying AI for customer service. It operations, it help desk, uh, the same place I used to work at ServiceNow. We are partners with ServiceNow to take, how can we argument for employees and customers, Salesforce, and ServiceNow to take it to the next stage? >>Well, I love having you on the cube, Dave and I, Dave Valenti as well loves having you on too, because you not only bring the entrepreneurial CEO experience, you're an investor. You're like a GE, you're like a guest analyst. <laugh> >>You know who you >>Get to call this fun to talk. You though, >>You got the commentary, you, your, your finger on the pulse. Um, so I gotta ask you obviously, AI and machine learning, machine learning AI, or you want to phrase it. Isn't every application. Now, AI first, uh, you're seeing a lot of that going on. You're starting to see companies build the modern applications at the top of the stack. So the cloud scale has hit. We're seeing cloud scale. You predicted that we talked about on cube many times. Now you have that past layer with a lot more services and cloud native becoming a standard layer. Containerizations growing DACA just raised a hundred million on a 2 billion valuation back from the dead after they pivoted from an enterprise services. So open source developers are booming. Um, where's the action. I mean, is there data control, plane emerging, AI needs data. There's a lot of challenges around this. There's a lot of discussions and a lot of companies being funded, observability there's 10 million observability companies. Data is the key. What's your angle on this? What's your take. Yeah, >>No, look, I think I'll give you the view that I see right from my side. Obviously data is very clear. So the things that remember system of recorded you and me talked about the next layer is called system of intelligence. That's where the AI will play. Like we talk cloud NA it'll be called AI, NA AI native is a new buzzword and using the AI customer service it operations. You talk about observability. I call it, AIOps applying AOPs for good old it operation management, cloud management. So you'll see the AOPs applied for whole list of, uh, application from observability doing the CMDB, predicting the events insurance. So I see a lot of work clicking for AIOps and service desk. What needs to be helped us with ServiceNow BMC G you see a new ELA emerging as a system of intelligence. Uh, the next would be is applying AI with workflow automation. So that's where you'll see a lot of things called customer workflow, employee workflows. So think of what UI path automation, anywhere ServiceNow are doing, that area will be driven with a AI workflows. So you'll see AI going >>Off is RPA a company is AI, is RPA a feature of something bigger? Or can someone have a company on RPA UI pass? One will be at their event this summer? Um, is it a product company? I mean, I mean, RPA is almost, should be embedded in everything. It's >>A feature. It is very good point. Very, very good thinking. So one is, it's a category for sure. Like, as we thought, it's a category, it's an area where RPA may change the name. I call it much more about automation, workflow automation, but RPA and automation is a category. Um, it's a company, or, but that automation should be embedded in every area. Yeah. Like we call cloud NA and AI NATO it'll become automation. NA yeah. And that's your thinking. >>It's almost interesting me. I think about the, what you're talking about what's coming to mind is I'm kinda having flashbacks to the old software model of middleware. Remember at middleware, it was very easy to understand it. It was middleware. It sat between two things and then the middle, and it was software abstraction. Now you have all, all kinds of workflows, abstractions everywhere. So multiple databases, it's not a monolithic thing. Right? Right. So as you break that down, is this the new modern middleware? Because what you're talking about is data workflows, but they might be siloed or they integrated. I mean, these are the challenges. This is crazy. What's the, >>So don't about the databases become called poly databases. Yeah. I call this one polyglot automation. So you need automation as a layer, as a category, but you also need to put automation in every area like you were talking about. It should be part of service. Now it should be part of ISRA, like every company, every Salesforce. So that's why you see MuleSoft and Salesforce buying RPA companies. So you'll see all the SaaS companies, cloud companies having an automation as a core. So it's like how you have a database and compute and sales and networking. You'll also have an automation as a layer <inaudible> inside every stack. >>All right. So I wanna shift gears a little bit and get your perspective on what's going on behind us. You can see, uh, behind us, you've got the expo hall. We got, um, we're back to vents, but you got, you know, AMD, Clum, Ove, uh, Dynatrace data, dog, innovative, all the companies out here that we know, we interview them all. They're trying to be suppliers to this growing enterprise market. Right. Okay. But now you also got the entrepreneurial equation. Okay. We're gonna have John Sado on from Bel later today. He's a former NEA guy and we always talk to Jerry, Jen. We know all the, the VCs. What does the startups look like? What does the state of the, in your mind, cause you, I know you invest the entrepreneurial founder situation, clouds bigger. Mm-hmm <affirmative> global, right? Data's part of it. You mentioned data's code. Yes. Basically data is everything. What's it like for a first an entrepreneur right now who's starting a company. What's the white space. What's the attack plan. How do they get in the market? How do they engineer everything? >>Very good. So I'll give it to, uh, two things that I'm seeing out there. Remember leaders of Amazon created the startups 15 years back. Everybody built on Amazon now, Azure and GCP. The next layer would be is people don't just build on Amazon. They're going to build it on top of snowflake. Companies are snowflake becomes a data platform, right? People will build on snowflake. Right? So I see my old boss flagman try to build companies on snowflake. So you don't build it just on Amazon. You build it on Amazon and snowflake. Snowflake will become your data store. Snowflake will become your data layer. Right? So I think that's in the of, <inaudible> trying to do that. So if I'm doing observability AI ops, if I'm doing next level of Splunk SIM, I'm gonna build it on snowflake, on Salesforce, on Amazon, on Azure, et cetera. >>It's interesting. You know, Jerry Chan has it put out a thesis a couple months ago called castles in the cloud where your moat is, what you do in the cloud. Not necessarily in the, in the IP. Um, Dave LAN and I had last reinvent, coined the term super cloud, right? He's got a lot of traction and a lot of people throwing, throwing mud at us, but we were, our thesis was, is that what Snowflake's doing? What Goldman S Sachs is doing. You starting to see these clouds on top of clouds. So Amazon's got this huge CapEx advantage. And guys like Charles Fitzgeral out there, who we like was kind of shit on us saying, Hey, you guys terrible, they didn't get it. Like, yeah. I don't think he gets it, but that's a whole, can't wait to debate him publicly on this. <laugh> if he's cool. Um, but snowflake is on Amazon. Yes. Now they say they're on Azure now. Cause they've got a bigger market and they're public, but ultimately without a AWS snowflake doesn't exist. And, and they're reimagining the data warehouse with the cloud, right? That's the billion dollar opportunity. >>It is. It is. They both are very tight. So imagine what Frank has done at snowflake and Amazon. So if I'm a startup today, I want to build everything on Amazon where possible whatever is, I cannot build. I'll make the pass layer. Remember the middle layer pass will be snowflake. So can build it on snowflake. I can use them for data layer. If I really need to size, I'll build it on four.com Salesforce. So I think that's where you'll see. So >>Basically if you're an entrepreneur, the north star in terms of the outcome is be a super cloud. >>It is, >>That's the application on another big CapEx ride, the CapEx of AWS or cloud, >>And that reduce your product development, your go to market and you get use the snowflake marketplace to drive your engagement. >>Yeah. Yeah. How are, how is Amazon and the clouds dealing with these big whales? The snowflakes of the world? I mean, I know they got a great relationship, uh, but snowflake now has to run a company they're public. Yeah. So, I mean, I'll say, I think got Redshift. Amazon has got red, um, but Snowflake's a big customer. They're probably paying AWS think big bills too. >>So John, very good. Cause it's like how Netflix is and Amazon prime, right. Netflix runs on Amazon, but Amazon has Amazon prime that co-option will be there. So Amazon will have Redshift, but Amazon is also partnering with, uh, snowflake to have native snowflake data warehouse as a data layer. So I think depending on the application use case, you have to use each of the above. I think snowflake is here for a long term. Yeah. Yeah. So if I'm building an application, I want to use snowflake then writing from stats. >>Well, I think that comes back down to entrepreneurial hustle. Do you have a better product? Right. Product value will ultimately determine it as long as the cloud doesn't, You know, foreclose your value that's right. But some sort of internal hack, but I think, I think the general question that I have is that I think it's okay to have a super cloud like that because the rising tide is still happening at some point. When does the rising tide stop >>And >>Do the people shopping up their knives, it gets more competitive or is it just an infinite growth cycle? I >>Think it's growth. You call it cloud scale. You invented the word cloud scale. So I think look, cloud will continually agree, increase. I think there's, as long as there are more movement from on, uh, OnPrem to the classical data center, I think there's no reason at this point, the rumor, the old lift and shift that's happening in like my business. I see people lift and shifting from the it operations. It helpless, even the customer service service now and, uh, ticket data from BMCs CAS like Microfocus, all those workloads are shifted to the cloud, right? So cloud ticketing system is happening. Cloud system of record is happening. So I think this train has still a long way to go made. >>I wanna get your thoughts for the folks watching that are, uh, enterprise buyers or practitioners, not suppliers to the market, feel free to, to XME or DMing. Next question's really about the buying side, which is if I'm a customer, what's the current, um, appetite for startup products. Cause you know, the big enterprises now and, you know, small, medium, large, and large enterprise are all buying new companies cuz a startup can go from zero to relevant very quickly. So that means now enterprises are engaging heavily with startups. What's it like what's is there a change in order of magnitude of the relationship between the startup selling to, or a growing startup selling to an enterprise? Um, have you seen changes there? I mean I'm seeing some stuff, but why don't we get your thoughts on that? What, no, it is. >>If I remember going back to our 2007 or eight, it, when I used to talk to you back then when Amazon started very small, right? We are an Amazon summit here. So I think enterprises on the average used to spend nothing with startups. It's almost like 0% or 1% today. Most companies are already spending 20, 30% with startups. Like if I look at a CIO line business, it's gone. Yeah. Can it go more? I think it can double in the next four, five years. Yeah. Spending on the startups. >>Yeah. And check out, uh, AWS startups.com. That's a site that we built for the startup community for buyers and startups. And I want to get your reaction because I reference the URL cause it's like, there's like a bunch of companies we've been promoting because the solutions that startups have actually are new stuff. Yes. It's bending, it's shifting left for security or using data differently or um, building tools and platforms for data engineering. Right. Which is a new persona that's emerging. So you know, a lot of good resources there, um, and gives back now to the data question. Now, getting back to your, what you're working on now is what's your thoughts around this new, um, data engineering persona, you mentioned AIOps, we've been seeing AIOps IOPS booming and that's creating a new developer paradigm that's right. Which we call coin data as code data as code is like infrastructure as code, but it's for data, right? It's developing with data, right? Retraining machine learnings, going back to the data lake, getting data to make, to do analysis, to make the machine learning better post event or post action. So this, this data engineers like an SRE for data, it's a new, scalable role we're seeing. Do you see the same thing? Do you agree? Um, do you disagree or can you share >>Yourself? No, I have a lot of thoughts that plus I see AIOP solutions in the future should be not looking back. I need to be like we are in San Francisco bay. That means earthquake prediction. Right? I want AOPs to predict when the outages are gonna happen. When there's a performance issue. I don't think most AOPs vendors have not gone there yet. Like I spend a lot of time with data dog, Cisco app Dyna, right? Dynatrace, all this solution will go future towards to proactive solution with AOPs. But what you bring up a very good point on the data side. I think like we have a Amazon marketplace and Amazon for startup, there should be data exchange where you want to create for AOPs and AI service that customers are give the data, share the data because we thought the data algorithms are useless. I can come the best algorithm, but I gotta train them, modify them, tweak them, make them better, make them better. Yeah. And I think their whole data exchange is the industry has not thought through something you and me talk many times. Yeah. Yeah. I think the whole, that area is very important. >>You've always been on, um, on the Vanguard of data because, uh, it's been really fun. Yeah. >>Going back to our big data days back in 2009, you know, >>Look at, look how much data bricks has grown. >>It is uh, double, the key >>Cloud kinda went private, so good stuff. What are you working on right now? Give a, give a, um, plug for what you're working on. You'll still investing. >>I do still invest, but look, I'm a hundred percent on ISRA right now. I'm the CEO there. Yeah. Okay. So right. ISRA is my number one baby right now. So I'm looking at that growing customers and my customers are some of them, you like it's zoom auto desk, Mac of fee, uh, grandchildren, all the top customers. Um, mainly for it help desk customer service. AIOps those are three product lines and going after enterprise and commercial deals. >>And when should someone buy your product? What's what's their need? What category is it? >>I think they look whenever somebody needs to buy the product is if you need AOP solution to predict, keep your lights on predict S one area. If you want to improve employee experience, you are using a slack teams and you want to automate all your workflows. That's another value problem. Third is customer service. You don't want to hire more people to do it. Some of the areas where you want to scale your company, grow your company, eliminate the cost customer service, >>Great stuff, man. Doing great to see you. Thanks for coming on. Congratulations on the success of your company and your investments. Thanks for coming on the cube. Okay. I'm John fur here at the cube live in San Francisco for day one of two days of coverage of 80 summit, 2022. And we're gonna be at 80 summit in San, uh, in New York and the summer. So look for that on this calendar, of course go to eight of us, startups.com. I mentioned that it's a site for all the hot startups and of course the cube.net and Silicon angle.com. Thanks for watching. We'll be back more coverage after this short break. >>Okay. Welcome back everyone. This to cubes coverage here in San Francisco, California, a Davis summit, 2022, the beginning of the event season, as it comes back a little bit smaller footprint, a lot of hybrid events going on, but this is actually a physical event, a summit new York's coming in the summer. We'll be there too with the cube on the set. We're getting back in the groove, psyched to be back. We were at reinvent, uh, as well, and we'll see more and more cube, but you're gonna see a lot of virtual cube, a lot of hybrid cube. We wanna get all those conversations, try to get more interviews, more flow going. But right now I'm excited to have Corey Quinn here on the back on the cube chief cloud economists with duck, bill groove, he founder, uh, and chief content person always got great angles, fun comedy, authoritative Corey. Great to see you. Thank you. >>Thanks. Coming on. Sure is a lot of words to describe as shit posting, which is how I describe what I tend to do. Most days, >>Shit posting is an art form now. And if you look at Mark's been doing a lot of shit posting lately, all a billionaires are shit posting, but they don't know how to do it. Like they're not >>Doing it right. Something opportunity there. It's like, here's how to be even more obnoxious and incisive. It's honestly the most terrifying scenario for anyone is if I have that kind of budget to throw at my endeavors, it's like, I get excited with a nonsense I can do with a $20 gift card for an AWS credit compared to, oh well, if I could buy a mid-size island to begin doing this from, oh, then we're having fun. This >>Shit posting trend. Interesting. I was watching a thread go on about, saw someone didn't get a job because of their shit posting and the employer didn't get it. And then someone on the other side, I'll hire the guy cuz I get that's highly intelligent shit posting. So for the audience that doesn't know what shit posting is, what is shit posting? >>It's more or less talking about the world of enterprise tech, which even that sentence is hard to finish without falling asleep and toppling out of my chair in front of everyone on the livestream. But it's doing it in such a way that brings it to life that says the quiet part. A lot of the audience is thinking, but generally doesn't say either because they're polite or not a jackass or more prosaically are worried about getting fired for better or worse. I don't have that particular constraint, >>Which is why people love you. So let's talk about what you, what you think is, uh, worthy and not worthy in the industry right now, obviously, uh, coupons coming up in Spain, which they're having a physical event, you can see the growth of cloud native Amazons, all, all the Adams let see new CEO, Andy move on to be the chief of all. Amazon just saw him. The cover of was it time magazine. Um, he's under a lot of stress. Amazon's changed. Invoice has changed. What's working. What's not, what's rising, what's falling. What's hot. What's not, >>It's easy to sit here and criticize almost anything these folks do. They they're effectively in a fishbowl, but I have trouble imagining the logistics. It takes to wind up handling the catering for a relatively downscale event like this one this year, let alone running a 1.7 million employee company having to balance all the competing challenges and pressures and the rest. I, I just can't fathom what it would be like to look at all of AWS. It's, it's sprawling, immense that dominates our entire industry and say, okay, this is a good start, but I, I wanna focus on something with a broader remit. What is that? How do you even get into that position? And you can't win once you're there. All you can do is hold onto the tiger and hope you don't get mold. Well, >>There's a lot of force for good conversations, seeing a lot of that going on, Amazon's trying to port and he was trying to portray themselves as you know, the Pathfinder, you know, you're the pioneer, um, force for good. And I get that and I think that's a good angle as cloud goes mainstream. There's still the question of, we had a guy on just earlier, who was a skydiving instructor and we were joking about the early days of cloud. Like that was like skydiving, build a parachute open, you know, and now it same kind of thing. As you move to edge, things are like reliable in some areas, but still new, new fringe, new areas. That's crazy. Well, >>Since the last time we've spoken, uh, Steve Schmidt is now the CISO for all of Amazon and his backfill replacement. The AWS CISO is CJ. Moses who as a hobby races, a as a semi-pro race car driver to my understanding, which either, I don't know what direction to take that in either. This is what he does to relax or ultimately, or ultimately it's. Huh? That, that certainly says something about risk assessment. I'm not entirely sure what, but okay. Either way, sounds like more exciting >>Replacement ready <laugh> in case something goes wrong. I, the track highly >>Available >>CSOs. I gotta say one of the things I do like in the recent trend is that the tech companies are getting into the formula one, which I was never a fan of until I watched that Netflix series. But when you look at the formula one, it's pretty cool. Cause it's got some tech angles, I get the whole data instrumentation thing, but the most coolest thing about formula one is they have these new rigs out. Yeah. Where you can actually race in e-sports with other, in pure simulation of the race car. You gotta get the latest and video graphics card, but it's basically a tricked out PC with amazing monitors and you have all the equipment of F1 and you're basically simulating racing. >>Oh, it's great too. And I can see the appeal of these tech companies getting into it because these things are basically rocket shifts. When those cars go, like they're sitting there, we can instrument every last part of what is going on inside that vehicle. And then AWS crops up. And we can bill on every one of those dimensions too. And it's like slow down their hasty pudding one step at a time. But I do see the appeal. >>So I gotta ask you about, uh, what's going in your world. I know you have a lot of great success. We've been following you in the queue for many, many years. Got a great newsletter. Check out Corey Quinn's newsletter, uh, screaming in the cloud program. Uh, you're on the cutting edge and you've got a great balance between really being snarky and, and, and really being delivering content. That's exciting, uh, for people, uh, with a little bit of an edge, um, how's that going? Uh, what's back any blow back late there been uptick. What was, what are some of the things you're hearing from your audience, more Corey, more Corey. And then of course the, the PR team's calling you >>The weird thing about having an audience beyond a certain size is far and away as a landslide. The most common response I get is silence where it's high. I'm emailing an awful lot of people at last week in AWS every week and okay. They must not have heard me it. That is not actually true. People just generally don't respond to email because who responds to email newsletters. That sounds like something, a lunatic might do same story with response to live streams and podcasts. It's like, I'm gonna call into that am radio show and give them a piece of my mind. People generally don't do that. >>We should do that. Actually. I think sure would call in. Oh, I, >>I think >>Chief, we had that right now. People would call in and say, Corey, what do you think about X? >>Yeah. It not, everyone understands the full context of what I do. And in fact, increasingly few people do and that's fine. I, I keep forgetting that sometimes people do not see what I'm doing in the same light that I do. And that's fine. Blowback has been largely minimal. Honestly, I am surprised anything by how little I have gotten over the last five years of doing this, but it would be easier to dismiss me if I weren't generally. Right. When, okay, so you launch this new service and it seems pretty crappy to me cuz when I try and build something, it falls over and begs for help. And people might not like hearing that, but it's what customers are finding too. Yeah. I really am the voice of the customer. >>You know, I always joke with Dave ante about how John Fort's always at, uh, reinvent getting the interview with jazzy now, Andy we're there, you're there. And so we have these rituals at the events. It's all cool. Um, one of the rituals I like about your, um, your content is you like to get on the naming product names. Um, and, and, and, and, and kind of goof on that. Now why I like is because I used to work at ETT Packard where they used to name things as like engineers, HP 1 0 5, or we can't, >>We have a new monitor. How are we gonna name it? Throw the wireless keyboard down the stairs again. And there you go. Yeah. >>It's and the old joke at HP was if they, if they invented sushi, they'd say, yeah, we can't call sushi. It's cold, dead fish. That's what it is. And so the joke was cold. Dead fish is a better name than sushi. So you know is fun. So what's the, what are the, how's the Amazon doing in there? Have they changed their naming, uh, strategy, uh, on some of their, their >>Producting, they're going in different directions. When they named Amazon Aurora, they decided to explore a new theme of Disney princesses as they go down those paths. And some things are more descriptive. Some people are clearly getting bonused on a number of words. They can shove into it. Like the better a service is the longer it's name. Like AWS systems manager, session manager is a great one. I love the service, ridiculous name. They have systems manager, parameter store, which is great. They have secrets manager, which does the same thing. It's two words less, but that one costs money in a way that systems manage your parameter store does not. It's >>Fun. What's your, what's your favorite combination of acronyms >>Combination of you >>Got Ks. You got EMR, you got EC two. You got S three SQS. Well, Redshift the on an acronym, you >>Gots is one of my personal favorites because it's either elastic block store or elastic bean stock, depending entirely on the context of the conversation. >>They still up bean stalk. Or is that still around? Oh, >>They never turn anything off. They're like the anti Google, Google turns things off while they're still building it. Whereas Amazon is like, wow, we built this thing in 2005 and everyone hates it. But while we certainly can't change it, now it has three customers on it. John three <laugh>. >>Okay. >>Simple BV still haunts our dreams. >>I, I actually got an email. I saw one of my, uh, servers, all these C two S were being deprecated and I got an email I'm like, I couldn't figure out. Why can you just like roll it over? Why, why are you telling me just like, give me something else. Right. Okay. So let me talk about, uh, the other things I want to ask you is that like, okay. So as Amazon gets better in some areas, where do they need more work in your opinion? Because obviously they're all interested in new stuff and they tend to like put it out there for their end to end customers. But then they've got ecosystem partners who actually have the same product. Yes. And, and this has been well documented. So it's, it's not controversial. It's just that Amazon's got a database, Snowflake's got a database service. So Redshift, snowflake database is, so you got this co-op petition. Yes. How's that going? And what are you hearing about the reaction to any of that stuff? >>Depends on who you ask. They love to basically trot out a bunch of their partners who will say nice things about them. And it very much has heirs of, let's be honest, a hostage video, but okay. Cuz these companies do partner with Amazon and they cannot afford to rock the boat too far. I'm not partnered with anyone. I can say what I want and they're basically restricted to taking away my birthday at worse so I can live with that. >>All right. So I gotta ask about multi-cloud cause obviously the other cloud shows are coming up. Amazon hated that word. Multi-cloud um, a lot of people are saying, you know, it's not a real good marketing word, like multi sounds like, you know, root canal. Mm-hmm <affirmative> right. So is there a better description for multi-cloud >>Multiple single points? >>Dave loves that term. Yeah. >>Yeah. You're building in multiple single points of failure. Do it for the right reasons or don't do it as a default. I believe not doing it is probably the right answer. However, and if I were, if I were Amazon, I wouldn't want to talk about multi-cloud either as the industry leader, talk about other clouds, bad direction to go in from a market cap perspective, it doesn't end well for you, but regardless of what they want to talk about, or don't want to talk about what they say, what they don't say, I tune all of it out. And I look at what customers are doing and multi-cloud exists in a variety of forms. Some brilliant, some brain dead. It depends a lot on context. But my general response is when someone gets on stage from a company and tells me to do a thing that directly benefits their company. I am skeptical at best. Yeah. When customers get on stage and say, this is what we're doing, because it solves problems. That's when I shut up and listen. Yeah. >>Cool. Awesome. Corey, I gotta ask you a question, cause I know you, we you've been, you know, fellow journeymen and the, and the cloud journey going to all the events and then the pandemic hit where now in the third year, who knows what it's gonna gonna end. Certainly events are gonna look different. They're gonna be either changing footprint with the virtual piece, new group formations. Community's gonna emerge. You got a pretty big community growing and it's throwing like crazy. What's the weirdest or coolest thing, or just big chain angels. You've seen with the pandemic, uh, from your perspective, cuz you've been in the you're in the middle of the whitewater rafting. You've seen the events you circle offline. You saw the online piece, come in, you're commentating. You're calling balls and strikes in the industry. You got a great team developing over there. Duck bill group. What's the big aha moment that you saw with the pandemic. Weird, fun, serious, real in the industry and with customers what's >>Accessibility. Reinvent is a great example. When in the before times it's open to anyone who wants to attend, who can pony up two grand and a week in Las Vegas and get to Las Vegas from wherever they happen to be by moving virtually suddenly it, it embraces the reality that talent is even distributed. Opportunity is not. And that means that suddenly these things are accessible to a wide swath of audience and potential customer base and the rest that hadn't been invited to the table previously, it's imperative that we not lose that. It's nice to go out and talk to people and have people come up and try and smell my hair from time to time, I smell delightful. Let make assure you, but it was, but it's also nice to be. >>I have a product for you if you want, you know. >>Oh, excellent. I look forward to it. What is it putting? Why not? <laugh> >>What else have you seen? So when accessibility for talent, which by the way is totally home run. What weird things have happened that you've seen? Um, that's >>Uh, it's, it's weird, but it's good that an awful lot of people giving presentations have learned to tighten their message and get to the damn point because most people are not gonna get up from a front row seat in a conference hall, midway through your Aing talk and go somewhere else. But they will change a browser tab and you won't get them back. You've gotta be on point. You've gotta be compelling if it's going to be a virtual discussion. >>Yeah. And also turn off your IMEs too. >>Oh yes. It's always fun in the, in the meetings when you're talking to someone and their co is messaging them about, should we tell 'em about this? And I'm sitting there reading it and it's >>This guy is really weird. Like, >>Yes I am and I bring it into the conversation and then everyone's uncomfortable. It goes, wow. >>Why not? I love when my wife yells at me over I message. When I'm on a business call, like, do you wanna take that about no, I'm good. >>No, no. It's better off. I don't. No, the only encourager it's fine. >>My kids. Excellent. Yeah. That's fun again. That's another weird thing. And, and then group behavior is weird. Now people are looking at, um, communities differently. Yes. Very much so, because if you're fatigued on content, people are looking for the personal aspect. You're starting to see much more of like yeah. Another virtual event. They gotta get better. One and two who's there. >>Yeah. >>The person >>That's a big part of it too is the human stories are what are being more and more interesting. Don't get up here and tell me about your product and how brilliant you are and how you built it. That's great. If I'm you, or if I wanna work with you or I want to compete with you, or I wanna put on my engineering hat and build it myself. Cause why would I buy anything? That's more than $8. But instead, tell me about the problem. Tell me about the painful spot that you specialize in. Tell me a story there. >>I, I >>Think that gets a glimpse in a hook and >>Makes more, more, I think you nailed it. Scaling storytelling. Yes. And access to better people because they don't have to be there in person. I just did it thing. I never, we never would've done the queue. We did. Uh, Amazon stepped up in sponsors. Thank you, Amazon for sponsoring international women's day, we did 30 interviews, APAC. We did five regions and I interviewed this, these women in Asia, Pacific eight, PJ, they called for in this world. And they're amazing. I never would've done those interviews cuz I never, would've seen 'em at an event. I never would've been in Japan or Singapore to access them. And now they're in the index. They're in the network. They're collaborating on LinkedIn. So a threads are developing around connections that I've never seen before. Yes. Around the content, >>Absolutely >>Content value plus >>The networking. And that is the next big revelation of this industry is going to realize you have different companies. And in Amazon's case, different service teams, all, all competing with each other, but you have the container group and you have the database group and you have the message cuing group. But customers don't really want to build things from spare parts. They want a solution to a problem. I want to build an app that does Twitter for pets or whatever it is I'm trying to do. I don't wanna basically have to pick and choose and fill my shopping cart with all these different things. I want something that's gonna give me what I'm trying to get as close to turnkey as possible. Moving up the stack. That is the future. And just how it gets here is gonna be >>Well we're here with Corey Quinn, the master of the master of content here in the a ecosystem. Of course we we've been following up in the beginnings. Great guy. Check out his blog, his site, his newsletter screaming podcast. Cory, final question for you. Uh, what do you hear doing what's on your agenda this week in San Francisco and give a plug for the duck build group. What are you guys doing? I know you're hiring some people what's on the table for the company. What's your focus this week and put a plug in for the group. >>I'm here as a customer and basically getting outta my cage cuz I do live here. It's nice to actually get out and talk to folks who are doing interesting things at the duck build group. We solve one problem. We fixed the horrifying AWS bill, both from engineering and architecture, advising as well as negotiating AWS contracts because it turns out those things are big and complicated. And of course my side media projects last week in aws.com, we are, it it's more or less a content operation where I indulge my continual and ongoing law of affair with the sound of my own voice. >><laugh> and you good. It's good content. It's on, on point fun, Starky and relevant. So thanks for coming to the cube and sharing with us. Appreciate it. No, thank you. Fun. You. Okay. This the cube covers here in San Francisco, California, the cube is back at to events. These are the summits, Amazon web services summits. They happen all over the world. We'll be in New York and obviously we're here in San Francisco this week. I'm John furry. Keep, keep it right here. We'll be back with more coverage after this short break. Okay. Welcome back everyone. This's the cubes covers here in San Francisco, California, we're live on the show floor of AWS summit, 2022. I'm John for host of the cube and remember AWS summit in New York city coming up this summer, we'll be there as well. And of course reinvent the end of the year for all the cube coverage on cloud computing and AWS. The two great guests here from the APN global APN se Jenko and Jeff Grimes partner leader, Jeff and se is doing partnerships global APN >>AWS global startup program. Yeah. >>Okay. Say that again. >>AWS global startup program. >>That's the official name. >>I love >>It too long, too long for me. Thanks for coming on. Yeah, of course. Appreciate it. Tell us about what's going on with you guys. What's the, how was you guys organized? You guys we're obviously were in San Francisco bay area, Silicon valley, zillions of startups here, New York. It's got another one we're gonna be at tons of startups. Lot of 'em getting funded, big growth and cloud big growth and data security, hot and sectors. >>Absolutely. >>So maybe, maybe we could just start with the global startup program. Um, it's essentially a white glove service that we provide to startups that are built on AWS. And the intention there is to help identify use cases that are being built on top of AWS. And for these startups, we want to provide white glove support in co building products together. Right. Um, co-marketing and co-selling essentially, um, you know, the use cases that our customers need solved, um, that either they don't want to build themselves or are perhaps more innovative. Um, so the, a AWS global startup program provides white glove support, dedicated headcount for each one of those pillars. Um, and within our program, we've also provided incentives, programs go to market activities like the AWS startup showcase that we've built for these startups. >>Yeah. By the way, start AWS startups.com is the URL, check it out. Okay. So partnerships are key. Jeff, what's your role? >>Yeah. So I'm responsible for leading the overall F for, for the AWS global startup program. Um, so I've got a team of partner managers that are located throughout the us, uh, managing a few hundred startup ISVs right now. <laugh> >>Yeah, I got >>A lot. We've got a lot. >>There's a lot. I gotta, I gotta ask the tough question. Okay. I'm I'm a startup founder. I got a team. I just got my series a we're grown. I'm trying to hire people. I'm super busy. What's in it for me. Yeah. What do you guys bring to the table? I love the white glove service, but translate that what's in it. What do I get out of it? What's >>A good story. Good question. I focus, I think. Yeah, because we get, we get to see a lot of partners building their businesses on AWS. So, you know, from our perspective, helping these partners focus on what, what do we truly need to build by working backwards from customer feedback, right? How do we effectively go to market? Because we've seen startups do various things, um, through trial and error, um, and also just messaging, right? Because oftentimes partners or rather startups, um, try to boil the ocean with many different use cases. So we really help them, um, sort of laser focus on what are you really good at and how can we bring that to the customer as quickly as possible? >>Yeah. I mean, it's truly about helping that founder accelerate the growth of their company. Yeah. Right. And there's a lot that you can do with AWS, but focus is truly the key word there because they're gonna be able to find their little piece of real estate and absolutely deliver incredible outcomes for our customers. And then they can start their growth curve there. >>What are some of the coolest things you've seen with the APN that you can share publicly? I know you got a lot going on there, a lot of confidentiality. Um, but you know, we're here lot of great partners on the floor here. I'm glad we're back at events. Uh, a lot of stuff going on digitally with virtual stuff and, and hybrid. What are some of the cool things you guys have seen in the APN that you can point to? >>Yeah, absolutely. I mean, I can point to few, you can take them. Sure. So, um, I think what's been fun over the years for me personally, I came from a startup, ran sales at an early stage startup and, and I went through the whole thing. So I have a deep appreciation for what these guys are going through. And what's been interesting to see for me is taking some of these early stage guys, watching them progress, go public, get acquired, and see that big day mm-hmm <affirmative>, uh, and being able to point to very specific items that we help them to get to that point. Uh, and it's just a really fun journey to watch. >>Yeah. I, and part of the reason why I really, um, love working at the AWS, uh, global startup program is working with passionate founders. Um, I just met with a founder today that it's gonna, he's gonna build a very big business one day, um, and watching them grow through these stages and supporting that growth. Um, I like to think of our program as a catalyst for enterprise sort of scale. Yeah. Um, and through that we provide visibility, credibility and growth opportunities. >>Yeah. A lot, a lot of partners too. What I found talking to staff founders is when they have that milestone, they work so hard for it. Whether it's a B round C round Republic or get bought. Yeah. Um, then they take a deep breath and they look back at wow, what a journey it's been. So it's kind of emotional for sure. Yeah. Still it's a grind. Right? You gotta, I mean, when you get funding, it's still day one. You don't stop. It's no celebrate, you got a big round or valuation. You still gotta execute >>And look it's hypercompetitive and it's brutally difficult. And our job is to try to make that a little less difficult and navigate those waters right. Where everyone's going after similar things. >>Yeah. I think as a group element too, I observe that startups that I, I meet through the APN has been interesting because they feel part of AWS. Yeah, totally. As a group of community, as a vibe there. Um, I know they're hustling, they're trying to make things happen. But at the same time, Amazon throws a huge halo effect. I mean, that's a huge factor. I mean, yeah. You guys are the number one cloud in the business, the growth in every sector is booming. Yeah. And if you're a startup, you don't have that luxury yet. And look at companies like snowflake, they're built on top of AWS. Yeah. I mean, people are winning by building on AWS. >>Yeah. And our, our, our program really validates their technology first. So we have, what's called a foundation's technical review that we put all of our startups through before we go to market. So that when enterprise customers are looking at startup technology, they know that it's already been vetted. And, um, to take that a step further and help these partners differentiate, we use programs like the competency programs, the DevOps compet, the, the security competency, which continues to help, um, provide sort of a platform for these startups, help them differentiate. And also there's go to market benefits that are associated with that. >>Okay. So let me ask the, the question that's probably on everyone's mind, who's watching. Certainly I asked this a lot. There's a lot of companies startups out there who makes the, is there a criteria? Oh God, it's not like his sports team or anything, but like sure. Like there's activate program, which is like, there's hundreds of thousands of startups out there. Not everyone is at the APN. Right? Correct. So ISVs again, that's a whole nother, that's a more mature partner that might have, you know, huge market cap or growth. How do you guys focus? How do you guys focus? I mean, you got a good question, you know, a thousand flowers blooming all the time. Is there a new way you guys are looking at it? I know there's been some talk about restructure or, or new focus. What's the focus. >>Yeah. It's definitely not an easy task by any means. Um, but you know, I recently took over this role and we're really trying to establish focus areas, right. So obviously a lot of the fees that we look after our infrastructure ISVs, that's what we do. Uh, and so we have very specific pods that look after different type of partners. So we've got a security pod, we've got a DevOps pod, we've got core infrastructure, et cetera. And really we're trying to find these ISVs that can solve, uh, really interesting AWS customer challenges. >>So you guys have a deliberate, uh, focus on these pillars. So what infrastructure, >>Security, DevOps, and data and analytics, and then line of business >>Line of business line, like web marketing >>Solutions, business apps, >>Business, this owner type thing. Exactly. >>Yeah, exactly. >>So solutions there. Yeah. More solutions and the other ones are like hardcore. So infrastructure as well, like storage, backup, ransomware of stuff, or, >>Uh, storage, networking. >>Okay. Yeah. The classic >>Database, et cetera. Right. >>And so there's teams on each pillar. >>Yep. So I think what's, what's fascinating for the startup that we cover is that they've got, they truly have support from a build market sell perspective. Right. So you've got someone who's technical to really help them get the technology, figured out someone to help them get the marketing message dialed and spread, and then someone to actually do the co-sell, uh, day to day activities to help them get in front of customers. >>Probably the number one request that we always ask for Amazon is can we waste that sock report? Oh, download it, the console, which we use all the time. Exactly. But security's a big deal. I mean, you know, SREs are evolving, that role of DevOps is taking on dev SecOps. Um, I, I could see a lot of customers having that need for a relationship to move things faster. Do you guys provide like escalation or is that a part of a service or not, not part of a, uh, >>Yeah, >>So the partner development manager can be an escalation point. Absolutely. Think of them as an extension of your business inside of AWS. >>Great. And you guys how's that partner managers, uh, measure >>On those three pillars. Right. Got it. Are we billing, building valuable use cases? So product development go to market, so go to market activities, think blog, posts, webinars, case studies, so on and so forth. And then co-sell not only are we helping these partners win their current opportunities that they are sourcing, but can we also help them source net new deals? Yeah. Right. That's >>Very important. I mean, top asked from the partners is get me in front of customers. Right. Um, not an easy task, but that's a huge goal of ours to help them grow their top >>Line. Right. Yeah. In fact, we had some interviews here on the cube earlier talking about that dynamic of how enterprise customers are buying. And it's interesting, a lot more POCs. I have one partner here that you guys work with, um, on observability, they got a huge POC with capital one mm-hmm <affirmative> and the enterprises are engaging the startups and bringing them in. So the combination of open source software enterprises are leaning into that hard and bringing young growing startups in mm-hmm <affirmative>. Yep. So I could see that as a huge service that you guys can bring people in. >>Right. And they're bringing massively differentiated technology to the table. Mm-hmm <affirmative> the challenge is they just might not have the brand recognition that the big guys have. And so that it's our job is how do you get that great tech in front of the right situations? >>Okay. So my next question is about the show here, and then we'll talk globally. So here in San Francisco sure. You know, Silicon valley bay area, San Francisco bay area, a lot of startups, a lot of VCs, a lot of action. Mm-hmm <affirmative> so probably a big market for you guys. Yeah. So what's exciting here in SF and then outside SF, you guys have a global program, you see any trends that are geography based or is it sure areas more mature? There's certain regions that are better. I mean, I just interviewed a company here that's doing, uh, AWS edge really well in these cases. It's interesting that these, the partners are filling a lot of holes and gaps in the opportunities with AWS. So what's exciting here. And then what's the global perspective. >>Yeah, totally. So obviously a ton of partners, I, from the bay area that we support. Um, but we're seeing a lot of really interesting technology coming out of AMEA specifically. Yeah. Uh, and making a lot of noise here in the United States, which is great. Um, and so, you know, we definitely have that global presence and, and starting to see super differentiated technology come out of those regions. >>Yeah. Especially Tel Aviv. Yeah. >>Amy real quick, before you get in the surge. It's interesting. The VC market in, in Europe is hot. Yeah. They've got a lot of unicorns coming in. We've seen a lot of companies coming in. They're kind of rattling their own, you know, cage right now. Hey, look at us. We'll see if they crash, you know, but we don't see that happening. I mean, people have been projecting a crash now in, in the startup ecosystem for at least a year. It's not crashing. In fact, funding's up. >>Yeah. The pandemic was hard on a lot of startups for sure. Yeah. Um, but what we've seen is many of these startups, they, as quickly as they can grow, they can also pivot as, as, as well. Um, and so I've actually seen many of our startups grow through the pandemic because their use cases are helping customers either save money, become more operationally efficient and provide value to leadership teams that need more visibility into their infrastructure during a pandemic. >>It's an interesting point. I talked to Andy jazzy and Adam Leski both say the same thing during the pandemic necessity, the mother of all invention. Yep. And startups can move fast. So with that, you guys are there to assist if I'm a startup and I gotta pivot cuz remember iterate and pivot, iterate and pivot. So you get your economics, that's the playbook of the ventures and the models. >>Exactly. How >>Do you guys help me do that? Give me an example of walk me through, pretend me I'm a startup. Hey, I am on the cloud. Oh my God. Pandemic. They need video conferencing. Hey cube. Yeah. What do I need? Surge? What, what do I do? >>That's a good question. First thing is just listen. Yeah. I think what we have to do is a really good job of listening to the partner. Um, what are their needs? What is their problem statement and where do they want to go at the end of the day? Um, and oftentimes because we've worked with so many successful startups, they have come out of our program. We have, um, either through intuition or a playbook, determined what is gonna be the best path forward and how do we get these partners to stop focusing on things that will eventually, um, just be a waste of time yeah. And, or not provide, or, you know, bring any fruit to the table, which, you know, essentially revenue. >>Well, we love star rights here in the cube because one, um, they have good stories. They're oil and cutting edge, always pushing the envelope and they're kind of disrupting someone else. Yeah. And so they have an opinion. They don't mind sharing on camera. So love talking to startups. We love working with you guys on our startup showcases startups.com. Check out AWS startups.com and you got the showcases, uh, final. We I'll give you guys the last word. What's the bottom line bumper sticker for AP the global APN program. Summarize the opportunity for startups, what you guys bring to the table and we'll close it out. Totally start >>With you. Yeah. I think the AWS global startup program's here to help companies truly accelerate their business full stop. Right. And that's what we're here for. I love it. >>It's a good way to, it's a good way to put it Dito. >>Yeah. All right, sir. Thanks for coming on. Thanks John. Great to see you love working with you guys. Hey, startups need help. And the growing and huge market opportunities, the shift cloud scale data engineering, security infrastructure, all the markets are exploding in growth because of the digital transformation of the realities here. Open source and cloud all making it happen here in the cube in San Francisco, California. I'm John furrier, your host. Thanks for watching >>John. >>Hello and welcome back to the cubes live coverage here in San Francisco, California for AWS summit, 2022. I'm John for host of the cube. Uh, two days of coverage, AWS summit, 2022 in New York city. Coming up this summer, we'll be there as well at events are back. The cube is back of course, with the cube virtual cube hybrid, the cube.net, check it out a lot of content this year, more than ever, a lot more cloud data cloud native, modern applic is all happening. Got a great guest here. Jeremy Burton, Cub alumni, uh, CEO of observe Inc in the middle of all the cloud scale, big data observability Jeremy. Great to see you. Thanks >>Always great to come and talk to you on the queue, man. It's been been a few years, so, >>Um, well you, you got your hands. You're in the trenches with great startup, uh, good funding, great board, great people involved in the observability hot area, but also you've been a senior executive president of Dell, uh, EMC, uh, 11 years ago you had a, a vision and you actually had an event called cloud meets big data. Um, yeah. And it's here. You predicted it 11 years ago. Um, look around it's cloud meets big data. >>Yeah. I mean the, the cloud thing I think, you know, was, was probably already a thing, but the big data thing I do claim credit for, for, for sort of catching that bus out, um, you know, we, we were on the, the, the bus early and, and I think it was only inevitable. Like, you know, if you could bring the economics and the compute of cloud to big data, you, you could find out things you could never possibly imagine. >>So you're close to a lot of companies that we've been covering deeply. Snowflake obviously are involved, uh, the board level, you know, the founders, you know, the people there cloud, you know, Amazon, you know, what's going on here? Yeah. You're doing a startup as the CEO at the helm, uh, chief of observ, Inc, which is an observability, which is to me in the center of this confluence of data engineering, large scale integrations, um, data as code integrating into applic. I mean, it's a whole nother world developing, like you see with snowflake, it means snowflake is super cloud as we call it. So a whole nother wave is here. What's your, what's this wave we're on what's how would you describe the wave? >>Well, a couple of things, I mean, people are, I think riding more software than, than ever fall. Why? Because they've realized that if, if you don't take your business online and offer a service, then you become largely irrelevant. And so you you've got a whole set of new applications. I think, I think more applications now than any point. Um, not, not just ever, but the mid nineties, I always looked at as the golden age of application development. Now back then people were building for windows. Well, well now they're building for things like AWS is now the platform. Um, so you've got all of that going on. And then at the same time, the, the side effect of these applications is they generate data and lots of data and the, you know, the sort of the transactions, you know, what you bought today or something like that. But then there's what we do, which is all the telemetry data, all the exhaust fumes. And I think people really are realizing that their differentiation is not so much their application. It's their understanding of the data. Can, can I understand who my best customers are, what I sell today. If people came to my website and didn't buy, then I not, where did they drop off all of that they wanna analyze. And, and the answers are all in the data. The question is, can you understand it >>In our last startup showcase, we featured data as code. One of the insights that we got out of that I wanna get your opinion on our reaction to is, is that data used to be put into a data lake and turns into a data swamp or throw into the data warehouse. And then we'll do some query, maybe a report once in a while. And so data, once it was done, unless it was real time, even real time was not good anymore after real time. That was the old way. Now you're seeing more and more, uh, effort to say, let's go look at the data cuz now machine learning is getting better. Not just train once mm-hmm <affirmative> they're iterating. Yeah. This notion of iterating and then pivoting, iterating and pivoting. Yeah, that's a Silicon valley story. That's like how startups work, but now you're seeing data being treated the same way. So now you have another, this data concept that's now yeah. Part of a new way to create more value for the apps. So this whole, this whole new cycle of >>Yeah. >>Data being reused and repurposed and figured out and >>Yeah, yeah. I'm a big fan of, um, years ago. Uh, uh, just an amazing guy, Andy McAfee at the MIT C cell labs I spent time with and he, he had this line, which still sticks to me this day, which is look I'm I'm. He said I'm part of a body, which believes that everything is a matter of data. Like if you, of enough data, you can answer any question. And, and this is going back 10 years when he was saying these kind of things and, and certainly, you know, research is on the forefront. But I, I think, you know, starting to see that mindset of the, the sort of MIT research be mainstream, you know, in enterprises, they they're realizing that yeah, it is about the data. You know, if I can better understand my data better than my competitor than I've got an advantage. And so the question is is, is how, what, what technologies and what skills do I need in my organization to, to allow me to do that. So >>Let's talk about observing you the CEO of, okay. Given you've seen the wave before you're in the front lines of observability, which again is in the center of all this action what's going on with the company. Give a quick minute to explain, observe for the folks who don't know what you guys do. What's the company doing? What's the funding status, what's the product status and what's the customer status. Yeah. >>So, um, we realized, you know, a handful of years ago, let's say five years ago that, um, look, the way people are building applications is different. They they're way more functional. They change every day. Uh, but in some respects they're a lot more complicated. They're distributed. They, you know, microservices architectures and when something goes wrong, um, the old way of troubleshooting and solving problems was not gonna fly because you had SA so much change going into production on a daily basis. It was hard to tell like where the problem was. And so we thought, okay, it's about time. Somebody looks at the exhaust fumes from this application and all the telemetry data and helps people troubleshoot and make sense of the problems that they're seeing. So, I mean, that's observability, it's actually a term that goes back to the 1960s. It was a guy called, uh, Rudolph like, like everything in tech, you know, it's, it's a reinvention of, of something from years gone by. >>But, um, there's a guy called, um, Rudy Coleman in 1960s, kinder term. And, and, and the term was been able to determine the state of a system by looking at its external outputs. And so we've been going on this for, uh, the best part of the all years now. Um, it took us three years just to build the product. I think, I think what people don't appreciate these days often is the barrier to entry in a lot of these markets is quite high. You, you need a lot of functionality to have something that's credible with a customer. Um, so yeah, this last year we, we, we did our first year selling, uh, we've got about 40 customers now. <affirmative> um, we just we've got great investors for the hill ventures. Uh, I mean, Mike SP who was, you know, the, the guy who was the, really, the first guy in it snowflake and the, the initial investor were fortunate enough to, to have Mike on our board. And, um, you know, part of the observed story yeah. Is closely knit with snowflake because all of that time data know we, we still are in there. >>So I want to get, uh, >>Yeah. >>Pivot to that. Mike Pfizer, snowflake, Jeremy Burton, the cube kind of, kind of same thinking this idea of a super cloud or what snowflake became snowflake is massively successful on top of AWS. Mm-hmm <affirmative> and now you're seeing startups and companies build on top of snowflake. Yeah. So that's become an entrepreneurial story that we think that to go big in the cloud, you can have a cloud on a cloud, uh, like as Jerry, Jerry Chan and Greylock calls it castles in the cloud where there are moats in the cloud. So you're close to it. I know you're doing some stuff with snowflake. So a startup, what's your view on building on top of say a snowflake or an AWS, because again, you gotta go where the data is. You need all the data. >>Yeah. So >>What's your take on that? >>I mean, having enough gray hair now, um, you know, again, in tech, I think if you wanna predict the future, look at the past. And, uh, you know, to many years ago, 25 years ago, I was at a, a smaller company called Oracle and an Oracle was the database company. And, uh, their, their ambition was to manage all of the world's transactional data. And they built on a platform or a couple of platforms, one, one windows, and the other main one was Solaris. And so at that time, the operator and system was the platform. And, and then that was the, you know, ecosystem that you would compete on top of. And then there were companies like SAP that built applications on top of Oracle. So then wind the clock forward 25 years gray hairs. <laugh> the platform, isn't the operating system anymore. The platform is AWS, you know, Google cloud. I gotta probably look around if I say that in. Yeah. It's >>Okay. But hyperscale, yeah. CapX built out >>That is the new platform. And then snowflake comes along. Well, their aspiration is to manage all of the, not just human generator data, but machine generated data in the world of cloud. And I think they they've done an amazing job doing for the, I'd say, say the, the big data world, what Oracle did for the relational data world, you know, way back 25 years ago. And then there are folks like us come along and, and of course my ambition would be, look, if, if we can be as successful as an SAP building on top of snow snowflake, uh, as, as they were on top of Oracle, then, then we'd probably be quite happy. >>So you're building on top of snowflake. >>We're building on top of snowflake a hundred percent. And, um, you know, I've had folks say to me, well, aren't you worried about that? Isn't that a risk? It's like, well, that that's a risk. You >>Still on the board. >>Yeah. I'm still on the board. Yeah. That that's a risk I'm prepared to take <laugh> I am long on snowflake you, >>Well, you're in a good spot. Stay on the board, then you'll know what's going on. Okay. No know just doing, but the, this is a real dynamic. It is. It's not a one off it's. >>Well, and I do believe as well that the platform that you see now with AWS, if you look at the revenues of AWS is an order of magnitude more than Microsoft was 25 years ago with windows mm-hmm <affirmative>. And so I believe the opportunity for folks like snowflake and folks like observe it's an order of magnitude more than it was for the Oracle and the SAPs of the old >>World. Yeah. And I think this is really, I think this is something that this next generation of entrepreneurship is the go big scenario is you gotta be on a platform. Yeah. >>It's quite >>Easy or be the platform, but it's hard. There's only like how many seats are at that table left. >>Well, value migrates up over time. So, you know, when the cloud thing got going, there were probably 10, 20, 30, you know, Rackspace and there's 1,000,001 infrastructure, a service platform as a service, my, my old, uh, um, employee EMC, we had pivotal, you know, pivotal was a platform as a service. You don't hear so much about it, these, but initially there's a lot of players and then it consolidates. And then to, to like extract, uh, a real business, you gotta move up, you gotta add value, you gotta build databases, then you gotta build applications. So >>It's interesting. Moving from the data center of the cloud was a dream for starters. Cause then if the provision, the CapEx, now the CapEx is in the cloud. Then you build on top of that, you got snowflake you on top of that, the >>Assumption is almost that compute and storage is free. I know it's not quite free. Yeah. It's >>Almost free, >>But, but you can, you know, as an application vendor, you think, well, what can I do if I assume compute and storage is free, that's the mindset you've gotta get into. >>And I think the platform enablement to value. So if I'm an entrepreneur, I'm gonna get a serious, multiple of value in what I'm paying. Yeah. Most people don't even blanket their Avis pills unless they're like massively huge. Yeah. Then it's a repatriation question or whatever discount question, but for most startups or any growing company, the Amazon bill should be a small factor. >>Yeah. I mean, a lot of people, um, ask me like, look, you're building on snowflake. Um, you, you know, you are, you are, you're gonna be, you're gonna be paying their money. How, how, how, how does that work with your business model? If you're paying them money, you know, do, do you have a viable business? And it's like, well, okay. I, we could build a database as well in observe, but then I've got half the development team working on in that will never be as good as snowflake. And so we made the call early on that. No, no, we, we wanna innovate above the database. Yeah. Right. Snowflake are doing a great job of innovating on the database and, and the same is true of something like Amazon, like, like snowflake could have built their own cloud and their own platform, but they didn't. >>Yeah. And what's interesting is that Dave <inaudible> and I have been pointing this out and he's actually more on snowflake. I I've been looking at data bricks, um, and the same dynamics happening, the proof is the ecosystem. Yeah. I mean, if you look at Snowflake's ecosystem right now and data bricks it's exploding. Right. I mean, the shows are selling out the floor. Space's book. That's the old days at VMware. Yeah. The old days at AWS >>One and for snowflake and, and any platform provider, it's a beautiful thing. You know, we build on snowflake and we pay them money. They don't have to sell to us. Right. And we do a lot of the support. And so the, the economics work out really, really well. If you're a platform provider and you've got a lot of ecosystems. >>Yeah. And then also you get, you get a, um, a trajectory of, uh, economies of scale with the institutional knowledge of snowflake integrations, right. New products. You're scaling that function with the, >>Yeah. I mean, we manage 10 petabytes of data right now. Right. When I, when I, when I arrived at EMC in 2010, we had, we had one petabyte customer. And, and so at observe, we've been only selling the product for a year. We have 10 petabytes of data under management. And so been able to rely on a platform that can manage that is invaluable, >>You know, but Jeremy Greek conversation, thanks for sharing your insights on the industry. Uh, we got a couple minutes left. Um, put a plug in for observe. What do you guys, I know you got some good funding, great partners. I don't know if you can talk about your, your, your POC customers, but you got a lot of high ends folks that are working with you. You getting traction. Yeah. >>Yeah. >>Scales around the corner. Sounds like, are you, is that where you are scale? >>Got, we've got a big announcement coming up in two or weeks. We've got, we've got new funding, um, which is always great. Um, the product is, uh, really, really close. I think, as a startup, you always strive for market fit, you know, which is at which point can you just start hiring salespeople? And the revenue keeps going. We're getting pretty close to that right now. Um, we've got about 40 SaaS companies run on the platform. They're almost all AWS Kubernetes, uh, which is our sweet spot to begin with, but we're starting to get some really interesting, um, enterprise type customers. We're, we're, you know, F five networks we're POC in right now with capital one, we got some interest in news around capital one coming up. I, I can't share too much, uh, but it's gonna be exciting. And, and like I saids hill continued to, to, to stick, >>I think capital one's a big snowflake customer as well. Right. They, >>They were early in one of the things that attracted me to capital one was they were very, very good with snowflake early on. And, and they put snowflake in a position in the bank where they thought that snowflake could be successful. Yeah. And, and today that, that is one of Snowflake's biggest accounts. >>So capital one, very innovative cloud, obviously AIOS customer and very innovative, certainly in the CISO and CIO, um, on another point on where you're at. So you're, Prescale meaning you're about to scale, right? So you got POCs, what's that trick GE look like, can you see around the corner? What's, what's going on? What's on, around the corner. That you're, that you're gonna hit the straight and narrow and, and gas it >>Fast. Yeah. I mean, the, the, the, the key thing for us is we gotta get the product. Right. Um, the nice thing about having a guy like Mike Pfizer on the board is he doesn't obsess about revenue at this stage is questions that the board are always about, like, is the product, right? Is the product right? Is the product right? If you got the product right. And cuz we know when the product's right, we can then scale the sales team and, and the revenue will take care of itself. Yeah. So right now all the attention is on the product. Um, the, this year, the exciting thing is we were, we're adding all the tracing visualizations. So people will be able to the kind of things that back in the day you could do with the new lakes and, and AppDynamics, the last generation of, of APM tools, you're gonna be able to do that within observe. And we've already got the logs and the metrics capability in there. So for us, this year's a big one, cuz we sort of complete the trifecta, you know, the, the logs, >>What's the secret sauce observe. What if you had the, put it into a, a sentence what's the secret sauce? I, >>I, I think, you know, an amazing founding engineering team, uh, number one, I mean, at the end of the day, you have to build an amazing product and you have to solve a problem in a different way. And we've got great long term investors. And, and the biggest thing our investors give is actually it's not just money. It gives us time to get the product, right. Because if we get the product right, then we can get the growth. >>Got it. Final question. Why I got you here? You've been on the enterprise business for a long time. What's the buyer landscape out there. You got people doing POCs on capital one scale. So we know that goes on. What's the appetite at the buyer side for startups and what are their requirements that you're seeing? Uh, obviously we're seeing people go in and dip into the startup pool because new ways to refactor their business restructure. So a lot happening in cloud. What's the criteria. How are enterprises engaging in with startups? >>Yeah. I mean, enterprises, they know they've gotta spend money transforming the business. I mean, this was, I almost feel like my old Dell or EMC self there, but, um, what, what we were saying five years ago is happening. Um, everybody needs to figure out out a way to take their, this to this digital world. Everybody has to do it. So the nice thing from a startup standpoint is they know at times they need to risk or, or take a bet on new technology in order to, to help them do that. So I think you've got buyers that a have money, uh, B prepared to take risks and it's, it's a race against time to, you know, get their, their offerings in this. So a new digital footprint, >>Final, final question. What's the state of AWS. Where do you see them going next? Obviously they're continuing to be successful. How does cloud 3.0, or they always say it's day one, but it's more like day 10. Uh, but what's next for Aw. Where do they go from here? Obviously they're doing well. They're getting bigger and bigger. >>Yeah. They're, they're, it's an amazing story. I mean, you know, we we're, we're on AWS as well. And so I, I think if they keep nurturing the builders in the ecosystem, then that is their superpower. They, they have an early leads. And if you look at where, you know, maybe the likes of Microsoft lost the plot in the, in the late it was, they stopped, uh, really caring about developers and the folks who were building on top of their ecosystem. In fact, they started buying up their ecosystem and competing with people in their ecosystem. And I see with AWS, they, they have an amazing head start and if they did more, you know, if they do more than that, that's, what's gonna keep the jut rolling for many years to come. Yeah, >>They got the silicone and they got the staff act, developing Jeremy Burton inside the cube, great resource for commentary, but also founding with the CEO of a company called observing in the middle of all the action on the board of snowflake as well. Um, great start. Thanks for coming on the cube. >>Always a pleasure. >>Okay. Live from San Francisco to cube. I'm John for your host. Stay with us more coverage from San Francisco, California after the short break. >>Hello. Welcome back to the cubes coverage here live in San Francisco, California. I'm John furrier, host of the cubes cube coverage of AWS summit 2022 here in San Francisco. We're all the developers of the bay area at Silicon valley. And of course, AWS summit in New York city is coming up in the summer. We'll be there as well. SF and NYC cube coverage. Look for us. Of course, reinforcing Boston and re Mars with the whole robotics AI thing, all coming together. Lots of coverage stay with us today. We've got a great guest from Deibel VC. John Skoda, founding partner, entrepreneurial venture is a venture firm. Your next act, welcome to the cube. Good to see you. >>Good to see you, Matt. I feel like it's been forever since we've been able to do something in person. Well, >>I'm glad you're here because we run into each other all the time. We've known each other for over a decade. Um, >><affirmative>, it's been at least 10 years now, >>At least 10 years more. And we don't wanna actually go back as frees back, uh, the old school web 1.0 days. But anyway, we're in web three now. So we'll get to that in >>Second. We, we are, it's a little bit of a throwback to the path though, in my opinion, >><laugh>, it's all the same. It's all distributed computing and software. We ran each other in cube con you're investing in a lot of tech startup founders. Okay. This next level, next gen entrepreneurs have a new makeup and it's software. It's hardcore tech in some cases, not hardcore tech, but using software is take old something old and make it better, new, faster. <laugh>. So tell us about Deibel what's the firm. I know you're the founder, uh, which is cool. What's going on. Explain >>What you're doing. I mean, you remember I'm a recovering entrepreneur, right? So of course I, I, I, >>No, you're never recovering. You're always entrepreneur >>Always, but we are also always recovering. So I, um, started my first company when I was 24. If you remember, before there was Facebook and friends, there was instant messaging. People were using that product at work every day, they were creating a security vulnerability between their network and the outside world. So I plugged that hole and built an instant messaging firewall. It was my first company. The company was called, I am logic and we were required by Symantec. Uh, then spent 12 years investing in the next generation of our companies, uh, early investor in open source companies and cloud companies and spent a really wonderful 12 years, uh, at a firm called NEA. So I, I feel like my whole life I've been either starting enterprise software companies or helping founders start enterprise software companies. And I'll tell you, there's never been a better time than right now to start enter price software company. >>So, uh, the passion for starting a new firm was really a recognition that founders today that are starting in an enterprise software company, they, they tend to be, as you said, a more technical founder, right? Usually it's a software engineer or a builder mm-hmm <affirmative>, uh, they are building products that are serving a slightly different market than what we've traditionally seen in enterprise software. Right? I think traditionally we've seen it buyers or CIOs that have agendas and strategies, which, you know, purchased software that has traditionally bought and sold tops down. But, you know, today I think the most successful enterprise software companies are the ones that are built more bottoms up and have more technical early opts. And generally speaking, they're free to use. They're free to try. They're very commonly community source or open source companies where you have a large technical community that's supporting them. So there's a, there's kind of a new normal now I think in great enterprise software. And it starts with great technical founders with great products and great and emotions. And I think there's no better place to, uh, service those people than in the cloud and uh, in, in your community. >>Well, first of all, congratulations, and by the way, you got a great pedigree and great background, super smart admire of your work and your, and, and your founding, but let's face it. Enterprise is hot because digital transformation is all companies. The is no, I mean, consumer is enterprise. Now everything is what was once a niche. No, I won't say niche category, but you know, not for the faint of heart, you know, investors, >>You know, it's so funny that you say that enterprise is hot because you, and I feel that way now. But remember, like right now, there's also a giant tech in VC conference in Miami <laugh> it's covering cryptocurrencies and FCS and web three. So I think beauty is definitely in the eye of the beholder <laugh> but no, I, I will tell you, >>Ts is one big enterprise, cuz you gotta have imutability you got performance issues. You have, I IOPS issues. Well, and, >>And I think all of us here that are, uh, maybe students of history and have been involved in, open in the cloud would say that we're, you know, much of what we're doing is, uh, the predecessors of the web web three movement. And many of us I think are contributors to the web three movement. >>The hype is definitely that three. >>Yeah. But, but >>You know, for >>Sure. Yeah, no, but now you're taking us further east to Miami. So, uh, you know, look, I think, I, I think, um, what is unquestioned with the case now? And maybe it's, it's more obvious the more time you spend in this world is this is the fastest growing part of enterprise software. And if you include cloud infrastructure and cloud infrastructure spend, you know, it is by many men over, uh, 500 billion in growing, you know, 20 to 30% a year. So it it's a, it's a just incredibly fast, >>Let's getting, let's get into some of the cultural and the, the shifts that are happening, cuz again, you, you have the luxury of being in enterprise when it was hard, it's getting easier and more cooler. I get it and more relevant, but it's also the hype of like the web three, for instance. But you know, uh, um, um, the CEO snowflake, okay. Has wrote a book and Dave Valenti and I were talking about it and uh, Frank Luman has says, there's no playbooks. We always ask the CEOs, what's your playbook. And he's like, there's no playbook, situational awareness, always Trump's playbooks. So in the enterprise playbook, oh, higher direct sales force and SAS kind of crushed the, at now SAS is being redefined, right. So what is SAS? Is snowflake a SAS or is that a platform? So again, new unit economics are emerging, whole new situation, you got web three. So to me there's a cultural shift, the young entrepreneurs, the, uh, user experience, they look at Facebook and say, ah, you know, they own all my data. You know, we know that that cliche, um, they, you know, the product. So as this next gen, the gen Z and the millennials come in and our customers and the founders, they're looking at things a little bit differently and the tech better. >>Yeah. I mean, I mean, I think we can, we can see a lot of commonalities across all successful startups and the overall adoption of technology. Uh, and, and I would tell you, this is all one big giant revolution. I call it the user driven revolution. Right. It's the rise of the user. Yeah. And you might say product like growth is currently the hottest trend in enterprise software. It's actually user like growth, right. They're one in the same. So sometimes people think the product, uh, is what is driving. You >>Just pull the >>Product through. Exactly, exactly. And so that's that I, that I think is really this revolution that you see, and, and it does extend into things like cryptocurrencies and web three and, you know, sort of like the control that is taken back by the user. Um, but you know, many would say that, that the origins of this movement maybe started with open source where users were, are contributors, you know, contributors, we're users and looking back decades and seeing how it, how it fast forward to today. I think that's really the trend that we're all writing and it's enabling these end users. And these end users in our world are developers, data engineers, cybersecurity practitioners, right. They're really the users. And they're really the, the beneficiaries and the most, you know, kind of valued people in >>This. I wanna come back to the data engineers in a second, but I wanna make a comment and get your reaction to, I have a, I'm a GenXer technically, so for not a boomer, but I have some boomer friends who are a little bit older than me who have, you know, experienced the sixties. And I've, I've been staying on the cube for probably about eight years now that we are gonna hit a digital hippie revolution, meaning a rebellion against in the sixties was rebellion against the fifties and the man and, you know, summer of love. That was a cultural differentiation from the other one other group, the predecessors. So we're kind of having that digital moment now where it's like, Hey boomers, Hey people, we're not gonna do that anymore. We hate how you organize shit. >>Right. But isn't this just technology. I mean, isn't it, isn't it like there used to be the old adage, like, you know, you would never get fired for buying IBM, but now it's like, you obviously probably would get fired if you bought IBM. And I mean, it's just like the, the, I think, I think >>It's the main for days, those renegades were breaking into Stanford, starting the home brew club. So what I'm trying to get at is that, do you see the young cultural revolution also, culturally, just, this is my identity NFTs to me speak volumes about my, I wanna associate with NFTs, not single sign on. Well, >>Absolutely. And, and I think like, I think you're hitting on something, which is like this convergence of, of, you know, societal trends with technology trends and how that manifests in our world is yes. I think like there is unquestionably almost a religion around the way in which a product is built. Right. And we can use open source, one example of that religion. Some people will say, look, I'll just never try a product in the cloud if it's not open source. Yeah. I think cloud, native's another example of that, right? It's either it's, you know, it either is cloud native or it's not. And I think a lot of people will look at a product and say, look, you know, you were not designed in the cloud era. Therefore I just won't try you. And sometimes, um, like it or not, it's a religious decision, right? It's, it's something that people just believe to be true almost without, uh, necessarily. I mean >>The decision making, let me ask you this next question. As a VC. Now you look at pitch, well, you've made a VC for many years, but you also have the founder, uh, entrepreneurial mindset, but you can get empathize with the founders. You know, hustle is a big part of the, that first founder check, right? You gotta convince someone to part with their ch their money and the first money in which you do a lot of is about believing in the person. So fing, so you make, it is hard. Now you, the data's there, you either have it cloud native, you either have the adaption or traction. So honesty is a big part of that pitch. You can't fake it. Oh, >>AB absolutely. You know, there used to be this concept of like the persona of an entrepreneur, right. And the persona of the entrepreneur would be, you know, somebody who was a great salesperson or somebody who tell a great story. You, I still think that that's important, right? It still is a human need for people to believe in narratives and stories. But having said that you're right, the proof is in the pudding, right? At some point you click download and you try the product and it does what it says it it's gonna do, or it doesn't, or it either stands up to the load test or it doesn't. And so I, I feel like in this new economy that we live in, it's a shift from maybe the storytellers and the creators to, to the builders, right. The people that know how to build great product. And in some ways the people that can build great product yeah. Stand out from the crowd. And they're the ones that can build communities around their products. And, you know, in some ways can, um, you know, kind of own more of the narrative because their products exactly >>The volume back to the user led growth. >>Exactly. And it's the religion of, I just love your product. Right. And I, I, I, um, Doug song was the founder of du security used to say, Hey, like, you know, the, the really like in today's world of like consumption based software, the user is only gonna give you 90 seconds to figure out whether or not you're a company that's easy to do business with. Right. And so you can say, and do all the things that you want about how easy you are to work with. But if the product isn't easy to install, if it's not easy to try, if it's not, if, if the, you know, it's gotta speak to >>The, speak to the user, but let me ask a question now that the people watching who are maybe entrepreneurial entrepreneur, um, masterclass here is in session. So I have to ask you, do you prefer, um, an entrepreneur to come in and say, look at John. Here's where I'm at. Okay. First of all, storytelling's fine. Whether you're an extrovert or introvert, have your style, sell the story in a way that's authentic, but do you, what do you prefer to say? Here's where I'm at? Look, I have an idea. Here's my traction. I think here's my MVP prototype. I need help. Or do you wanna just see more stats? What's the, what's the preferred way that you like to see entrepreneurs come in and engage, engage? >>There's tons of different styles, man. I think the single most important thing that every founder should know is that we, we don't invest in what things are today. We invest in what we think something will become. Right. And I think that's why we all get up in the morning and try to build something different, right? It's that we see the world a different way. We want it to be a different way, and we wanna work every single moment of the day to try to make that vision a reality. So I think the more that you can show people where you want to be, the more likely somebody is gonna align with your vision and, and want to invest in you and wanna be along for the ride. So I, I wholeheartedly believe in showing off what you got today, because eventually we all get down to like, where are we and what are we gonna do together? But, um, no, I >>Show >>The path. I think the single most important thing for any founder and VC relationship is that they have the same vision, uh, have the same vision. You can, you can get through bumps in the road, you can get through short term spills. You can all sorts of things in the middle of the journey can happen. Yeah. But it doesn't matter as much if you share the same long term vision, >>Don't flake out and, and be fashionable with the latest trends because it's over before you can get there. >>Exactly. I think many people that, that do what we do for a living will say, you know, ultimately the future is relatively easy to predict, but it's the timing that's impossible to predict. So you, you know, you sort of have to balance the, you know, we, we know that the world is going this way and therefore we're gonna invest a lot of money to try to make this a reality. Uh, but sometimes it happens in six months. Sometimes it takes six years is sometimes like 16 years. >>Uh, what's the hottest thing in enterprise that you see the biggest wave that people should pay attention to that you're looking at right now with Desel partners, Tebel dot your site. What's the big wave. What's your big >>Wave. There, there's three big trends that we invest in. And they're the, they're the only things we do day in, day out. One is the explosion and open source software. So I think many people think that all software is unquestionably moving to an open source model in some form or another yeah. Tons of reasons to debate whether or not that is gonna happen and on what timeline happening >>Forever. >>But it is, it is accelerating faster than we've ever seen. So I, I think it's, it's one big, massive wave that we continue to ride. Um, second is the rise of data engineering. Uh, I think data engineering is in and of itself now, a category of software. It's not just that we store data. It's now we move data and we develop applications on data. And, uh, I think data is in and of itself as big of a, a market as any of the other markets that we invest in. Uh, and finally, it's the gift that keeps on giving. I've spent my entire career in it. We still feel that security is a market that is under invested. It is, it continues to be the place where people need to continue to invest and spend more money. Yeah. Uh, and those are the three major trends that we run >>And security, you think we all need a dessert do over, right? I mean, do we need a do over in security or is what's the core problem? I, >>I, I keep using this word underinvested because I think it's the right way to think about the problem. I think if you, I think people generally speaking, look at cyber security as an add-on. Yeah. But if you think about it, the whole economy is moving online. And so in, in some ways like security is core to protecting the digital economy. And so it's, it shouldn't be an afterthought, right? It should be core to what everyone is doing. And that's why I think relative to the trillions of dollars that are at stake, uh, I believe the market size for cybersecurity is around 150 billion. And it still is a fraction of what we're, what >>We're and security even boom is booming now. So you get the convergence of national security, geopolitics, internet digital >>That's right. You mean arguably, right? I mean, arguably again, it's the area of the world that people should be spending more time and more money given what to stake. >>I love your thesis. I gotta, I gotta say, you gotta love your firm. Love. You're doing we're big supporters of your mission. Congratulations on your entrepreneurial venture. And, uh, we'll be, we'll be talking and maybe see a Cub gone. Uh, >>Absolutely. >>Certainly EU maybe even north America's in Detroit this year. >>Huge fan of what you guys are doing here. Thank you so much for having me on >>The show. Guess bell VC Johnson here on the cube. Check him out. Founder for founders here on the cube, more coverage from San Francisco, California. After the short break, stay with us. Everyone. Welcome to the queue here. Live in San Francisco, California for AWS summit, 2022 we're live we're back with the events. Also we're virtual. We got hybrid all kinds of events. This year, of course, 80% summit in New York city is happening this summer. We'll be there with the cube as well. I'm John. Again, John host of the cube got a great guest here. Justin Coby owner and CEO of innovative solutions. Their booth is right behind us. Justin, welcome to the cube. >>Thank you. Thank you for having me. >>So we're just chatting, uh, uh, off camera about some of the work you're doing. You're the owner of and CEO. Yeah. Of innovative. Yeah. So tell us a story. What do you guys do? What's the elevator pitch. >>Yeah. <laugh> so the elevator pitch is we are, uh, a hundred percent focused on small to midsize businesses that are moving into the cloud or have already moved to the cloud and really trying to understand how to best control, cost, security, compliance, all the good stuff, uh, that comes along with it. Um, exclusively focused on AWS and, um, you know, about 110 people, uh, based in Rochester, New York, that's where our headquarters is, but now we have offices down in Austin, Texas up in Toronto, uh, key Canada, as well as Chicago. Um, and obviously in New York, uh, you know, the, the business was never like this, uh, five years ago, um, founded in 1989, made the decision in 2018 to pivot and go all in on the cloud. And, uh, I've been a part of the company for about 18 years, bought the company about five years ago and it's been a great ride. It >>It's interesting. The manages services are interesting with cloud cause a lot of the heavy liftings done by AWS. So we had Matt on your team on earlier talking about some of the edge stuff. Yeah. But you guys are a managed cloud service. You got cloud advisory, you know, the classic service that's needed, but the demands coming from cloud migrations and application modernization and obviously data is a huge part of it. Huge. How is this factoring into what you guys do and your growth cuz you guys are the number one partner on the SMB side for edge. Yeah. For AWS, you got results coming in. Where's the, where's the forcing function. What's the pressure point. What's the demand like? >>Yeah. It's a great question. Every CEO I talk to, that's a small to midsize business. They're trying to understand how to leverage technology. It better to help either drive a revenue target for their own business, uh, help with customer service as so much has gone remote now. And we're all having problems or troubles or issues trying to hire talent. And um, you know, tech ISNT really at the, at the forefront and the center of that. So most customers are coming to us and they're like, listen, we gotta move to the cloud or we move some things to cloud and we want to do that better. And um, there's this big misnomer that when you move to the cloud, you gotta automatically modernize. Yeah. And what we try to help as many customers understand as possible is lifting and shifting, moving the stuff that you maybe currently have OnPrem and a data center to the cloud first is a first step. And then, uh, progressively working through a modernization strateg, always the better approach. And so we spend a lot of time with small to midsize businesses who don't have the technology talent on staff to be able to do >>That. Yeah. They want get set up. But then the dynamic of like latency is huge. We're seeing that edge product is a big part of it. This is not a one-off happening around everywhere. It is. And it's not, it's manufacturing, it's the physical plant or location >>Literally. >>And so, and you're seeing more IOT devices. What's that like right now from a challenge and problem statement standpoint, are the customers, not staff, is the it staff kind of old school? Is it new skills? What's the core problem you guys solve >>In the SMB space? The core issue nine outta 10 times is people get enamored with the latest and greatest. And the reality is not everything that's cloud based. Not all cloud services are the latest and greatest. Some things have been around for quite some time and are hardened solutions. And so, um, what we try to do with technology staff that has traditional on-prem, uh, let's just say skill sets and they're trying to move to a cloud-based workload is we try to help those customers through education and through some practical, let's just call it use case. Um, whether that's a proof of concept that we're doing or whether we're gonna migrate a small workload over, we try to give them the confidence to be able to not, not necessarily go it alone, but to, to, to have the, uh, the Gusto and to really have the, um, the, the opportunity to, to do that in a wise way. Um, and what I find is that most CEOs that I talk to, yeah, they're like, listen, the end of the day, I'm gonna be spending money in one place or another, whether that's OnPrem or in the cloud. I just want to know that I'm doing that in a way that helps me grow as quickly as possible status quo. I think every, every business owner knows that COVID taught us anything that status quo is, uh, is, is no. No. >>Good. How about factoring in the, the agility and speed equation? Does that come up a lot? It >>Does. I think, um, I, there's also this idea that if, uh, if we do a deep dive analysis and we really take a surgical approach to things, um, we're gonna be better off. And the reality is the faster you move with anything cloud based, the better you are. And so there's this assumption that we gotta get it right the first time. Yeah. In the cloud, if you start down your journey in one way and you realize midway that it's not the right, let's just say the right place to go. It's not like buying a piece of iron that you put in the closet and now you own it in the cloud. You can turn those services on and off. It's gives you a much higher density for making decisions and failing >>Forward. Well actually shutting down the abandoning the projects that early and not worrying about it, you got it. I mean, most people don't abandon cause like, oh, I own it. >>Exactly. And >>They get, they get used to it. Like, and then they wait too long. >>That's exactly. Yeah. >>Frog and boiling water as we used to say. So, oh, it's a great analogy. So I mean, this is a dynamic that's interesting. I wanna get more thoughts on it because like I'm a, if I'm a CEO of a company, like, okay, I gotta make my number. Yeah. I gotta keep my people motivated. Yeah. And I gotta move faster. So this is where you, I get the whole thing. And by the way, great service, um, professional services in the cloud right now are so hot because so hot, you can build it and then have option optionality. You got path decisions, you got new services to take advantage of. It's almost too much for customers. It is. I mean, everyone I talked to at reinvent, that's a customer. Well, how many announcements did am jazzy announce or Adam, you know, the 5,000 announcement or whatever. They do huge amounts. Right. Keeping track of it all. Oh, is huge. So what's the, what's the, um, the mission of, of your company. How does, how do you talk to that alignment? Yeah. Not just processes. I can get that like values as companies, cuz they're betting on you and your people. >>They are, they are, >>What's the values. >>Our mission is, is very simple. We want to help every small to midsize business leverage the power of the cloud. Here's the reality. We believe wholeheartedly. This is our vision that every company is going to become a technology company. So we go to market with this idea that every customer's trying to leverage the power of the cloud in some way, shape or form, whether they know it or don't know it. And number two, they're gonna become a tech company in the process of that because everything is so tech-centric. And so when you talk about speed and agility, when you talk about the, the endless options and the endless permutations of solutions that a customer can buy in the cloud, how are you gonna ask a team of one or two people in your, or it department to make all those decisions going it alone or trying to learn it as you go, it only gets you so far working with a partner. >>I'll just give you some perspective. We work with about a thousand small to midsize business customers. More than 50% of those customers are on our managed services. Meaning they know that we have their back Andre or the safety net. So when a customer is saying, all right, I'm gonna spend a couple thousand dollars a month in the cloud. They know that that bill, isn't gonna jump to $10,000 a month going in alone. Who's there to help protect that. Number two, if you have a security posture and let's just say you're high profile and you're gonna potentially be more vulnerable to security attack. If you have a partner, that's all offering you some managed services. Now you, again, you've got that backstop and you've got those services and tooling. We, we offer, um, seven different products, uh, that are part of our managed services that give the customer the tooling, that for them to go out and buy on their own for a customer to go out today and go buy a new Relic solution on their own. It, it would cost 'em a fortune. If >>Training alone would be insane, a factor and the cost. Yes, absolutely. Opportunity cost is huge, >>Huge, absolutely enormous training and development. Something. I think that is often, you know, it's often overlooked technologists. Typically they want to get their skills up. Yeah. They, they love to get the, the stickers and the badges and the pins, um, at innovative in 2018, when, uh, when we made the decision to go all in on the club, I said to the organization, you know, we have this idea that we're gonna pivot and be aligned with AWS in such a way that it's gonna really require us all to get certified. My executive assistant at the time looks at me. She said, even me, I said, yeah, even you, why can't you get certified? Yeah. And so we made, uh, a conscious decision. It wasn't requirement and still isn't today to make sure everybody in the company has the opportunity to become certified. Even the people that are answering the phones at the front desk >>And she could be running the Kubernetes clusters. I love it. It's amazing. >>But I'll tell you what, when that customer calls and they have a real Kubernetes issue, she'll be able to assist and get >>The right people involved. And that's a cultural factor that you guys have. So, so again, this is back to my whole point about SMBs and businesses in general, small en large, it staffs are turning over the gen Z and millennials are in the workforce. They were provisioning top of rack switches. Right. First of all. And so if you're a business, there's also the, I call the build out, um, uh, return factor, ROI piece. At what point in time as an owner or SMB, do I get the ROI? Yeah. I gotta hire a person to manage it. That person's gonna have five zillion job offers. Yep. Uh, maybe who knows? Right. I got cybersecurity issues. Where am I gonna find a cyber person? Yeah. A data compliance. I need a data scientist and a compliance person. Right. Maybe one and the same. Right. Good luck. Trying to find a data scientist. Who's also a compliance person. Yep. And the list goes on. I can just continue. Absolutely. I need an SRE to manage the, the, uh, the sock report and we can pen test. Right. >>Right. >>These are, these are >>Critical issues. This >>Is just like, these are the table stakes. >>Yeah. And, and every, every business owner's thinking about. So that's, >>That's what, at least a million in bloating, if not three or more Just to get that going. Yeah. Then it's like, where's the app. Yeah. So there's no cloud migration. There's no modernization on the app side though. Yeah. No. And nevermind AI and ML. That's >>Right. That's right. So to try to go it alone, to me, it's hard. It it's incredibly difficult. And, and the other thing is, is there's not a lot of partners, so the partner, >>No one's raising their hand boss. I'll >>Do all that >>Exactly. In it department. >>Exactly. >>Like, can we just call up, uh, you know, <laugh> our old vendor. That's >>Right. <laugh> right. Our old vendor. I like it, but that's so true. I mean, when I think about how, if I was a business owner, starting a business to today and I had to build my team, um, and the amount of investment that it would take to get those people skilled up and then the risk factor of those people now having the skills and being so much more in demand and being recruited away, that's a real, that's a real issue. And so how you build your culture around that is, is very important. And it's something that we talk about every, with every one of our small to midsize business. >>So just, I want to get, I want to get your story as CEO. Okay. Take us through your journey. You said you bought the company and your progression to, to being the owner and CEO of innovative award winning guys doing great. Uh, great bet on a good call. Yeah. Things are good. Tell your story. What's your journey? >>It's real simple. I was, uh, was a sophomore at the Rochester Institute of technology in 2003. And, uh, I knew that I, I was going to school for it and I, I knew I wanted to be in tech. I didn't know what I wanted to do, but I knew I didn't wanna code or configure routers and switches. So I had this great opportunity with the local it company that was doing managed services. We didn't call it at that time innovative solutions to come in and, uh, jump on the phone and dial for dollars. I was gonna cold call and introduce other, uh, small to midsize businesses locally in Rochester, New York go to Western New York, um, who innovative was now. We were 19 people at the time. And I came in, I did an internship for six months and I loved it. I learned more in those six months that I probably did in my first couple of years at, uh, at R I T long story short. >>Um, for about seven years, I worked, uh, to really help develop, uh, sales process and methodology for the business so that we could grow and scale. And we grew to about 30 people. And, um, I went to the owners at the time in 2010 and I was like, Hey, I'm growing the value of this business. And who knows where you guys are gonna be another five years? What do you think about making me an owner? And they were like, listen, you got long ways before you're gonna be an owner, but if you stick it out in your patient, we'll, um, we'll work through a succession plan with you. And I said, okay, there were four other individuals at the time that we're gonna also buy the business with >>Me. And they were the owners, no outside capital, >>None zero, well, 2014 comes around. And, uh, the other folks that were gonna buy into the business with me that were also working at innovative for different reasons. They all decided that it wasn't for them. One started a family. The other didn't wanna put capital in. Didn't wanna write a check. Um, the other had a real big problem with having to write a check. If we couldn't make payroll, I'm like, well, that's kind of like if we're owners, we're gonna have to like cover that stuff. <laugh> so >>It's called the pucker factor. >>Exactly. So, uh, I sat down with the CEO in early 2015, and, uh, we made the decision that I was gonna buy the three partners out, um, go through an earn out process, uh, coupled with, uh, an interesting financial strategy that wouldn't strap the business, cuz they care very much. The company still had the opportunity to keep going. So in 2016 I bought the business, um, became the sole owner. And, and at that point we, um, we really focused hard on what do we want this company to be? We had built this company to this point. Yeah. And, uh, and by 2018 we knew that pivoting all going all in on the cloud was important for us and we haven't looked back. >>And at that time, the proof points were coming clearer and clearer 2012 through 15 was the early adopters, the builders, the startups and early enterprises. Yes. The capital ones of the world. Exactly the, uh, and those kinds of big enterprises. The game don't, won't say gamblers, but ones that were very savvy. The innovators, the FinTech folks. Yep. The hardcore glass eating enterprises >>Agreed, agreed to find a small to midsize business, to migrate completely to the cloud as, as infrastructure was considered. That just didn't happen as often. Um, what we were seeing were a lot of our small to midsize business customers, they wanted to leverage cloud based backup, or they wanted to leverage a cloud for disaster recovery because it lent itself. Well, early days, our most common cloud customer though, was the customer that wanted to move messaging and collaboration. The, the Microsoft suite to the cloud and a lot of 'em dipped their toe in the water. But by 2017 we knew infrastructure was around the corner. Yeah. And so, uh, we only had two customers on eight at the time. Um, and we, uh, we, we made the decision to go all in >>Justin. Great to have you on the cube. Thank you. Let's wrap up. Uh, tell me the hottest product that you have. Is it migrations? Is the app modernization? Is it data? What's the hot product and then put a plug in for the company. Awesome. >>So, uh, there's no question. Every customer is looking to migrate workloads and try to figure out how to modernize for the future. We have very interesting, sophisticated yet elegant funding solutions to help customers with the cash flow, uh, constraints that come along with those migrations. So any SMB that's thinking about migrating to the cloud, they should be talking innovative solutions. We know how to do it in a way that allows those customers not to be cash strapped and gives them an opportunity to move forward in a controlled, contained way so that they can modernize. >>So like insurance, basically for them not insurance class in the classic sense, but you help them out on the, on the cash exposure. >>Absolutely. We are known for that and we're known for being creative with those customers, empathetic to where they are in their journey. And >>That's the cloud upside is all about doubling down on the variable wind. That's right. Seeing the value and doubling down on it. Absolutely not praying for it. Yeah. <laugh> all right, Justin. Thanks for coming on. You really appreciate it. Thank >>You very much for having >>Me. Okay. This is the cube coverage here live in San Francisco, California for AWS summit, 2022. I'm John for your host. Thanks for watching with back with more great coverage for two days after this short break >>Live on the floor in San Francisco for 80 west summit, I'm John ferry, host of the cube here for the next two days, getting all the action we're back in person. We're at AWS reinvent a few months ago. Now we're back events are coming back and we're happy to be here with the cube, bringing all the action. Also virtual, we have a hybrid cube, check out the cube.net, Silicon angle.com for all the coverage. After the event. We've got a great guest ticketing off here. Matthew Park, director of solutions, architecture with innovation solutions. The booth is right here. Matthew, welcome to the cube. >>Thank you very much. I'm glad >>To be here. So we're back in person. You're from Tennessee. We were chatting before you came on camera. Um, it's great to have to be back through events. >>It's amazing. This is the first, uh, summit I've been to and what two, three years. >>It's awesome. We'll be at the, uh, New York as well. A lot of developers and a big story this year is as developers look at cloud going distributed computing, you got on premises, you got public cloud, you got the edge. Essentially the cloud operations is running everything dev sec ops, everyone kind of sees that you got containers, you got Kubernetes, you got cloud native. So the, the game is pretty much laid out. Mm. And the edge is with the actions you guys are number one, premier partner at SMB for edge. >>That's right. >>Tell us about what you guys doing at innovative and, uh, what you do. >>That's right. Uh, so I'm the director of solutions architecture. Uh, me and my team are responsible for building out the solutions that are around, especially the edge public cloud out for us edge is anything outside of an AWS availability zone. Uh, we are deploying that in countries that don't have AWS infrastructure in region. They don't have it. Uh, give >>An example, >>Uh, example would be Panama. We have a customer there that, uh, needs to deploy some financial tech data and compute is legally required to be in Panama, but they love AWS and they want to deploy AWS services in region. Uh, so they've taken E EKS anywhere. We've put storage gateway and, uh, snowball, uh, in region inside the country and they're running their FinTech on top of AWS services inside Panama. >>You know, what's interesting, Matthew is that we've been covering Aw since 2013 with the cube about their events. And we watched the progression and jazzy was, uh, was in charge and then became the CEO. Now Adam Slosky is in charge, but the edge has always been that thing they've been trying to, I don't wanna say, trying to avoid, of course, Amazon would listen to customers. They work backwards from the customers. We all know that. Uh, but the real issue was they were they're bread and butters EC two and S three. And then now they got tons of services and the cloud is obviously successful and seeing that, but the edge brings up a whole nother level. >>It does >>Computing. It >>Does. >>That's not central lies in the public cloud. Now they got regions. So what is the issue with the edge what's driving? The behavior. Outpost came out as a reaction to competitive threats and also customer momentum around OT, uh, operational technologies. And it merging. We see with the data at the edge, you got five GM having. So it's pretty obvious, but there was a slow transition. What was the driver for the <affirmative> what's the driver now for edge action for AWS >>Data is the driver for the edge. Data has gravity, right? And it's pulling compute back to where the customer's generating that data and that's happening over and over again. You said it best outpost was a reaction to a competitive situation. Whereas today we have over fit 15 AWS edge services, and those are all reactions to things that customers need inside their data centers on location or in the field like with media companies. >>Outpost is interesting. We always used to riff on the cube, uh, cuz it's basically Amazon in a box, pushed in the data center, uh, running native, all the stuff, but now cloud native operations are kind of become standard. You're starting to see some standard Deepak sings group is doing some amazing work with open source Rauls team on the AI side, obviously, uh, you got SW who's giving the keynote tomorrow. You got the big AI machine learning big part of that edge. Now you can say, okay, outpost, is it relevant today? In other words, did outpost do its job? Cause EKS anywhere seems to be getting a lot of momentum. You see low the zones, the regions are kicking ass for Amazon. This edge piece is evolving. What's your take on EKS anywhere versus say outpost? >>Yeah, I think outpost did its job. It made customers that were looking at outpost really consider, do I wanna invest in this hardware? Do I, do I wanna have, um, this outpost in my data center, do I wanna manage this over the long term? A lot of those customers just transitioned to the public cloud. They went into AWS proper. Some of those customers stayed on prem because they did have use cases that were, uh, not a good fit for outpost. They weren't a good fit. Uh, in the customer's mind for the public AWS cloud inside an availability zone. Now what's happening is as AWS is pushing these services out and saying, we're gonna meet you where you are with 5g. We're gonna meet you where you are with wavelength. We're gonna meet you where you are with EKS anywhere. Uh, I think it has really reduced the amount of times that we have conversations about outposts and it's really increased. We can deploy fast. We don't have to spin up outpost hardware. We can go deploy EKS anywhere in your VMware environment and it's increasing the speed of adoption >>For sure. So you guys are making a lot of good business decisions around managed cloud service. Innovative does that. You have the cloud advisory, the classic professional services for the specific edge piece and, and doing that outside of the availability zones and regions for AWS, um, customers in, in these new areas that you're helping out are they want cloud, like they want to have modernization a modern applications. Obviously they got data machine learning and AI, all part of that. What's the main product or, or, or gap that you're filling for AWS, uh, outside of their available ability zones or their regions that you guys are delivering. What's the key is it. They don't have a footprint. Is it that it's not big enough for them? What's the real gap. What's why, why are you so successful? >>So what customers want when they look towards the cloud is they want to focus on, what's making them money as a business. They wanna focus on their applications. They want focus on their customers. So they look towards AWS cloud and say, AWS, you take the infrastructure. You take, uh, some of the higher layers and we'll focus on our revenue generating business, but there's a gap there between infrastructure and revenue generating business that innovative slides into, uh, we help manage the AWS environment. We help build out these things in local data centers for 32 plus year old company, we have traditional on-premises people that know about deploying hardware that know about deploying VMware to host EKS anywhere. But we also have most of our company totally focused on the AWS cloud. So we're filling that gap in helping deploy these AWS services, manage them over the long term. So our customers can go to just primarily and totally focusing on their revenue generating business. >>So basically you guys are basically building AWS edges, >>Correct? >>For correct companies, correct? Mainly because the, the needs are there, you got data, you got certain products, whether it's, you know, low latency type requirements, right. And then they still work with the regions, right. It's all tied together, right. Is that how it works? Right. >>And, and our customers, even the ones in the edge, they also want us to build out the AWS environment inside the availability zone, because we're always gonna have a failback scenario. If we're gonna deploy FinTech in the Caribbean, we're gonna talk about hurricanes and gonna talk about failing back into the AWS availability zones. So innovative is filling that gap across the board, whether it be inside the AWS cloud or on the AWS edge. >>All right. So I gotta ask you on the, since you're at the edge in these areas, I won't say underserved, but developing areas where now have data, you have applications that are tapping into that, that requirement. It makes total sense. We're seeing across the board. So it's not like it's, it's an outlier it's actually growing. Yeah. There's also the crypto angle. You got the blockchain. Are you seeing any traction at the edge with blockchain? Because a lot of people are looking at the web three in these areas like Panama, you mentioned FinTech in, in the islands. There are a lot of, lot of, lot of web three happening. What's your, what's your view on the web three world right now, relative >>To we, we have some customers actually deploying crypto, especially, um, especially in the Caribbean. I keep bringing the Caribbean up, but it's, it's top of my mind right now we have customers that are deploying crypto. A lot of, uh, countries are choosing crypto underly parts of their central banks. Yeah. Um, so it's, it's up and coming. Uh, I, I have some, you know, personal views that, that crypto is still searching for a use case. Yeah. And, uh, I think it's searching a lot and, and we're there to help customers search for that use case. Uh, but, but crypto, as a, as a tech technology, um, lives really well on the AWS edge. Yeah. Uh, and, and we're having more and more people talk to us about that. Yeah. And ask for assistance in the infrastructure because they're developing new cryptocurrencies every day. Yeah. It's not like they're deploying Ethereum or anything specific. They're actually developing new currencies and, and putting them out there on it's >>Interesting. And I mean, first of all, we've been doing crypto for many, many years. We have our own little, um, you know, projects going on. But if you look talk to all the crypto people that say, look, we do a smart contract, we use the blockchain. It's kind of over a lot of overhead. It's not really their technical already, but it's a cultural shift, but there's underserved use cases around use of money, but they're all using the blockchain, just for this like smart contracts for instance, or certain transactions. And they go into Amazon for the database. Yeah. <laugh> they all don't tell anyone we're using a centralized service, but what happened to decent centralized. >>Yeah. And that's, and that's the conversation performance. >>Yeah. >>And, and it's a cost issue. Yeah. And it's a development issue. Um, so I think more and more as, as some of these, uh, currencies maybe come up, some of the smart contracts get into, uh, they find their use cases. I think we'll start talking about how does that really live on, on AWS and, and what does it look like to build decentralized applications, but with AWS hardware and services. >>Right. So take me through a, a use case of a customer, um, Matthew around the edge. Okay. So I'm a customer, pretend I'm a customer, Hey, you know, I'm, we're in an underserved area. I want to modernize my business. And I got my developers that are totally peaked up on cloud. Um, but we've identified that it's just a lot of overhead latency issues. I need to have a local edge and serve my a and I also want all the benefits of the cloud. So I want the modernization and I wanna migrate to the cloud for all those cloud benefits and the good this of the cloud. What's the answer. Yeah. >>Uh, big thing is, uh, industrial manufacturing, right? That's, that's one of the best use cases, uh, inside industrial manufacturing, we can pull in many of the AWS edge services we can bring in, uh, private 5g, uh, so that all the, uh, equipment inside that, that manufacturing plant can be hooked up. They don't have to pay huge overheads to deploy 5g it's, uh, better than wifi for the industrial space. Um, when we take computing down to that industrial area, uh, because we wanna do pre-procesing on the data. Yeah. We want to gather some analytics. We deploy that with, uh, regular commercially available hardware running VMware, and we deploy EKS anywhere on that. Uh, inside of that manufacturing plant, uh, we can do pre-processing on things coming out of the, uh, the robotics that depending on what we're manufacturing, right. Uh, and then we can take the, those refined analytics and for very low cost with maybe a little bit longer latency transmit those back, um, to the AWS availability zone, the, the standard >>For data lake or whatever, >>To the data lake. Yeah. Data Lakehouse, whatever it might be. Um, and we can do additional data science on that once it gets to the AWS cloud. Uh, but I'll lot of that, uh, just in time business decisions, just in time, manufacturing decisions can all take place on an AWS service or services inside that manufacturing plant. And that's, that's one of the best use cases that we're >>Seeing. And I think, I mean, we've been seeing this on the queue for many, many years, moving data around is very expensive. Yeah. But also compute going of the data that saves that cost yep. On the data transfer also on the benefits of the latency. So I have to ask you, by the way, that's standard best practice now for the folks watching don't move the data unless you have to. Um, but those new things are developing. So I wanna ask you, what new patterns are you seeing emerging once this new architecture's in place? Love that idea, localize everything right at the edge, manufacture, industrial, whatever the use case, retail, whatever it is. Right. But now what does that change in the, in the core cloud? There's a, there's a system element here. Yeah. What's the new pattern. There's >>Actually an organizational element as well, because once you have to start making the decision, do I put this compute at the point of use or do I put this compute in the cloud? Uh, now you start thinking about where business decisions should be taking place. Uh, so not only are you changing your architecture, you're actually changing your organization because you're thinking, you're thinking about a dichotomy you didn't have before. Uh, so now you say, okay, this can take place here. Uh, and maybe, maybe this decision can wait. Yeah. Uh, and then how do I visualize that? By >>The way, it could be a bot tube doing the work for management. Yeah. <laugh> exactly. You got observability going, right. But you gotta change the database architecture in the back. So there's new things developing. You've got more benefit. There >>Are, there are. And, and we have more and more people that, that want to talk less about databases and want to talk more about data lakes because of this. They want to talk more about out. Customers are starting to talk about throwing away data, uh, you know, for the past maybe decade. Yeah. It's been store everything. And one day we will have a data science team that we hire in our organization to do analytics on this decade of data. And well, >>I mean, that's, that's a great point. We don't have time to drill into, maybe we do another session on this, but the one pattern we're seeing of the past year is that throwing away data's bad, even data lakes that so-called turn into data swamps, actually, it's not the case. You look at data, brick, snowflake, and other successes out there. And even time series data, which may seem irrelevant efforts over actually matters when people start retraining their machine learning algorithms. Yep. So as data becomes code, as we call it in our last showcase, we did a whole whole event on this. The data's good in real time and in the lake. Yeah. Because the iteration of the data feeds the machine learning training. Things are getting better with the old data. So it's not throw it away. It's not just business better. Yeah. There's all kinds of new scale. >>There are. And, and we have, uh, many customers that are running pay Toby level. Um, they're, they're essentially data factories on, on, uh, on premises, right? They're, they're creating so much data and they're starting to say, okay, we could analyze this, uh, in the cloud, we could transition it. We could move Aytes of data to the AWS cloud, or we can run, uh, computational workloads on premises. We can really do some analytics on this data transition, uh, those high level and sort of raw analytics back to AWS run 'em through machine learning. Um, and we don't have to transition 10, 12 petabytes of data into AWS. >>So I gotta end the segment on a, on a kind of a, um, fun note. I was told to ask you about your personal background, OnPrem architect, Aus cloud, and skydiving instructor. <laugh> how does that all work together? What tell, what does this mean? Yeah. >>Uh, you >>Jumped out a plane and got a job. You got a customer to jump out >>Kind of. So I was, you jumped out. I was teaching having, uh, before I, before I started in the cloud space, this was 13, 14 years ago. I was a, I still am a sky. I instructor, uh, I was teaching skydiving and I heard out of the corner of my ear, uh, a guy that owned an MSP that was lamenting about, um, you know, storing data and, and how his customers are working. And he can't find an enough people to operate all these workloads. So I walked over and said, Hey, this is, this is what I went to school for. Like, I'd love to, you know, uh, I was living in a tent in the woods, teaching skydiving. I was like, I'd love to not live in a tent in the woods. So, uh, uh, I started and the first day there, uh, we had a, a discussion, uh, EC two had just come out <laugh> and, uh, like, >>This is amazing. >>Yeah. And so we had this discussion, we should start moving customers here. And, uh, and that totally revolutionized that business, um, that, that led to, uh, that that guy actually still owns a skydiving airport. But, um, but through all of that, and through being in on premises, migrated me and myself, my career into the cloud, and now it feels like, uh, almost, almost looking back and saying, now let's take what we learned in the cloud and, and apply those lessons and those services tore >>It's. So it's such a great story, you know, was gonna, you know, you know, the whole, you know, growth mindset pack your own parachute, you know, uh, exactly. You know, the cloud in the early days was pretty much will the shoot open. Yeah. It was pretty much, you had to roll your own cloud at that time. And so, you know, you, you jump on a plane, you gotta make sure that parachute is gonna open. >>And so was Kubernetes by the way, 2015 or so when, uh, when that was coming out, it was, I mean, it was, it was still, and maybe it does still feel like that to some people. Right. But, uh, it was, it was the same kind of feeling that we had in the early days of AWS, the same feeling we have when we >>It's now with you guys, it's more like a tandem jump. Yeah. You know, but, but it's a lot of, lot of this cutting edge stuff, like jumping out of an airplane. Yeah. You got the right equipment. You gotta do the right things. Exactly. >>Right. >>Yeah. Thanks for coming. You really appreciate it. Absolutely great conversation. Thanks for having me. Okay. The cubes here live in San Francisco for eight of us summit. I'm John for host of the cube. Uh, we'll be at a summit in New York coming up in the summer as well. Look up for that. Look up this calendar for all the cube, actually@thecube.net. We'll right back with our next segment after this break. >>Okay. Welcome back everyone to San Francisco live coverage here, we're at the cube a be summit 2022. We're back in person. I'm John fury host of the cube. We'll be at the eighties summit in New York city this summer, check us out then. But right now, two days in San Francisco, getting all the coverage what's going on in the cloud, we got a cube alumni and friend of the cube, my dos car CEO, investor, a Sierra, and also an investor in a bunch of startups, angel investor. Gonna do great to see you. Thanks for coming on the cube. Good to see you. Good to see you. Cool. How are you? Good. >>How hello you. >>So congratulations on all your investments. Uh, you've made a lot of great successes, uh, over the past couple years, uh, and your company raising, uh, some good cash as Sarah. So give us the update. How much cash have you guys raised? What's the status of the company product what's going on? >>First of all, thank you for having me. We're back to be business with you, never after to see you. Uh, so is a company started around four years back. I invested with a few of the investors and now I'm the CEO there. We have raised close to a hundred million there. The investors are people like Norwes Menlo ventures, coastal ventures, Ram Shera, and all those people, all well known guys. And Beckel chime Paul me Mayard web. So whole bunch of operating people and, uh, Silicon valley VCs are involved >>And has it gone? >>It's going well. We are doing really well. We are going almost 300% year over year. Uh, for last three years, the space ISRA is going after is what I call the applying AI for customer service. It operations, it help desk, uh, the same place I used to work at ServiceNow. We are partners with ServiceNow to take, how can we argument for employees and customers, Salesforce, and service now to take you to the next stage? Well, >>I love having you on the cube, Dave and I, Dave LAN as well loves having you on too, because you not only bring the entrepreneurial CEO experience, you're an investor. You're like a, you're like a guest analyst. <laugh> >>You know, who does >>You, >>You >>Get the call fund to talk to you though. You >>Get the commentary, your, your finger in the pulse. Um, so I gotta ask you obviously, AI and machine learning, machine learning AI, or you want to phrase it. Isn't every application. Now, AI first, uh, you're seeing a lot of that going on. You're starting to see companies build the modern applications at the top of the stack. So the cloud scale has hit. We're seeing cloud scale. You predicted that we talked about in the cube many times. Now you have that past layer with a lot more services and cloud native becoming a standard layer. Containerizations growing Docker just raised a hundred million on a $2 billion valuation back from the dead after they pivoted from enterprise services. So open source developers are booming. Um, where's the action. I mean, is there data control plan? Emerging AI needs data. There's a lot of challenges around this. There's a lot of discussions and a lot of companies being funded, observability there's 10 billion observability companies. Data is the key. This is what's your end on this. What's your take. >>Yeah, look, I think I'll give you the few that I see right from my side. Obviously data is very clear. So the things that rumor system of recorded you and me talked about the next layer is called system of intelligence. That's where the AI will play. Like we talk cloud native, it'll be called AI. NA AI enable is a new buzzword and using the AI for customer service. It, you talk about observability. I call it, AIOps applying AOPs for good old it operation management, cloud management. So you'll see the AOPs applied for whole list of, uh, application from observability doing the CMDB, predicting the events insurance. So I see a lot of work clicking for AIOps and AI services. What used to be desk with ServiceNow BMC GLA you see a new ALA emerging as a system of intelligence. Uh, the next would be is applying AI with workflow automation. So that's where you'll see a lot of things called customer workflows, employee workflows. So think of what UI path automation, anywhere ServiceNow are doing, that area will be driven with AI workflows. So you, you see AI going >>Off is RPA. A company is AI, is RPA a feature of something bigger? Or can someone have a company on RPA UI S one will be at their event this summer? Um, is it a product company? I mean, or I mean, RPA is, should be embedded in everything. It's a >>Feature. It is very good point. Very, very good thinking. So one is, it's a category for sure. Like, as we thought, it's a category, it's an area where RPA may change the name. I call it much more about automation, workflow automation, but RPA and automation is a category. Um, it's a company also, but that automation should be embedded in every area. Yeah. Like we call cloud NATO and AI. They it'll become automation data. Yeah. And that's your, thinking's >>Interesting me. I think about the, what you're talking about what's coming to mind is I'm kinda having flashbacks to the old software model of middleware. Remember at middleware, it was very easy to understand it was middleware. It sat between two things and then the middle, and it was software abstraction. Now you have all kinds of workflows, abstractions everywhere. So multiple databases, it's not a monolithic thing. Right? Right. So as you break that down, is this the new modern middleware? Because what you're talking about is data workflows, but they might be siloed. Are they integrated? I mean, these are the challenges. This is crazy. What's the, >>So remember the databases became called polyglot databases. Yeah. I call this one polyglot automation. So you need automation as a layer, as a category, but you also need to put automation in every area like you, you were talking about, it should be part of service. Now it should be part of ISRA. Like every company, every Salesforce. So that's why you see it MuleSoft and sales buying RPA companies. So you'll see all the SaaS companies, cloud companies having an automation as a core. So it's like how you have a database and compute and sales and networking. You'll also have an automation as a layer embedded inside every stack. >>All right. So I wanna shift gears a little bit and get your perspective on what's going on behind us. You can see, uh, behind, as you got the XPO hall got, um, we're back to vis, but you got, you know, AMD, Clum, Dynatrace data, dog, innovative, all the companies out here that we know, we interview them all. They're trying to be suppliers to this growing enterprise market. Right? Okay. But now you also got the entrepreneurial equation. Okay. We're gonna have John Sado on from Deibel later. He's a former NEA guy and we always talk to Jerry, Jen, we know all the, the VCs, what does the startups look like? What does the state of the, in your mind, cause you, I know you invest the entrepreneurial founder situation. Cloud's bigger. Mm-hmm <affirmative> global, right? Data's part of it. You mentioned data's code. Yes. Basically. Data's everything. What's it like for a first an entrepreneur right now who's starting a company. What's the white space. What's the attack plan. How do they get in the market? How do they engineer everything? >>Very good. So I'll give it to, uh, two things that I'm seeing out there. Remember leaders of Amazon created the startups 15 years back. Everybody built on Amazon now, Azure and GCP. The next layer would be people don't just build on Amazon. They're going to build it on top of snow. Flake companies are snowflake becomes a data platform, right? People will build on snowflake, right? So I see my old boss playing ment, try to build companies on snowflake. So you don't build it just on Amazon. You build it on Amazon and snowflake. Snowflake will become your data store. Snowflake will become your data layer, right? So I think that's the next level of companies trying to do that. So if I'm doing observability AI ops, if I'm doing next level of Splunk SIM, I'm gonna build it on snowflake, on Salesforce, on Amazon, on Azure, et cetera. >>It's interesting. You know, Jerry Chan has it put out a thesis a couple months ago called castles in the cloud where your moat is, what you do in the cloud. Not necessarily in the, in the IP. Um, Dave LAN and I had last re invent, coined the term super cloud, right? It's got a lot of traction and a lot of people throwing, throwing mud at us, but we were, our thesis was, is that what Snowflake's doing? What Goldman S Sachs is doing. You're starting to see these clouds on top of clouds. So Amazon's got this huge CapEx advantage. And guys like Charles Fitzgeral out there, who we like was kind of hitting on us saying, Hey, you guys terrible, they didn't get him. Like, yeah, I don't think he gets it, but that's a whole, can't wait to debate him publicly on this. <laugh> cause he's cool. Um, but snowflake is on Amazon. Yes. Now they say they're on Azure now. Cause they've got a bigger market and they're public, but ultimately without a AWS snowflake doesn't exist and, and they're reimagining the data warehouse with the cloud, right? That's the billion dollar opportunity. >>It is. It is. They both are very tight. So imagine what Frank has done at snowflake and Amazon. So if I'm a startup today, I want to build everything on Amazon where possible whatever is, I cannot build. I'll make the pass layer room. The middle layer pass will be snowflake. So I cannot build it on snowflake. I can use them for data layer if I really need to size, I'll build it on force.com Salesforce. Yeah. Right. So I think that's where you'll >>See. So basically the, the, if you're an entrepreneur, the, the north star in terms of the, the outcome is be a super cloud. It >>Is, >>That's the application on another big CapEx ride, the CapEx of AWS or cloud, >>And that reduce your product development, your go to market and you get use the snowflake marketplace to drive your engagement. Yeah. >>Yeah. How are, how is Amazon and the clouds dealing with these big whales, the snowflakes of the world? I mean, I know they got a great relationship, uh, but snowflake now has to run a company they're public. Yeah. So, I mean, I'll say, I think got Redshift. Amazon has got Redshift. Um, but snowflake big customer. The they're probably paying AWS big, >>I >>Think big bills too. >>So John, very good. Cause it's like how Netflix is and Amazon prime, right. Netflix runs on Amazon, but Amazon has Amazon prime that co-option will be there. So Amazon will have Redshift, but Amazon is also partnering with the snowflake to have native snowflake data warehouse as a data layer. So I think depending on the use case you have to use each of the above, I think snowflake is here for a long term. Yeah. Yeah. So if I'm building an application, I want to use snowflake then writing from stats. >>Well, I think that comes back down to entrepreneurial hustle. Do you have a better product? Right. Product value will ultimately determine it as long as the cloud doesn't, you know, foreclose your value. That's right. With some sort of internal hack, but I've think, I think the general question that I have is that I think it's okay to have a super cloud like that because the rising tide is still happening at some point, when does the rising tide stop and the people shopping up their knives, it gets more competitive or is it just an infinite growth cycle? I >>Think it's growth. You call it closed skill you the word cloud scale. So I think look, cloud will continually agree, increase. I think there's as long as there more movement from on, uh, on-prem to the classical data center, I think there's no reason at this point, the rumor, the old lift and shift that's happening in like my business. I see people lift and shifting from the it operations, it helpless. Even the customer service service. Now the ticket data from BMCs CAS like Microfocus, all those workloads are shifted to the cloud, right? So cloud ticketing system is happening. Cloud system of record is happening. So I think this train has still a long way to go made. >>I wanna get your thoughts for the folks watching that are, uh, enterprise buyers are practitioners, not suppliers to the market. Feel free to text me or DMing. Next question is really about the buying side, which is if I'm a customer, what's the current, um, appetite for startup products. Cause you know, the big enterprises now and you know, small, medium, large, and large enterprise, they're all buying new companies cuz a startup can go from zero to relevant very quickly. So that means now enterprises are engaging heavily with startups. What's it like what's is there a change in order of magnitude of the relationship between the startup selling to, or growing startup selling to an enterprise? Um, have you seen changes there? I mean seeing some stuff, but why don't we get your thoughts on that? What it >>Is you, if I remember going back to our 2007 or eight, when I used to talk to you back then when Amazon started very small, right? We are an Amazon summit here. So I think enterprises on the average used to spend nothing with startups. It's almost like 0% or one person today. Most companies are already spending 20, 30% with startups. Like if I look at a C I will line our business, it's gone. Yeah. Can it go more? I think it can double in the next four, five years. Yeah. Spending on the startups. Yeah. >>And check out, uh, AWS startups.com. That's a site that we built for the startup community for buyers and startups. And I want to get your reaction because I, I reference the URL causes like there's like a bunch of companies we've been promoting because the solution that startups have actually are new stuff. Yes. It's bending, it's shifting left for security or using data differently or um, building tools and platforms for data engineering. Right. Which is a new persona that's emerging. So you know, a lot of good resources there. Um, and goes back now to the data question. Now, getting back to your, what you're working on now is what's your thoughts around this new, um, data engineering persona, you mentioned AIOps, we've been seeing AIOps IOPS booming and that's creating a new developer paradigm that's right. Which we call coin data as code data as code is like infrastructure as code, but it's for data, right? It's developing with data, right? Retraining machine learnings, going back to the data lake, getting data to make, to do analysis, to make the machine learning better post event or post action. So this, this data engineers like an SRE for data, it's a new, scalable role we're seeing. Do you see the same thing? Do you agree? Um, do you disagree or can you share? >>I, a lot of thoughts that Fu I see the AI op solutions in the futures should be not looking back. I need to be like we are in San Francisco bay. That means earthquake prediction. Right? I want AOPs to predict when the outages are gonna happen. When there's a performance issue. I don't think most AOPs vendors have not gone there yet. Like I spend a lot of time with data dog, Cisco app dynamic, right? Dynatrace, all this solution will go future towards predict to pro so solution with AOPs. But what you bring up a very good point on the data side. I think like we have a Amazon marketplace and Amazon for startup, there should be data exchange where you want to create for AOPs and AI service that customers give the data, share the data because we thought the data algorithms are useless. I can give the best algorithm, but I gotta train them, modify them, make them better, make them better. Yeah. And I think their whole data exchange is the industry has not thought through something you and me talk many times. Yeah. Yeah. I think the whole, that area is very important. >>You've always been on, um, on the Vanguard of data because, uh, it's been really fun. Yeah. >>Going back to big data days back in 2009, you know that >>Look at, look how much data bricks has grown. >>It is doubled. The key cloud >>Air kinda went private, so good stuff. What are you working on right now? Give a, give a, um, plug for what you're working on. You'll still investing. >>I do still invest, but look, I'm a hundred percent on ISRA right now. I'm the CEO there. Yeah. Okay. So right. ISRA is my number one baby right now. So I'm looking year that growing customers and my customers, or some of them, you like it's zoom auto desk, McAfee, uh, grand <inaudible>. So all the top customers, um, mainly for it help desk customer service. AIOps those are three product lines and going after enterprise and commercial deals. >>And when should someone buy your product? What's what's their need? What category is it? >>I think they look whenever somebody needs to buy the product is if you need AOP solution to predict, keep your lights on, predict ours. One area. If you want to improve employee experience, you are using a slack teams and you want to automate all your workflows. That's another value problem. Third is customer service. You don't want to hire more people to do it. Some of the areas where you want to scale your company, grow your company, eliminate the cost customer service, >>Great stuff, man. Doing great to see you. Thanks for coming on. Congratulations on the success of your company and your investments. Thanks for coming on the cube. Okay. I'm John fur here at the cube live in San Francisco for day one of two days of coverage of a us summit 2022. And we're gonna be at Aus summit in San, uh, in New York in the summer. So look for that on the calendar, of course, go to a us startups.com. That's a site for all the hot startups and of course the cube.net and Silicon angle.com. Thanks for watching. We'll be back more coverage after this short break. >>Okay. Welcome back everyone. This the cubes coverage here in San Francisco, California, a Davis summit, 2022, the beginning of the event season, as it comes back, little bit smaller footprint, a lot of hybrid events going on, but this is actually a physical event, a summit in new York's coming in the summer. We'll be two with the cube on the set. We're getting back in the Groove's psych to be back. We were at reinvent, uh, as well, and we'll see more and more cube, but you're gonna see a lot of virtual cube outta hybrid cube. We wanna get all those conversations, try to get more interviews, more flow going. But right now I'm excited to have Corey Quinn here on the back on the cube chief cloud economist with duck bill groove, he's the founder, uh, and chief content person always got great angles, fun comedy, authoritative Corey. Great to see you. Thank you. >>Thanks. Coming on. Sure is a lot of words to describe is shit posting, which is how I describe what I tend to do. Most days, >>Shit posting is an art form now. And if you look at mark, Andrew's been doing a lot of shit posting lately. All a billionaires are shit posting, but they don't know how to do it. They're >>Doing it right. There's something opportunity there. It's like, here's how to be even more obnoxious and incisive. It's honestly the most terrifying scenario for anyone is if I have that kind of budget to throw at my endeavors, it's like, I get excited with a nonsense I can do with a $20 gift card for an AWS credit compared to, oh well, if I could buy a mid-size island to begin doing this from, oh, then we're having fun. >>This shit posting trend. Interesting. I was watching a thread go on about, saw someone didn't get a job because of their shit posting and the employer didn't get it. And then someone on this side I'll hire the guy cuz I get that's highly intelligent shit posting. So for the audience that doesn't know what shit posting is, what, what is shitposting >>It's more or less talking about the world of enterprise technology, which even that sentence is hard to finish without falling asleep and toppling out of my chair in front of everyone on the livestream, but it's doing it in such a way that brings it to life that says the quiet part. A lot of the audience is thinking, but generally doesn't say either because they're polite or not a Jack ass or more prosaically are worried about getting fired for better or worse. I don't have that particular constraint, >>Which is why people love you. So let's talk about what you, what you think is, uh, worthy and not worthy in the industry right now, obviously, uh, Cuban coming up in Spain, which they're having a physical event, you see the growth of cloud native Amazon's evolving Atos, especially new CEO. Andy move on to be the chief of all. Amazon just saw him the cover of was it time magazine. Um, he's under a lot of stress. Amazon's changed. Invoice has changed. What's working. What's not, what's rising, what's falling. What's hot. What's not, >>It's easy to sit here and criticize almost anything. These folks do. They're they're effectively in a fishbowl, but I have trouble. Imagine the logistics, it takes to wind up handling the catering for a relatively downscale event like this one this year, let alone running a 1.7 million employee company having to balance all the competing challenges and pressures and the rest. I, I just can't fathom what it would be like to look at all of AWS. And it's, it's sprawling immense, the nominates our entire industry and say, okay, this is a good start, but I, I wanna focus on something with a broader remit. What is that? How do you even get into that position? And you can't win once you're there. All you can do is hold onto the tiger and hope you don't get mold. >>Well, there's a lot of force for good conversations. Seeing a lot of that going on, Amazon's trying to a, is trying to portray themselves, you know, the Pathfinder, you know, you're the pioneer, um, force for good. And I get that and I think that's a good angle as cloud goes mainstream. There's still the question of, we had a guy on just earlier, who was a skydiving instructor and we were joking about the early days of cloud. Like that was like skydiving, build a parachute open, you know, and now it's same kind of thing. As you move to edge, things are like reliable in some areas, but still new, new fringe, new areas. That's crazy. Well, >>Since the last time we've spoken, uh, Steve Schmidt is now the CISO for all of Amazon and his backfill replacement. The AWS CISO is CJ. Moses who as a hobby races, a as a semi-pro race car, our driver to my understanding, which either, I don't know what direction to take that in either. This is what he does to relax or ultimately, or ultimately it's. Huh? That, that certainly says something about risk assessment. I'm not entirely sure what, but okay. Either way, it sounds like more exciting. Like they >>Better have a replacement ready in case something goes wrong on the track, highly >>Available >>CSOs. I gotta say one of the things I do like in the recent trend is that the tech companies are getting into the formula one, which I was never a fan of until I watched that Netflix series. But when you look at the formula one, it's pretty cool. Cause it's got some tech angles, I get the whole data instrumentation thing, but the most coolest thing about formula, the one is they have these new rigs out. Yeah. Where you can actually race in e-sports with other people in pure simulation of the race car. You gotta get the latest and video graphics card, but it's basically a tricked out PC with amazing monitors and you have all the equipment of F1 and you're basically simulating racing. Oh, >>It's great too. And I can see the appeal of these tech companies getting it into it because these things are basically rocket shifts. When those cars go, like they're sitting there, we can instrument every last part of what is going on inside that vehicle. And then AWS crops up. And we can bill on every one of those dimensions too. And it's like slow down their hasty pudding one step at a time. But I do see the appeal. >>So I gotta ask you about, uh, what's going on in your world. I know you have a lot of great SA we've been following you in the queue for many, many years. Got a great newsletter. Check out Corey Quinn's newsletter, uh, screaming in the cloud program. Uh, you're on the cutting edge and you've got a great balance between really being snarky and, and, and really being delivering content. That's exciting, uh, for people, uh, with a little bit of an edge, um, how's that going? Uh, what's the blowback, any blowback late leads there been tick? What was, what are some of the things you're hearing from your audience, more Corey, more Corey. And then of course the, the PR team's calling you >>The weird thing about having an audience beyond a certain size is far and away as a landslide. The most common response I get is silence where it's hi, I'm emailing an awful lot of people at last week in AWS every week and okay. They not have heard me. It. That is not actually true. People just generally don't respond to email because who responds to email newsletters. That sounds like something, a lunatic might do same story with response to live streams and podcasts. It's like, I'm gonna call into that am radio show and give them a piece of my mind. People generally don't do that. >>We should do that. Actually. I think sure would call in. Oh, I, I >>Think >>I guarantee if we had that right now, people would call in and Corey, what do you think about X? >>Yeah. It not, everyone understands the full context of what I do. And in fact, increasingly few people do and that's fine. I, I keep forgetting that sometimes people do not see what I'm doing in the same light that I do. And that's fine. Blowback has been largely minimal. Honestly, I am surprised anything by how little I have gotten over the last five years of doing this, but it would be easier to dismiss me if I weren't generally. Right. When, okay, so you launch this new service and it seems pretty crappy to me cuz when I try and build something, it falls over and begs for help. And people might not like hearing that, but it's what customers are finding too. Yeah. I really am the voice of the customer. >>You know, I always joke with Dave Avante about how John Fort's always at, uh, um, reinvent getting the interview with jazzy now, Andy we're there, you're there. And so we have these rituals at the events. It's all cool. Um, one of the rituals I like about your, um, your content is you like to get on the naming product names. Um, and, and, and, and, and kind of goof on that. Now why I like is because I used to work at ETT Packard where they used to name things as like engineers, HP 1 0, 0 5, or we can't, we >>Have a new monitor. How are we gonna name it? Throw the wireless keyboard down the stairs again. And then there you go. Yeah. >>It's and the old joke at HP was if they, if they invented sushi, they'd say, yeah, we can't call sushi. It's cold, dead fish, but that's what it is. And so the joke was cold. Dead fish is a better name than sushi. So you know is fun. So what's the, what are the, how's the Amazon doing in there? Have they changed their naming, uh, strategy, uh, on some of their, their product >>They're going in different directions. When they named Aurora, they decided to explore a new theme of Disney princesses as they go down those paths. And some things are more descriptive. Some people are clearly getting bonus on number of words, they can shove into it. Like the better a service is the longer it's name. Like AWS systems manager, a session manager is a great one. I love the service ridiculous name. They have a systems manager, parameter store with is great. They have secrets manager, which does the same thing. It's two words less, but that one costs money in a way that systems manage through parameter store does not. It's fun. >>What's your, what's your favorite combination of acronyms >>Combination of you >>Got Ks. You got EMR, you got EC two. You got S three SQS. Well, RedShift's not an acronym. You got >>Gas is one of my personal favorites because it's either elastic block store or elastic bean stock, depending entirely on the context of the conversation, >>They still got bean stock or is that still >>Around? Oh, they never turn anything off. They're like the anti Google, Google turns things off while they're still building it. Whereas Amazon is like, wow, we built this thing in 2005 and everyone hates it. But while we certainly can't change it, now it has three customers on it, John. >>Okay. >>Simple BV still haunts our >>Dreams. I, I actually got an email on, I saw one of my, uh, servers, all these C twos were being deprecated and I got an email I'm like, I couldn't figure out. Why can you just like roll it over? Why, why are you telling me just like, gimme something else. Right. Okay. So let me talk about, uh, the other things I want to ask you is that like, okay, so as Amazon gets better in some areas where do they need more work? And you, your opinion, because obviously they're all interested in new stuff and they tend to like put it out there for their end to end customers. But then they've got ecosystem partners who actually have the same product. Yes. And, and this has been well documented. So it's, it's not controversial. It's just that Amazon's got a database Snowflake's got out database service. So, you know, Redshift, snowflake database is out there. So you've got this optician. Yes. How's that going? And what are you hearing about the reaction to any of that stuff? >>Depends on who you ask. They love to basically trot out a bunch of their partners who will say nice things about them. And it very much has heirs of, let's be honest, a hostage video, but okay. Cuz these companies do partner with Amazon and they cannot afford to rock the boat too far. I'm not partnered with anyone. I can say what I want. And they're basically restricted to taking away my birthday at worse so I can live with that. >>All right. So I gotta ask about multi-cloud cause obviously the other cloud shows are coming up. Amazon hated that word. Multi-cloud um, a lot of people are saying, you know, it's not a real good marketing word. Like multicloud sounds like, you know, root canal. Mm-hmm <affirmative> right. So is there a better description for multicloud? >>Multiple single >>Loves that term. Yeah. >>You're building in multiple single points of failure. Do it for the right reasons or don't do it as a default. I believe not doing it is probably the, the right answer. However, and if I were, if I were Amazon, I wouldn't want to talk about multi-cloud either as the industry leader, let's talk about other clouds, bad direction to go in from a market cap perspective. It doesn't end well for you, but regardless of what they want to talk about, or don't want to talk about what they say, what they don't say, I tune all of it out. And I look at what customers are doing and multi-cloud exists in a variety of some brilliant, some brain dead. It depends a lot on context. But my general response is when someone gets on stage from a company and tells me to do a thing that directly benefits their company. I am skeptical at best. Yeah. When customers get on stage and say, this is what we're doing because it solves problems. That's when I shut up and listen. >>Yeah. Cool. Awesome. Corey, I gotta ask you a question cause I know you we've been, you know, fellow journey mean in the, in the cloud journey, going to all the events and then the pandemic hit where now in the third year, who knows what it's gonna end, certainly events are gonna look different. They're gonna be either changing footprint with the virtual piece, new group formations community's gonna emerge. You've got a pretty big community growing and it's growing like crazy. What's the weirdest or coolest thing, or just big changes you've seen with the pan endemic, uh, from your perspective, cuz you've been in the you're in the middle of the whitewater rafting. You've seen the events you circle offline. You saw the online piece come in, you're commentating, you're calling balls and strikes in the industry. You got a great team developing over there. Duck bill group. What's the big aha moment that you saw with the pandemic. Weird, funny, serious, real in the industry and with customers what's >>Accessibility. Reinvent is a great example. When in the before times it's open to anyone who wants to attend, who >>Can pony. >>Hello and welcome back to the live cube coverage here in San Francisco, California, the cube live coverage. Two days, day two of a summit, 2022 Aish summit, New York city coming up in summer. We'll be there as well. Events are back. I'm the host, John fur, the Cub got great guest here. Johnny Dallas with Ze. Um, here is on the queue. We're gonna talk about his background. Uh, little trivia here. He was the youngest engineer ever worked at Amazon at the age. 17 had to get escorted into reinvent in Vegas cause he was underage <laugh> with security, all good stories. Now the CEO of company called Z know DevOps kind of focus, managed service, a lot of cool stuff, Johnny, welcome to the cube. >>Thanks John. Great. >>So tell a story. You were the youngest engineer at AWS. >>I was, yes. So I used to work at a company called Bebo. I got started very young. I started working when I was about 14, um, kind of as a software engineer. And when I, uh, it was about 16. I graduated out of high school early, um, working at this company Bebo, still running all of the DevOps at that company. Um, I went to reinvent in about 2018 to give a talk about some of the DevOps software I wrote at that company. Um, but you know, as many of those things were probably familiar with reinvent happens in a casino and I was 16. So was not able to actually go into the, a casino on my own. Um, so I'd have <inaudible> security as well as casino security escort me in to give my talk. >>Did Andy jazzy, was he aware of >>This? Um, you know, that's a great question. I don't know. <laugh> >>I'll ask him great story. So obviously you started a young age. I mean, it's so cool to see you jump right in. I mean, I mean you never grew up with the old school that I used to grew up in and loading package software, loading it onto the server, deploying it, plugging the cables in, I mean you just rocking and rolling with DevOps as you look back now what's the big generational shift because now you got the Z generation coming in, millennials on the workforce. It's changing like no one's putting and software on servers. Yeah, >>No. I mean the tools keep getting better, right? We, we keep creating more abstractions that make it easier and easier. When I, when I started doing DevOps, I could go straight into E two APIs. I had APIs from the get go and you know, my background was, I was a software engineer. I never went through like the CIS admin stack. I, I never had to, like you said, rack servers, myself. I was immediately able to scale. I was managing, I think 2,500 concurrent servers across every Ables region through software. It was a fundamental shift. >>Did you know what an SRE was at that time? >>Uh, >>You were kind of an SRE on >>Yeah, I was basically our first SRE, um, was familiar with the, with the phrasing, but really thought of myself as a software engineer who knows cloud APIs, not a SRE. All >>Right. So let's talk about what's what's going on now as you look at the landscape today, what's the coolest thing that's going on in your mind in cloud? >>Yeah, I think the, I think the coolest thing is, you know, we're seeing the next layer of those abstraction tools exist and that's what we're doing with Z is we've basically gone and we've, we're building an app platform that deploys onto your cloud. So if you're familiar with something like Carku, um, where you just click a GitHub repo, uh, we actually make it that easy. You click a GI hub repo and it will deploy on ALS using a AWS tools. So, >>Right. So this is Z. This is the company. Yes. How old's the company about >>A year and a half old now. >>All right. So explain what it does. >>Yeah. So we make it really easy for any software engineer to deploy on a AWS. It's not SREs. These are the actual application engineers doing the business logic. They don't really want to think about Yamo. They don't really want to configure everything super deeply. They want to say, run this API on S in the best way possible. We've encoded all the best practices into software and we set it up for you. Yeah. >>So I think the problem you're solving is that there's a lot of want be DevOps engineers. And then they realize, oh shit, I don't wanna do this. Yeah. And some people want to do it. They loved under the hood. Right. People love to have infrastructure, but the average developer needs to actually be as agile on scale. So that seems to be the problem you solve. Right? >>Yeah. We, we, we give way more productivity to each individual engineer, you know? >>All right. So let me ask you a question. So let me just say, I'm a developer. Cool. I build this new app. It's a streaming app or whatever. I'm making it up cube here, but let's just say I deploy it. I need your service. But what happens about when my customers say, Hey, what's your SLA? The CDN went down from this it's flaky. Does Amazon have, so how do you handle all that SLA reporting that Amazon provides? Cuz they do a good job with sock reports all through the console. But as you start getting into DevOps <affirmative> and sell your app, mm-hmm <affirmative> you have customer issues. How do you, how do you view that? Yeah, >>Well, I, I think you make a great point of AWS has all this stuff already. AWS has SLAs. AWS has contract. Aw has a lot of the tools that are expected. Um, so we don't have to reinvent the wheel here. What we do is we help people get to those SLAs more easily. So Hey, this is AWS SLA as a default. Um, Hey, we'll fix you your services. This is what you can expect here. Um, but we can really leverage S's reliability of you. Don't have to trust us. You have to trust ALS and trust that the setup is good there. >>Do you handle all the recovery or mitigation between, uh, identification say downtime for instance? Oh, the server's not 99% downtime. Uh, went down for an hour, say something's going on? And is there a service dashboard? How does it get what's the remedy? Do you have a, how does all that work? >>Yeah, so we have some built in remediation. You know, we, we basically say we're gonna do as much as we can to keep your endpoint up 24 7 mm-hmm <affirmative>. If it's something in our control, we'll do it. If it's a disc failure, that's on us. If you push bad code, we won't put out that new version until it's working. Um, so we do a lot to make sure that your endpoint stay is up, um, and then alert you if there's a problem that we can't fix. So cool. Hey S has some downtime, this thing's going on. You need to do this action. Um, we'll let you know. >>All right. So what do you do for fun? >>Yeah, so, uh, for, for fun, um, a lot of side projects. <laugh> uh, >>What's your side hustle right now. You got going on >>The, uh, it's >>A lot of tools playing tools, serverless. >>Yeah, painless. A lot of serverless stuff. Um, I think there's a lot of really cool WAM stuff as well. Going on right now. Um, I love tools is, is the truest answer is I love building something that I can give to somebody else. And they're suddenly twice as productive because of it. Um, >>It's a good feeling, isn't it? >>Oh yeah. There's >>Nothing like tools were platforms. Mm-hmm <affirmative>, you know, the expression, too many tools in the tool. She becomes, you know, tools for all. And then ultimately tools become platforms. What's your view on that? Because if a good tool works and starts to get traction, you need to either add more tools or start building a platform platform versus tool. What's your, what's your view on a reaction to that kind of concept debate? >>Yeah, it's a good question. Uh, we we've basically started as like a, a platform. First of we've really focused on these, uh, developers who don't wanna get deep into the DevOps. And so we've done all of the pieces of the stacks. We do C I C D management. Uh, we do container orchestration, we do monitoring. Um, and now we're, spliting those up into individual tools so they can be used. Awesome in conjunction more. >>All right. So what are some of the use cases that you see for your service? It's DevOps basically nano service DevOps. So people who want a DevOps team, do clients have a DevOps person and then one person, two people what's the requirements to run >>Z. Yeah. So we we've got teams, um, from no DevOps is kind of when they start and then we've had teams grow up to about, uh, five, 10 men DevOps teams. Um, so, you know, as is more infrastructure people come in because we're in your cloud, you're able to go in and configure it on top you're we can't block you. Uh, you wanna use some new AWS service. You're welcome to use that alongside the stack that we deploy >>For you. How many customers do you have now? >>So we've got about 40 companies that are using us for all of their infrastructure, um, kind of across the board, um, as well as >>What's the pricing model. >>Uh, so our pricing model is we, we charge basically similar to an engineering salary. So we charge a monthly rate. We have plans at 300 bucks a month, a thousand bucks a month, and then enterprise plan for >>The requirement scale. Yeah. So back into the people cost, you must have her discounts, not a fully loaded thing, is it? >>Yeah, there's a discounts kind of asking >>Then you pass the Amazon bill. >>Yeah. So our customers actually pay for the Amazon bill themselves. So >>Have their own >>Account. There's no margin on top. You're linking your, a analyst account in, um, got it. Which is huge because we can, we are now able to help our customers get better deals with Amazon. Um, got it. We're incentivized on their team to drive your costs down. >>And what's your unit main unit of economics software scale. >>Yeah. Um, yeah, so we, we think of things as projects. How many services do you have to deploy as that scales up? Um, awesome. >>All right. You're 20 years old now you not even can't even drink legally. <laugh> what are you gonna do when you're 30? We're gonna be there. >>Well, we're, uh, we're making it better, better, >>Better the old guy on the queue here. <laugh> >>I think, uh, I think we're seeing a big shift of, um, you know, we've got these major clouds. ALS is obviously the biggest cloud and it's constantly coming out with new services, but we're starting to see other clouds have built many of the common services. So Kubernetes is a great example. It exists across all the clouds and we're starting to see new platforms come up on top that allow you to leverage tools for multiple times. At the same time. Many of our customers actually have AWS as their primary cloud and they'll have secondary clouds or they'll pull features from other clouds into AWS, um, through our software. I think that's, I'm very excited by that. And I, uh, expect to be working on that when I'm 30. <laugh> awesome. >>Well, you gonna have a good future. I gotta ask you this question cuz uh, you know, I always, I was a computer science undergrad in the, in the, and um, computer science back then was hardcore, mostly systems OS stuff, uh, database compiler. Um, now there's so much compi, right? Mm-hmm <affirmative> how do you look at the high school college curriculum experience slash folks who are nerding out on computer science? It's not one or two things. You've got a lot of, lot of things. I mean, look at Python, data engineering and emerging as a huge skill. What's it, what's it like for college kids now and high school kids? What, what do you think they should be doing if you had to give advice to your 16 year old self back a few years ago now in college? Um, I mean Python's not a great language, but it's super effective for coding and the datas were really relevant, but it's, you've got other language opportunities you've got tools to build. So you got a whole culture of young builders out there. What should, what should people gravitate to in your opinion and stay away from or >>Stay away from? That's a good question. I, I think that first of all, you're very right of the, the amount of developers is increasing so quickly. Um, and so we see more specialization. That's why we also see, you know, these SREs that are different than typical application engineering. You know, you get more specialization in job roles. Um, I think if, what I'd say to my 16 year old self is do projects, um, the, I learned most of my, what I've learned just on the job or online trying things, playing with different technologies, actually getting stuff out into the world, um, way more useful than what you'll learn in kind of a college classroom. I think classroom's great to, uh, get a basis, but you need to go out and experiment actually try things. >>You know? I think that's great advice. In fact, I would just say from my experience of doing all the hard stuff and cloud is so great for just saying, okay, I'm done, I'm banning the project. Move on. Yeah. Cause you know, it's not gonna work in the old days. You have to build this data center. I bought all this, you know, people hang on to the old, you know, project and try to force it out there. Now you >>Can launch a project now, >>Instant gratification, it ain't working <laugh> or this is shut it down and then move on to something new. >>Yeah, exactly. Instantly you should be able to do that much more quickly. Right. So >>You're saying get those projects and don't be afraid to shut it down. Mm-hmm <affirmative> that? Do you agree with that? >>Yeah. I think it's ex experiment. Uh, you're probably not gonna hit it rich on the first one. It's probably not gonna be that idea is the genius idea. So don't be afraid to get rid of things and just try over and over again. It's it's number of reps >>That'll win. I was commenting online. Elon Musk was gonna buy Twitter, that whole Twitter thing. And someone said, Hey, you know, what's the, I go look at the product group at Twitter's been so messed up because they actually did get it right on the first time. And we can just a great product. They could never change it because people would freak out and the utility of Twitter. I mean, they gotta add some things, the added button and we all know what they need to add, but the product, it was just like this internal dysfunction, the product team, what are we gonna work on? Don't change the product so that you kind of have there's opportunities out there where you might get the lucky strike right outta the gate. Yeah. Right. You don't know. >>It's almost a curse too. It's you're not gonna hit curse Twitter. You're not gonna hit a rich the second time too. So yeah. >><laugh> Johnny Dallas. Thanks for coming on the cube. Really appreciate it. Give a plug for your company. Um, take a minute to explain what you're working on. What you're look looking for. You hiring funding. Customers. Just give a plug, uh, last minute and kind the last word. >>Yeah. So, um, John Dallas from Ze, if you, uh, need any help with your DevOps, if you're a early startup, you don't have DevOps team, um, or you're trying to deploy across clouds, check us out z.com. Um, we are actively hiring. So if you are a software engineer excited about tools and cloud, or you're interested in helping getting this message out there, hit me up. Um, find us on z.co. >>Yeah. LinkedIn Twitter handle GitHub handle. >>Yeah. I'm the only Johnny on a LinkedIn and GitHub and underscore Johnny Dallas underscore on Twitter. All right. Um, >>Johnny Dallas, the youngest engineer working at Amazon, um, now 20 we're on great new project here in the cube. Builders are all young. They're growing into the business. They got cloud at their, at their back it's tailwind. I wish I was 20. Again, this is a I'm John for your host. Thanks for watching. Thanks. >>Welcome >>Back to the cubes. Live coverage of a AWS summit in San Francisco, California events are back, uh, ADAS summit in New York cities. This summer, the cube will be there as well. Check us out there lot. I'm glad we have events back. It's great to have everyone here. I'm John furry host of the cube. Dr. Matt wood is with me cube alumni now VP of business analytics division of AWS. Matt. Great to see you. Thank >>You, John. Great to be here. >>Appreciate it. I always call you Dr. Matt wood, because Andy jazzy always says Dr. Matt, we >>Would introduce you on the he's the one and only the one and >>Only Dr. Matt wood >>In joke. I love it. >>Andy style. And I think you had walkup music too on, you know, >>Too. Yes. We all have our own personalized walk. >>So talk about your new role. I not new role, but you're running up, um, analytics, business or AWS. What does that consist of right now? >>Sure. So I work, I've got what I consider to be the one of the best jobs in the world. Uh, I get to work with our customers and, uh, the teams at AWS, uh, to build the analytics services that millions of our customers use to, um, uh, slice dice, pivot, uh, better understand their day data, um, look at how they can use that data for, um, reporting, looking backwards and also look at how they can use that data looking forward. So predictive analytics and machine learning. So whether it is, you know, slicing and dicing in the lower level of, uh Hado and the big data engines, or whether you're doing ETR with glue or whether you're visualizing the data in quick side or building models in SageMaker. I got my, uh, fingers in a lot of pies. >>You know, one of the benefits of, uh, having cube coverage with AWS since 2013 is watching the progression. You were on the cube that first year we were at reinvent 2013 and look at how machine learning just exploded onto the scene. You were involved in that from day one is still day one, as you guys say mm-hmm <affirmative>, what's the big thing now. I mean, look at, look at just what happened. Machine learning comes in and then a slew of services come in and got SageMaker became a hot seller, right outta the gate. Mm-hmm <affirmative> the database stuff was kicking butt. So all this is now booming. Mm-hmm <affirmative> that was the real generational changeover for <inaudible> what's the perspective. What's your perspective on, yeah, >>I think how that's evolved. No, I think it's a really good point. I, I totally agree. I think for machine machine learning, um, there was sort of a Renaissance in machine learning and the application of machine learning machine learning as a technology has been around for 50 years, let's say, but, uh, to do machine learning, right? You need like a lot of data, the data needs to be high quality. You need a lot of compute to be able to train those models and you have to be able to evaluate what those mean as you apply them to real world problems. And so the cloud really removed a lot of the constraints. Finally, customers had all of the data that they needed. We gave them services to be able to label that data in a high quality way. There's all the compute. You need to be able to train the models <laugh> and so where you go. >>And so the cloud really enabled this Renaissance with machine learning, and we're seeing honestly, a similar Renaissance with, uh, with data, uh, and analytics. You know, if you look back, you know, five, 10 years, um, analytics was something you did in batch, like your data warehouse ran a analysis to do, uh, reconciliation at the end of the month. And then was it? Yeah. And so that's when you needed it, but today, if your Redshift cluster isn't available, uh, Uber drivers don't turn up door dash deliveries, don't get made. It's analytics is now central to virtually every business and it is central to every virtually every business is digital transformation. Yeah. And be able to take that data from a variety of sources here, or to query it with high performance mm-hmm <affirmative> to be able to actually then start to augment that data with real information, which usually comes from technical experts and domain experts to form, you know, wisdom and information from raw data. That's kind of, uh, what most organizations are trying to do when they kind of go through this analytics journey. It's >>Interesting, you know, Dave LAN and I always talk on the cube, but out, you know, the future and, and you look back, the things we were talking about six years ago are actually happening now. Yeah. And it's not a, a, a, you know, hyped up statement to say digital transformation. It actually's happening now. And there's also times where we bang our fist on the table, say, I really think this is so important. And Dave says, John, you're gonna die on that hill <laugh>. >>And >>So I I'm excited that this year, for the first time I didn't die on that hill. I've been saying data you're right. Data as code is the next infrastructure as code mm-hmm <affirmative>. And Dave's like, what do you mean by that? We're talking about like how data gets and it's happening. So we just had an event on our 80 bus startups.com site mm-hmm <affirmative>, um, a showcase with startups and the theme was data as code and interesting new trends emerging really clearly the role of a data engineer, right? Like an SRE, what an SRE did for cloud. You have a new data engineering role because of the developer on, uh, onboarding is massively increasing exponentially, new developers, data science, scientists are growing mm-hmm <affirmative> and the, but the pipelining and managing and engineering as a system. Yeah. Almost like an operating system >>And as a discipline. >>So what's your reaction to that about this data engineer data as code, because if you have horizontally scalable data, you've gotta be open that's hard. <laugh> mm-hmm <affirmative> and you gotta silo the data that needs to be siloed for compliance and reasons. So that's got a very policy around that. So what's your reaction to data as code and data engineering and >>Phenomenon? Yeah, I think it's, it's a really good point. I think, you know, like with any, with any technology, uh, project inside an organization, you know, success with analytics or machine learning is it's kind of 50% technology and then 50% cultural. And, uh, you have often domain experts. Those are, could be physicians or drug experts, or they could be financial experts or whoever they might be got deep domain expertise. And then you've got technical implementation teams and it's kind of a natural often repulsive force. I don't mean that rudely, but they, they just, they don't talk the same language. And so the more complex the domain and the more complex the technology, the stronger that repulsive force, and it can become very difficult for, um, domain experts to work closely with the technical experts, to be able to actually get business decisions made. And so what data engineering does and data engineering is in some cases team, or it can be a role that you play. >>Uh, it's really allowing those two disciplines to speak the same language it provides. You can think of it as plumbing, but I think of it as like a bridge, it's a bridge between like the technical implementation and the domain experts. And that requires like a very disparate range of skills. You've gotta understand about statistics. You've gotta understand about the implementation. You've gotta understand about the, it, you've gotta understand and understand about the domain. And if you could pull all of that together, that data engineering discipline can be incredibly transformative for an organization, cuz it builds the bridge between those two >>Groups. You know, I was advising some, uh, young computer science students at the sophomore junior level, uh, just a couple weeks ago. And I told 'em, I would ask someone at Amazon, this questions I'll ask you since you're, you've been in the middle of of it for years, they were asking me and I was trying to mentor them on. What, how do you become a data engineer from a practical standpoint, uh, courseware projects to work on how to think, um, not just coding Python cause everyone's coding in Python mm-hmm <affirmative> but what else can they do? So I was trying to help them and I didn't really know the answer myself. I was just trying to like kind of help figure it out with them. So what is the answer in your opinion or the thoughts around advice to young students who want to be data engineers? Cuz data scientists is pretty clear in what that is. Yeah. You use tools, you make visualizations, you manage data, you get answers and insights and apply that to the business. That's an application mm-hmm <affirmative>, that's not the, you know, sta standing up a stack or managing the infrastructure. What, so what does that coding look like? What would your advice be to >>Yeah, I think >>Folks getting into a data engineering role. >>Yeah. I think if you, if you believe this, what I said earlier about like 50% technology, 50% culture, like the, the number one technology to learn as a data engineer is the tools in the cloud, which allow you to aggregate data from virtually any source into something which is incrementally more valuable for the organization. That's really what data engineering is all about. It's about taking from multiple sources. Some people call them silos, but silos indicates that the, the storage is kind of fungible or UND differentiated. That that's really not the case. Success requires you to really purpose built well crafted high performance, low cost engines for all of your data. So understanding those tools and understanding how to use 'em, that's probably the most important technical piece. Um, and yeah, Python and programming and statistics goes along with that, I think. And then the most important cultural part, I think is it's just curiosity. >>Like you want to be able to, as a data engineer, you want to have a natural curiosity that drives you to seek the truth inside an organization, seek the truth of a particular problem and to be able to engage, cuz you're probably, you're gonna have some choice as you go through your career about which domain you end up in, like maybe you're really passionate about healthcare. Maybe you're really just passionate about your transportation or media, whatever it might be. And you can allow that to drive a certain amount of curiosity, but within those roles, like the domains are so broad, you kind of gotta allow your curiosity to develop and lead, to ask the right questions and engage in the right way with your teams. So because you can have all the technical skills in the world, but if you're not able to help the team's truths seek through that curiosity, you simply won't be successful. >>We just had a guest on 20 year old, um, engineer, founder, Johnny Dallas, who was 16 when he worked at Amazon youngest engineer at >>Johnny Dallas is a great name by the that's fantastic. It's his real name? >>It sounds like a football player. Rockstar. I should call Johnny. I have Johnny Johnny cube. Uh it's me. Um, so, but he's young and, and he, he was saying, you know, his advice was just do projects. >>Yeah. That's get hands on. >>Yeah. And I was saying, Hey, I came from the old days though, you get to stand stuff up and you hugged onto the assets. Cause you didn't wanna kill the cause you spent all this money and, and he's like, yeah, with cloud, you can shut it down. If you do a project that's not working and you get bad data, no one's adopting it or you don't want like it anymore. You shut it down. Just something >>Else. Totally >>Instantly abandoned it. Move onto something new. >>Yeah. With progression. Totally. And it, the, the blast radius of, um, decisions is just way reduced, gone. Like we talk a lot about like trying to, you know, in the old world trying to find the resources and get the funding. And it's like, right. I wanna try out this kind of random idea that could be a big deal for the organization. I need 50 million in a new data center. Like you're not gonna get anywhere. You, >>You do a proposal working backwards, document >>Kinds, all that, that sort of stuff got hoops. So, so all of that is gone, but we sometimes forget that a big part of that is just the, the prototyping and the experimentation and the limited blast radius in terms of cost. And honestly, the most important thing is time just being able to jump in there, get fingers on keyboards, just try this stuff out. And that's why at AWS, we have part of the reason we have so many services because we want, when you get into AWS, we want the whole toolbox to be available to every developer. And so, as your ideas developed, you may want to jump from, you know, data that you have, that's already in a database to doing realtime data. Yeah. And then you can just, you have the tools there. And when you want to get into real time data, you don't just have kineses, but you have real time analytics and you can run SQL again, that data is like the, the capabilities and the breadth, like really matter when it comes to prototyping and, and >>That's culture too. That's the culture piece, because what was once a dysfunctional behavior, I'm gonna go off the reservation and try something behind my boss's back or cause now as a side hustle or fun project. Yeah. So for fun, you can just code something. Yeah, >>Totally. I remember my first Haddo project, I found almost literally a decommissioned set of servers in the data center that no one was using. They were super old. They're about to be literally turned off. And I managed to convince the team to leave them on for me for like another month. And I installed her DUP on them and like, got them going. It's like, that just seems crazy to me now that I, I had to go and convince anybody not to turn these service off, but what >>It was like for that, when you came up with elastic map produce, because you said this is too hard, we gotta make it >>Easier. Basically. Yes. <laugh> I was installing Haddo version, you know, beta nor 0.9 or whatever it was. It's like, this is really hard. This is really hard. >>We simpler. All right. Good stuff. I love the, the walk down memory lane and also your advice. Great stuff. I think culture's huge. I think. And that's why I like Adam's keynote to reinvent Adam. Lesky talk about path minds and trail blazers because that's a blast radius impact. Mm-hmm <affirmative> when you can actually have innovation organically just come from anywhere. Yeah, that's totally cool. Totally. Let's get into the products. Serverless has been hot mm-hmm <affirmative> uh, we hear a lot about EKS is hot. Uh, containers are booming. Kubernetes is getting adopted. There's still a lot of work to do there. Lambda cloud native developers are booming, serverless Lambda. How does that impact the analytics piece? Can you share the hot, um, products around how that translates? Sure, absolutely. Yeah, the SageMaker >>Yeah, I think it's a, if you look at kind of the evolution and what customers are asking for, they're not, you know, they don't just want low cost. They don't just want this broad set of services. They don't just want, you know, those services to have deep capabilities. They want those services to have as lower operating cost over time as possible. So we kind of really got it down. We got built a lot of muscle, lot of services about getting up and running and experimenting and prototyping and turning things off and turn turning them on and turning them off. And like, that's all great. But actually the, you really only most projects start something once and then stop something once. And maybe there's an hour in between, or maybe there's a year, but the real expense in terms of time and, and complexity is sometimes in that running cost. Yeah. And so, um, we've heard very loudly and clearly from customers that they want, that, that running cost is just undifferentiated to them and they wanna spend more time on their work and in analytics that is, you know, slicing the data, pivoting the data, combining the data, labeling the data, training their models, uh, you know, running inference against their models, uh, and less time doing the operational pieces. >>So is that why the servers focus is there? >>Yeah, absolutely. It, it dramatically reduces the skill required to run these, uh, workloads of any scale. And it dramatically reduces the UND differentiated, heavy lifting, cuz you get to focus more of the time that you would've spent on the operation on the actual work that you wanna get done. And so if you look at something just like Redshift serverless that we launched a reinvent, you know, there's a kind of a, we have a lot of customers that want to run like a, uh, the cluster and they want to get into the, the weeds where there is benefit. We have a lot of customers that say, you know, I there's no benefit for me though. I just wanna do the analytics. So you run the operational piece, you're the experts we've run. You know, we run 60 million instant startups every single day. Like we do this a lot. Exactly. We understand the operation. I >>Want the answers come on. So >>Just give the answers or just let, give me the notebook or just give the inference prediction. So today for example, we announced, um, you know, serverless inference. So now once you've trained your machine learning model, just, uh, run a few, uh, lines of code or you just click a few buttons and then yeah, you got an inference endpoint that you do not have to manage. And whether you're doing one query against that endpoint, you know, per hour or you're doing, you know, 10 million, but we'll just scale it on the back end. You >>Know, I know we got not a lot of time left, but I want, wanna get your reaction to this. One of the things about the data lakes, not being data swamps has been from what I've been reporting and hearing from customers is that they want to retrain their machine learning algorithm. They want, they need that data. They need the, the, the realtime data and they need the time series data, even though the time has passed, they gotta store in the data lake mm-hmm <affirmative>. So now the data lakes main function is being reusing the data to actually retrain. Yeah, >>That's >>Right. It worked properly. So a lot of, lot of postmortems turn into actually business improvements to make the machine learning smarter, faster. You see that same way. Do you see it the same way? Yeah, >>I think it's, I think it's really interesting. No, I think it's really interesting because you know, we talk it's, it's convenient to kind of think of analytics as a very clear progression from like point a point B, but really it's, you are navigating terrain for which you do not have a map and you need a lot of help to navigate that terrain. Yeah. And so, you know, being, having these services in place, not having to run the operations of those services, being able to have those services be secure and well governed, and we added PII detection today, you know, something you can do automatically, uh, to be able to use their, uh, any unstructured data run queries against that unstructured data. So today we added, you know, um, text extract queries. So you can just say, well, uh, you can scan a badge for example, and say, well, what's the name on this badge? And you don't have to identify where it is. We'll do all of that work for you. So there's a often a, it's more like a branch than it is just a, a normal, uh, a to B path, a linear path. Uh, and that includes loops backwards. And sometimes you gotta get the results and use those to make improvements further upstream. And sometimes you've gotta use those. And when you're downstream, you'll be like, ah, I remember that. And you come back and bring it all together. So awesome. It's um, it's, uh, uh, it's a wonderful >>Work for sure. Dr. Matt wood here in the queue. Got just take the last word and give the update. Why you're here. What's the big news happening that you're announcing here at summit in San Francisco, California, and update on the, the business analytics >>Group? Yeah, I think, you know, one of the, we did a lot of announcements in the keynote, uh, encouraged everyone to take a look at that. Uh, this morning was Swami. Uh, one of the ones I'm most excited about, uh, is the opportunity to be able to take, uh, dashboards, visualizations. We're all used to using these things. We see them in our business intelligence tools, uh, all over the place. However, what we've heard from customers is like, yes, I want those analytics. I want their visualization. I want it to be up to date, but you know, I don't actually want to have to go my tools where I'm actually doing my work to another separate tool to be able to look at that information. And so today we announced, uh, one click public embedding for quick side dashboards. So today you can literally, as easily as embedding a YouTube video, you can take a dashboard that you've built inside, quick site cut and paste the HTML, paste it into your application and that's it. That's all you have to do. It takes seconds and >>It gets updated in real time. >>Updated in real time, it's interactive. You can do everything that you would normally do. You can brand it like this is there's no power by quick site button or anything like that. You can change the colors, make it fit in perfectly with your, with your applications. So that's sitting incredibly powerful way of being able to take a, uh, an analytics capability that today sits inside its own little fiefdom and put it just everywhere. It's, uh, very transformative. >>Awesome. And the, the business is going well. You got the serverless and your tailwind for you there. Good stuff, Dr. Matt with thank you. Coming on the cube >>Anytime. Thank >>You. Okay. This is the cubes cover of eight summit, 2022 in San Francisco, California. I'm John host cube. Stay with us with more coverage of day two after this short break.
SUMMARY :
And I think there's no better place to, uh, service those people than in the cloud and uh, Well, first of all, congratulations, and by the way, you got a great pedigree and great background, super smart, You know, it's so funny that you say that enterprise is hot because you, and I feel that way now. Ts is one big enterprise, cuz you gotta have imutability you got performance issues. of history and have been involved in open source in the cloud would say that we're, you know, much of what we're doing is, Yeah. the more time you spend in this world is this is the fastest growing part I get it and more relevant <laugh> but there's also the hype of like the web three, for instance, but you know, I call it the user driven revolution. And so that's that I, that I think is really this revolution that you see, the sixties was rebellion against the fifties and the man and, you know, summer of love. like, you know, you would never get fired for buying IBM, but now it's like, you obviously probably would So what I'm trying to get at is that, do you see the young cultural revolution look, you know, you were not designed in the cloud era. You gotta convince someone to part with their ch their money and the first money in which you do a lot of it's And the persona of the entrepreneur would be, you know, so somebody who was a great salesperson or somebody who tell a great story, software, like the user is only gonna give you 90 seconds to figure out whether or not you're storytelling's fine with you an extrovert or introvert, have your style, sell the story in a way that's So I think the more that you can show in the road, you can get through short term spills. I think many people that, that do what we do for a living, we'll say, you know, What's the hottest thing in enterprise that you see the biggest wave that people should pay attention to that you're looking at And the they're the only things we do day in, Uh, and finally, it's the gift that keeps on giving. But if you think about it, the whole economy is moving online. So you get the convergence of national security, I mean, arguably again, it's the area of the world that people should be I gotta, I gotta say, you gotta love your firm. Huge fan of what you guys are doing here. Again, John host of the cube. Thank you for having me. What do you guys do? and obviously in New York, uh, you know, the business was never like this, How is this factoring into what you guys do and your growth cuz you moving the stuff that you maybe currently have OnPrem and a data center to the cloud first is a first step. manufacturing, it's the physical plant or location And you guys solve And the reality is not everything that's And the reality is the faster you move with anything cloud based, Well actually shutting down the abandoning, the projects that early, not worrying about it, And they get, they get used to it. I can get that like values as companies, cuz they're betting on you and your people. that a customer can buy in the cloud, how are you gonna ask a team of one or two people in If you have a partner that's offering you some managed services. I mean the cost. sure everybody in the company has the opportunity to become certified. Desk and she could be running the Kubernetes clusters. It's And that's a cultural factor that you guys have. There's no modernization on the app side. And the other thing is, is there's not a lot of partners, In the it department. I like it, And so how you build your culture around that is, is very important. You said you bought the company and We didn't call it at that time innovative solutions to come in and, And they were like, listen, you got long ways before you're gonna be an owner. Um, the other had a real big problem with having to write a check. So in 2016 I bought the business, um, became the sole owner. The capital ones of the world. The, the Microsoft suite to the cloud. Uh, tell me the hottest product that you have. funding solutions to help customers with the cash flow, uh, constraints that come along with those migrations. on the cash exposure. We are known for that and we're known for being creative with those customers and being empathetic And that's the cloud upside is all about doubling down on the variable win that's right. I'm John for your host. I'm John for host of the cube here for the next Thank you very much. We were chatting before you came on camera. This is the first, uh, summit I've been to, to in what two, three is running everything devs sec ops, everyone kind of sees that you got containers, you got Benet, Tell us about what you guys doing at innovative and, uh, what you do. Uh, so I'm the director of solutions architecture. We have a customer there that, uh, needs to deploy but the real issue was they were they're bread and butters EC two and S three. the data at the edge, you got five GM having. Data in is the driver for the edge. side, obviously, uh, you got SW who's giving the keynote tomorrow. And it's increasing the speed of adoption So you guys are making a lot of good business decisions around managed cloud service. You take the infrastructure, you got certain products, whether it's, you know, low latency type requirements, So innovative is filling that gap across the Because a lot of people are looking at the web three in these areas like Panama, you mentioned FinTech. I keep bringing the Caribbean up, but it's, it's top of my mind right now we have customers We have our own little, um, you know, I think we'll start talking about how does that really live on, So I'm a customer, pretend I'm a customer, Hey, you know, I'm, we're in an underserved area. That's, that's one of the best use cases, And that's, that's one of the best use cases that we're move the data unless you have to. Uh, so not only are you changing your architecture, you're actually changing your organization because you're But you gotta change the database architecture on the back. Uh, you know, for the past maybe decade. We don't have time to drill into, maybe we do another session this, but the one pattern we're seeing come of the past of data to AWS cloud, or we can run, uh, computational workloads So I gotta end the segment on a, on a, kind of a, um, fun, I was told to ask you You got a customer to jump I started in the first day there, we had a, and, uh, my career into the cloud, and now it feels like, uh, almost, almost looking back and saying, And so, you know, you, you jump on a plane, you gotta make sure that parachute is gonna open. the same feeling we have when we It's much now with you guys, it's more like a tandem jump. Matthew, thanks for coming on the cube. I'm John furry host of the cube. What's the status of the company product what's going on? We're back to be business with you never while after. It operations, it help desk the same place I used to work at ServiceNow. I love having you on the cube, Dave and I, and Dave Valenti as well loves having you on too, because you not only bring the entrepreneurial So the cloud scale has hit. So the things that room system of record that you and me talked about, the next layer is called system of intelligence. I mean, I mean, RPA is almost, should be embedded in everything. And that's your thinking. So as you break that down, is this So it's like how you have a database and compute and sales and networking. uh, behind us, you got the expo hall. So you don't build it just on Amazon. kind of shitting on us saying, Hey, you guys terrible, they didn't get it. Remember the middle layer pass will be snowflake so I Basically the, if you're an entrepreneur, the, the north star in terms of the, the outcome is be And that reduce your product development, your go to market and you get use the snowflake marketplace to I mean, I know they got a great relationship, uh, but snowflake now has to run a company they're public. So I think depending on the application use case, you have to use each of the above. I have is that I, I think it's okay to have a super cloud like that because the rising tide is still happening I see people lift and shifting from the it operations. the big enterprises now and you know, small, medium, large and large enterprise are all buying new companies If I growing by or 2007 or eight, when I used to talk to you back then and Amazon started So you know, a lot of good resources there. Yourself a lot of first is I see the AIOP solutions in the future should be not looking back. I think the whole, that area is very important. Yeah. They doubled the What are you working on right now? I'm the CEO there. Some of the areas where you want to scale your company, grow your company, eliminate the cost customer service. I mentioned that it's decipher all the hot startups and of course the cube.net and Silicon angle.com. We're getting back in the groove psych to be back. Sure is a lot of words to describe is shit posting, which is how I describe what I tend to do. And if you look at mark, Andrew's been doing a lot of shit posting lately. It's honestly the most terrifying scenario for anyone is if I have that kind of budget to throw at my endeavors, So for the audience that doesn't know what shit posting is, what is shit posting? A lot of the audience is thinking, in the industry right now, obviously, uh, coupons coming up in Spain, which they're having a physical event, And you can't win once you're there. of us is trying to portray themselves as you know, the Pathfinder, you know, you're the pioneer, Since the last time we've spoken, uh, Steve Schmidt is now the CISO for all of Amazon I gotta say one of the things I do like in the recent trend is that the tech companies are getting into the formula one, And I can see the appeal of these tech companies getting into it because these things are basically So I gotta ask you about, uh, what's going on in your world. People just generally don't respond to email because who responds I think you're people would call in, oh, People would call in and say, Corey, what do you think about X? Honestly, I am surprised about anything by how little I have gotten over the last five years of doing this, Um, one of the rituals I like about your, um, And then there you go. And so the joke was cold. I love the service ridiculous name. You got EMR, you got EC two, They're like the anti Google, Google turns things off while they're still building it. So let me talk about, uh, the other things I want to ask you, is that like, okay. Depends on who you ask. Um, a lot of people though saying, you know, it's not a real good marketing Yeah. I believe not doing it is probably the right answer. What's the big aha moment that you saw with the pandemic. When in the before times it's open to anyone I look forward to it. What else have you seen? But they will change a browser tab and you won't get them back. It's always fun in the, in the meetings when you're ho to someone and their colleague is messaging them about, This guy is really weird. Yes I am and I bring it into the conversation and then everyone's uncomfortable. do you wanna take that about no, I'm good. I don't the only entire sure. You're starting to see much more of like yeah. Tell me about the painful spot that you More, more, I think you nailed it. And that is the next big revelation of this industry is going to realize you have different companies. Corey, final question for, uh, what are you here doing? We fixed the horrifying AWS bill, both from engineering and architecture, So thanks for coming to the cube and And of course reinvent the end of the year for all the cube Yeah. We'll start That's the official name. Yeah, What's the, how was you guys organized? And the intention there is to So partnerships are key. Um, so I've got a team of partner managers that are located throughout the us, I love the white glove service, but translate that what's in it for what um, sort of laser focus on what are you really good at and how can we bring that to the customer as And there's a lot that you can do with AWS, but focus is truly the key word there because What are some of the cool things you guys have seen in the APN that you can point to? I mean, I can point to few, you can take them. Um, and through that we provide You gotta, I mean, when you get funding, it's still day one. And our job is to try to make I mean, you guys are the number one cloud in the business, the growth in every sector is booming. competency programs, the DevOps competencies, the security competency, which continues to help, I mean, you got a good question, you know, thousand flowers blooming all the time. lot of the ISVs that we look after are infrastructure ISVs. So what infrastructure, Exactly. So infrastructure as well, like storage back up ransomware Right. spread, and then someone to actually do the co-sell, uh, day to day activities to help them get in I mean, you know, ask the res are evolving, that role of DevOps is taking on dev SecOps. So the partner development manager can be an escalation for absolutely. And you guys, how is that partner managers, uh, measure And then co-sell not only are we helping these partners win their current opportunities but that's a huge goal of ours to help them grow their top line. I have one partner here that you guys work And so that's, our job is how do you get that great tech in lot of holes and gaps in the opportunities with a AWS. Uh, and making a lot of noise here in the United States, which is great. Let's see if they crash, you know, Um, and so I've actually seen many of our startups grow So you get your economics, that's the playbook of the ventures and the models. How I'm on the cloud. And, or not provide, or, you know, bring any fruit to the table, for startups, what you guys bring to the table and we'll close it out. And that's what we're here for. It's a good way to, it's a good way to put it. Great to see you love working with you guys. I'm John for host of the cube. Always great to come and talk to you on the queue, man. And it's here, you predicted it 11 years ago. do claim credit for, for sort of catching that bus early, um, you know, at the board level, the other found, you know, the people there, uh, cloud, you know, Amazon, And the, you know, there's sort of the transactions, you know, what you bought today are something like that. So now you have another, the sort of MIT research be mainstream, you know, observe for the folks who don't know what you guys do. So, um, we realized, you know, a handful of years ago, let's say five years ago that, And, um, you know, part of the observed story is we think that to go big in the cloud, you can have a cloud on a cloud, And, and then that was the, you know, Yeah. say the, the big data world, what Oracle did for the relational data world, you know, way back 25 years ago. So you're building on top of snowflake, And, um, you know, I've had folks say to me, I am more on snowing. Stay on the board, then you'll know what's going on. And so I've believe the opportunity for folks like snowflake and, and folks like observe it. the go big scenario is you gotta be on a platform. Or be the platform, but it's hard. to like extract, uh, a real business, you gotta move up, you gotta add value, Moving from the data center of the cloud was a dream for starters within if the provision, It's almost free, but you can, you know, as an application vendor, you think, growing company, the Amazon bill should be a small factor. Snowflake are doing a great job of innovating on the database and, and the same is true of something I mean, the shows are selling out the floor. Well, and for snowflake and, and any platform from VI, it's a beautiful thing because, you know, institutional knowledge of snowflake integrations, right. And so been able to rely on a platform that can manage that is inve I don't know if you can talk about your, Around the corner. I think, as a startup, you always strive for market fit, you know, which is at which point can you just I think capital one's a big snowflake customer as well. And, and they put snowflake in a position in the bank where they thought that snowflake So you're, Prescale meaning you're about to So you got POCs, what's that trajectory look like? So people will be able to the kind of things that by in the day you could do with the new relics and AppDynamics, What if you had the, put it into a, a, a sentence what's the I mean, at the end of the day, you have to build an amazing product and you have to solve a problem in a different way. What's the appetite at the buyer side for startups and what So the nice thing from a startup standpoint is they know at times What's the state of AWS. I mean, you know, we're, we're on AWS as well. Thanks for coming on the cube. host of the cubes cube coverage of AWS summit 2022 here in San Francisco. I feel like it's been forever since we've been able to do something in person. I'm glad you're here because we run into each other all the time. And we don't wanna actually go back as bring back the old school web It's all the same. No, you're never recovering. the next generation of software companies, uh, early investor in open source companies and cloud that have agendas and strategies, which, you know, purchase software that is traditionally bought and sold tops Well, first of all, congratulations, and by the way, you got a great pedigree and great background. You know, it's so funny that you say that enterprise is hot because you, and I feel that way now. MFTs is one big enterprise, cuz you gotta have imutability you got performance issues. you know, much of what we're doing is, uh, the predecessors of the web web three movement. The hype is definitely web the more time you spend in this world is this is the fastest growing part I get it and more relevant <laugh> but there's also the hype of like the web three, for instance, but you know, I call it the user driven revolution. the offic and the most, you know, kind of valued people in in the sixties was rebellion against the fifties and the man and, you know, summer of love. like, you know, you would never get fired for buying IBM, but now it's like, you obviously probably would So what I'm trying to get at is that, do you see the young cultural revolution look, you know, you were not designed in the cloud era. You gotta convince someone to part with their ch their money and the first money in which you do a lot of is about And the persona of the entrepreneur would be, you know, somebody who was a great salesperson or somebody who tell a great story. software, like the user is only gonna give you 90 seconds to figure out whether or not you're But let me ask a question now that for the people watching, who are maybe entrepreneurial entre entrepreneurs, So I think the more that you can show I think many people that, that do what we do for a living will say, you know, What's the hottest thing in enterprise that you see the biggest wave that people should pay attention to that you're looking at itself as big of a market as any of the other markets that we invest in. But if you think about it, the whole like economy is moving online. So you get the convergence of national security, Arguably again, it's the area of the world that I gotta, I gotta say you gotta love your firm. Huge fan of what you guys are doing here. Again, John host of the cube. Thank you for having me. What do you guys do? made the decision in 2018 to pivot and go all in on the cloud. How is this factoring into what you guys do and your growth cuz you guys are the number one partner on moving the stuff that you maybe currently have OnPrem and a data center to the cloud first is a first step. it's manufacturing, it's the physical plant or location What's the core problem you guys solve And the reality is not everything that's And the reality is the faster you move with anything cloud based, Well actually shutting down the abandoning, the projects that early and not worrying about it, And they get, they get used to it. Yeah. So this is where you guys come in. that a customer can buy in the cloud, how are you gonna ask a team of one or two people in of our managed services that give the customer the tooling, that for them to go out and buy on their own for a customer to go A risk factor not mean the cost. sure everybody in the company has the opportunity to become certified. And she could be running the Kubernetes clusters. So I'll tell you what, when that customer calls and they have a real Kubernetes issue, And that's a cultural factor that you guys have. This There's no modernization on the app side now. And the other thing is, is there's not a lot of partners, so the partner, In the it department. I like And so how you build your culture around that is, is very important. You said you bought the company and We didn't call it at that time innovative solutions to come in and, on the value of this business and who knows where you guys are gonna be another five years, what do you think about making me an Um, the other had a real big problem with having to write a check. going all in on the cloud was important for us and we haven't looked back. The capital ones of the world. And so, uh, we only had two customers on AWS at the time. Uh, tell me the hottest product that you have. So any SMB that's thinking about migrating to the cloud, they should be talking innovative solutions. So like insurance, basically for them not insurance class in the classic sense, but you help them out on the, We are known for that and we're known for being creative with those customers and being empathetic to And that's the cloud upside is all about doubling down on the variable wind. I'm John for your host. I'm John ferry, host of the cube here for the Thank you very much. We were chatting before you came on camera. This is the first, uh, summit I've been to and what two, three years. So the game is pretty much laid out mm-hmm <affirmative> and the edge is with the Uh, so I'm the director of solutions architecture. but the real issue was they were they're bread and butters EC two and S three. It does computing. the data at the edge, you got 5g having. in the field like with media companies. uh, you got SW, he was giving the keynote tomorrow. And it's increasing the speed of adoption So you guys are making a lot of good business decisions around managed cloud service. So they look towards AWS cloud and say, AWS, you take the infrastructure. Mainly because the, the needs are there, you got data, you got certain products, And, and our customers, even the ones in the edge, they also want us to build out the AWS Because a lot of people are looking at the web three in these areas like Panama, you mentioned FinTech. I keep bringing the Caribbean up, but it's, it's top of my mind right now we have customers We have our own little, um, you know, projects going on. I think we'll start talking about how does that really live on, So I'm a customer, pretend I'm a customer, Hey, you know, I'm, we're in an underserved area. That's, that's one of the best use cases, And that's, that's one of the best use cases that we're for the folks watching don't move the data, unless you have to, um, those new things are developing. Uh, so not only are you changing your architecture, you're actually changing your organization because But you gotta change the database architecture on the back. away data, uh, you know, for the past maybe decade. actually, it's not the case. of data to the AWS cloud, or we can run, uh, computational workloads So I gotta end the segment on a, on a kind of a, um, fun note. You, you got a customer to jump out um, you know, storing data and, and how his cus customers are working. my career into the cloud, and now it feels like, uh, almost, almost looking back and saying, And so, you know, you, you jump on a plane, you gotta make sure that parachute is gonna open. the same feeling we have when we It's pretty much now with you guys, it's more like a tandem jump. I'm John Forry host of the cube. Thanks for coming on the cube. What's the status of the company product what's going on? Of all, thank you for having me back to be business with you. Salesforce, and ServiceNow to take it to the next stage? Well, I love having you on the cube, Dave and I, Dave Valenti as well loves having you on too, because you not only bring Get to call this fun to talk. So the cloud scale has hit. So the things that remember system of recorded you and me talked about the next layer is called system of intelligence. I mean, I mean, RPA is almost, should be embedded in everything. And that's your thinking. So as you break that down, is this So it's like how you have a database and compute and sales and networking. innovative, all the companies out here that we know, we interview them all. So you don't build it just on Amazon. is, what you do in the cloud. Remember the middle layer pass will be snowflake. Basically if you're an entrepreneur, the north star in terms of the outcome is be And that reduce your product development, your go to market and you get use the snowflake marketplace to of the world? So I think depending on the application use case, you have to use each of the above. I think the general question that I have is that I think it's okay to have a super cloud like that because the rising I see people lift and shifting from the it operations. Cause you know, the big enterprises now and, If I remember going back to our 2007 or eight, it, when I used to talk to you back then when Amazon started very small, So you know, a lot of good resources there, um, and gives back now to the data question. service that customers are give the data, share the data because we thought the data algorithms are Yeah. What are you working on right now? I'm the CEO there. Some of the areas where you want to scale your company, grow your company, eliminate the cost customer service, I mentioned that it's a site for all the hot startups and of course the cube.net and Silicon angle.com. We're getting back in the groove, psyched to be back. Sure is a lot of words to describe as shit posting, which is how I describe what I tend to do. And if you look at Mark's been doing a lot of shit posting lately, all a billionaires It's honestly the most terrifying scenario for anyone is if I have that kind of budget to throw at my endeavors, So for the audience that doesn't know what shit posting is, what is shit posting? A lot of the audience is thinking, in the industry right now, obviously, uh, coupons coming up in Spain, which they're having a physical event, you can see the growth And you can't win once you're there. to portray themselves as you know, the Pathfinder, you know, you're the pioneer, Since the last time we've spoken, uh, Steve Schmidt is now the CISO for all of Amazon I, the track highly card, but it's basically a tricked out PC with amazing monitors and you have all the equipment of F1 and you're And I can see the appeal of these tech companies getting into it because these things are basically So I gotta ask you about, uh, what's going in your world. People just generally don't respond to email because who responds I think sure would call in. People would call in and say, Corey, what do you think about X? Honestly, I am surprised anything by how little I have gotten over the last five years of doing this, reinvent getting the interview with jazzy now, Andy we're there, you're there. And there you go. And so the joke was cold. I love the service, ridiculous name. Well, Redshift the on an acronym, you the context of the conversation. Or is that still around? They're like the anti Google, Google turns things off while they're still building it. So let me talk about, uh, the other things I want to ask you is that like, okay. Depends on who you ask. So I gotta ask about multi-cloud cause obviously the other cloud shows are coming up. Yeah. I believe not doing it is probably the right answer. What's the big aha moment that you saw with When in the before times it's open to anyone I look forward to it. What else have you seen? But they will change a browser tab and you won't get them back. It's always fun in the, in the meetings when you're talking to someone and their co is messaging them about, This guy is really weird. Yes I am and I bring it into the conversation and then everyone's uncomfortable. do you wanna take that about no, I'm good. No, the only encourager it's fine. You're starting to see much more of like yeah. Tell me about the painful spot that you Makes more, more, I think you nailed it. And that is the next big revelation of this industry is going to realize you have different companies. Uh, what do you hear doing what's on your agenda this We fixed the horrifying AWS bill, both from engineering and architecture, And of course reinvent the end of the year for all the cube coverage Yeah. What's the, how was you guys organized? And the intention there is to So partnerships are key. Um, so I've got a team of partner managers that are located throughout the us, We've got a lot. I love the white glove service, but translate that what's in it. um, sort of laser focus on what are you really good at and how can we bring that to the customer as And there's a lot that you can do with AWS, but focus is truly the key word there What are some of the cool things you guys have seen in the APN that you can point to? I mean, I can point to few, you can take them. Um, and through that we provide You gotta, I mean, when you get funding, it's still day one. And our job is to try to You guys are the number one cloud in the business, the growth in every sector is booming. competency programs, the DevOps compet, the, the security competency, which continues to help, I mean, you got a good question, you know, a thousand flowers blooming all the time. lot of the fees that we look after our infrastructure ISVs, that's what we do. So you guys have a deliberate, uh, focus on these pillars. Business, this owner type thing. So infrastructure as well, like storage, Right. and spread, and then someone to actually do the co-sell, uh, day to day activities to help them get I mean, you know, SREs are evolving, that role of DevOps is taking on dev SecOps. So the partner development manager can be an escalation point. And you guys how's that partner managers, uh, measure And then co-sell not only are we helping these partners win their current opportunities I mean, top asked from the partners is get me in front of customers. I have one partner here that you guys And so that it's our job is how do you get that great tech in of holes and gaps in the opportunities with AWS. Uh, and making a lot of noise here in the United States, which is great. We'll see if they crash, you know, Um, and so I've actually seen many of our startups grow So with that, you guys are there to How I am on the cloud. And, or not provide, or, you know, bring any fruit to the table, what you guys bring to the table and we'll close it out. And that's what we're here for. Great to see you love working with you guys. I'm John for host of the cube. Always great to come and talk to you on the queue, man. You're in the trenches with great startup, uh, do claim credit for, for, for sort of catching that bus out, um, you know, the board level, you know, the founders, you know, the people there cloud, you know, Amazon, And so you you've One of the insights that we got out of that I wanna get your the sort of MIT research be mainstream, you know, what you guys do. So, um, we realized, you know, a handful of years ago, let's say five years ago that, And, um, you know, part of the observed story yeah. that to go big in the cloud, you can have a cloud on a cloud, I mean, having enough gray hair now, um, you know, again, CapX built out the big data world, what Oracle did for the relational data world, you know, way back 25 years ago. And, um, you know, I've had folks say to me, That that's a risk I'm prepared to take <laugh> I am long on snowflake you, Stay on the board, then you'll know what's going on. And so I believe the opportunity for folks like snowflake and folks like observe it's the go big scenario is you gotta be on a platform. Easy or be the platform, but it's hard. And then to, to like extract, uh, a real business, you gotta move up, Moving from the data center of the cloud was a dream for starters. I know it's not quite free. and storage is free, that's the mindset you've gotta get into. And I think the platform enablement to value. Snowflake are doing a great job of innovating on the database and, and the same is true of something I mean, the shows are selling out the floor. And we do a lot of the support. You're scaling that function with the, And so been able to rely on a platform that can manage that is invaluable, I don't know if you can talk about your, Scales around the corner. I think, as a startup, you always strive for market fit, you know, which is at which point can you just I think capital one's a big snowflake customer as well. They were early in one of the things that attracted me to capital one was they were very, very good with snowflake early So you got POCs, what's that trick GE look like, So right now all the attention is on the What if you had the, put it into a, a sentence what's the I mean, at the end of the day, you have to build an amazing product and you have to solve a problem in a different way. What's the appetite at the buyer side for startups and what So the nice thing from a startup standpoint is they know at times they need to risk or, What's the state of AWS. I mean, you know, we we're, we're on AWS as They got the silicone and they got the staff act, developing Jeremy Burton inside the cube, great resource for California after the short break. host of the cubes cube coverage of AWS summit 2022 here in San Francisco. I feel like it's been forever since we've been able to do something in person. I'm glad you're here because we run into each other all the time. the old school web 1.0 days. We, we are, it's a little bit of a throwback to the path though, in my opinion, <laugh>, it's all the same. I mean, you remember I'm a recovering entrepreneur, right? No, you're never recovering. in the next generation of our companies, uh, early investor in open source companies that have agendas and strategies, which, you know, purchased software that has traditionally bought and sold tops Well, first of all, congratulations, and by the way, you got a great pedigree and great background, super smart admire of your work You know, it's so funny that you say that enterprise is hot because you, and I feel that way now. Ts is one big enterprise, cuz you gotta have imutability you got performance issues. history and have been involved in, open in the cloud would say that we're, you know, much of what we're doing is, the more time you spend in this world is this is the fastest growing part I get it and more relevant, but it's also the hype of like the web three, for instance. I call it the user driven revolution. the beneficiaries and the most, you know, kind of valued people in the sixties was rebellion against the fifties and the man and, you know, summer of love. like, you know, you would never get fired for buying IBM, but now it's like, you obviously probably would So what I'm trying to get at is that, do you see the young cultural revolution look, you know, you were not designed in the cloud era. You gotta convince someone to part with their ch their money and the first money in which you do a lot of is And the persona of the entrepreneur would be, you know, somebody who was a great salesperson or somebody who tell a great story. software, the user is only gonna give you 90 seconds to figure out whether or not you're What's the, what's the preferred way that you like to see entrepreneurs come in and engage, So I think the more that you can in the road, you can get through short term spills. I think many people that, that do what we do for a living will say, you know, Uh, what's the hottest thing in enterprise that you see the biggest wave that people should pay attention to that you're One is the explosion and open source software. Uh, and finally, it's the gift that keeps on giving. But if you think about it, the whole economy is moving online. So you get the convergence of national security, I mean, arguably again, it's the area of the world that I gotta, I gotta say, you gotta love your firm. Huge fan of what you guys are doing here. Again, John host of the cube got a great guest here. Thank you for having me. What do you guys do? that are moving into the cloud or have already moved to the cloud and really trying to understand how to best control, How is this factoring into what you guys do and your growth cuz you guys are the number one partner on moving the stuff that you maybe currently have OnPrem and a data center to the cloud first is a first step. it's manufacturing, it's the physical plant or location What's the core problem you guys solve And the reality is not everything that's Does that come up a lot? And the reality is the faster you move with anything cloud based, Well actually shutting down the abandoning the projects that early and not worrying about it, And Like, and then they wait too long. Yeah. I can get that like values as companies, cuz they're betting on you and your people. that a customer can buy in the cloud, how are you gonna ask a team of one or two people in your, If you have a partner, that's all offering you some managed services. Opportunity cost is huge, in the company has the opportunity to become certified. And she could be running the Kubernetes clusters. And that's a cultural factor that you guys have. This So that's, There's no modernization on the app side though. And, and the other thing is, is there's not a lot of partners, No one's raising their hand boss. In it department. Like, can we just call up, uh, you know, <laugh> our old vendor. And so how you build your culture around that is, You said you bought the company and We didn't call it at that time innovative solutions to come in and, And they were like, listen, you got long ways before you're gonna be an owner, but if you stick it out in your patient, Um, the other had a real big problem with having to write a check. all going all in on the cloud was important for us and we haven't looked back. The capital ones of the world. The, the Microsoft suite to the cloud and Uh, tell me the hottest product that you have. So any SMB that's thinking about migrating to the cloud, they should be talking innovative solutions. So like insurance, basically for them not insurance class in the classic sense, but you help them out on the, We are known for that and we're known for being creative with those customers, That's the cloud upside is all about doubling down on the variable wind. I'm John for your host. Live on the floor in San Francisco for 80 west summit, I'm John ferry, host of the cube here for the Thank you very much. We were chatting before you came on camera. This is the first, uh, summit I've been to and what two, three years. is running everything dev sec ops, everyone kind of sees that you got containers, you got Kubernetes, Uh, so I'm the director of solutions architecture. to be in Panama, but they love AWS and they want to deploy AWS services but the real issue was they were they're bread and butters EC two and S three. It the data at the edge, you got five GM having. in the field like with media companies. side, obviously, uh, you got SW who's giving the keynote tomorrow. Uh, in the customer's mind for the public AWS cloud inside an availability zone. So you guys are making a lot of good business decisions around managed cloud service. So they look towards AWS cloud and say, AWS, you take the infrastructure. Mainly because the, the needs are there, you got data, you got certain products, And, and our customers, even the ones in the edge, they also want us to build out the AWS Because a lot of people are looking at the web three in these areas like Panama, you mentioned FinTech in, I keep bringing the Caribbean up, but it's, it's top of my mind right now we have customers We have our own little, um, you know, projects going on. I think we'll start talking about how does that really live So I'm a customer, pretend I'm a customer, Hey, you know, I'm, we're in an underserved area. That's, that's one of the best use cases, And that's, that's one of the best use cases that we're the folks watching don't move the data unless you have to. Uh, so not only are you changing your architecture, you're actually changing your organization because But you gotta change the database architecture in the back. away data, uh, you know, for the past maybe decade. We don't have time to drill into, maybe we do another session on this, but the one pattern we're seeing of the past year of data to the AWS cloud, or we can run, uh, computational workloads So I gotta end the segment on a, on a kind of a, um, fun note. You got a customer to jump out So I was, you jumped out. my career into the cloud, and now it feels like, uh, almost, almost looking back and saying, And so, you know, you, you jump on a plane, you gotta make sure that parachute is gonna open. But, uh, it was, it was the same kind of feeling that we had in the early days of AWS, the same feeling we have when we It's now with you guys, it's more like a tandem jump. I'm John for host of the cube. I'm John fury host of the cube. What's the status of the company product what's going on? First of all, thank you for having me. Salesforce, and service now to take you to the next stage? I love having you on the cube, Dave and I, Dave LAN as well loves having you on too, because you not only bring the entrepreneurial Get the call fund to talk to you though. So the cloud scale has hit. So the things that rumor system of recorded you and me talked about the next layer is called system of intelligence. I mean, or I mean, RPA is, should be embedded in everything. I call it much more about automation, workflow automation, but RPA and automation is a category. So as you break that down, is this the new modern middleware? So it's like how you have a database and compute and sales and networking. uh, behind, as you got the XPO hall got, um, we're back to vis, but you got, So you don't build it just on Amazon. is, what you do in the cloud. I'll make the pass layer room. It And that reduce your product development, your go to market and you get use the snowflake marketplace I mean, I know they got a great relationship, uh, but snowflake now has to run a company they're public. So I think depending on the use case you have to use each of the above, I think the general question that I have is that I think it's okay to have a super cloud like that because the rising I see people lift and shifting from the it operations, it helpless. Cause you know, the big enterprises now and you Spending on the startups. So you know, a lot of good resources there. And I think their whole data exchange is the industry has not thought through something you and me talk Yeah. It is doubled. What are you working on right now? So all the top customers, um, mainly for it help desk customer service. Some of the areas where you want to scale your company, So look for that on the calendar, of course, go to a us startups.com. We're getting back in the Groove's psych to be back. Sure is a lot of words to describe is shit posting, which is how I describe what I tend to do. And if you look at mark, Andrew's been doing a lot of shit posting lately. It's honestly the most terrifying scenario for anyone is if I have that kind of budget to throw at my endeavors, So for the audience that doesn't know what shit posting is, what, what is shitposting A lot of the audience is thinking, in the industry right now, obviously, uh, Cuban coming up in Spain, which they're having a physical event, And you can't win once you're there. is trying to portray themselves, you know, the Pathfinder, you know, you're the pioneer, Since the last time we've spoken, uh, Steve Schmidt is now the CISO for all of card, but it's basically a tricked out PC with amazing monitors and you have all the equipment of F1 and you're And I can see the appeal of these tech companies getting it into it because these things are basically So I gotta ask you about, uh, what's going on in your world. People just generally don't respond to email because who responds I think sure would call in. Honestly, I am surprised anything by how little I have gotten over the last five years of doing this, reinvent getting the interview with jazzy now, Andy we're there, you're there. And then there you go. And so the joke was cold. I love the service ridiculous name. You got S three SQS. They're like the anti Google, Google turns things off while they're still building So let me talk about, uh, the other things I want to ask you is that like, okay, so as Amazon gets better in Depends on who you ask. So I gotta ask about multi-cloud cause obviously the other cloud shows are coming up. Yeah. And I look at what customers are doing and What's the big aha moment that you saw with the pandemic. When in the before times it's open to anyone here is on the queue. So tell a story. Um, but you know, Um, you know, that's a great question. I mean, it's so cool to see you jump right in. I had APIs from the Yeah, I was basically our first SRE, um, was familiar with the, with the phrasing, but really thought of myself as a software engineer So let's talk about what's what's going on now as you look at the landscape today, what's the coolest thing Yeah, I think the, I think the coolest thing is, you know, we're seeing the next layer of those abstraction tools exist How old's the company about So explain what it does. We've encoded all the best practices into software and we So that seems to be the problem you solve. So let me ask you a question. This is what you can expect here. Do you handle all the recovery or mitigation between, uh, identification say Um, we'll let you know. So what do you do for fun? Yeah, so, uh, for, for fun, um, a lot of side projects. You got going on And they're suddenly twice as productive because of it. There's Mm-hmm <affirmative>, you know, the expression, too many tools in the tool. And so we've done all of the pieces of the stacks. So what are some of the use cases that you see for your service? Um, so, you know, as is more infrastructure people come in because we're How many customers do you have now? So we charge a monthly rate. The requirement scale. So team to drive your costs down. How many services do you have to deploy as that scales <laugh> what are you gonna do when you're Better the old guy on the queue here. It exists across all the clouds and we're starting to see new platforms come up on top that allow you to leverage I gotta ask you this question cuz uh, you know, I always, I was a computer science undergrad in the, I think classroom's great to, uh, get a basis, but you need to go out and experiment actually try things. people hang on to the old, you know, project and try to force it out there. then move on to something new. Instantly you should be able to do that much more quickly. Do you agree with that? It's probably not gonna be that idea is the genius idea. Don't change the product so that you kind of have there's opportunities out there where you might get the lucky strike You're not gonna hit a rich the second time too. Thanks for coming on the cube. So if you are a software engineer excited about tools and cloud, Um, Johnny Dallas, the youngest engineer working at Amazon, um, I'm John furry host of the cube. I always call you Dr. Matt wood, because Andy jazzy always says Dr. Matt, we I love it. And I think you had walkup music too on, you know, So talk about your new role. So whether it is, you know, slicing and dicing You know, one of the benefits of, uh, having cube coverage with AWS since 2013 is watching You need a lot of compute to be able to train those models and you have to be able to evaluate what those mean And so the cloud really enabled this Renaissance with machine learning, and we're seeing honestly, And it's not a, a, a, you know, hyped up statement to And Dave's like, what do you mean by that? you gotta silo the data that needs to be siloed for compliance and reasons. I think, you know, like with any, with any technology, And if you could pull all of that together, that data engineering discipline can be incredibly transformative And I told 'em, I would ask someone at Amazon, this questions I'll ask you since you're, the tools in the cloud, which allow you to aggregate data from virtually like the domains are so broad, you kind of gotta allow your curiosity to develop and lead, Johnny Dallas is a great name by the that's fantastic. I have Johnny Johnny cube. If you do a project that's not working and you get bad data, Instantly abandoned it. trying to, you know, in the old world trying to find the resources and get the funding. And honestly, the most important thing is time just being able to jump in there, So for fun, you can just code something. And I managed to convince the team to leave them on for It's like, this is really hard. How does that impact the analytics piece? combining the data, labeling the data, training their models, uh, you know, running inference against their And so if you look at something just like Redshift serverless that we launched a reinvent, Want the answers come on. we announced, um, you know, serverless inference. is being reusing the data to actually retrain. Do you see it the same way? So today we added, you know, um, text extract queries. What's the big news happening that you're announcing here at summit in San Francisco, California, I want it to be up to date, but you know, I don't actually want to have to go my tools where I'm actually You can do everything that you would normally do. You got the serverless and your tailwind for you there. Thank Stay with us with more coverage of day two after this short break.
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-Alan Nance, CitrusCollab | theCUBE on Cloud
>> From the cube studios in Palo Alto and Boston, connecting with thought leaders all around the world. This is a cube conversation. >> Hello everyone, welcome back to the cubes. Special presentation on the future of cloud. Three years ago, Alan Nance said to me that in order to really take advantage of cloud and drive billions of dollars of value, you have to change the operating model. I've never forgotten that statement and have explored it from many angles over the last three years. In fact it was one of the motivations for me actually running this program for our audience. Of course with me is Alan Nance. He is a change agent. He's led transformations at large organizations, including ING bank, Royal Phillips, Barclay's bank, and many others. He's also a co-founder of CitrusCollab. Alan, great to see you. Thanks for coming on the program. >> Thanks for having me again, Dave. >> All right, so when we were preparing for this interview, you shared with me the following, you said enterprise IT, often hasn't really tapped the true powers that are available to them to make real connections, to take advantage of that opportunity, connections to the business that is. What do you mean by that? >> Well I think we we've been saying for quite a long time that enterprise IT is certainly a big part of our past in technology. But just how much is it going to be in the future? And enterprise IT has had a difficult time under the cost pressures of being a centralized organization with large, expensive, large topics. While at the same time we see obviously the digital operations for growing oftentimes in separate reporting structures and closest to the business. And what I'm thinking right now is enterprise IT, if it has made this transition to a cloud operating models, whether they are proprietary or whether they are public cloud, there's a huge opportunity for enterprise IT to connect the dots in a way that no other part of the organization can do that. And when they connect those dots, working closely with the business, they unleash a huge amount of value that is beyond things like efficiency or things like just providing cloud computing to be flexible. It has to be much more about value generation. And I think that a lot of leaders of enterprise IT have not really grasped that. And I think that's the opportunity sitting right in front of them right now. >> You know what I've seen lately? I wonder if you could comment, is obviously we always talk about the stove pipes, but you've seen the CIO, the chief data officer that you just mentioned, the chief digital officer, the chief information security officer, they've largely been in their own silos of definitely seeing a move to bring those together. I'm seeing a lot of CDOs and CIO roles come together. And even the chief information or the head of security reporting up into that, where there seems to be as you're sort of suggesting just a lot more visibility across the entire organization. Is it an organizational issue? Is it a mindset? Go on if you could comment. >> Well I would say it's two or three different things. Certainly it's an organizational issue, but I think it starts off with a cultural issue. And I think what you're seeing, and if you look at the more progressive companies that you see, I think you are also seeing a new emergence of the enlightened technology leader. So with all respect to me and my generation our tenure as the owners of the large enterprise IT is coming to an end. And we grew up trying to master the complexity of the silos as you so deftly pointed out. Out we were battling this soaring technology, trying to get it under control, trying to get the costs down, trying to reduce CapEx. And a lot of that was focused on the partnerships that we had with technology suppliers. And so that mindset of being engineers struggling for control, having your most important part of being a technology company itself, I've got now, I think is giving way, giving way to a new generation of technology leaders who haven't grown up with that culture. And oftentimes what I see is that the new enlightened CIOs are female and they are coming into the role outside of the regular promotion chain, so they're coming to these roles through finance, HR, marketing, and they're bringing a different focus. And the focus is much more about how do we work together to create an amazing experience for our employees and for our customers and an experience that drives value. So I think there's a reset in the culture. And clearly when you start talking about creating a value chain to improve experience, you're also talking about bringing people together from different multidisciplinary backgrounds to make that happen. >> Well that's kind of, it makes me think about Amazon's mantra of working backwards, start with the experience. And then a lot of CIOs that I know would love to be more involved in the business, but they're just so busy trying to keep the lights on. Like you said, trying to manage vendors and in the like. I've had a discussion the other day with an individual, we were talking about how, you got to shift from a product mindset to a platform mindset, but you've said that the platform thinking you're always ahead of the game. Platform thinking it needs to make way for ecosystem thinking. Unless you're into that, it'd be giant scale business like Amazon or Spotify you said, you're going to be in a niche market if you really don't tap that ecosystem again . If you could explain what you mean by that? >> Well I think right now, if this movement to experience is fundamental. Right? So Joe Pine and Jim Gilmore wrote about the experience economy as far back in 1990, but the things that they predicted then are here now. And so what we're now seeing is that consumers have choice. Employees have choice. I think the pandemic has accelerated that. And so what happens when you put an enterprise under that type of external pressure, is that it fragments. And if it can fragment in two ways. It can fragment dysfunctionally so that every silo tries to go into a defensive mode, protective mode. That's obviously the wrong way to go. But the fragmentation that's exciting is when it fragments into ecosystems that are actually working together to solve and experience problem. And those are not platforms they're too big. When I was at Phillips, I was very enthusiastic about working on this connected healthcare platform. But I think what I started to realize was it takes too much time. It requires too much investment and you are bringing people who tune you based on your capability, whereas what the market needs is much more agile than that. So if we look in healthcare, for instance and you want to connect patients at home, with patients, with the doctors in the hospital. In the old model when you said, I'm going to build a platform for this, I'm going to have doctors with a certain competence, so they're going to be connecting into this. And so are the patients in some way. And so are the insurers. I think what you're going to see now is different. We're going to say let's get together a small team that understands its competence. So for instance, let's get an insurance provider, let's get a healthcare operator, let's get a healthcare tech company and let's pull their data in a way that helps us to create solutions now that can roll out in 30, 60 or 90 days. And the thing that makes that possible is the move to the public cloud. Because now there are so many specialized suppliers, specialized skillsets available that you can connect to through Amazon, through Google, through Azure, that these things that we used to think were very, very difficult, are now much easier. I don't want to minimize the effort, but these things are on the table right now to read value. >> So you're also technologist. And I want to ask you and everybody always says, technology is easy part of the people and the process. We can all agree on that. However sometimes technology can be a blocker. And the example that you just mentioned, I have a couple of takeaways from that. First of all the platform thinking is somewhat, sounds like it's more command and control and you're advocating for let's get the ecosystem who are closest to the problem to solve those problems. However they decide and they'll leverage the cloud. So my question is from a technology standpoint. Does that ecosystem have to be in the same cloud, with the state of today's technology? can it be across clouds? Can be there pieces on prem? What's your thinking on that? >> I think exactly the opposite. It cannot be monolithic and centralized. It's just not practical because that would cause you too much time on interoperability. And who owns what. You see the power behind experience is data. And so the most important technical part of this is dealing with data liquidity. So the data that, for instance somebody like Kaiser has or the Harvard Mental Healthcare have or the Phillips have, that's not going to be put into a central place for the ecosystem mobilization. There will be subsets of that data flowing between those parties. So the technical, the hardware. Is how do we manage data liquidity? How do we manage the security around data liquidity? And how do we also understand that what we're building is going to be ever changing and maybe temporary, because an idea may not work. And so you've got this idea that the timeliness is very very important. The duration is very uncertain. The mojo energy for this is data liquidity, data transfer, data sharing. But the vehicle is the combination of public cloud, in my mind. >> Somebody said to me, hey that data's like water. It'll go where it wants to go, where it needs to go and you can't try to control it. It's let it go. Now of course many organizations, particularly large incumbent organizations they have many many data pipelines. They have many processes, many roles, and they're struggling to actually kind of inject automation into those pipelines. Maybe that's machine intelligence really do more data sharing across that pipeline and ultimately compress the end and cycle time to go from raw data to insights that are actionable. What are you seeing there? And what's your advice? >> Well I think you make some really good points, but what I hear also a little bit in your observation is you're still observing enterprises. And the focus of the enterprise has been on optimizing the processes within the boundaries of its own system. That's why we have SAP and this why we have Salesforce. And to some degree even service now. It's all been about optimizing how we move data, how we create production services. And that's not the game now. That's not an important game. The important game right now is how do I connect to my employees? How do I connect to my customers in a way that provides them a memorable experience? And the realization is, I'm assuming it's already manufacturing for some years. I can't be all things to all people. So I have to understand this is where the first part of data comes in. I have to understand. Who this person is that I am trying to target? Who is the person that needs this memorable experience? And what is that memorable experience going to look like? And I'm going to need my data, but I'm also going to need the data of other actors in that ecosystem. And then I'm going to have to build that ecosystem really quickly to take advantage of the system. So this throws a monkey rage in traditional ideas of standardization. It throws a monkey rage in the idea that enterprise IT is about efficiency. If I may, I just want to come back to the AI because I think we're looking in the wrong places. Things like AI. And let me give you an example today, there are 2.2 million people working in call centers around the world. If we imagine that they work in three shifts, that means that anyone time there are 700,000 people on the phone to a customer, and that customer is calling that company because they're vested, they're calling them with advice. They're calling them with a question they're calling them with a complaint. It is the most important source of valuable data that any company has. And yet, what have we done with that? What we've done with that is we've attacked it with efficiency. So instead of saying, these are the most valuable sources of information, let's use AI to tag the sentiment in the recordings that we make with our most valuable stakeholders. And let's analyze them for trends, ideas things that needs to change. We don't do that. What we do is we're going to give every cool agent two minutes to get them off the phone. For God's sake, don't answer many important, difficult questions. Don't spend money talking to the customer, try to make them happy. So they get a score and say, they hire you at the end of the call, and then you're done. So where the AI automation needs to come in is not in improving your efficiency, but in mining value. And the real opportunity with AI is that Joe Pine says this. "If you are able to understand the customer, rather than interpret them, that is so valuable to the customer, that they will pay money for that". And I think that's where the whole focus needs to be in this new team in enterprise IT, and they're still in the business. >> That's a great observation. I think we can all relate to that in your call center example, or you've been a restaurant, and you're trying to turn the tables fast and get out of there. And it's the last time you ever go to that restaurant. And you're taking that notion of systems thinking and broadening it to ecosystems thinking. And you've said, ecosystems have a better chance of success when they're used to stage and experience for whether it's the employee for the brand. And of course the customer and the partners. >> That's it that's exactly it. So every technology leader should be asking themselves what contribution can I and my organization make to this movement, because the business understands the problem. They don't understand how to solve it, and we've chosen a different dialogue. So we've been talking a lot about what cloud can do and the functionality that cloud has and the potential that cloud has. And those are all good things, but it really comes together. Now when we work together and we as the technology group brings in the know how we know how to connect quickly through the public cloud, we know how to do that in a secure way. We know how to manage data liquidity at scale, and we can stand these things up through our new learning of agile and DevOps. We can stand these ecosystems up fairly quickly. Now there's still a whole bunch of culture between different businesses that have to work together. The idea that I have to protect my data rather than serve the customer. But once you get past that, there's a whole new conversation enterprise IT can have, that I think gives them a new lease of life, new value. And I just think it's a really really exciting time. >> (inaudible) The intersection of a lot of different things. You talk about cloud as an enabler for sure. And that's great. We can talk about that, but you've got this. What you were referring to before is maybe you're in a niche market, but you have your marketplace. And like you're saying, you can actually use that through an ecosystem to really leave a much, much broader available market. And then vector that into the experience economy. We talk about subscriptions, the API economy, that really is new thinking. >> It is and I think what you're seeing here it's not radical in as much as all of these ideas have been around. Some of them have been around since the nineties, but what's radical is the way in which we can now mix and match these technologies to make this happen. That's growing so quickly. And I would argue to you and I've argued this before. Scale, scale as a concept within an organization is dead. It doesn't give you enough value. It gives you enough efficiency and it gives you a cloud. And it doesn't give you the opportunity to target the niche experiences that you need to do. So if we start to think of an organization as a combination of known and unknown potential ecosystems, you start to build a different operating model, a different architectural idea. You start to look outside more than you start to look inside. Which is why the cultural change that we were talking about just now goes hand in hand with this because people have to be comfortable thinking in ecosystems that may not yet exist and partnering with people where they bring to the table. There 20, 30 years of experience in a new and different way. >> So let me make sure I understand that. So you basically, if I understand it, you're saying that if your sort of end goal is scale and efficiency at scale you're going to have a vanilla solution for your customers in your ecosystem. Whereas if you will allow this outside in thinking to come in, you're going to be able to actually customize those experience, experiences and get the value of scale and efficiency. >> Right, so I mean Rory Sutherland, who is a big thinker in the marketing world has always said, "ultimately scale standardization and best practice lead to mediocrity". Because you are not focused on the most important thing for your employee or your brand. You're focused on the efficiency factors and they create very little value. In fact we know that they subvert value. So yes we need to have a very big mindset change. >> Yeah you're a top line thinker Alan and always at the forefront. I really appreciate you coming on to the cube and participate in this program. Give us a last word. So if you're a change agent, I'm an organization and I want to inject this type of change. Where do I start? >> Well I think it starts by identifying. Are we going to work on the employee experience? Do we feel that we have a model where the employees that are on stage with customers are so important that the focus has to be employees. We go down that route and then we look at what's happened to the pandemic. What type of experiences are we going to bring to those employees around their ability to have flow in their work, to get return on energy, to excite the customers? Let's do that. Let's figure out what experience are we driving now? And what does that experience need to be? If we're the customer side. As I said let's look at all the sources of information that we already have. I know companies that spend hundreds of millions a year trying to figure out what consumers want. And yet if we look in their call sentences, you will call up and they will say to you, your call may be recorded for quality purposes and training. And it's not true, less than 10% of those calls are ever listened to. And if they listened to, it's compliance, that's driving that, not the burning desire to better understand the consumer. So if we change that, then we shall get to. What can we change? What is the experience we are now able to stage with all we know and with all we can do. And let's start there, let's start with, what is the experience you want to stage? What's the experience landscape look like now? And who do we bring together to make that happen? >> Alan fantastic. Having you back in the cube, it's always a pleasure and thanks so much for participating. >> Thank you, Dave. It's always a pleasure to speak with you. >> And thank you everybody. This is Dave Vellante the cube on cloud. We'll be right back right after this short break, stay with us. (soft music)
SUMMARY :
leaders all around the world. Thanks for coming on the program. that are available to them and closest to the business. And even the chief information of the silos as you so deftly pointed out. to be more involved in the business, is the move to the public cloud. And the example that you just mentioned, And so the most important and they're struggling to on the phone to a customer, And it's the last time you The idea that I have to protect my data an ecosystem to really leave And I would argue to you and get the value of scale and efficiency. on the most important thing and always at the forefront. that the focus has to be employees. Having you back in the cube, It's always a pleasure to speak with you. This is Dave Vellante the cube on cloud.
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Kubernetes on Any Infrastructure Top to Bottom Tutorials for Docker Enterprise Container Cloud
>>all right, We're five minutes after the hour. That's all aboard. Who's coming aboard? Welcome everyone to the tutorial track for our launchpad of them. So for the next couple of hours, we've got a SYRIZA videos and experts on hand to answer questions about our new product, Doctor Enterprise Container Cloud. Before we jump into the videos and the technology, I just want to introduce myself and my other emcee for the session. I'm Bill Milks. I run curriculum development for Mirant us on. And >>I'm Bruce Basil Matthews. I'm the Western regional Solutions architect for Moran Tissue esa and welcome to everyone to this lovely launchpad oven event. >>We're lucky to have you with us proof. At least somebody on the call knows something about your enterprise Computer club. Um, speaking of people that know about Dr Enterprise Container Cloud, make sure that you've got a window open to the chat for this session. We've got a number of our engineers available and on hand to answer your questions live as we go through these videos and disgusting problem. So that's us, I guess, for Dr Enterprise Container Cloud, this is Mirant asses brand new product for bootstrapping Doctor Enterprise Kubernetes clusters at scale Anything. The airport Abu's? >>No, just that I think that we're trying Thio. Uh, let's see. Hold on. I think that we're trying Teoh give you a foundation against which to give this stuff a go yourself. And that's really the key to this thing is to provide some, you know, many training and education in a very condensed period. So, >>yeah, that's exactly what you're going to see. The SYRIZA videos we have today. We're going to focus on your first steps with Dr Enterprise Container Cloud from installing it to bootstrapping your regional child clusters so that by the end of the tutorial content today, you're gonna be prepared to spin up your first documentary prize clusters using documented prize container class. So just a little bit of logistics for the session. We're going to run through these tutorials twice. We're gonna do one run through starting seven minutes ago up until I guess it will be ten fifteen Pacific time. Then we're gonna run through the whole thing again. So if you've got other colleagues that weren't able to join right at the top of the hour and would like to jump in from the beginning, ten. Fifteen Pacific time. We're gonna do the whole thing over again. So if you want to see the videos twice, you got public friends and colleagues that, you know you wanna pull in for a second chance to see this stuff, we're gonna do it all. All twice. Yeah, this session. Any any logistics I should add, Bruce that No, >>I think that's that's pretty much what we had to nail down here. But let's zoom dash into those, uh, feature films. >>Let's do Edmonds. And like I said, don't be shy. Feel free to ask questions in the chat or engineers and boosting myself are standing by to answer your questions. So let me just tee up the first video here and walk their cost. Yeah. Mhm. Yes. Sorry. And here we go. So our first video here is gonna be about installing the Doctor Enterprise Container Club Management cluster. So I like to think of the management cluster as like your mothership, right? This is what you're gonna use to deploy all those little child clusters that you're gonna use is like, Come on it as clusters downstream. So the management costs was always our first step. Let's jump in there >>now. We have to give this brief little pause >>with no good day video. Focus for this demo will be the initial bootstrap of the management cluster in the first regional clusters to support AWS deployments. The management cluster provides the core functionality, including identity management, authentication, infantry release version. The regional cluster provides the specific architecture provided in this case, eight of us and the Elsie um, components on the UCP Cluster Child cluster is the cluster or clusters being deployed and managed. The deployment is broken up into five phases. The first phase is preparing a big strap note on this dependencies on handling with download of the bridge struck tools. The second phase is obtaining America's license file. Third phase. Prepare the AWS credentials instead of the adduce environment. The fourth configuring the deployment, defining things like the machine types on the fifth phase. Run the bootstrap script and wait for the deployment to complete. Okay, so here we're sitting up the strap node, just checking that it's clean and clear and ready to go there. No credentials already set up on that particular note. Now we're just checking through AWS to make sure that the account we want to use we have the correct credentials on the correct roles set up and validating that there are no instances currently set up in easy to instance, not completely necessary, but just helps keep things clean and tidy when I am perspective. Right. So next step, we're just going to check that we can, from the bootstrap note, reach more antis, get to the repositories where the various components of the system are available. They're good. No areas here. Yeah, right now we're going to start sitting at the bootstrap note itself. So we're downloading the cars release, get get cars, script, and then next, we're going to run it. I'm in. Deploy it. Changing into that big struck folder. Just making see what's there. Right now we have no license file, so we're gonna get the license filed. Oh, okay. Get the license file through the more antis downloads site, signing up here, downloading that license file and putting it into the Carisbrook struck folder. Okay, Once we've done that, we can now go ahead with the rest of the deployment. See that the follow is there. Uh, huh? That's again checking that we can now reach E C two, which is extremely important for the deployment. Just validation steps as we move through the process. All right, The next big step is valid in all of our AWS credentials. So the first thing is, we need those route credentials which we're going to export on the command line. This is to create the necessary bootstrap user on AWS credentials for the completion off the deployment we're now running an AWS policy create. So it is part of that is creating our Food trucks script, creating the mystery policy files on top of AWS, Just generally preparing the environment using a cloud formation script you'll see in a second will give a new policy confirmations just waiting for it to complete. Yeah, and there is done. It's gonna have a look at the AWS console. You can see that we're creative completed. Now we can go and get the credentials that we created Today I am console. Go to that new user that's being created. We'll go to the section on security credentials and creating new keys. Download that information media Access key I D and the secret access key. We went, Yeah, usually then exported on the command line. Okay. Couple of things to Notre. Ensure that you're using the correct AWS region on ensure that in the conflict file you put the correct Am I in for that region? I'm sure you have it together in a second. Yes. Okay, that's the key. Secret X key. Right on. Let's kick it off. Yeah, So this process takes between thirty and forty five minutes. Handles all the AWS dependencies for you, and as we go through, the process will show you how you can track it. Andi will start to see things like the running instances being created on the west side. The first phase off this whole process happening in the background is the creation of a local kind based bootstrapped cluster on the bootstrap node that clusters then used to deploy and manage all the various instances and configurations within AWS. At the end of the process, that cluster is copied into the new cluster on AWS and then shut down that local cluster essentially moving itself over. Okay. Local clusters boat just waiting for the various objects to get ready. Standard communities objects here Okay, so we speed up this process a little bit just for demonstration purposes. Yeah. There we go. So first note is being built the best in host. Just jump box that will allow us access to the entire environment. Yeah, In a few seconds, we'll see those instances here in the US console on the right. Um, the failures that you're seeing around failed to get the I. P for Bastian is just the weight state while we wait for a W s to create the instance. Okay. Yes. Here, beauty there. Okay. Mhm. Okay. Yeah, yeah. Okay. On there. We got question. Host has been built on three instances for the management clusters have now been created. We're going through the process of preparing. Those nodes were now copying everything over. See that? The scaling up of controllers in the big Strap cluster? It's indicating that we're starting all of the controllers in the new question. Almost there. Yeah. Yeah, just waiting for key. Clark. Uh huh. Start to finish up. Yeah. No. What? Now we're shutting down control this on the local bootstrap node on preparing our I. D. C. Configuration. Fourth indication, soon as this is completed. Last phase will be to deploy stack light into the new cluster the last time Monitoring tool set way Go stack like to plan It has started. Mhm coming to the end of the deployment Mountain. Yeah, America. Final phase of the deployment. Onda, We are done. Okay, You'll see. At the end they're providing us the details of you. I log in so there's a keeper clogging. You can modify that initial default password is part of the configuration set up with one documentation way. Go Councils up way can log in. Yeah, yeah, thank you very much for watching. >>Excellent. So in that video are wonderful field CTO Shauna Vera bootstrapped up management costume for Dr Enterprise Container Cloud Bruce, where exactly does that leave us? So now we've got this management costume installed like what's next? >>So primarily the foundation for being able to deploy either regional clusters that will then allow you to support child clusters. Uh, comes into play the next piece of what we're going to show, I think with Sean O'Mara doing this is the child cluster capability, which allows you to then deploy your application services on the local cluster. That's being managed by the ah ah management cluster that we just created with the bootstrap. >>Right? So this cluster isn't yet for workloads. This is just for bootstrapping up the downstream clusters. Those or what we're gonna use for workings. >>Exactly. Yeah. And I just wanted to point out, since Sean O'Mara isn't around, toe, actually answer questions. I could listen to that guy. Read the phone book, and it would be interesting, but anyway, you can tell him I said that >>he's watching right now, Crusoe. Good. Um, cool. So and just to make sure I understood what Sean was describing their that bootstrap er knows that you, like, ran document fresh pretender Cloud from to begin with. That's actually creating a kind kubernetes deployment kubernetes and Docker deployment locally. That then hits the AWS a p i in this example that make those e c two instances, and it makes like a three manager kubernetes cluster there, and then it, like, copies itself over toe those communities managers. >>Yeah, and and that's sort of where the transition happens. You can actually see it. The output that when it says I'm pivoting, I'm pivoting from my local kind deployment of cluster AP, I toothy, uh, cluster, that's that's being created inside of AWS or, quite frankly, inside of open stack or inside of bare metal or inside of it. The targeting is, uh, abstracted. Yeah, but >>those air three environments that we're looking at right now, right? Us bare metal in open staff environments. So does that kind cluster on the bootstrap er go away afterwards. You don't need that afterwards. Yeah, that is just temporary. To get things bootstrapped, then you manage things from management cluster on aws in this example? >>Yeah. Yeah. The seed, uh, cloud that post the bootstrap is not required anymore. And there's no, uh, interplay between them after that. So that there's no dependencies on any of the clouds that get created thereafter. >>Yeah, that actually reminds me of how we bootstrapped doctor enterprise back in the day, be a temporary container that would bootstrap all the other containers. Go away. It's, uh, so sort of a similar, similar temporary transient bootstrapping model. Cool. Excellent. What will convict there? It looked like there wasn't a ton, right? It looked like you had to, like, set up some AWS parameters like credentials and region and stuff like that. But other than that, that looked like heavily script herbal like there wasn't a ton of point and click there. >>Yeah, very much so. It's pretty straightforward from a bootstrapping standpoint, The config file that that's generated the template is fairly straightforward and targeted towards of a small medium or large, um, deployment. And by editing that single file and then gathering license file and all of the things that Sean went through, um, that that it makes it fairly easy to script >>this. And if I understood correctly as well that three manager footprint for your management cluster, that's the minimum, right. We always insist on high availability for this management cluster because boy do not wanna see oh, >>right, right. And you know, there's all kinds of persistent data that needs to be available, regardless of whether one of the notes goes down or not. So we're taking care of all of that for you behind the scenes without you having toe worry about it as a developer. >>No, I think there's that's a theme that I think will come back to throughout the rest of this tutorial session today is there's a lot of there's a lot of expertise baked him to Dr Enterprise Container Cloud in terms of implementing best practices for you like the defaulter, just the best practices of how you should be managing these clusters, Miss Seymour. Examples of that is the day goes on. Any interesting questions you want to call out from the chap who's >>well, there was. Yeah, yeah, there was one that we had responded to earlier about the fact that it's a management cluster that then conduce oh, either the the regional cluster or a local child molester. The child clusters, in each case host the application services, >>right? So at this point, we've got, in some sense, like the simplest architectures for our documentary prize Container Cloud. We've got the management cluster, and we're gonna go straight with child cluster. In the next video, there's a more sophisticated architecture, which will also proper today that inserts another layer between those two regional clusters. If you need to manage regions like across a BS, reads across with these documents anything, >>yeah, that that local support for the child cluster makes it a lot easier for you to manage the individual clusters themselves and to take advantage of our observation. I'll support systems a stack light and things like that for each one of clusters locally, as opposed to having to centralize thumb >>eso. It's a couple of good questions. In the chat here, someone was asking for the instructions to do this themselves. I strongly encourage you to do so. That should be in the docks, which I think Dale helpfully thank you. Dale provided links for that's all publicly available right now. So just head on in, head on into the docks like the Dale provided here. You can follow this example yourself. All you need is a Mirante license for this and your AWS credentials. There was a question from many a hear about deploying this toe azure. Not at G. Not at this time. >>Yeah, although that is coming. That's going to be in a very near term release. >>I didn't wanna make promises for product, but I'm not too surprised that she's gonna be targeted. Very bracing. Cool. Okay. Any other thoughts on this one does. >>No, just that the fact that we're running through these individual pieces of the steps Well, I'm sure help you folks. If you go to the link that, uh, the gentleman had put into the chat, um, giving you the step by staff. Um, it makes it fairly straightforward to try this yourselves. >>E strongly encourage that, right? That's when you really start to internalize this stuff. OK, but before we move on to the next video, let's just make sure everyone has a clear picture in your mind of, like, where we are in the life cycle here creating this management cluster. Just stop me if I'm wrong. Who's creating this management cluster is like, you do that once, right? That's when your first setting up your doctor enterprise container cloud environment of system. What we're going to start seeing next is creating child clusters and this is what you're gonna be doing over and over and over again. When you need to create a cluster for this Deb team or, you know, this other team river it is that needs commodity. Doctor Enterprise clusters create these easy on half will. So this was once to set up Dr Enterprise Container Cloud Child clusters, which we're going to see next. We're gonna do over and over and over again. So let's go to that video and see just how straightforward it is to spin up a doctor enterprise cluster for work clothes as a child cluster. Undocumented brands contain >>Hello. In this demo, we will cover the deployment experience of creating a new child cluster, the scaling of the cluster and how to update the cluster. When a new version is available, we begin the process by logging onto the you I as a normal user called Mary. Let's go through the navigation of the U I so you can switch. Project Mary only has access to development. Get a list of the available projects that you have access to. What clusters have been deployed at the moment there. Nan Yes, this H Keys Associate ID for Mary into her team on the cloud credentials that allow you to create access the various clouds that you can deploy clusters to finally different releases that are available to us. We can switch from dark mode to light mode, depending on your preferences, Right? Let's now set up semester search keys for Mary so she can access the notes and machines again. Very simply, had Mississippi key give it a name, we copy and paste our public key into the upload key block. Or we can upload the key if we have the file available on our local machine. A simple process. So to create a new cluster, we define the cluster ad management nodes and add worker nodes to the cluster. Yeah, again, very simply, you go to the clusters tab. We hit the create cluster button. Give the cluster name. Yeah, Andi, select the provider. We only have access to AWS in this particular deployment, so we'll stick to AWS. What's like the region in this case? US West one release version five point seven is the current release Onda Attach. Mary's Key is necessary Key. We can then check the rest of the settings, confirming the provider Any kubernetes c r D r I p address information. We can change this. Should we wish to? We'll leave it default for now on. Then what components? A stack light I would like to deploy into my Custer. For this. I'm enabling stack light on logging on Aiken. Sit up the retention sizes Attention times on. Even at this stage, at any customer alerts for the watchdogs. E consider email alerting which I will need my smart host details and authentication details. Andi Slack Alerts. Now I'm defining the cluster. All that's happened is the cluster's been defined. I now need to add machines to that cluster. I'll begin by clicking the create machine button within the cluster definition. Oh, select manager, Select the number of machines. Three is the minimum. Select the instant size that I'd like to use from AWS and very importantly, ensure correct. Use the correct Am I for the region. I commend side on the route device size. There we go, my three machines obviously creating. I now need to add some workers to this custom. So I go through the same process this time once again, just selecting worker. I'll just add to once again, the AM is extremely important. Will fail if we don't pick the right, Am I for a boon to machine in this case and the deployment has started. We can go and check on the bold status are going back to the clusters screen on clicking on the little three dots on the right. We get the cluster info and the events, so the basic cluster info you'll see pending their listen cluster is still in the process of being built. We kick on, the events will get a list of actions that have been completed This part of the set up of the cluster. So you can see here we've created the VPC. We've created the sub nets on We've created the Internet gateway. It's unnecessary made of us and we have no warnings of the stage. Yeah, this will then run for a while. We have one minute past waken click through. We can check the status of the machine bulls as individuals so we can check the machine info, details of the machines that we've assigned, right? Mhm Onda. See any events pertaining to the machine areas like this one on normal? Yeah. Just watch asked. The community's components are waiting for the machines to start. Go back to Custer's. Okay, right. Because we're moving ahead now. We can see we have it in progress. Five minutes in new Matt Gateway on the stage. The machines have been built on assigned. I pick up the U. S. Thank you. Yeah. There we go. Machine has been created. See the event detail and the AWS. I'd for that machine. Mhm. No speeding things up a little bit. This whole process and to end takes about fifteen minutes. Run the clock forward, you'll notice is the machines continue to bold the in progress. We'll go from in progress to ready. A soon as we got ready on all three machines, the managers on both workers way could go on and we could see that now we reached the point where the cluster itself is being configured. Mhm, mhm. And then we go. Cluster has been deployed. So once the classes deployed, we can now never get around our environment. Okay, Are cooking into configure cluster We could modify their cluster. We could get the end points for alert alert manager on See here The griffon occupying and Prometheus are still building in the background but the cluster is available on you would be able to put workloads on it the stretch to download the cube conflict so that I can put workloads on it. It's again three little dots in the right for that particular cluster. If the download cube conflict give it my password, I now have the Q conflict file necessary so that I can access that cluster Mhm all right Now that the build is fully completed, we can check out cluster info on. We can see that Allow the satellite components have been built. All the storage is there, and we have access to the CPU. I So if we click into the cluster, we can access the UCP dashboard, right? Shit. Click the signing with Detroit button to use the SSO on. We give Mary's possible to use the name once again. Thing is, an unlicensed cluster way could license at this point. Or just skip it on. There. We have the UCP dashboard. You can see that has been up for a little while. We have some data on the dashboard going back to the console. We can now go to the griffon, a data just being automatically pre configured for us. We can switch and utilized a number of different dashboards that have already been instrumented within the cluster. So, for example, communities cluster information, the name spaces, deployments, nodes. Mhm. So we look at nodes. If we could get a view of the resource is utilization of Mrs Custer is very little running in it. Yeah. General dashboard of Cuba navies cluster one of this is configurable. You can modify these for your own needs, or add your own dashboards on de scoped to the cluster. So it is available to all users who have access to this specific cluster, all right to scale the cluster on to add a notice. A simple is the process of adding a mode to the cluster, assuming we've done that in the first place. So we go to the cluster, go into the details for the cluster we select, create machine. Once again, we need to be ensure that we put the correct am I in and any other functions we like. You can create different sized machines so it could be a larger node. Could be bigger disks and you'll see that worker has been added from the provisioning state on shortly. We will see the detail off that worker as a complete to remove a note from a cluster. Once again, we're going to the cluster. We select the node would like to remove. Okay, I just hit delete On that note. Worker nodes will be removed from the cluster using according and drawing method to ensure that your workouts are not affected. Updating a cluster. When an update is available in the menu for that particular cluster, the update button will become available. And it's a simple as clicking the button, validating which release you would like to update to. In this case, the next available releases five point seven point one. Here I'm kicking the update by in the background We will coordinate. Drain each node slowly go through the process of updating it. Andi update will complete depending on what the update is as quickly as possible. Girl, we go. The notes being rebuilt in this case impacted the manager node. So one of the manager nodes is in the process of being rebuilt. In fact, to in this case, one has completed already on In a few minutes we'll see that there are great has been completed. There we go. Great. Done. Yeah. If you work loads of both using proper cloud native community standards, there will be no impact. >>Excellent. So at this point, we've now got a cluster ready to start taking our communities of workloads. He started playing or APs to that costume. So watching that video, the thing that jumped out to me at first Waas like the inputs that go into defining this workload cost of it. All right, so we have to make sure we were using on appropriate am I for that kind of defines the substrate about what we're gonna be deploying our cluster on top of. But there's very little requirements. A so far as I could tell on top of that, am I? Because Docker enterprise Container Cloud is gonna bootstrap all the components that you need. That s all we have is kind of kind of really simple bunch box that we were deploying these things on top of so one thing that didn't get dug into too much in the video. But it's just sort of implied. Bruce, maybe you can comment on this is that release that Shawn had to choose for his, uh, for his cluster in creating it. And that release was also the thing we had to touch. Wanted to upgrade part cluster. So you have really sharp eyes. You could see at the end there that when you're doing the release upgrade enlisted out a stack of components docker, engine, kubernetes, calico, aled, different bits and pieces that go into, uh, go into one of these commodity clusters that deploy. And so, as far as I can tell in that case, that's what we mean by a release. In this sense, right? It's the validated stack off container ization and orchestration components that you know we've tested out and make sure it works well, introduction environments. >>Yeah, and and And that's really the focus of our effort is to ensure that any CVS in any of the stack are taken care of that there is a fixes air documented and up streamed to the open stack community source community, um, and and that, you know, then we test for the scaling ability and the reliability in high availability configuration for the clusters themselves. The hosts of your containers. Right. And I think one of the key, uh, you know, benefits that we provide is that ability to let you know, online, high. We've got an update for you, and it's fixes something that maybe you had asked us to fix. Uh, that all comes to you online as your managing your clusters, so you don't have to think about it. It just comes as part of the product. >>You just have to click on Yes. Please give me that update. Uh, not just the individual components, but again. It's that it's that validated stack, right? Not just, you know, component X, y and Z work. But they all work together effectively Scalable security, reliably cool. Um, yeah. So at that point, once we started creating that workload child cluster, of course, we bootstrapped good old universal control plane. Doctor Enterprise. On top of that, Sean had the classic comment there, you know? Yeah. Yeah. You'll see a little warnings and errors or whatever. When you're setting up, UCP don't handle, right, Just let it do its job, and it will converge all its components, you know, after just just a minute or two. But we saw in that video, we sped things up a little bit there just we didn't wait for, you know, progress fighters to complete. But really, in real life, that whole process is that anything so spend up one of those one of those fosters so quite quite quick. >>Yeah, and and I think the the thoroughness with which it goes through its process and re tries and re tries, uh, as you know, and it was evident when we went through the initial ah video of the bootstrapping as well that the processes themselves are self healing, as they are going through. So they will try and retry and wait for the event to complete properly on. And once it's completed properly, then it will go to the next step. >>Absolutely. And the worst thing you could do is panic at the first warning and start tearing things that don't don't do that. Just don't let it let it heal. Let take care of itself. And that's the beauty of these manage solutions is that they bake in a lot of subject matter expertise, right? The decisions that are getting made by those containers is they're bootstrapping themselves, reflect the expertise of the Mirant ISS crew that has been developing this content in these two is free for years and years now, over recognizing humanities. One cool thing there that I really appreciate it actually that it adds on top of Dr Enterprise is that automatic griffon a deployment as well. So, Dr Enterprises, I think everyone knows has had, like, some very high level of statistics baked into its dashboard for years and years now. But you know our customers always wanted a double click on that right to be able to go a little bit deeper. And Griffon are really addresses that it's built in dashboards. That's what's really nice to see. >>Yeah, uh, and all of the alerts and, uh, data are actually captured in a Prometheus database underlying that you have access to so that you are allowed to add new alerts that then go out to touch slack and say hi, You need to watch your disk space on this machine or those kinds of things. Um, and and this is especially helpful for folks who you know, want to manage the application service layer but don't necessarily want to manage the operations side of the house. So it gives them a tool set that they can easily say here, Can you watch these for us? And Miran tas can actually help do that with you, So >>yeah, yeah, I mean, that's just another example of baking in that expert knowledge, right? So you can leverage that without tons and tons of a long ah, long runway of learning about how to do that sort of thing. Just get out of the box right away. There was the other thing, actually, that you could sleep by really quickly if you weren't paying close attention. But Sean mentioned it on the video. And that was how When you use dark enterprise container cloud to scale your cluster, particularly pulling a worker out, it doesn't just like Territo worker down and forget about it. Right? Is using good communities best practices to cordon and drain the No. So you aren't gonna disrupt your workloads? You're going to just have a bunch of containers instantly. Excellent crash. You could really carefully manage the migration of workloads off that cluster has baked right in tow. How? How? Document? The brass container cloud is his handling cluster scale. >>Right? And And the kubernetes, uh, scaling methodology is is he adhered to with all of the proper techniques that ensure that it will tell you. Wait, you've got a container that actually needs three, uh, three, uh, instances of itself. And you don't want to take that out, because that node, it means you'll only be able to have to. And we can't do that. We can't allow that. >>Okay, Very cool. Further thoughts on this video. So should we go to the questions. >>Let's let's go to the questions >>that people have. Uh, there's one good one here, down near the bottom regarding whether an a p I is available to do this. So in all these demos were clicking through this web. You I Yes, this is all a p. I driven. You could do all of this. You know, automate all this away is part of the CSC change. Absolutely. Um, that's kind of the point, right? We want you to be ableto spin up. Come on. I keep calling them commodity clusters. What I mean by that is clusters that you can create and throw away. You know, easily and automatically. So everything you see in these demos eyes exposed to FBI? >>Yeah. In addition, through the standard Cube cuddle, Uh, cli as well. So if you're not a programmer, but you still want to do some scripting Thio, you know, set up things and deploy your applications and things. You can use this standard tool sets that are available to accomplish that. >>There is a good question on scale here. So, like, just how many clusters and what sort of scale of deployments come this kind of support our engineers report back here that we've done in practice up to a Zeman ia's like two hundred clusters. We've deployed on this with two hundred fifty nodes in a cluster. So were, you know, like like I said, hundreds, hundreds of notes, hundreds of clusters managed by documented press container fall and then those downstream clusters, of course, subject to the usual constraints for kubernetes, right? Like default constraints with something like one hundred pods for no or something like that. There's a few different limitations of how many pods you can run on a given cluster that comes to us not from Dr Enterprise Container Cloud, but just from the underlying kubernetes distribution. >>Yeah, E. I mean, I don't think that we constrain any of the capabilities that are available in the, uh, infrastructure deliveries, uh, service within the goober Netease framework. So were, you know, But we are, uh, adhering to the standards that we would want to set to make sure that we're not overloading a node or those kinds of things, >>right. Absolutely cool. Alright. So at this point, we've got kind of a two layered our protection when we are management cluster, but we deployed in the first video. Then we use that to deploy one child clustering work, classroom, uh, for more sophisticated deployments where we might want to manage child clusters across multiple regions. We're gonna add another layer into our architectural we're gonna add in regional cluster management. So this idea you're gonna have the single management cluster that we started within the first video. On the next video, we're gonna learn how to spin up a regional clusters, each one of which would manage, for example, a different AWS uh, US region. So let me just pull out the video for that bill. We'll check it out for me. Mhm. >>Hello. In this demo, we will cover the deployment of additional regional management. Cluster will include a brief architectures of you how to set up the management environment, prepare for the deployment deployment overview and then just to prove it, to play a regional child cluster. So, looking at the overall architecture, the management cluster provides all the core functionality, including identity management, authentication, inventory and release version. ING Regional Cluster provides the specific architecture provider in this case AWS on the LCN components on the D you speak Cluster for child cluster is the cluster or clusters being deployed and managed? Okay, so why do you need a regional cluster? Different platform architectures, for example aws who have been stack even bare metal to simplify connectivity across multiple regions handle complexities like VPNs or one way connectivity through firewalls, but also help clarify availability zones. Yeah. Here we have a view of the regional cluster and how it connects to the management cluster on their components, including items like the LCN cluster Manager we also Machine Manager were held. Mandel are managed as well as the actual provider logic. Mhm. Okay, we'll begin by logging on Is the default administrative user writer. Okay, once we're in there, we'll have a look at the available clusters making sure we switch to the default project which contains the administration clusters. Here we can see the cars management cluster, which is the master controller. And you see, it only has three nodes, three managers, no workers. Okay, if we look at another regional cluster similar to what we're going to deploy now, also only has three managers once again, no workers. But as a comparison, here's a child cluster This one has three managers, but also has additional workers associate it to the cluster. All right, we need to connect. Tell bootstrap note. Preferably the same note that used to create the original management plaster. It's just on AWS, but I still want to machine. All right. A few things we have to do to make sure the environment is ready. First thing we're going to see go into route. We'll go into our releases folder where we have the kozberg struck on. This was the original bootstrap used to build the original management cluster. Yeah, we're going to double check to make sure our cube con figures there once again, the one created after the original customers created just double check. That cute conflict is the correct one. Does point to the management cluster. We're just checking to make sure that we can reach the images that everything is working. A condom. No damages waken access to a swell. Yeah. Next we're gonna edit the machine definitions. What we're doing here is ensuring that for this cluster we have the right machine definitions, including items like the am I. So that's found under the templates AWS directory. We don't need to edit anything else here. But we could change items like the size of the machines attempts. We want to use that The key items to ensure where you changed the am I reference for the junta image is the one for the region in this case AWS region for utilizing this was no construct deployment. We have to make sure we're pointing in the correct open stack images. Yeah, okay. Set the correct and my save file. Now we need to get up credentials again. When we originally created the bootstrap cluster, we got credentials from eight of the U. S. If we hadn't done this, we would need to go through the u A. W s set up. So we're just exporting the AWS access key and I d. What's important is CAAs aws enabled equals. True. Now we're sitting the region for the new regional cluster. In this case, it's Frankfurt on exporting our cube conflict that we want to use for the management cluster. When we looked at earlier Yeah, now we're exporting that. Want to call the cluster region Is Frank Foods Socrates Frankfurt yet trying to use something descriptive It's easy to identify. Yeah, and then after this, we'll just run the bootstrap script, which will complete the deployment for us. Bootstrap of the regional cluster is quite a bit quicker than the initial management clusters. There are fewer components to be deployed. Um, but to make it watchable, we've spent it up. So we're preparing our bootstrap cluster on the local bootstrap node. Almost ready on. We started preparing the instances at W s and waiting for that bastard and no to get started. Please. The best you nerd Onda. We're also starting to build the actual management machines they're now provisioning on. We've reached the point where they're actually starting to deploy. Dr. Enterprise, this is probably the longest face. Yeah, seeing the second that all the nerds will go from the player deployed. Prepare, prepare. Yeah, You'll see their status changes updates. He was the first night ready. Second, just applying second already. Both my time. No waiting from home control. Let's become ready. Removing cluster the management cluster from the bootstrap instance into the new cluster running the date of the U. S. All my stay. Ah, now we're playing Stockland. Switch over is done on. Done. Now I will build a child cluster in the new region very, very quickly to find the cluster will pick. Our new credential has shown up. We'll just call it Frankfurt for simplicity a key and customs to find. That's the machine. That cluster stop with three managers. Set the correct Am I for the region? Yeah, Do the same to add workers. There we go test the building. Yeah. Total bill of time Should be about fifteen minutes. Concedes in progress. It's going to expect this up a little bit. Check the events. We've created all the dependencies, machine instances, machines, a boat shortly. We should have a working cluster in Frankfurt region. Now almost a one note is ready from management. Two in progress. Yeah, on we're done. Clusters up and running. Yeah. >>Excellent. So at this point, we've now got that three tier structure that we talked about before the video. We got that management cluster that we do strapped in the first video. Now we have in this example to different regional clustering one in Frankfurt, one of one management was two different aws regions. And sitting on that you can do Strap up all those Doctor enterprise costumes that we want for our work clothes. >>Yeah, that's the key to this is to be able to have co resident with your actual application service enabled clusters the management co resident with it so that you can, you know, quickly access that he observation Elson Surfboard services like the graph, Ana and that sort of thing for your particular region. A supposed to having to lug back into the home. What did you call it when we started >>the mothership? >>The mothership. Right. So we don't have to go back to the mother ship. We could get >>it locally. Yeah, when, like to that point of aggregating things under a single pane of glass? That's one thing that again kind of sailed by in the demo really quickly. But you'll notice all your different clusters were on that same cluster. Your pain on your doctor Enterprise Container Cloud management. Uh, court. Right. So both your child clusters for running workload and your regional clusters for bootstrapping. Those child clusters were all listed in the same place there. So it's just one pane of glass to go look for, for all of your clusters, >>right? And, uh, this is kind of an important point. I was, I was realizing, as we were going through this. All of the mechanics are actually identical between the bootstrapped cluster of the original services and the bootstrapped cluster of the regional services. It's the management layer of everything so that you only have managers, you don't have workers and that at the child cluster layer below the regional or the management cluster itself, that's where you have the worker nodes. And those are the ones that host the application services in that three tiered architecture that we've now defined >>and another, you know, detail for those that have sharp eyes. In that video, you'll notice when deploying a child clusters. There's not on Lee. A minimum of three managers for high availability management cluster. You must have at least two workers that's just required for workload failure. It's one of those down get out of work. They could potentially step in there, so your minimum foot point one of these child clusters is fine. Violence and scalable, obviously, from a >>That's right. >>Let's take a quick peek of the questions here, see if there's anything we want to call out, then we move on to our last want to my last video. There's another question here about, like where these clusters can live. So again, I know these examples are very aws heavy. Honestly, it's just easy to set up down on the other us. We could do things on bare metal and, uh, open stack departments on Prem. That's what all of this still works in exactly the same way. >>Yeah, the, uh, key to this, especially for the the, uh, child clusters, is the provision hers? Right? See you establish on AWS provision or you establish a bare metal provision or you establish a open stack provision. Or and eventually that list will include all of the other major players in the cloud arena. But you, by selecting the provision or within your management interface, that's where you decide where it's going to be hosted, where the child cluster is to be hosted. >>Speaking off all through a child clusters. Let's jump into our last video in the Siri's, where we'll see how to spin up a child cluster on bare metal. >>Hello. This demo will cover the process of defining bare metal hosts and then review the steps of defining and deploying a bare metal based doctor enterprise cluster. So why bare metal? Firstly, it eliminates hyper visor overhead with performance boost of up to thirty percent. Provides direct access to GP use, prioritize for high performance wear clothes like machine learning and AI, and supports high performance workloads like network functions, virtualization. It also provides a focus on on Prem workloads, simplifying and ensuring we don't need to create the complexity of adding another opera visor. Lay it between so continue on the theme Why Communities and bare metal again Hyper visor overhead. Well, no virtualization overhead. Direct access to hardware items like F p G A s G p us. We can be much more specific about resource is required on the nodes. No need to cater for additional overhead. Uh, we can handle utilization in the scheduling. Better Onda we increase the performances and simplicity of the entire environment as we don't need another virtualization layer. Yeah, In this section will define the BM hosts will create a new project will add the bare metal hosts, including the host name. I put my credentials I pay my address the Mac address on then provide a machine type label to determine what type of machine it is for later use. Okay, let's get started. So well again. Was the operator thing. We'll go and we'll create a project for our machines to be a member off helps with scoping for later on for security. I begin the process of adding machines to that project. Yeah. So the first thing we had to be in post, Yeah, many of the machine A name. Anything you want, que experimental zero one. Provide the IAP my user name type my password. Okay. On the Mac address for the common interface with the boot interface and then the i p m I i p address These machines will be at the time storage worker manager. He's a manager. Yeah, we're gonna add a number of other machines on will. Speed this up just so you could see what the process looks like in the future. Better discovery will be added to the product. Okay. Okay. Getting back there we have it are Six machines have been added, are busy being inspected, being added to the system. Let's have a look at the details of a single note. Yeah, you can see information on the set up of the node. Its capabilities? Yeah. As well as the inventory information about that particular machine. I see. Okay, let's go and create the cluster. Yeah, So we're going to deploy a bare metal child cluster. The process we're going to go through is pretty much the same as any other child cluster. So we'll credit custom. We'll give it a name, but if it were selecting bare metal on the region, we're going to select the version we want to apply. No way. We're going to add this search keys. If we hope we're going to give the load. Balancer host I p that we'd like to use out of dress range on update the address range that we want to use for the cluster. Check that the sea ideal blocks for the Cuban ladies and tunnels are what we want them to be. Enable disabled stack light. Yeah, and soothe stack light settings to find the cluster. And then, as for any other machine, we need to add machines to the cluster. Here. We're focused on building communities clusters, so we're gonna put the count of machines. You want managers? We're gonna pick the label type manager and create three machines is the manager for the Cuban eighties. Casting Okay thing. We're having workers to the same. It's a process. Just making sure that the worker label host level are I'm sorry. On when Wait for the machines to deploy. Let's go through the process of putting the operating system on the notes validating and operating system deploying doctor identifies Make sure that the cluster is up and running and ready to go. Okay, let's review the bold events waken See the machine info now populated with more information about the specifics of things like storage and of course, details of a cluster etcetera. Yeah, yeah, well, now watch the machines go through the various stages from prepared to deploy on what's the cluster build? And that brings us to the end of this particular demo. You can see the process is identical to that of building a normal child cluster we got our complaint is complete. >>All right, so there we have it, deploying a cluster to bare metal. Much the same is how we did for AWS. I guess maybe the biggest different stepwise there is there is that registration face first, right? So rather than just using AWS financials toe magically create PM's in the cloud. You got a point out all your bare metal servers to Dr Enterprise between the cloud and they really come in, I guess three profiles, right? You got your manager profile with a profile storage profile which has been labeled as allocate. Um, crossword cluster has appropriate, >>right? And And I think that the you know, the key differentiator here is that you have more physical control over what, uh, attributes that love your cat, by the way, uh, where you have the different attributes of a server of physical server. So you can, uh, ensure that the SSD configuration on the storage nodes is gonna be taken advantage of in the best way the GP use on the worker nodes and and that the management layer is going to have sufficient horsepower to, um, spin up to to scale up the the environments, as required. One of the things I wanted to mention, though, um, if I could get this out without the choking much better. Um, is that Ah, hey, mentioned the load balancer and I wanted to make sure in defining the load balancer and the load balancer ranges. Um, that is for the top of the the cluster itself. That's the operations of the management, uh, layer integrating with your systems internally to be able to access the the Cube Can figs. I I p address the, uh, in a centralized way. It's not the load balancer that's working within the kubernetes cluster that you are deploying. That's still cube proxy or service mesh, or however you're intending to do it. So, um, it's kind of an interesting step that your initial step in building this, um and we typically use things like metal L B or in gen X or that kind of thing is to establish that before we deploy this bear mental cluster so that it can ride on top of that for the tips and things. >>Very cool. So any other thoughts on what we've seen so far today? Bruce, we've gone through all the different layers. Doctor enterprise container clouds in these videos from our management are regional to our clusters on aws hand bear amount, Of course, with his dad is still available. Closing thoughts before we take just a very short break and run through these demos again. >>You know, I've been very exciting. Ah, doing the presentation with you. I'm really looking forward to doing it the second time, so that we because we've got a good rhythm going about this kind of thing. So I'm looking forward to doing that. But I think that the key elements of what we're trying to convey to the folks out there in the audience that I hope you've gotten out of it is that will that this is an easy enough process that if you follow the step by steps going through the documentation that's been put out in the chat, um, that you'll be able to give this a go yourself, Um, and you don't have to limit yourself toe having physical hardware on prim to try it. You could do it in a ws as we've shown you today. And if you've got some fancy use cases like, uh, you you need a Hadoop And and, uh, you know, cloud oriented ai stuff that providing a bare metal service helps you to get there very fast. So right. Thank you. It's been a pleasure. >>Yeah, thanks everyone for coming out. So, like I said we're going to take a very short, like, three minute break here. Uh, take the opportunity to let your colleagues know if they were in another session or they didn't quite make it to the beginning of this session. Or if you just want to see these demos again, we're going to kick off this demo. Siri's again in just three minutes at ten. Twenty five a. M. Pacific time where we will see all this great stuff again. Let's take a three minute break. I'll see you all back here in just two minutes now, you know. Okay, folks, that's the end of our extremely short break. We'll give people just maybe, like one more minute to trickle in if folks are interested in coming on in and jumping into our demo. Siri's again. Eso For those of you that are just joining us now I'm Bill Mills. I head up curriculum development for the training team here. Moran Tous on Joining me for this session of demos is Bruce. Don't you go ahead and introduce yourself doors, who is still on break? That's cool. We'll give Bruce a minute or two to get back while everyone else trickles back in. There he is. Hello, Bruce. >>How'd that go for you? Okay, >>Very well. So let's kick off our second session here. I e just interest will feel for you. Thio. Let it run over here. >>Alright. Hi. Bruce Matthews here. I'm the Western Regional Solutions architect for Marantz. Use A I'm the one with the gray hair and the glasses. Uh, the handsome one is Bill. So, uh, Bill, take it away. >>Excellent. So over the next hour or so, we've got a Siris of demos that's gonna walk you through your first steps with Dr Enterprise Container Cloud Doctor Enterprise Container Cloud is, of course, Miranda's brand new offering from bootstrapping kubernetes clusters in AWS bare metal open stack. And for the providers in the very near future. So we we've got, you know, just just over an hour left together on this session, uh, if you joined us at the top of the hour back at nine. A. M. Pacific, we went through these demos once already. Let's do them again for everyone else that was only able to jump in right now. Let's go. Our first video where we're gonna install Dr Enterprise container cloud for the very first time and use it to bootstrap management. Cluster Management Cluster, as I like to describe it, is our mother ship that's going to spin up all the other kubernetes clusters, Doctor Enterprise clusters that we're gonna run our workloads on. So I'm gonna do >>I'm so excited. I can hardly wait. >>Let's do it all right to share my video out here. Yeah, let's do it. >>Good day. The focus for this demo will be the initial bootstrap of the management cluster on the first regional clusters. To support AWS deployments, the management cluster provides the core functionality, including identity management, authentication, infantry release version. The regional cluster provides the specific architecture provided in this case AWS and the Elsom components on the UCP cluster Child cluster is the cluster or clusters being deployed and managed. The deployment is broken up into five phases. The first phase is preparing a bootstrap note on its dependencies on handling the download of the bridge struck tools. The second phase is obtaining America's license file. Third phase. Prepare the AWS credentials instead of the ideas environment, the fourth configuring the deployment, defining things like the machine types on the fifth phase, Run the bootstrap script and wait for the deployment to complete. Okay, so here we're sitting up the strap node. Just checking that it's clean and clear and ready to go there. No credentials already set up on that particular note. Now, we're just checking through aws to make sure that the account we want to use we have the correct credentials on the correct roles set up on validating that there are no instances currently set up in easy to instance, not completely necessary, but just helps keep things clean and tidy when I am perspective. Right. So next step, we're just gonna check that we can from the bootstrap note, reach more antis, get to the repositories where the various components of the system are available. They're good. No areas here. Yeah, right now we're going to start sitting at the bootstrap note itself. So we're downloading the cars release, get get cars, script, and then next we're going to run it. Yeah, I've been deployed changing into that big struck folder, just making see what's there right now we have no license file, so we're gonna get the license filed. Okay? Get the license file through more antis downloads site signing up here, downloading that license file and putting it into the Carisbrook struck folder. Okay, since we've done that, we can now go ahead with the rest of the deployment. Yeah, see what the follow is there? Uh huh. Once again, checking that we can now reach E C two, which is extremely important for the deployment. Just validation steps as we move through the process. Alright. Next big step is violating all of our AWS credentials. So the first thing is, we need those route credentials which we're going to export on the command line. This is to create the necessary bootstrap user on AWS credentials for the completion off the deployment we're now running in AWS policy create. So it is part of that is creating our food trucks script. Creating this through policy files onto the AWS, just generally preparing the environment using a cloud formation script, you'll see in a second, I'll give a new policy confirmations just waiting for it to complete. And there is done. It's gonna have a look at the AWS console. You can see that we're creative completed. Now we can go and get the credentials that we created. Good day. I am console. Go to the new user that's being created. We'll go to the section on security credentials and creating new keys. Download that information media access Key I. D and the secret access key, but usually then exported on the command line. Okay, Couple of things to Notre. Ensure that you're using the correct AWS region on ensure that in the conflict file you put the correct Am I in for that region? I'm sure you have it together in a second. Okay, thanks. Is key. So you could X key Right on. Let's kick it off. So this process takes between thirty and forty five minutes. Handles all the AWS dependencies for you. Um, as we go through, the process will show you how you can track it. Andi will start to see things like the running instances being created on the AWS side. The first phase off this whole process happening in the background is the creation of a local kind based bootstrapped cluster on the bootstrap node that clusters then used to deploy and manage all the various instances and configurations within AWS at the end of the process. That cluster is copied into the new cluster on AWS and then shut down that local cluster essentially moving itself over. Yeah, okay. Local clusters boat. Just waiting for the various objects to get ready. Standard communities objects here. Yeah, you mentioned Yeah. So we've speed up this process a little bit just for demonstration purposes. Okay, there we go. So first note is being built the bastion host just jump box that will allow us access to the entire environment. Yeah, In a few seconds, we'll see those instances here in the US console on the right. Um, the failures that you're seeing around failed to get the I. P for Bastian is just the weight state while we wait for AWS to create the instance. Okay. Yeah. Beauty there. Movies. Okay, sketch. Hello? Yeah, Okay. Okay. On. There we go. Question host has been built on three instances for the management clusters have now been created. Okay, We're going through the process of preparing. Those nodes were now copying everything over. See that scaling up of controllers in the big strapped cluster? It's indicating that we're starting all of the controllers in the new question. Almost there. Right? Okay. Just waiting for key. Clark. Uh huh. So finish up. Yeah. No. Now we're shutting down. Control this on the local bootstrap node on preparing our I. D. C configuration, fourth indication. So once this is completed, the last phase will be to deploy stack light into the new cluster, that glass on monitoring tool set, Then we go stack like deployment has started. Mhm. Coming to the end of the deployment mountain. Yeah, they were cut final phase of the deployment. And we are done. Yeah, you'll see. At the end, they're providing us the details of you. I log in. So there's a key Clark log in. Uh, you can modify that initial default possible is part of the configuration set up where they were in the documentation way. Go Councils up way can log in. Yeah. Yeah. Thank you very much for watching. >>All right, so at this point, what we have we got our management cluster spun up, ready to start creating work clusters. So just a couple of points to clarify there to make sure everyone caught that, uh, as advertised. That's darker. Enterprise container cloud management cluster. That's not rework loans. are gonna go right? That is the tool and you're gonna use to start spinning up downstream commodity documentary prize clusters for bootstrapping record too. >>And the seed host that were, uh, talking about the kind cluster dingy actually doesn't have to exist after the bootstrap succeeds eso It's sort of like, uh, copies head from the seed host Toothy targets in AWS spins it up it then boots the the actual clusters and then it goes away too, because it's no longer necessary >>so that bootstrapping know that there's not really any requirements, Hardly on that, right. It just has to be able to reach aws hit that Hit that a p I to spin up those easy to instances because, as you just said, it's just a kubernetes in docker cluster on that piece. Drop note is just gonna get torn down after the set up finishes on. You no longer need that. Everything you're gonna do, you're gonna drive from the single pane of glass provided to you by your management cluster Doctor enterprise Continue cloud. Another thing that I think is sort of interesting their eyes that the convict is fairly minimal. Really? You just need to provide it like aws regions. Um, am I? And that's what is going to spin up that spending that matter faster. >>Right? There is a mammal file in the bootstrap directory itself, and all of the necessary parameters that you would fill in have default set. But you have the option then of going in and defining a different Am I different for a different region, for example? Oh, are different. Size of instance from AWS. >>One thing that people often ask about is the cluster footprint. And so that example you saw they were spitting up a three manager, um, managing cluster as mandatory, right? No single manager set up at all. We want high availability for doctrine Enterprise Container Cloud management. Like so again, just to make sure everyone sort of on board with the life cycle stage that we're at right now. That's the very first thing you're going to do to set up Dr Enterprise Container Cloud. You're going to do it. Hopefully exactly once. Right now, you've got your management cluster running, and they're gonna use that to spend up all your other work clusters Day today has has needed How do we just have a quick look at the questions and then lets take a look at spinning up some of those child clusters. >>Okay, e think they've actually been answered? >>Yeah, for the most part. One thing I'll point out that came up again in the Dail, helpfully pointed out earlier in surgery, pointed out again, is that if you want to try any of the stuff yourself, it's all of the dogs. And so have a look at the chat. There's a links to instructions, so step by step instructions to do each and every thing we're doing here today yourself. I really encourage you to do that. Taking this out for a drive on your own really helps internalizing communicate these ideas after the after launch pad today, Please give this stuff try on your machines. Okay, So at this point, like I said, we've got our management cluster. We're not gonna run workloads there that we're going to start creating child clusters. That's where all of our work and we're gonna go. That's what we're gonna learn how to do in our next video. Cue that up for us. >>I so love Shawn's voice. >>Wasn't that all day? >>Yeah, I watched him read the phone book. >>All right, here we go. Let's now that we have our management cluster set up, let's create a first child work cluster. >>Hello. In this demo, we will cover the deployment experience of creating a new child cluster the scaling of the cluster on how to update the cluster. When a new version is available, we begin the process by logging onto the you I as a normal user called Mary. Let's go through the navigation of the u I. So you can switch Project Mary only has access to development. Uh huh. Get a list of the available projects that you have access to. What clusters have been deployed at the moment there. Man. Yes, this H keys, Associate ID for Mary into her team on the cloud credentials that allow you to create or access the various clouds that you can deploy clusters to finally different releases that are available to us. We can switch from dark mode to light mode, depending on your preferences. Right. Let's now set up some ssh keys for Mary so she can access the notes and machines again. Very simply, had Mississippi key give it a name. We copy and paste our public key into the upload key block. Or we can upload the key if we have the file available on our machine. A very simple process. So to create a new cluster, we define the cluster ad management nodes and add worker nodes to the cluster. Yeah, again, very simply, we got the clusters tab we had to create cluster button. Give the cluster name. Yeah, Andi, select the provider. We only have access to AWS in this particular deployment, so we'll stick to AWS. What's like the region in this case? US West one released version five point seven is the current release Onda Attach. Mary's Key is necessary key. We can then check the rest of the settings, confirming the provider any kubernetes c r D a r i p address information. We can change this. Should we wish to? We'll leave it default for now and then what components of stack light? I would like to deploy into my custom for this. I'm enabling stack light on logging, and I consider the retention sizes attention times on. Even at this stage, add any custom alerts for the watchdogs. Consider email alerting which I will need my smart host. Details and authentication details. Andi Slack Alerts. Now I'm defining the cluster. All that's happened is the cluster's been defined. I now need to add machines to that cluster. I'll begin by clicking the create machine button within the cluster definition. Oh, select manager, Select the number of machines. Three is the minimum. Select the instant size that I'd like to use from AWS and very importantly, ensure correct. Use the correct Am I for the region. I convinced side on the route. Device size. There we go. My three machines are busy creating. I now need to add some workers to this cluster. So I go through the same process this time once again, just selecting worker. I'll just add to once again the am I is extremely important. Will fail if we don't pick the right. Am I for a Clinton machine? In this case and the deployment has started, we can go and check on the bold status are going back to the clusters screen on clicking on the little three dots on the right. We get the cluster info and the events, so the basic cluster info you'll see pending their listen. Cluster is still in the process of being built. We kick on, the events will get a list of actions that have been completed This part of the set up of the cluster. So you can see here. We've created the VPC. We've created the sub nets on. We've created the Internet Gateway. It's unnecessary made of us. And we have no warnings of the stage. Okay, this will then run for a while. We have one minute past. We can click through. We can check the status of the machine balls as individuals so we can check the machine info, details of the machines that we've assigned mhm and see any events pertaining to the machine areas like this one on normal. Yeah. Just last. The community's components are waiting for the machines to start. Go back to customers. Okay, right. Because we're moving ahead now. We can see we have it in progress. Five minutes in new Matt Gateway. And at this stage, the machines have been built on assigned. I pick up the U S. Yeah, yeah, yeah. There we go. Machine has been created. See the event detail and the AWS. I'd for that machine. No speeding things up a little bit this whole process and to end takes about fifteen minutes. Run the clock forward, you'll notice is the machines continue to bold the in progress. We'll go from in progress to ready. A soon as we got ready on all three machines, the managers on both workers way could go on and we could see that now we reached the point where the cluster itself is being configured mhm and then we go. Cluster has been deployed. So once the classes deployed, we can now never get around. Our environment are looking into configure cluster. We could modify their cluster. We could get the end points for alert Alert Manager See here the griffon occupying and Prometheus are still building in the background but the cluster is available on You would be able to put workloads on it at this stage to download the cube conflict so that I can put workloads on it. It's again the three little dots in the right for that particular cluster. If the download cube conflict give it my password, I now have the Q conflict file necessary so that I can access that cluster. All right, Now that the build is fully completed, we can check out cluster info on. We can see that all the satellite components have been built. All the storage is there, and we have access to the CPU. I. So if we click into the cluster, we can access the UCP dashboard, click the signing with the clock button to use the SSO. We give Mary's possible to use the name once again. Thing is an unlicensed cluster way could license at this point. Or just skip it on. Do we have the UCP dashboard? You could see that has been up for a little while. We have some data on the dashboard going back to the console. We can now go to the griffon. A data just been automatically pre configured for us. We can switch and utilized a number of different dashboards that have already been instrumented within the cluster. So, for example, communities cluster information, the name spaces, deployments, nodes. Um, so we look at nodes. If we could get a view of the resource is utilization of Mrs Custer is very little running in it. Yeah, a general dashboard of Cuba Navies cluster. What If this is configurable, you can modify these for your own needs, or add your own dashboards on de scoped to the cluster. So it is available to all users who have access to this specific cluster. All right to scale the cluster on to add a No. This is simple. Is the process of adding a mode to the cluster, assuming we've done that in the first place. So we go to the cluster, go into the details for the cluster we select, create machine. Once again, we need to be ensure that we put the correct am I in and any other functions we like. You can create different sized machines so it could be a larger node. Could be bigger group disks and you'll see that worker has been added in the provisioning state. On shortly, we will see the detail off that worker as a complete to remove a note from a cluster. Once again, we're going to the cluster. We select the node we would like to remove. Okay, I just hit delete On that note. Worker nodes will be removed from the cluster using according and drawing method to ensure that your workloads are not affected. Updating a cluster. When an update is available in the menu for that particular cluster, the update button will become available. And it's a simple as clicking the button validating which release you would like to update to this case. This available releases five point seven point one give you I'm kicking the update back in the background. We will coordinate. Drain each node slowly, go through the process of updating it. Andi update will complete depending on what the update is as quickly as possible. Who we go. The notes being rebuilt in this case impacted the manager node. So one of the manager nodes is in the process of being rebuilt. In fact, to in this case, one has completed already. Yeah, and in a few minutes, we'll see that the upgrade has been completed. There we go. Great. Done. If you work loads of both using proper cloud native community standards, there will be no impact. >>All right, there. We haven't. We got our first workload cluster spun up and managed by Dr Enterprise Container Cloud. So I I loved Shawn's classic warning there. When you're spinning up an actual doctor enterprise deployment, you see little errors and warnings popping up. Just don't touch it. Just leave it alone and let Dr Enterprises self healing properties take care of all those very transient temporary glitches, resolve themselves and leave you with a functioning workload cluster within victims. >>And now, if you think about it that that video was not very long at all. And that's how long it would take you if someone came into you and said, Hey, can you spend up a kubernetes cluster for development development A. Over here, um, it literally would take you a few minutes to thio Accomplish that. And that was with a W s. Obviously, which is sort of, ah, transient resource in the cloud. But you could do exactly the same thing with resource is on Prem or resource is, um physical resource is and will be going through that later in the process. >>Yeah, absolutely one thing that is present in that demo, but that I like to highlight a little bit more because it just kind of glides by Is this notion of, ah, cluster release? So when Sean was creating that cluster, and also when when he was upgrading that cluster, he had to choose a release. What does that didn't really explain? What does that mean? Well, in Dr Enterprise Container Cloud, we have released numbers that capture the entire staff of container ization tools that will be deploying to that workload costume. So that's your version of kubernetes sed cor DNs calico. Doctor Engineer. All the different bits and pieces that not only work independently but are validated toe work together as a staff appropriate for production, humanities, adopted enterprise environments. >>Yep. From the bottom of the stack to the top, we actually test it for scale. Test it for CVS, test it for all of the various things that would, you know, result in issues with you running the application services. And I've got to tell you from having, you know, managed kubernetes deployments and things like that that if you're the one doing it yourself, it can get rather messy. Eso This makes it easy. >>Bruce, you were staying a second ago. They I'll take you at least fifteen minutes to install your release. Custer. Well, sure, but what would all the other bits and pieces you need toe? Not just It's not just about pressing the button to install it, right? It's making the right decision. About what components work? Well, our best tested toe be successful working together has a staff? Absolutely. We this release mechanism and Dr Enterprise Container Cloud. Let's just kind of package up that expert knowledge and make it available in a really straightforward, fashionable species. Uh, pre Confederate release numbers and Bruce is you're pointing out earlier. He's got delivered to us is updates kind of transparent period. When when? When Sean wanted toe update that cluster, he created little update. Custer Button appeared when an update was available. All you gotta do is click. It tells you what Here's your new stack of communities components. It goes ahead. And the straps those components for you? >>Yeah, it actually even displays at the top of the screen. Ah, little header That says you've got an update available. Do you want me to apply? It s o >>Absolutely. Another couple of cool things. I think that are easy to miss in that demo was I really like the on board Bafana that comes along with this stack. So we've been Prometheus Metrics and Dr Enterprise for years and years now. They're very high level. Maybe in in previous versions of Dr Enterprise having those detailed dashboards that Ravana provides, I think that's a great value out there. People always wanted to be ableto zoom in a little bit on that, uh, on those cluster metrics, you're gonna provides them out of the box for us. Yeah, >>that was Ah, really, uh, you know, the joining of the Miranda's and Dr teams together actually spawned us to be able to take the best of what Morantes had in the open stack environment for monitoring and logging and alerting and to do that integration in in a very short period of time so that now we've got it straight across the board for both the kubernetes world and the open stack world. Using the same tool sets >>warm. One other thing I wanna point out about that demo that I think there was some questions about our last go around was that demo was all about creating a managed workplace cluster. So the doctor enterprise Container Cloud managers were using those aws credentials provisioned it toe actually create new e c two instances installed Docker engine stalled. Doctor Enterprise. Remember all that stuff on top of those fresh new VM created and managed by Dr Enterprise contain the cloud. Nothing unique about that. AWS deployments do that on open staff doing on Parramatta stuff as well. Um, there's another flavor here, though in a way to do this for all of our long time doctor Enterprise customers that have been running Doctor Enterprise for years and years. Now, if you got existing UCP points existing doctor enterprise deployments, you plug those in to Dr Enterprise Container Cloud, uh, and use darker enterprise between the cloud to manage those pre existing Oh, working clusters. You don't always have to be strapping straight from Dr Enterprises. Plug in external clusters is bad. >>Yep, the the Cube config elements of the UCP environment. The bundling capability actually gives us a very straightforward methodology. And there's instructions on our website for exactly how thio, uh, bring in import and you see p cluster. Um so it it makes very convenient for our existing customers to take advantage of this new release. >>Absolutely cool. More thoughts on this wonders if we jump onto the next video. >>I think we should move press on >>time marches on here. So let's Let's carry on. So just to recap where we are right now, first video, we create a management cluster. That's what we're gonna use to create All our downstream were closed clusters, which is what we did in this video. Let's maybe the simplest architectures, because that's doing everything in one region on AWS pretty common use case because we want to be able to spin up workload clusters across many regions. And so to do that, we're gonna add a third layer in between the management and work cluster layers. That's gonna be our regional cluster managers. So this is gonna be, uh, our regional management cluster that exists per region that we're going to manage those regional managers will be than the ones responsible for spending part clusters across all these different regions. Let's see it in action in our next video. >>Hello. In this demo, we will cover the deployment of additional regional management. Cluster will include a brief architectural overview, how to set up the management environment, prepare for the deployment deployment overview, and then just to prove it, to play a regional child cluster. So looking at the overall architecture, the management cluster provides all the core functionality, including identity management, authentication, inventory and release version. ING Regional Cluster provides the specific architecture provider in this case, AWS on the L C M components on the d you speak cluster for child cluster is the cluster or clusters being deployed and managed? Okay, so why do you need original cluster? Different platform architectures, for example AWS open stack, even bare metal to simplify connectivity across multiple regions handle complexities like VPNs or one way connectivity through firewalls, but also help clarify availability zones. Yeah. Here we have a view of the regional cluster and how it connects to the management cluster on their components, including items like the LCN cluster Manager. We also machine manager. We're hell Mandel are managed as well as the actual provider logic. Okay, we'll begin by logging on Is the default administrative user writer. Okay, once we're in there, we'll have a look at the available clusters making sure we switch to the default project which contains the administration clusters. Here we can see the cars management cluster, which is the master controller. When you see it only has three nodes, three managers, no workers. Okay, if we look at another regional cluster, similar to what we're going to deploy now. Also only has three managers once again, no workers. But as a comparison is a child cluster. This one has three managers, but also has additional workers associate it to the cluster. Yeah, all right, we need to connect. Tell bootstrap note, preferably the same note that used to create the original management plaster. It's just on AWS, but I still want to machine Mhm. All right, A few things we have to do to make sure the environment is ready. First thing we're gonna pseudo into route. I mean, we'll go into our releases folder where we have the car's boot strap on. This was the original bootstrap used to build the original management cluster. We're going to double check to make sure our cube con figures there It's again. The one created after the original customers created just double check. That cute conflict is the correct one. Does point to the management cluster. We're just checking to make sure that we can reach the images that everything's working, condone, load our images waken access to a swell. Yeah, Next, we're gonna edit the machine definitions what we're doing here is ensuring that for this cluster we have the right machine definitions, including items like the am I So that's found under the templates AWS directory. We don't need to edit anything else here, but we could change items like the size of the machines attempts we want to use but the key items to ensure where changed the am I reference for the junta image is the one for the region in this case aws region of re utilizing. This was an open stack deployment. We have to make sure we're pointing in the correct open stack images. Yeah, yeah. Okay. Sit the correct Am I save the file? Yeah. We need to get up credentials again. When we originally created the bootstrap cluster, we got credentials made of the U. S. If we hadn't done this, we would need to go through the u A. W s set up. So we just exporting AWS access key and I d. What's important is Kaz aws enabled equals. True. Now we're sitting the region for the new regional cluster. In this case, it's Frankfurt on exporting our Q conflict that we want to use for the management cluster when we looked at earlier. Yeah, now we're exporting that. Want to call? The cluster region is Frankfurt's Socrates Frankfurt yet trying to use something descriptive? It's easy to identify. Yeah, and then after this, we'll just run the bootstrap script, which will complete the deployment for us. Bootstrap of the regional cluster is quite a bit quicker than the initial management clusters. There are fewer components to be deployed, but to make it watchable, we've spent it up. So we're preparing our bootstrap cluster on the local bootstrap node. Almost ready on. We started preparing the instances at us and waiting for the past, you know, to get started. Please the best your node, onda. We're also starting to build the actual management machines they're now provisioning on. We've reached the point where they're actually starting to deploy Dr Enterprise, he says. Probably the longest face we'll see in a second that all the nodes will go from the player deployed. Prepare, prepare Mhm. We'll see. Their status changes updates. It was the first word ready. Second, just applying second. Grady, both my time away from home control that's become ready. Removing cluster the management cluster from the bootstrap instance into the new cluster running a data for us? Yeah, almost a on. Now we're playing Stockland. Thanks. Whichever is done on Done. Now we'll build a child cluster in the new region very, very quickly. Find the cluster will pick our new credential have shown up. We'll just call it Frankfurt for simplicity. A key on customers to find. That's the machine. That cluster stop with three manages set the correct Am I for the region? Yeah, Same to add workers. There we go. That's the building. Yeah. Total bill of time. Should be about fifteen minutes. Concedes in progress. Can we expect this up a little bit? Check the events. We've created all the dependencies, machine instances, machines. A boat? Yeah. Shortly. We should have a working caster in the Frankfurt region. Now almost a one note is ready from management. Two in progress. On we're done. Trust us up and running. >>Excellent. There we have it. We've got our three layered doctor enterprise container cloud structure in place now with our management cluster in which we scrap everything else. Our regional clusters which manage individual aws regions and child clusters sitting over depends. >>Yeah, you can. You know you can actually see in the hierarchy the advantages that that presents for folks who have multiple locations where they'd like a geographic locations where they'd like to distribute their clusters so that you can access them or readily co resident with your development teams. Um and, uh, one of the other things I think that's really unique about it is that we provide that same operational support system capability throughout. So you've got stack light monitoring the stack light that's monitoring the stack light down to the actual child clusters that they have >>all through that single pane of glass that shows you all your different clusters, whether their workload cluster like what the child clusters or usual clusters from managing different regions. Cool. Alright, well, time marches on your folks. We've only got a few minutes left and I got one more video in our last video for the session. We're gonna walk through standing up a child cluster on bare metal. So so far, everything we've seen so far has been aws focus. Just because it's kind of easy to make that was on AWS. We don't want to leave you with the impression that that's all we do, we're covering AWS bare metal and open step deployments as well documented Craftsman Cloud. Let's see it in action with a bare metal child cluster. >>We are on the home stretch, >>right. >>Hello. This demo will cover the process of defining bare metal hosts and then review the steps of defining and deploying a bare metal based doctor enterprise cluster. Yeah, so why bare metal? Firstly, it eliminates hyper visor overhead with performance boost of up to thirty percent provides direct access to GP use, prioritize for high performance wear clothes like machine learning and AI, and support high performance workouts like network functions, virtualization. It also provides a focus on on Prem workloads, simplifying and ensuring we don't need to create the complexity of adding another hyper visor layer in between. So continuing on the theme Why communities and bare metal again Hyper visor overhead. Well, no virtualization overhead. Direct access to hardware items like F p g A s G p, us. We can be much more specific about resource is required on the nodes. No need to cater for additional overhead. We can handle utilization in the scheduling better Onda. We increase the performance and simplicity of the entire environment as we don't need another virtualization layer. Yeah, In this section will define the BM hosts will create a new project. Will add the bare metal hosts, including the host name. I put my credentials. I pay my address, Mac address on, then provide a machine type label to determine what type of machine it is. Related use. Okay, let's get started Certain Blufgan was the operator thing. We'll go and we'll create a project for our machines to be a member off. Helps with scoping for later on for security. I begin the process of adding machines to that project. Yeah. Yeah. So the first thing we had to be in post many of the machine a name. Anything you want? Yeah, in this case by mental zero one. Provide the IAP My user name. Type my password? Yeah. On the Mac address for the active, my interface with boot interface and then the i p m i P address. Yeah, these machines. We have the time storage worker manager. He's a manager. We're gonna add a number of other machines on will speed this up just so you could see what the process. Looks like in the future, better discovery will be added to the product. Okay, Okay. Getting back there. We haven't Are Six machines have been added. Are busy being inspected, being added to the system. Let's have a look at the details of a single note. Mhm. We can see information on the set up of the node. Its capabilities? Yeah. As well as the inventory information about that particular machine. Okay, it's going to create the cluster. Mhm. Okay, so we're going to deploy a bare metal child cluster. The process we're going to go through is pretty much the same as any other child cluster. So credit custom. We'll give it a name. Thank you. But he thought were selecting bare metal on the region. We're going to select the version we want to apply on. We're going to add this search keys. If we hope we're going to give the load. Balancer host I p that we'd like to use out of the dress range update the address range that we want to use for the cluster. Check that the sea idea blocks for the communities and tunnels are what we want them to be. Enable disabled stack light and said the stack light settings to find the cluster. And then, as for any other machine, we need to add machines to the cluster. Here we're focused on building communities clusters. So we're gonna put the count of machines. You want managers? We're gonna pick the label type manager on create three machines. Is a manager for the Cuban a disgusting? Yeah, they were having workers to the same. It's a process. Just making sure that the worker label host like you are so yes, on Duin wait for the machines to deploy. Let's go through the process of putting the operating system on the notes, validating that operating system. Deploying Docker enterprise on making sure that the cluster is up and running ready to go. Okay, let's review the bold events. We can see the machine info now populated with more information about the specifics of things like storage. Yeah, of course. Details of a cluster, etcetera. Yeah, Yeah. Okay. Well, now watch the machines go through the various stages from prepared to deploy on what's the cluster build, and that brings us to the end of this particular do my as you can see the process is identical to that of building a normal child cluster we got our complaint is complete. >>Here we have a child cluster on bare metal for folks that wanted to play the stuff on Prem. >>It's ah been an interesting journey taken from the mothership as we started out building ah management cluster and then populating it with a child cluster and then finally creating a regional cluster to spread the geographically the management of our clusters and finally to provide a platform for supporting, you know, ai needs and and big Data needs, uh, you know, thank goodness we're now able to put things like Hadoop on, uh, bare metal thio in containers were pretty exciting. >>Yeah, absolutely. So with this Doctor Enterprise container cloud platform. Hopefully this commoditized scooping clusters, doctor enterprise clusters that could be spun up and use quickly taking provisioning times. You know, from however many months to get new clusters spun up for our teams. Two minutes, right. We saw those clusters gets better. Just a couple of minutes. Excellent. All right, well, thank you, everyone, for joining us for our demo session for Dr Enterprise Container Cloud. Of course, there's many many more things to discuss about this and all of Miranda's products. If you'd like to learn more, if you'd like to get your hands dirty with all of this content, police see us a training don Miranda's dot com, where we can offer you workshops and a number of different formats on our entire line of products and hands on interactive fashion. Thanks, everyone. Enjoy the rest of the launchpad of that >>thank you all enjoy.
SUMMARY :
So for the next couple of hours, I'm the Western regional Solutions architect for Moran At least somebody on the call knows something about your enterprise Computer club. And that's really the key to this thing is to provide some, you know, many training clusters so that by the end of the tutorial content today, I think that's that's pretty much what we had to nail down here. So the management costs was always We have to give this brief little pause of the management cluster in the first regional clusters to support AWS deployments. So in that video are wonderful field CTO Shauna Vera bootstrapped So primarily the foundation for being able to deploy So this cluster isn't yet for workloads. Read the phone book, So and just to make sure I understood The output that when it says I'm pivoting, I'm pivoting from on the bootstrap er go away afterwards. So that there's no dependencies on any of the clouds that get created thereafter. Yeah, that actually reminds me of how we bootstrapped doctor enterprise back in the day, The config file that that's generated the template is fairly straightforward We always insist on high availability for this management cluster the scenes without you having toe worry about it as a developer. Examples of that is the day goes on. either the the regional cluster or a We've got the management cluster, and we're gonna go straight with child cluster. as opposed to having to centralize thumb So just head on in, head on into the docks like the Dale provided here. That's going to be in a very near term I didn't wanna make promises for product, but I'm not too surprised that she's gonna be targeted. No, just that the fact that we're running through these individual So let's go to that video and see just how We can check the status of the machine bulls as individuals so we can check the machine the thing that jumped out to me at first Waas like the inputs that go into defining Yeah, and and And that's really the focus of our effort is to ensure that So at that point, once we started creating that workload child cluster, of course, we bootstrapped good old of the bootstrapping as well that the processes themselves are self healing, And the worst thing you could do is panic at the first warning and start tearing things that don't that then go out to touch slack and say hi, You need to watch your disk But Sean mentioned it on the video. And And the kubernetes, uh, scaling methodology is is he adhered So should we go to the questions. Um, that's kind of the point, right? you know, set up things and deploy your applications and things. that comes to us not from Dr Enterprise Container Cloud, but just from the underlying kubernetes distribution. to the standards that we would want to set to make sure that we're not overloading On the next video, we're gonna learn how to spin up a Yeah, Do the same to add workers. We got that management cluster that we do strapped in the first video. Yeah, that's the key to this is to be able to have co resident with So we don't have to go back to the mother ship. So it's just one pane of glass to the bootstrapped cluster of the regional services. and another, you know, detail for those that have sharp eyes. Let's take a quick peek of the questions here, see if there's anything we want to call out, then we move on to our last want all of the other major players in the cloud arena. Let's jump into our last video in the Siri's, So the first thing we had to be in post, Yeah, many of the machine A name. Much the same is how we did for AWS. nodes and and that the management layer is going to have sufficient horsepower to, are regional to our clusters on aws hand bear amount, Of course, with his dad is still available. that's been put out in the chat, um, that you'll be able to give this a go yourself, Uh, take the opportunity to let your colleagues know if they were in another session I e just interest will feel for you. Use A I'm the one with the gray hair and the glasses. And for the providers in the very near future. I can hardly wait. Let's do it all right to share my video So the first thing is, we need those route credentials which we're going to export on the command That is the tool and you're gonna use to start spinning up downstream It just has to be able to reach aws hit that Hit that a p I to spin up those easy to instances because, and all of the necessary parameters that you would fill in have That's the very first thing you're going to Yeah, for the most part. Let's now that we have our management cluster set up, let's create a first We can check the status of the machine balls as individuals so we can check the glitches, resolve themselves and leave you with a functioning workload cluster within exactly the same thing with resource is on Prem or resource is, All the different bits and pieces And I've got to tell you from having, you know, managed kubernetes And the straps those components for you? Yeah, it actually even displays at the top of the screen. I really like the on board Bafana that comes along with this stack. the best of what Morantes had in the open stack environment for monitoring and logging So the doctor enterprise Container Cloud managers were Yep, the the Cube config elements of the UCP environment. More thoughts on this wonders if we jump onto the next video. Let's maybe the simplest architectures, of the regional cluster and how it connects to the management cluster on their components, There we have it. that we provide that same operational support system capability Just because it's kind of easy to make that was on AWS. Just making sure that the worker label host like you are so yes, It's ah been an interesting journey taken from the mothership Enjoy the rest of the launchpad
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Teresa Carlson Keynote Analysis | AWS Public Sector Online
>>from around the globe. It's the queue with digital coverage of AWS public sector online brought to you by Amazon Web services. >>Everyone welcome back to the Cube's virtual coverage of AWS Public sector summit online. That's the virtual conference. Public Sector Summit is the big get together for Teresa Carlson and her team and Amazon Web services from the public sector, which includes all the government agencies as well as education state governments here in United States and also abroad for other governments and countries. So we're gonna do an analysis of Teresa's keynote and also summarize the event as well. I'm John Furrow, your host of the Cube. I'm joined with my co host of the Cube, Dave Volante Stew Minimum. We're gonna wrap this up and analyze the keynote summit a really awkward, weird situation going on with the Summit because of the virtual nature of it. This event really prides itself. Stew and Dave. We've all done this event. It's one of our favorites. It's a really good face to face environment, but this time is virtual. And so with the covert 19 that's the backdrop to all this. >>Yeah, so I mean, a couple of things, John. I think first of all, A Z, you've pointed out many times. The future has just been pulled forward. I think the second thing is with this whole work from home in this remote thing obviously was talking about how the cloud is a tailwind. But let's face it. I mean, everybody's business was affected in some way. I think the cloud ultimately gets a tail wind out of this, but but But I think the third thing is security. Public sector is always heavily focused on security, and the security model has really changed overnight to what we've been talking about for years that the moat that we've built the perimeter is no longer where organizations need to be spending money. It's really to secure remote locations. And that literally happened overnight. So things like a security cloud become much, much more important. And obviously endpoint security and other other things that we've talked about in the Cube now for last 100 days. >>Well, Steve, I want to get your thoughts cause you know, we all love space. Do we always want to go the best space events that they're gonna be virtual this year as well? Um, But the big news out of the keynote, which was really surprising to me, is Amazon's continued double down on their efforts around space, cyber security, public and within the public sector. And they're announcing here, and the big news is a new space business segment. So they announced an aerospace group to serve those customers because space to becoming a very important observation component to a lot of the stuff we've seen with ground station we've seen at reinvent public sector. These new kinds of services are coming out. It's the best, the cloud. It's the best of data, and it's the best of these new use cases. What's your thoughts? >>Yeah, interesting. John, of course. You know, the federal government has put together Space Forces, the newest arm of the military. It's really even though something it is a punchline. There's even a Netflix show that I believe got the trademark board because they registered for it first. But we've seen Amazon pushing into space. Not only there technology being used. I had the pleasure of attending the Amazon re Marcia last year, which brought together Jeff Bezos's blue origin as well as Amazon AWS in that ecosystem. So AWS has had a number of services, like ground Station that that that are being used to help the cloud technology extend to what's happening base. So it makes a lot of sense for for the govcloud to extend to that type of environment aside you mentioned at this show. One of the things we love always is. You know, there's some great practitioner stories, and I think so many over the years that we've been doing this show and we still got some of them. Theresa had some really good guests in her keynote, talking about transformation and actually, one of the ones that she mentioned but didn't have in the keynote was one that I got to interview. I was the CTO for the state of West Virginia. If you talk about one of those government services that is getting, you know, heavy usage, it's unemployment. So they had to go from Oh my gosh, we normally had people in, you know, physical answering. The phone call centers to wait. I need to have a cloud based contact center. And they literally did that, you know, over the weekend, spun it up and pulled people from other organizations to just say, Hey, you're working from home You know you can't do your normal job Well, we can train your own, we can get it to you securely And that's the kind of thing that the cloud was really built for >>and this new aerospace division day this really highlights a lot of not just the the coolness of space, but on Earth. The benefits of there and one of Amazon's ethos is to do the heavy lifting, Andy Jassy told us on the Cube. You know, it could be more cost effective to use satellites and leverage more of that space perimeter to push down and look at observation. Cal Poly is doing some really interesting work around space. Amazon's worked with NASA Jet Propulsion Labs. They have a lot of partnerships in aerospace and space, and as it all comes together because this is now an augmentation and the cost benefits are there, this is going to create more agility because you don't have to do all that provisioning to get this going spawned. All kinds of new creativity, both an academic and commercial, your thoughts >>Well, you know, I remember the first cloud first came out people talked a lot about while I can do things that I was never able to do before, you know, The New York Times pdf example comes to mind, but but I think what a lot of people forget is you know the point to a while. A lot of these mission critical applications Oracle databases aren't moving to the cloud. But this example that you're giving and aerospace and ground station. It's all about being able to do new things that you weren't able to do before and deliver them as a service. And so, to me, it shows a great example of tam expansion, and it also shows things that you never could do before. It's not just taking traditional enterprise APs and sticking them in the cloud. Yeah, that happens. But is re imagining what you can do with computing with this massive distributed network. And you know, I O. T. Is clearly coming into into play here. I would consider this a kind of I o t like, you know, application. And so I think there are many, many more to come. But this is a great example of something that you could really never even conceive in enterprise Tech before >>you, Dave the line on that you talked about i o t talk a lot about edge computing. Well, if you talk about going into space, that's a new frontier of the edge that we need to talk about >>the world. Glad it's round. So technically no edge if you're in space so again not to get nuance here and nerdy. But okay, let's get into the event. I want to hold on the analysis of the keynote because I think this really society impact public service, public sector, things to talk about. But let's do a quick review of kind of what's happened. We'll get to the event. But let's just review the guests that we interviewed on the Cube because we have the cube virtual. We're here in our studios. You guys were in yours. We get the quarantine cruise. We're still doing our job to get the stories out there. We talked to Teresa Carlson, Shannon Kellogg, Ken Eisner, Sandy Carter, Dr Papa Casey Coleman from Salesforce, Dr Shell Gentleman from the Paragon Institute, which is doing the fairground islands of researcher on space and weather data. Um, Joshua Spence math you can use with the Alliance for Digital Innovation Around some of this new innovation, we leave the Children's National Research Institute. So a lot of great guests on the cube dot net Check it out, guys. I had trouble getting into the event that using this in Toronto platform and it was just so hard to navigate. They've been doing it before. Um, there's some key notes on there. I thought that was a disappointment for me. I couldn't get to some of the sessions I wanted to, um, but overall, I thought the content was strong. Um, the online platform just kind of wasn't there for me. What's your reaction? >>Well, I mean, it's like a Z. That's the state of the art today. And so it's essentially a webinar like platforms, and that's what everybody's saying. A lot of people are frustrated with it. I know I as a user. Activity clicks to find stuff, but it is what it is. But I think the industry is can do better. >>Yeah, and just to comment. I'll make on it, John. One of things I always love about the Amazon show. It's not just what AWS is doing, But, you know, you walk the hallways and you walk the actual So in the virtual world, I walk the expo floor and its okay, Here's a couple of presentations links in an email address if you want to follow up, I felt even the A previous AWS online at a little bit more there. And I'm sure Amazon's listening, talking to all their partners and building out more there cause that's definitely a huge opportunity to enable both networking as well. As you know, having the ecosystem be able to participate more fully in the event >>and full disclosure. We're building our own platform. We have the platforms. We care about this guys. I think that on these virtual events that the discovery is critical having the available to find the sessions, find the people so it feels more like an event. I think you know, we hope that these solutions can get better. We're gonna try and do our best. Um, so, um well, keep plugging away, guys. I want to get your thoughts. They have you been doing a lot of breaking analysis on this do and your interviews as well in the technology side around the impact of Covert 19 with Teresa Carlson and her keynote. Her number one message that I heard was Covad 19 Crisis has caused a imperative for all agencies to move faster, and Amazon is kind of I won't say put things to the side because they got their business at scale. Have really been honing in on having deliverables for crisis solutions. Solving the problems and getting out to Steve mentioned the call centers is one of the key interviews. This is that they're job. They have to do this cove. It impacts the public services of the public sector that she's that they service. So what's your reaction? Because we've been covering on the commercial side. What's your thoughts of Teresa and Amazon's story today? >>Yeah, well, she said, You know, the agencies started making cloud migrations that they're at record pace that they'd never seen before. Having said that, you know it's hard, but Amazon doesn't break out its its revenue in public sector. But in the data, I look at the breaking analysis CTR data. I mean, it definitely suggests a couple of things. Things one is I mean, everybody in the enterprise was affected in some way by Kobe is they said before, it wouldn't surprise me if there wasn't a little bit of a pause and aws public sector business and then it's picking up again now, as we sort of exit this isolation economy. I think the second thing I would say is that AWS Public sector, based on the data that I see, is significantly outpacing the growth of AWS. Overall number one number two. It's also keeping pace with the growth of Microsoft Azure. Now we know that AWS, on balance is much bigger than Microsoft Azure and Infrastructures of Service. But we also know that Microsoft Azure is growing faster. That doesn't seem to be the case in public sector. It seems like the public sector business is is really right there from in terms of growth. So it really is a shining star inside of AWS. >>Still, speed is a startup game, and agility has been a dev ops ethos. You couldn't see more obvious example in public sector where speed is critical. What's your reaction to your interviews and your conversations and your observations? A keynote? >>Yeah, I mean something We've all been saying in the technology industry is Just imagine if this had happened under 15 years ago, where we would be So where in a couple of the interviews you mentioned, I've talked to some of the non profits and researchers working on covert 19. So the cloud really has been in the spotlight. Can I react? Bask scale. Can I share information fast while still maintaining the proper regulations that are needed in the security so that, you know, the cloud has been reacting fast when you talk about the financial resource is, it's really nice to see Amazon in some of these instances has been donating compute occasional resource is and the like, so that you know, critical universities that are looking at this when researchers get what they need and not have to worry about budgets, other agencies, if you talk about contact centers, are often they will get emergency funding where they have a way to be able to get that to scale, since they weren't necessarily planning for these expenses. So you know what we've been seeing is that Cloud really has had the stress test with everything that's been going on here, and it's reacting, so it's good to see that you know, the promise of cloud is meeting that scale for the most part, Amazon doing a really good job here and you know, their customers just, you know, feel The partnership with Amazon is what I've heard loud and clear. >>Well, Dave, one of these I want to get your reaction on because Amazon you can almost see what's going on with them. They don't want to do their own horn because they're the winners on the pandemic. They are doing financially well, their services. All the things that they do scale their their their position, too. Take advantage. Business wise of of the remote workers and the customers and agencies. They don't have the problems at scale that the customers have. So a lot of things going on here. These applications that have been in the i t world of public sector are old, outdated, antiquated, certainly summer modernize more than others. But clearly 80% of them need to be modernized. So when a pandemic hits like this, it becomes critical infrastructure. Because look at the look of the things unemployment checks, massive amount of filings going on. You got critical service from education remote workforces. >>these are >>all exposed. It's not just critical. Infrastructure is plumbing. It's The applications are critical. Legit problems need to be solved now. This is forcing an institutional mindset that's been there for years of, like, slow two. Gotta move fast. I mean, this is really your thoughts. >>Yeah. And well, well, with liquidity that the Fed put into the into the market, people had, You know, it's interesting when you look at, say, for instance, take a traditional infrastructure provider like an HP era Dell. Very clearly, their on Prem business deteriorated in the last 100 days. But you know HP Q and, well, HBO, you had some some supply chain problem. But Dell big uptick in this laptop business like Amazon doesn't have that problem. In fact, CEOs have told me I couldn't get a server into my data center was too much of a hassle to get too much time. It didn't have the people. So I just spun up instances on AWS at the same time. You know, Amazon's VD I business who has workspaces business, you know, no doubt, you know, saw an uptick from this. So it's got that broad portfolio, and I think you know, people ask. Okay, what remains permanent? Uh, and I just don't see this This productivity boom that we're now finally getting from work from home pivoting back Teoh, go into the office and it calls into question Stu, when If nobody is in the corporate office, you know the VP ends, you know, the Internet becomes the new private network. >>It's to start ups moving fast. The change has been in the past two months has been, like, two years. Huge challenges. >>Yeah, John, it's an interesting point. So, you know, when cloud first started, it was about developers. It was about smaller companies that the ones that were born in the cloud on The real opportunity we've been seeing in the last few months is, you know, large organizations. You talk about public sector, there's non profits. There's government agencies. They're not the ones that you necessarily think of as moving fast. A David just pointing out Also, many of these changes that we're putting into place are going to be with us for a while. So not only remote work, but you talk about telehealth and telemedicine. These type of things, you know, have been on our doorstep for many years, but this has been a forcing function toe. Have it be there. And while we will likely go back to kind of a hybrid world, I think we have accelerated what's going on. So you know, there is the silver lining in what's going on because, you know, Number one, we're not through this pandemic. And number two, you know, there's nothing saying that we might have another pandemic in the future. So if the technology can enable us to be more flexible, more distributed a xai I've heard online. People talk a lot. It's no longer work from home but really work from anywhere. So that's a promise we've had for a long time. And in every technology and vertical. There's a little bit of a reimagining on cloud, absolutely an enabler for thinking differently. >>John, I wonder if I could comment on that and maybe ask you a question. That's okay. I know your host. You don't mind. So, first of all, I think if you think about a framework for coming back, it's too said, You know, we're still not out of this thing yet, but if you look at three things how digital is an organization. How what's the feasibility of them actually doing physical distancing? And how essential is that business from a digital standpoint you have cloud. How digital are you? The government obviously, is a critical business. And so I think, you know, AWS, public Sector and other firms like that are in pretty good shape. And then there's just a lot of businesses that aren't essential that aren't digital, and those are gonna really, you know, see a deterioration. But you've been you've been interviewing a lot of people, John, in this event you've been watching for years. What's your take on AWS Public sector? >>Well, I'll give an answer that also wants to do away because he and I both talk to some of the guests and interview them. Had some conversations in the community is prep. But my take away looking at Amazon over the past, say, five or six years, um, a massive acceleration we saw coming in that match the commercial market on the enterprise side. So this almost blending of it's not just public sector anymore. It looks a lot like commercial cause, the the needs and the services and the APS have to be more agile. So you saw the same kind of questions in the same kind of crazy. It wasn't just a separate division or a separate industry sector. It has the same patterns as commercial. But I think to me my big takeaways, that Theresa Carlson hit this early on with Amazon, and that is they can do a lot of the heavy lifting things like fed ramp, which can cost a $1,000,000 for a company to go through. You going with Amazon? You onboard them? You're instantly. There's a fast track for you. It's less expensive, significantly less expensive. And next thing you know, you're selling to the government. If you're a start up or commercial business, that's a gold mine. I'm going with Amazon every time. Um, and the >>other >>thing is, is that the government has shifted. So now you have Covad 19 impact. That puts a huge premium on people who are already been setting up for digital transformation and or have been doing it. So those agencies and those stakeholders will be doing very, very well. And you know that Congress has got trillions of dollars day. We've covered this on the Cube. How much of that coverage is actually going for modernization of I T systems? Nothing. And, you know, one of things. Amazon saying. And rightfully so. Shannon Kellogg was pointing out. Congress needs to put some money aside for their own agencies because the citizens us, the taxpayers, we got to get the services. You got veterans, you've got unemployment. You've got these critical services that need to be turned on quicker. There's no money for that. So huge blind spot on the whole recovery bill. And then finally, I think that there's a huge entrepreneurial thinking that's going to be a public private partnership. Cal Poly, Other NASA JPL You're starting to see new applications, and this came out of my interviews on some of the ones I talked to. They're thinking differently, the doing things that have never been done before. And they're doing it in a clever, innovative way, and they're reinventing and delivering new things that are better. So everything's about okay. Modernize the old and make it better, and then think about something new and completely different and make it game changing. So to me, those were dynamics that are going on than seeing emerge, and it's coming out of the interviews. Loud and clear. Oh, my God, I never would have thought about that. You can only do that with Cloud Computing. A super computer in the Cloud Analytics at scale, Ocean Data from sale Drone using satellite over the top observation data. Oh, my God. Brilliant. Never possible before. So these are the new things that put the old guard in the Beltway bandits that check because they can't make up the old excuses. So I think Amazon and Microsoft, more than anyone else, can drive change fast. So whoever gets there first, well, we'll take most of the shares. So it's a huge shift and it's happening very fast more than ever before this year with Covert 19 and again, that's the the analysis. And Amazon is just trying to like, Okay, don't talk about us is we don't want to like we're over overtaking the world because outside and then look opportunistic. But the reality is we have the best solution. So >>what? They complain they don't want to be perceived as ambulance station. But to your point, the new work loads and new applications and the traditional enterprise folks they want to pay the cow path is really what they want to dio. And we're just now seeing a whole new set of applications and workloads emerging. What about the team you guys have been interviewing? A lot of people we've interviewed tons of people at AWS reinvent over the years. We know about Andy Jassy at all. You know, his his lieutenants, about the team in public sector. How do they compare, you know, relative to what we know about AWS and maybe even some of the competition. Where do you Where do you grade them? >>I give Amazon and, um, much stronger grade than Microsoft. Microsoft still has an old DNA. Um, you got something to tell them is bring some fresh brand there. I see the Jedi competition a lot of mud slinging there, and I think Microsoft clearly got in fear solution. So the whole stall tactic has worked, and we pointed out two years ago the number one goal of Jet I was for Amazon not to win. And Microsoft looks like they're gonna catch up, and we'll probably get that contract. And I don't think you're probably gonna win that out, right? I don't think Amazon is gonna win that back. We'll see. But still doesn't matter. Is gonna go multi cloud anyway. Um, Teresa Carlson has always had the right vision. The team is exceptional. Um, they're superb experience and their ecosystem partners Air second and NASA GPL Cal Poly. The list goes on and on, and they're attracting new talent. So you look at the benchmark new talent and unlimited capability again, they're providing the kinds of services. So if we wanted to sell the Cube virtual platform Dave, say the government to do do events, we did get fed ramp. We get all this approval process because Amazon customer, you can just skate right in and move up faster versus the slog of these certifications that everyone knows in every venture capitalists are. Investor knows it takes a lot of time. So to me, the team is awesome. I think that the best in the industry and they've got to balance the policy. I think that's gonna be a real big challenge. And it's complex with Amazon, you know, they own the post. You got the political climate and they're winning, right? They're doing well. And so they have an incentive to to be in there and shape policy. And I think the digital natives we are here. And I think it's a silent revolution going on where the young generation is like, Look at government served me better. And how can I get involved? So I think you're going to see new APS coming. We're gonna see a really, you know, integration of new blood coming into the public sector, young talent and new applications that might take >>you mentioned the political climate, of course. Pre Cove. It'll you heard this? All that we call it the Tech lash, right, The backlash into big tech. You wonder if that is going to now subside somewhat, but still is the point You're making it. Where would we be without without technology generally and big tech stepping up? Of course, now that you know who knows, right, Biden looks like he's, you know, in the catbird seat. But there's a lot of time left talking about Liz more on being the Treasury secretary. You know what she'll do? The big tech, but But nonetheless I think I think really it is time to look at big tech and look at the Tech for good, and you give them some points for that. Still, what do you think? >>Yeah, first of all, Dave, you know, in general, it felt like that tech lash has gone down a little bit when I look online. Facebook, of course, is still front and center about what they're doing and how they're reacting to the current state of what's happening around the country. Amazon, on the other hand, you know, a done mentioned, you know, they're absolutely winning in this, but there hasn't been, you know, too much push back if you talk culturally. There's a big difference between Amazon and AWS. There are some concerns around what Amazon is doing in their distribution facilities and the like. And, you know, there's been lots of spotlights set on that, um, but overall, there are questions. Should AWS and Amazon that they split. There's an interesting debate on that, Dave, you and I have had many conversations about that over the past couple of years, and it feels like it is coming more to a head on. And if it happens from a regulation standpoint, or would Amazon do it for business reason because, you know, one of Microsoft and Google's biggest attacks are, well, you don't want to put your infrastructure on AWS because Amazon, the parent company, is going to go after your business. I do want to pull in just one thread that John you and Dave were both talking about while today you know, Amazon's doing a good job of not trying todo ambulance case. What is different today than it was 10 or 20 years ago. It used to be that I t would do something and they didn't want to talk to their peers because that was their differentiation. But Amazon has done a good job of explaining that you don't want to have that undifferentiated heavy lifting. So now when an agency or a company find something that they really like from Amazon talking all their peers about it because they're like, Oh, you're using this Have you tried plugging in this other service or use this other piece of the ecosystem? So there is that flywheel effect from the cloud from customers. And of course, we've talked a lot about the flywheel of data, and one of the big takeaways from this show has been the ability for cloud to help unlock and get beyond those information silos for things like over 19 and beyond. >>Hey, John, if the government makes a ws spin out or Amazon spin out AWS, does that mean Microsoft and Google have to spin out their cloud businesses to? And, uh, you think that you think the Chinese government make Alibaba spin out its cloud business? >>Well, you know the thing about the Chinese and Facebook, I compare them together because this is where the tech lash problem comes in. The Chinese stolen local property, United States. That's well documented use as competitive advantage. Facebook stole all the notional property out of the humans in the world and broke democracy, Right? So the difference between those bad tech actors, um, is an Amazon and others is 11 enabling technology and one isn't Facebook really doesn't really enable anything. If you think about it, enables hate. It enables some friends to talk some emotional reactions, but the real societal benefit of historically if you look at society, things that we're enabling do well in free free societies. Closed systems don't work. So you got the country of China who's orchestrating all their actors to be state driven, have a competitive advantage that's subsidised. United States will never do that. I think it's a shame to break up any of the tech companies. So I'm against the tech lash breakup. I think we should get behind our American companies and do it in an open, transparent way. Think Amazon's clearly doing that? I think that's why Amazon's quiet is because they're not taking advantage of the system that do things faster and cheaper gets that's there. Ethos thinks benefits the consumer with If you think about it that way, and some will debate that, but in general Amazon's and enabling technology with cloud. So the benefits of the cloud for them to enable our far greater than the people taking advantage of it. So if I'm on agency trying to deliver unemployment checks, I'm benefiting the citizens at scale. Amazon takes a small portion of that fee, so when you have enabling technologies, that's how to me, The right capitalism model works Silicon Valley In the tech companies, they don't think this way. They think for profit, go big or go home and this has been an institutional thing with tech companies. They would have a policy team, and that's all they did. They didn't really do anything t impact society because it wasn't that big. Now, with networked economies, you're looking at something completely different to connected system. You can't handle dissidents differently is it's complex? The point is, the diverse team Facebook and Amazon is one's an enabling technology. AWS Facebook is just a walled garden portal. So you know, I mean, some tech is good, some text bad, and a lot of people just don't know the difference what we do. I would say that Amazon is not evil Amazon Web services particular because they enable people to do things. And I think the benefits far outweigh the criticisms. So >>anybody use AWS. Anybody can go in there and swipe the credit card and spin up compute storage AI database so they could sell the problems. >>The problems, whether it's covert problems on solving the unemployment checks going out, are serving veterans or getting people getting delivering services. Some entrepreneurs develop an app for that, right? So you know there's benefits, right? So this you know, there's not not Amazon saying Do it this way. They're saying, Here's this resource, do something creative and build something solve a problem. And that was the key message of the keynote. >>People get concerned about absolute power, you know, it's understandable. But if you know you start abusing absolute power, really, I've always believed the government should come in, >>but >>you know, the evidence of that is is pretty few and far between, so we'll see how this thing plays out. I mean, it's a very interesting dynamic. I point about why should. I don't understand why AWS, you know, gets all the microscopic discussion. But I've never heard anybody say that Microsoft should spend on Azure. I've never heard that. >>Well, the big secret is Azure is actually one of Amazon's biggest customers. That's another breaking analysis look into that we'll keep on making noted that Dave's do Thanks for coming to do great interviews. Love your conversations. Final words to I'll give you What's the big thing you took away from your conversations with your guests for this cube? Virtual coverage of public sector virtual summit >>so biggest take away from the users is being able to react to, you know, just ridiculously fast. You know it. Talk about something where you know I get a quote on Thursday on Friday and make a decision, and on Monday, on up and running this unparalleled that I wouldn't be able to do before. And if you talk about the response things like over nine, I mean enabling technology to be able to cut across organizations across countries and across domains. John, as you pointed out, that public private dynamic helping to make sure that you can react and get things done >>Awesome. We'll leave it there. Stew. Dave. Thanks for spending time to analyze the keynote. Also summarize the event. This is a does public sector virtual summit online Couldn't be face to face. Of course. We bring the Cube virtual coverage as well as content and our platform for people to consume. Go the cube dot net check it out and keep engaging. Hit us up on Twitter if any questions hit us up. Thanks for watching. >>Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
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AWS public sector online brought to you by Amazon and her team and Amazon Web services from the public sector, which includes all the government agencies as well as on security, and the security model has really changed overnight to what we've been talking about and it's the best of these new use cases. So it makes a lot of sense for for the govcloud this is going to create more agility because you don't have to do all that provisioning to able to do before, you know, The New York Times pdf example comes to mind, Well, if you talk about going into space, that's a new frontier of the edge that we need to talk about So a lot of great guests on the Well, I mean, it's like a Z. That's the state of the art today. It's not just what AWS is doing, But, you know, you walk the hallways and you walk the actual So I think you know, we hope that these solutions can get better. But in the data, I look at the breaking analysis CTR You couldn't see more obvious example in public sector where that are needed in the security so that, you know, the cloud has been reacting fast when They don't have the problems at scale that the customers have. I mean, this is really your thoughts. So it's got that broad portfolio, and I think you know, people ask. The change has been in the past two months has been, They're not the ones that you necessarily think of as moving fast. And so I think, you know, AWS, public Sector and other firms like that are in pretty And next thing you know, you're selling to the government. I think that there's a huge entrepreneurial thinking that's going to be a public What about the team you guys have been interviewing? I see the Jedi competition a lot of mud slinging there, and I think Microsoft clearly got in fear solution. is time to look at big tech and look at the Tech for good, and you give them some points for Amazon, on the other hand, you know, a done mentioned, you know, they're absolutely winning So the benefits of the cloud for them to enable our Anybody can go in there and swipe the credit card and spin So this you know, there's not not Amazon But if you know you start abusing absolute you know, the evidence of that is is pretty few and far between, so we'll see how this thing Final words to I'll give you What's the big thing you took away from your conversations with your guests helping to make sure that you can react and get things done We bring the Cube virtual coverage as well as content and our
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theCUBE Insights | AnsibleFest 2019
>>Live from Atlanta, Georgia. It's the cube covering Ansible Fest 2019 brought to you by red hat. >>Welcome back. This is the cubes coverage of Ansible Fest 2019. I'm Stu Miniman. My cohost of the week is John farrier. And this is the cube insights where we share our independent analysis, break down what we're hearing from the community, what we've learned from all of our interviews. John, uh, you know, we knew community would be a big portion of what we did here. Uh, culture and collaboration were things that we talked a lot about that wasn't necessarily what I thought I would be hearing. Uh, you've been talking a lot about how observability and automation are the, the huge wave. We've seen, you know, acquisitions, we've seen IPOs, we've seen investments. So, you know, your, your, your take here as we're wrapping up. Sure, sure. Last to, um, as we said in our opening in the big scene here has been automation for all that's Ansible's kind of rap because they're, you know, they're announcing their main news ants, full automation platform. >>So that's the big news. But the bottom line is where this emerged from was configuration management and supple started out as a small little project that's solved a very specific problem. It solved configuring devices and all the automation around, you know, opening up ports and things that that were important beyond the basic static routing, the old web one. Dot. O web 2.0 model. And it grew into a software abstraction layer for automating because a lot of that stuff, the mundane tasks in configuring networks and servers frankly were boring and redundant. Everyone hated them patches. So easy ground to automate. And I think, um, it's evolved a lot into dev ops because with the cloud scale more devices, just because software's defining everything, it doesn't mean servers go away. So we know that is more servers is more storage, it's in the cloud, it's on premise, it's cloud operations. >>So automation I think, and I'm, my prediction is is that automation will be as big of a category as observability was. And remember we kinda missed observability we saw it as important. We've covered all those companies, but especially in network management on steroids with the cloud. But look what happened. Multiple companies when public big companies getting sold for billions of dollars, a lot of M and a activity observability is the most, one of the most important areas of cloud 2.0 it's not just some white space around network management. The data is super important. I think automation is going to grow into a highly competitive, highly relevant in the lucrative marketplace for companies and I think Ansible is in pole position to capture that with red hat and now red hat part of IBM. I think automation is going to be very big land grab. It's going to be where the value is created. >>I think observability and automation are going to go hand in hand and I think AI and data, those are the things programming infrastructure revolve around those two spheres. I think it is going to be super important. I think that's why the cube is here. We smelled it out, we sniffing it and we can see. We can touch it and the community here, they're doing it. They're there actually have proof points. Yup. These, this community is demonstrating that the process is going to be more efficient. The technology works and the people are transforming and that is a key piece with automation. People can work on other things and it's certainly changing the game. So all three aspects of digital transformation are in lockstep and, and, and, and expanding rapidly. >>Yeah. John, I would expect nothing less than a bold prediction from you on this space. You know, it's only $150 million acquisition, which is really small compared to a lot of the acquisitions that we see these as heck. You know, red hat Ansible didn't get talked about all that much when you know, IBM went and spent over $30 billion for red hat. But absolutely automation is so important that infrastructure is code movement that we've been tracking for quite a long time helps enable automation across the entire stack. A lot of discussion this week here, networking and security, two areas that we know need to make progress and we need to have, you know, less errors. We need to be able to make changes faster and cloud. We just as in the infrastructure space, that configuration management, we need to be able to simplify things. Absolutely. One of the things that will slow down the growth of cloud is that if we can't simplify those environments, so the same type of tooling and where Ansible is trying to, you know, span between the traditional environments and the cloud is to get this working in the containerization cloud native Kubernetes world that we're living in. >>Yeah, and it's still, you're right on, I mean this is the analysis and that it's spot on. I think one of the nuances in the industry landscape is a, when red hat got acquired by IBM for a massive amount of money, everyone's scratching their heads. But if you think about what red hat has done and you know I'm a real big fan of red hat, you are too. They're smart. They make great acquisitions, Ansible, not a big payout. They had coral West, they, they got open shifts there. They're the decouple their operating systems people. They get the notion of systems architecture. I think red hat is executed brilliantly in that systems mindset, which is perfect for cloud computing. I think Arvin Krishna at IBM really understood the impact of red hat and when I talked to him at red hat summit two years ago, right before the acquisition, he had the twinkle in his eye when I asked him about red at, because you can see them connecting the dots. Red hat brings a lot to the table and if IBM doesn't screw up red hat, then they're going to do well and we talk about red hat not screwing up Ansible and they didn't. Now part of it, if IBM doesn't screw up the red hat acquisition, let red hat bring that systems mindset in. I think IBM could use red has a beautiful way to bring a systems architecture into cloud, cloud native and really take a lot of territory down these new cloud native apps. >>John F automation is a force multiplier for customers and Ansible has that capability to be a force multiplier for red hat. When you look at the ecosystem they're building out here, the Ansible automation platform really helps it get customers more in lock steps. So you know, I was talking to the people and said, Oh, you know, AWS has an update. Oh we need to roll the entire core and put out another version. I can't wait for that. I need to be able to decouple the partner activity, which by the way, they talked about how the disk project is the six most popular in get hub decoupling collections might actually put them lower on the on the list, but that's okay because they're solving real customer problems. And it's interesting, John, we talk about the ecosystem here. One of, there's only a couple of other companies other than red hat that can commit without having to go through approval. Microsoft is one of them. So you talk about the, the collaboration, the ecosystem here where this can be, >>let's do the, the thing about Ansible is that it's a double edged sword. There value is also an Achilles heel. And one of the critical analysis that I have is, is that they're not broad enough yet. On and there and there. I won't say misunderstood the customers here in the community, they totally get it. Everyone here loves Ansible. The problem is is that in the global landscape of the industry, they're tiny red hat needs to bring this out faster. I think IBM has to get animal out there faster because they have all the elements kind of popping right now. You got community, very strong customer base, loyal and dynamic. You got champions developing. That's classic sign of success. They got a great product, perfectly fit for this glue layer, this integration layer, you know, below containers and maybe you can even sitting above containers depending on how you look at it. And then finally the ecosystem of partners. Not yet fully robust, but all the names are here. Microsoft, Cisco net app F five kind of feels like VMworld on a small scale. They have to up level it. I think that's the critical problem I see with with these guys is that it's almost too good and too small. >>Yeah. Uh, you know, when I look back at when red hat made the acquisition, there were a handful of companies, most of them embracing open source as to which configuration management tool you're going to do. Ansible did well against them and red hat helped make them the category leader in this space. There is a different competitive landscape today. Just public cloud. You know, Ansible can help, but there's some customers that would be like, Oh, I've got different tooling and it doesn't fit into what I'm doing today. So there's some different competitors in the landscape and we know John, every customer we've talked to, they've got a lot of tools. So how does Ansible get mind share inside the company? They had some great stories that we heard both on the Q from like ING and the Southern company as well as in the keynotes from JP Morgan where they're scaling out, they're building playbooks, they're doing this, but you know, this is not, you know, it's not just push a button to get all of this rolled out. >>The IBM marketing should help here. And if I'm, you know, um, uh, the marketing team at IBM, I'd be like all over this because this is a, a game changer because this could be a digital transformation ingredient. The people equation. The problem is, is that again, IBM to embrace this and Ansible has that glue layer integration. This could be great. Now the benefit to them, I think they're tailwind is they can solve a lot of problems. One nuance from the show that I learned was, okay, configuration management, dev ops, great. The network automation is looking good. Security is a huge opportunity because if you think about the basic blocking and tackling patches, configuration, misconfigurations, automation plays perfect role. So to get beachhead in the enterprise as an extraction layer is to own and dominate those basics. Because think about the big hacks. Capitol one, misconfigured firewall to an S three bucket, that wasn't Amazon's fault, but the data on Amazon, this is automation can solve a lot of these problems, patches, malware, vulnerabilities, the adversaries are going to be all over that. >>So I think the security piece, huge upside position, Ansible and red hat as an abstraction layer to solve those basic problems rather than overselling it could be a great strategy. I think they're doing a good job with that. Uh, it totally, you know, built on simplicity and modularity. Uh, this, this tooling is something that it can sit lots of places in the organization, uh, and help that cultural communication. Uh, I was a bit critical of, uh, you know, enterprise collaboration, uh, that, that top down push that you'd get. Um, but here, you know, you've got a tool that uh, as we, we just had on our final interview with, uh, Pirog, you know, developers, they didn't build this for developers, but developers are embracing it. The infrastructure people are embracing it. It gives a sense of some why we here to why we're here is I think Ansible fast as a community event, which we love. >>But two, I think this is early, you know, days in the Canadian, the coal mine and saying that the Ansible formula for automation is going to be a growth year. That's my prediction. And we have data to back it up. If you look at our our community and the folks out in the cube alumni know no that when we reach out to them and get some data. But here's what supports why I think the automation thing with Ansible and red hat is relevant because it applies what we just talked about. The number one thing that came back from the community stew was focused efforts on better results. Automation from time efficiency days, hours to minutes check. Security is absolutely a top driver for automation. That's a tailwind. The job satisfaction issue is not like a marketing feel. Good thing. People actually liked their jobs when they have to, don't have to come in on the weekends. >>So this automation does align with that. And finally infrastructure and developers re-skilling with new capabilities and new things. Is it just an uplift? So those are the drivers driving the automation. That's why RPA is so hot and this is a critical foundation in my opinion. So you know Ansible's is the leading the wave here in this new automation wave and I think it's going to be a big part because it's controlling the plumbing. Yeah, John wanted the machinery. Johnny is the, the, the future of work. We know that automation is going to be hugely important. You mentioned >>RPA, a huge one. I had an interview with the associate professor from Syracuse university or they're teaching this to education. It's not just, Oh Hey you got to go learn coding and learn this programming language. No, we need to have that. That combination of the business understanding and the technology and automation can sit right at that intersection. What's your big learning point? What did you take away? Yeah, so it is, it's that point here that this is not just to some, you know, cool little tool on the side. This is something you John, we've talked at many shows. Software can actually be a unifying factor inside companies to help build platforms and for customers to help them collaborate and work together. This a tool like Ansible isn't just something that is done tactically but strategically, you know, gets everyone on the same page enables that collaboration isn't just another channel of you know, some other thing that a, I don't want to have to deal with it. >>It helps me get my job better. Increases that job satisfaction. That's so hugely important as to if you think about the digital transformation form of the people, process technology, how many interviews have we done, how many interviews have we done, a companies we've talked to where they have the great product and on the process side to address the process. They have the tech but they fail on the people side. It's the cultural adoption, it's the, it's the real enablement and I think Ansible's challenge is to take the platform, the capabilities of their, of their, of their software, launch the platform and create value because if they're not enabling value out of the platform that does not cross check with what platforms are supposed to do, which is create value. And John, the thing I want to look for when we come back to this show next year is how much are they allowing customers delivered through data? >>When we heard from their engineering division here, okay, the platforms, the first piece, but how do I measure internally and how do I measure against our peers? We know that that people want to have, there's so much information out there. How am I doing? Am I, where am I on my the five, five step progression and adoption of automation and you know, Hey, am I doing good against my competition or are they smoking me? Well? That's the metrics with the insight piece and tying it to the rail. Now people can say, look, I just saved a bunch of money. I saved some time. That's the business impact and I think you know when you have the KPIs and you had the analysts to back it up, good things will happen. Students been great. All right, John, always a pleasure to catch up with you. We got lot more here toward the second half of 2019 a big thanks to the whole community for of course watching this here at antelopes Fest. Check out the cube.net for all the upcoming shows. Thank you to our whole production team and to our hosts. Red hat for giving this beautiful set right in the middle of the show. And thanks as always for watching the cube.
SUMMARY :
Ansible Fest 2019 brought to you by red hat. This is the cubes coverage of Ansible Fest 2019. devices and all the automation around, you know, opening up ports and things that that were I think automation is going to be very big land grab. I think it is going to be super important. and we need to have, you know, less errors. right before the acquisition, he had the twinkle in his eye when I asked him about red at, So you know, I was talking to the people and said, Oh, you know, AWS has an update. landscape of the industry, they're tiny red hat needs to bring this out faster. where they're scaling out, they're building playbooks, they're doing this, but you know, this is not, Now the benefit to them, I think they're tailwind is they can solve a lot of Uh, it totally, you know, built on simplicity the Ansible formula for automation is going to be a growth year. We know that automation is going to be hugely it's that point here that this is not just to some, you know, cool little tool on the side. the process side to address the process. That's the business impact and I think you know when you have the KPIs and you had the analysts to back it up,
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Sébastien Morissette, Intact Financial Group | Cisco Live US 2019
>> Narrator: Live from San Diego California it's theCUBE covering Cisco Live, US, 2019 brought to you by Cisco and its ecosystem partners. >> Welcome back we're here at the San Diego convention center for Cisco Live 2019 and you're watching theCUBE the worldwide leader in enterprise tech coverage helping extract the signal from the noise. I'm Stu Miniman we've had three days wall to wall coverage my co-host Dave Vellante and Lisa Martin are all in the house and I'm really excited to actually sit down one on one with one of the users at this user conference the 30th anniversary conference actually for Cisco with their users and partners over 28,000 so speaking for all of them right? We have Sebastien Morissette who's an IT architect specialist at Intact Financial Corporation come to us from beautiful Montreal Canada. >> Exactly. >> All right thank you so much for joining us so Sebastien first of all how many Cisco Lives have you been too? >> Honestly this is my first. >> Oh absolutely exciting for that, my first one I came too was actually 10 years ago I joked at the 20th anniversary they went back 20 years to have some 80's bands they had The Bangles and Devo on and now on the 30 year they moved 10 years forwards they have two great bands from the 90's Wheezer and Foo Fighters so your first time at Cisco Live give us your general impressions of the show. >> Well actually it's been very great I've had a lot of appearances I had to do as well so I got some sessions in I did some work as well so it's amazing to see how these events unfold right? Like the sheer size of this thing and how many people are involved, how many booths how many technical sessions you can have so, I was very pleased I'm here with a lot of people from my team as well from Intact so you know we get the chance to do stuff outside of the work area as well so it's interesting right? It's giving us this opportunity to really deep dive into what we love which is technology but at the same time spend some time together outside of work. >> That's awesome, we've had gorgeous weather here in San Diego hope you definitely get to see the sights before we geek out on some of the technology just give our audience a little bit about Intact and the insurance business but give us a little bit about the history of the company and core focus. >> Okay well Intact is a company that was, they grew as acquisitions with acquisitions we've typically, we were ING Canada back in, before 2010 and afterwards we were publicly traded now so we're Intact Financial Corp. Typically we're the number one PNC insurer in Canada and we've been working with different partners to build our data center 2.0 initiative which is kind of a new offering of you know modern IT services within Intact. >> Okay great and just to, your purview in the company and just the comment about the company is you know when you talk about those transformations you know MNA is something we see a lot in your industry and put some extra special challenges in place when you're doing that but tell us a little bit about what's under your role and scope as to kind of locations, people however you measure you know what, boxes or ports or whatever. >> Okay well you know typically my role is lead architect within the infrastructure and security group for North America Intact through acquisition we actually bought OneBeacon Insurance last year, so typically we now have a US presence as well in specialty insurance, specialty lines so typically whenever we're looking at different technologies we look at the skills sets that we have, we look to see what can be the better half for us to you know accelerate and be more agile in how we actually consume technology so in some cases whatever we're looking at building up these new features like I was talking for data center 2.0 it happens that some of the technologies and the skill sets we have were with Cisco which is why we are here today with the team. >> All right so Sebastien you talk about data center 2.0 and transformation there at the organizational level is it branded data center transformation does the word digital transformation come up in your discussions? >> Yeah data center 2.0 is actually kind of the project name that we've been giving this initiative for the past two years but it really is at the essence a digital transformation, what we're doing is we're typically taking training wheels to the Cloud so we're building an on-prem private Cloud offering with multi-sites so we have three sites in the scope right now and the goal is really to actually allow our business to expand into the Cloud while being in a secure on-prem environment when we get to that maturity level where we feel we're ready to actually really go into public Cloud our software engineering teams our development teams will have experienced it on-prem safely and will have a confidence level to bringing them there so it has been transformational also because we decided to push DevOps culture as far as we can from an infrastructure team so we were trying to get all the adoption from our software engineering folks to actually structure themselves, bring on DevOps team and that we can share with them so they can actually be more agile and get a lot more done without having to depend on us and spend a lot of time waiting for VM's or stuff so trying to accelerate that. >> Awesome I love that 'cause sometimes you hear okay we're going to 2.0 it's basically a fancy refresh but we're going to keep things mostly the same when I hear DevOps I know that culture and organization is something that is a key piece of that, I have to ask you without getting down into the pedantics of this, when you say a private Cloud that's in your data center we understand some of the covenants and reasons what you have but how do you determine whether, what was your guiding line as to how is this a Cloud versus just some new virtualized environment? >> I've had the chance to have great executive sponsorship from my senior vice president typically we were looking at how can we access the Cloud? The way I approached it was overhauling what we do was not the route to go what I asked him to do is say you know trust me I'll start with a clean slate and we will build a brand new landing area for Cloud native applications and new methodologies for modern IT services so typically in the end we didn't overhaul anything that we had we built a brand new sandbox for Intact to be able to work with so we went from disaster recovery to business continuity in that move we've built a three site approach because when I was looking at kind of my capex expenditure if I was building two sites to be fully resilient and be business continuity I would be spending 200% of my capital to actually build up that capacity when you go to three sites it seems awkward but you just need 50% on each site of your capacity to ensure 100% of coverage of your requirements, so in the end you're actually spending 150% of your capacity, or your capex to buy the compute, so there's an incentive there as well. So to answer your question more precisely it's very easy for us to see how it's a Cloud because we're not operating it the same way we're operating our other environment and since we started from scratch every process has been revised we haven't kept everything we had before so we had the chance to build something brand new for that specific offering that our software engineering groups were asking us to do. >> All right that's exciting stuff there when you look at these multi-site deployments I think back in my career and I worked on some of these environments, management, security and networking are absolutely critical, I hear oh okay I've got 50% in each oh my God what if a site gets isolated and I can't talk to those other two so luckily I'm guessing Cisco has something to do with your rollout, we're obviously here at Cisco Live so give us a little bit inside the architecture and especially you know what kind of Cisco pieces are you using? >> All right well you know typically the way that our story started was kind of weird the first thing we've done is we've actually went to Cisco to redesign a DMZ and we got out from Cisco Montreal team with an idea to not just change and buy ACI switches for the DMZ but actually rebuild our whole design to you know integrate ACI into the fabric and then when you start talking about firewalls or switches they tell you well with ACI you have contracts so it really started that way so we built an ACI fabric with the Cisco HyperFlex hyper-converged infrastructure as our compute layer so typically think of it as Intact is building our new version of a software defined data center. So with building that we have all the components so we have the virtualization like you spoke of earlier which is running like you know VMware on site, on top of the HyperFlex and then we have the ACI since we had three sites we topped it off with the multi-site orchestrator to be able to manage consistent policies around all of our three sites and in the end we needed to have an orchestrator to be able to deploy the content onto that and when we were looking at it early on it was Clicker when Cisco purchased Clicker we were looking at finding a Cloud management platform, so we ended up using CloudCenter which is now CloudCenter Suite and in the way we were using it, which was a little atypical from the typical way clients are using CloudCenter today we're taking it into the data center and out to the Cloud whereas when I was talking with Kip Compton earlier this week he was saying you know what sometimes our clients buy it more for the Cloud first and I was like well we have like the inverse story of exactly how we did the opposite but it works as well, so typically where we stand today I have the three sites we're able to deploy with CloudCenter we've got multi-site on top of that and the idea it really is that, I spoke about training wheels earlier well we're taking them off right? In the next couple of weeks we're starting to look into negotiations with public Cloud providers trying to move towards the public Cloud and you know there's exciting news that came out from Cisco this week while I was here about the fact that now you know they're forecasting a lot more collaboration with Microsoft and AWS and now they have all the three major Cloud providers covered with ACI Anywhere so that means all of our security that you were talking about earlier will now have a consistent policy model applied all, everywhere so to be honest I'm not too concerned about if we did a good choice a couple of years back I think we're in our sweet spot right now. >> Yeah and you're right it's a different story than we've generally heard from Cisco and some customers which is I have all of these public Cloud's and I have my data center and I'm looking for some piece to help tie it together and that the CloudCenter Suite is there so you feel you're confident with the platform that you chose and that's going to give you the flexibility as to whichever public Cloud or public Cloud you choose are you at the point there that do you know which public Cloud you're going to be on or maybe it's a little too early? >> Well to be honest you know we're keeping our options open you know we have different providers that are offered, you know the major public one there's Amazon there's Google Cloud we're not closing any options it's really a question of us to do the same secure approach that we've done right now with this offering to really go one at a time make sure that we're able to nail it down, make it secure that we get all the information back so I'm not at a possibility right now to disclose which ones we're dealing with because we're still negotiating but in the end we're not limiting ourselves we just want to be able to scale. >> Right you're confident that the Cisco solution that you choose will give you the flexibility no matter which one you use or if you use multiples or need to make switches along the way? >> Yeah. >> Question I have for you on that is when you look at multi-Cloud one of the things that are challenging for companies is how do I make sure I've got the skillsets because workloads might be portable, networks might be connected but understanding how I manage each of those environments so do you feel CloudCenter Suite's going to help you through that? You know what do you see as you look out over your roadmap as to what that's going to mean for you know your DevOps team and the people managing this environment as it spreads out to the public Cloud? >> Actually I'm feeling really confident because you know especially after seeing a couple of sessions of what Roland Acra and Kip have announced for the data center and for the Cloud piece we're seeing more and more normalization being done by Cisco to actually allow us to be confident in the fact that on prem we're doing ACI and that our policies are going to be mapped to the constructs of the different Cloud providers. So for me what it means is I don't necessarily need to become specialized in how we're going to be operating inside of a Cloud we need to make sure that we get the proper policies built into the different products you know Cisco's branding it the Anywhere right? They have the HX Anywhere the ACI Anywhere and typically that's what we like about it is I can have one consistent set of skillsets and allow the people to use it one thing I found interesting about this week and it's not necessarily to do like more promotion for Cisco is like the Cloud First ACI right? So being able to be starting with ACI in the Cloud I found that was kind of interesting because when you know how the multi-site orchestrator works means apps you build out in the Cloud you're going to be able to to pull back in through the MSO and push it back on prem or anywhere in other Clouds afterwards so I found that was very intuitive of them to go to that route of allowing us to you know transparently migrate apps between sites. >> All right so Sebastien you're using a lot of the latest and greatest from Cisco you talk about the HX the ACI the CloudCenter Suite what advice do you give to your peers out there and they say you know I've used Cisco products for a long time Cisco makes great products but you know simplicity and management across the product lines was something that you know needed some work what does the Cisco of today look like you know what's working well? What still would you like to see them progress on? >> Well you know for us one of the things that was nice like I mentioned earlier is we're typically going greenfield so I didn't have a lot of the issues that other companies might be facing if they're trying to take their brownfield and actually make it into what we've built so my first advice would be if you're able to get the executive sponsorship to build a greenfield environment there's nothing in Cloud native applications that is you know symmetric with the traditional environment of a data center, it's completely different ways of working we have one week sprints we patch everything as it comes out if an application goes into the environment it needs to be functional with that patching cycle of almost every time we're at n or n-1 so, my thing is think about applications as being the center of what you actually need and not the infrastructure, let the infrastructure be what it is because you're going to be anywhere right? So that's one of the things I would say, from what you said about Cisco and the integration you were right, we have lived a couple of items like that in the last two years and a half, however I've noticed that these new software components like CloudShare and everything not necessarily the hardware part Cisco nails hardware like it works they've been doing it for years the thing is with these software teams they're very customer driven we have access to the engineers now I mean we've had meetings with the Canadian execs Roland Acra's team we were able to get access to the developers and the teams here in the US so, every company has challenges I would be lying if I told you that even at Intact we don't have silos and we don't have issues sometimes with different teams managing together but I feel as if at least for the technologies that we're using they've done good work for us to actually help us get through that. >> Well it's interesting Sebastian you bring that up because I look at you say okay, you've got a greenfield environment awesome, we can go do some new tech, well let's throw in there the DevOps and let's change all the other pieces you're like completely overhauling your environment how much of that were there some new team members that came in as part of that or you know I look people, process and technology sounded like you were taking it all on at once, did that work well? Would you have if you looked back would you have changed some of the ordering and maybe you know gotten one piece before the other or did it help to kind of you know start brand new start fresh and get everything going? >> Well I wouldn't redo the part of starting fresh however, it helped us get really good pace and work you know it's our first agile project as an infrastructure group so all of that was great learning experience the only thing I would say is you need to make sure your organization is ready for that level of change because it's one thing to have one VP sponsorship to actually build out this type of approach but where we struggled a little bit was afterwards getting the rest of our IT organization to kind of want to get onboard. because we are building something new, the traditional environment is not disappearing and we're telling our software engineering groups here's a new area where you can play in but you know typically I'd say that it's been well received we have not had the need to build new skillsets because we're doing infrastructure as code so typically a lot of the stuff we're building we're making sure it's automated so that way it's very nice and lean and when we build a new site we have a lot of automation already built in so we can properly just deploy so lessons learned like you've asked me I'd say that typically I'd probably do much of what I did the same way, but I would work a little bit more on the people area just to make sure that the message is clearly understood that what we're building is for the future of Intact and make sure that we spend a little bit more time managing that aspect because for the technology it's fine for the time it took and everything it's fine, it's really people the change is significant to most of them and when you've been doing something for a long time and someone comes up and disrupts it's like if we were disrupting our own company right? So typically I'd say, that would be something that I would say to people manage that properly or you will have a lot more work to do inside of that initiative to actually gain everybody's momentum and get them to be behind you. >> Well Sebastien I really appreciate you walking us through all of your transformation I want to just give you the final word sounds like you've got great access to Cisco really hope you're happy with what you've done final word is to you know your expectations coming into a show like this and you know what your take aways will be from Cisco Live 2019 in San Diego? >> Well outside from the amazing weather you mean or yeah? so you know typically I like the event I've been to other events before, like I said this is my first time at Cisco but what I've seen is that Cisco's really into getting their customers to understand their technology so they're really present so I really liked how you know we were given the opportunity to do hands on labs and actually learn new technologies so typically great experience coming here and great opportunities and thanks so much for having us. >> Well Sebastien Morissette congratulations to your team at Intact and thank you so much for sharing this story. >> Thank you so much. >> All right we've got a little bit more left here of three days wall to wall coverage Cisco Live 2019 in San Diego for Dave Vellante, Lisa Martin I'm Stu Miniman and thanks as always for watching theCUBE. (electronic jingle)
SUMMARY :
brought to you by Cisco and its ecosystem partners. and Lisa Martin are all in the house I joked at the 20th anniversary as well from Intact so you know we get the chance and the insurance business but give us a little bit of you know modern IT services within Intact. you know MNA is something we see a lot in your industry the better half for us to you know accelerate All right so Sebastien you talk bring on DevOps team and that we can share with them some of the covenants and reasons what you have what I asked him to do is say you know trust me about the fact that now you know they're forecasting Well to be honest you know we're keeping to go to that route of allowing us to you know and the integration you were right, and work you know it's our first agile project so I really liked how you know to your team at Intact and thank you so much Lisa Martin I'm Stu Miniman and thanks as always
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Mandy Chessell, IBM | Dataworks Summit EU 2018
>> Announcer: From Berlin, Germany, it's the Cube covering Dataworks Summit Europe 2018. Brought to you by Hortonworks. (electronic music) >> Well hello welcome to the Cube I'm James Kobielus. I'm the lead analyst for big data analytics within the Wikibon team of SiliconANGLE Media. I'm hosting the Cube this week at Dataworks Summit 2018 in Berlin, Germany. It's been an excellent event. Hortonworks, the host, had... We've completed two days of keynotes. They made an announcement of the Data Steward Studio as the latest of their offerings and demonstrated it this morning, to address GDPR compliance, which of course is hot and heavy is coming down on enterprises both in the EU and around the world including in the U.S. and the May 25th deadline is fast approaching. One of Hortonworks' prime partners is IBM. And today on this Cube segment we have Mandy Chessell. Mandy is a distinguished engineer at IBM who did an excellent keynote yesterday all about metadata and metadata management. Mandy, great to have you. >> Hi and thank you. >> So I wonder if you can just reprise or summarize the main take aways from your keynote yesterday on metadata and it's role in GDPR compliance, so forth and the broader strategies that enterprise customers have regarding managing their data in this new multi-cloud world where Hadoop and open source platforms are critically important for storing and processing data. So Mandy go ahead. >> So, metadata's not new. I mean it's basically information about data. And a lot of companies are trying to build a data catalog which is not a catalog of, you know, actually containing their data, it's a catalog that describes their data. >> James: Is it different with index or a glossary. How's the catalog different from-- >> Yeah, so catalog actually includes both. So it is a list of all the data sets plus a links to glossary definitions of what those data items mean within the data sets, plus information about the lineage of the data. It includes information about who's using it, what they're using it for, how it should be governed. >> James: It's like a governance repository. >> So governance is part of it. So the governance part is really saying, "This is how you're allowed to use it, "this is how the data's classified," "these are the automated actions that are going to happen "on the data as it's used "within the operational environment." >> James: Yeah. >> So there's that aspect to it, but there is the collaboration side. Hey I've been using this data set it's great. Or, actually this data set is full of errors, we can't use it. So you've got feedback to data set owners as well as, exchange and collaboration between data scientists working with the data. So it's really, it is a central resource for an organization that has a strong data strategy, is interested in becoming a data-driven organization as such, so, you know, this becomes their major catalog over their data assets, and how they're using it. So when a regulator comes in and says, "can you show up, show me that you're "managing personal data?" The data catalog will have the information about where personal data's located, what type of infrastructure it's sitting on, how it's being used by different services. So they can really show that they know what they're doing and then from that they can show how to processes are used in the metadata in order to use the data appropriately day to day. >> So Apache Atlas, so it's basically a catalog, if I understand correctly at least for IBM and Hortonworks, it's Hadoop, it's Apache Atlas and Apache Atlas is essentially a metadata open source code base. >> Mandy: Yes, yes. >> So explain what Atlas is in this context. >> So yes, Atlas is a collection of code, but it supports a server, a graph-based metadata server. It also supports-- >> James: A graph-based >> Both: Metadata server >> Yes >> James: I'm sorry, so explain what you mean by graph-based in this context. >> Okay, so it runs using the JanusGraph, graph repository. And this is very good for metadata 'cause if you think about what it is it's connecting dots. It's basically saying this data set means this value and needs to be classified in this way and this-- >> James: Like a semantic knowledge graph >> It is, yes actually. And on top of it we impose a type system that describes the different types of things you need to control and manage in a data catalog, but the graph, the Atlas component gives you that graph-based, sorry, graph-based repository underneath, but on top we've built what we call the open metadata and governance libraries. They run inside Atlas so when you run Atlas you will have all the open metadata interfaces, but you can also take those libraries and connect them and load them actually into another vendor's product. And what they're doing is allowing metadata to be exchanged between repositories of different types. And this becomes incredibly important as an organization increases their maturity and their use of data because you can't just have knowledge about data in a single server, it just doesn't scale. You need to get that knowledge into every runtime environment, into the data tools that people are using across the organization. And so it needs to be distributed. >> Mandy I'm wondering, the whole notion of what you catalog in that repository, does it include, or does Apache Atlas support adding metadata relevant to data derivative assets like machine learning models-- >> Mandy: Absolutely. >> So forth. >> Mandy: Absolutely, so we have base types in the upper metadata layer, but also it's a very flexible and sensible type system. So, if you've got a specialist machine learning model that needs additional information stored about it, that can easily be added to the runtime environment. And then it will be managed through the open metadata protocols as if it was part of the native type system. >> Because of the courses in analysts, one of my core areas is artificial intelligence and one of the hot themes in artificial, well there's a broad umbrella called AI safety. >> Mandy: Yeah. >> And one of the core subsets of that is something called explicable AI, being able to identify the lineage of a given algorithmic decision back to what machine learning models fed from what data. >> Mandy: Yeah. >> Throw what action like when let's say a self-driving vehicle hits a human being for legal, you know, discovery whatever. So what I'm getting at, what I'm working through to is the extent to which the Hortonworks, IBM big data catalog running Atlas can be a foundation for explicable AI either now or in the future. We see a lot of enterprise, me as an analyst at least, sees lots of enterprises that are exploring this topic, but it's not to the point where it's in production, explicable AI, but where clearly companies like IBM are exploring building a stack or a architecture for doing this kind of thing in a standardized way. What are your thoughts there? Is IBM working on bringing, say Atlas and the overall big data catalog into that kind of a use case. >> Yes, yeah, so if you think about what's required, you need to understand the data that was used to train the AI how, what data's been fed to it since it was deployed because that's going to change its behavior, and then also a view of how that data's going to change in the future so you can start to anticipate issues that might arising from the model's changing behavior. And this is where the data catalog can actually associate and maintain information about the data that's being used with the algorithm. You can also associate the checking mechanism that's constantly monitoring the profile of the data so you can see where the data is changing over time, that will obviously affect the behavior of the machine learning model. So it's really about providing, not just information about the model itself, but also the data that's feeding it, how those characteristics are changing over time so that you know the model is continuing to work into the future. >> So tell us about the IBM, Hortonworks partnership on metadata and so forth. >> Mandy: Okay. >> How is that evolving? So, you know, your partnership is fairly tight. You clearly, you've got ODPI, you've got the work that you're doing related to the big data catalog. What can we expect to see in the near future in terms of, initiatives building on all of that for governance of big data in the multi-cloud environment? >> Yeah so Hortonworks started the Apache Atlas project a couple of years ago with a number of their customers. And they built a base repository and a set of APIs that allow it to work in the Hadoop environment. We came along last year, formed our partnership. That partnership includes this open metadata and governance layer. So since then we worked with ING as well and ING bring the, sort of, user perspective, this is the organization's use of the data. And, so between the three of us we are basically transforming Apache Atlas from an Hadoop focused metadata repository to an enterprise focused metadata repository. Plus enabling other vendors to connect into the open metadata ecosystem. So we're standardizing types, standardizing format, the format of metadata, there's a protocol for exchanging metadata between repositories. And this is all coming from that three-way partnership where you've got a consuming organization, you've got a company who's used to building enterprise middleware, and you've got Hortonworks with their knowledge of open source development in their Hadoop environment. >> Quick out of left field, as you develop this architecture, clearly you're leveraging Hadoop HTFS for storage. Are you looking to at least evaluating maybe using block chain for more distributed management of the metadata in these heterogeneous environments in the multi-cloud, or not? >> So Atlas itself does run on HTFS, but doesn't need to run on HTFS, it's got other storage environments so that we can run it outside of Hadoop. When it comes to block chain, so block chain is, for, sharing data between partners, small amounts of data that basically express agreements, so it's like a ledger. There are some aspects that we could use for metadata management. It's more that we actually need to put metadata management into block chain. So the agreements and contracts that are stored in block chain are only meaningful if we understand the data that's there, what it's quality, where it came from what it means. And so actually there's a very interesting distributor metadata question that comes with the block chain technology. And I think that's an important area of research. >> Well Mandy we're at the end of our time. Thank you very much. We could go on and on. You're a true expert and it's great to have you on the Cube. >> Thank you for inviting me. >> So this is James Kobielus with Mandy Chessell of IBM. We are here this week in Berlin at Dataworks Summit 2018. It's a great event and we have some more interviews coming up so thank you very much for tuning in. (electronic music)
SUMMARY :
Announcer: From Berlin, Germany, it's the Cube I'm hosting the Cube this week at Dataworks Summit 2018 and the broader strategies that enterprise customers which is not a catalog of, you know, actually containing How's the catalog different from-- So it is a list of all the data sets plus a links "these are the automated actions that are going to happen in the metadata in order to use So Apache Atlas, so it's basically a catalog, So yes, Atlas is a collection of code, James: I'm sorry, so explain what you mean and needs to be classified in this way that describes the different types of things you need in the upper metadata layer, but also it's a very flexible and one of the hot themes in artificial, And one of the core subsets of that the extent to which the Hortonworks, IBM big data catalog in the future so you can start to anticipate issues So tell us about the IBM, Hortonworks partnership for governance of big data in the multi-cloud environment? And, so between the three of us we are basically of the metadata in these heterogeneous environments So the agreements and contracts that are stored You're a true expert and it's great to have you on the Cube. So this is James Kobielus with Mandy Chessell of IBM.
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Alan Gates, Hortonworks | Dataworks Summit 2018
(techno music) >> (announcer) From Berlin, Germany it's theCUBE covering DataWorks Summit Europe 2018. Brought to you by Hortonworks. >> Well hello, welcome to theCUBE. We're here on day two of DataWorks Summit 2018 in Berlin, Germany. I'm James Kobielus. I'm lead analyst for Big Data Analytics in the Wikibon team of SiliconANGLE Media. And who we have here today, we have Alan Gates whose one of the founders of Hortonworks and Hortonworks of course is the host of DataWorks Summit and he's going to be, well, hello Alan. Welcome to theCUBE. >> Hello, thank you. >> Yeah, so Alan, so you and I go way back. Essentially, what we'd like you to do first of all is just explain a little bit of the genesis of Hortonworks. Where it came from, your role as a founder from the beginning, how that's evolved over time but really how the company has evolved specifically with the folks on the community, the Hadoop community, the Open Source community. You have a deepening open source stack with you build upon with Atlas and Ranger and so forth. Gives us a sense for all of that Alan. >> Sure. So as I think it's well-known, we started as the team at Yahoo that really was driving a lot of the development of Hadoop. We were one of the major players in the Hadoop community. Worked on that for, I was in that team for four years. I think the team itself was going for about five. And it became clear that there was an opportunity to build a business around this. Some others had already started to do so. We wanted to participate in that. We worked with Yahoo to spin out Hortonworks and actually they were a great partner in that. Helped us get than spun out. And the leadership team of the Hadoop team at Yahoo became the founders of Hortonworks and brought along a number of the other engineering, a bunch of the other engineers to help get started. And really at the beginning, we were. It was Hadoop, Pig, Hive, you know, a few of the very, Hbase, the kind of, the beginning projects. So pretty small toolkit. And we were, our early customers were very engineering heavy people, or companies who knew how to take those tools and build something directly on those tools right? >> Well, you started off with the Hadoop community as a whole started off with a focus on the data engineers of the world >> Yes. >> And I think it's shifted, and confirm for me, over time that you focus increasing with your solutions on the data scientists who are doing the development of the applications, and the data stewards from what I can see at this show. >> I think it's really just a part of the adoption curve right? When you're early on that curve, you have people who are very into the technology, understand how it works, and want to dive in there. So those tend to be, as you said, the data engineering types in this space. As that curve grows out, you get, it comes wider and wider. There's still plenty of data engineers that are our customers, that are working with us but as you said, the data analysts, the BI people, data scientists, data stewards, all those people are now starting to adopt it as well. And they need different tools than the data engineers do. They don't want to sit down and write Java code or you know, some of the data scientists might want to work in Python in a notebook like Zeppelin or Jupyter but some, may want to use SQL or even Tablo or something on top of SQL to do the presentation. Of course, data stewards want tools more like Atlas to help manage all their stuff. So that does drive us to one, put more things into the toolkit so you see the addition of projects like Apache Atlas and Ranger for security and all that. Another area of growth, I would say is also the kind of data that we're focused on. So early on, we were focused on data at rest. You know, we're going to store all this stuff in HDFS and as the kind of data scene has evolved, there's a lot more focus now on a couple things. One is data, what we call data-in-motion for our HDF product where you've got in a stream manager like Kafka or something like that >> (James) Right >> So there's processing that kind of data. But now we also see a lot of data in various places. It's not just oh, okay I have a Hadoop cluster on premise at my company. I might have some here, some on premise somewhere else and I might have it in several clouds as well. >> K, your focus has shifted like the industry in general towards streaming data in multi-clouds where your, it's more stateful interactions and so forth? I think you've made investments in Apache NiFi so >> (Alan) yes. >> Give us a sense for your NiFi versus Kafka and so forth inside of your product strategy or your >> Sure. So NiFi is really focused on that data at the edge, right? So you're bringing data in from sensors, connected cars, airplane engines, all those sorts of things that are out there generating data and you need, you need to figure out what parts of the data to move upstream, what parts not to. What processing can I do here so that I don't have to move upstream? When I have a error event or a warning event, can I turn up the amount of data I'm sending in, right? Say this airplane engine is suddenly heating up maybe a little more than it's supposed to. Maybe I should ship more of the logs upstream when the plane lands and connects that I would if, otherwise. That's the kind o' thing that Apache NiFi focuses on. I'm not saying it runs in all those places by my point is, it's that kind o' edge processing. Kafka is still going to be running in a data center somewhere. It's still a pretty heavy weight technology in terms of memory and disk space and all that so it's not going to be run on some sensor somewhere. But it is that data-in-motion right? I've got millions of events streaming through a set of Kafka topics watching all that sensor data that's coming in from NiFi and reacting to it, maybe putting some of it in the data warehouse for later analysis, all those sorts of things. So that's kind o' the differentiation there between Kafka and NiFi. >> Right, right, right. So, going forward, do you see more of your customers working internet of things projects, is that, we don't often, at least in the industry of popular mind, associate Hortonworks with edge computing and so forth. Is that? >> I think that we will have more and more customers in that space. I mean, our goal is to help our customers with their data wherever it is. >> (James) Yeah. >> When it's on the edge, when it's in the data center, when it's moving in between, when it's in the cloud. All those places, that's where we want to help our customers store and process their data. Right? So, I wouldn't want to say that we're going to focus on just the edge or the internet of things but that certainly has to be part of our strategy 'cause it's has to be part of what our customers are doing. >> When I think about the Hortonworks community, now we have to broaden our understanding because you have a tight partnership with IBM which obviously is well-established, huge and global. Give us a sense for as you guys have teamed more closely with IBM, how your community has changed or broadened or shifted in its focus or has it? >> I don't know that it's shifted the focus. I mean IBM was already part of the Hadoop community. They were already contributing. Obviously, they've contributed very heavily on projects like Spark and some of those. They continue some of that contribution. So I wouldn't say that it's shifted it, it's just we are working more closely together as we both contribute to those communities, working more closely together to present solutions to our mutual customer base. But I wouldn't say it's really shifted the focus for us. >> Right, right. Now at this show, we're in Europe right now, but it doesn't matter that we're in Europe. GDPR is coming down fast and furious now. Data Steward Studio, we had the demonstration today, it was announced yesterday. And it looks like a really good tool for the main, the requirements for compliance which is discover and inventory your data which is really set up a consent portal, what I like to refer to. So the data subject can then go and make a request to have my data forgotten and so forth. Give us a sense going forward, for how or if Hortonworks, IBM, and others in your community are going to work towards greater standardization in the functional capabilities of the tools and platforms for enabling GDPR compliance. 'Cause it seems to me that you're going to need, the industry's going to need to have some reference architecture for these kind o' capabilities so that going forward, either your ecosystem of partners can build add on tools in some common, like the framework that was laid out today looks like a good basis. Is there anything that you're doing in terms of pushing towards more Open Source standardization in that area? >> Yes, there is. So actually one of my responsibilities is the technical management of our relationship with ODPI which >> (James) yes. >> Mandy Chessell referenced yesterday in her keynote and that is where we're working with IBM, with ING, with other companies to build exactly those standards. Right? Because we do want to build it around Apache Atlas. We feel like that's a good tool for the basis of that but we know one, that some people are going to want to bring their own tools to it. They're not necessarily going to want to use that one platform so we want to do it in an open way that they can still plug in their metadata repositories and communicate with others and we want to build the standards on top of that of how do you properly implement these features that GDPR requires like right to be forgotten, like you know, what are the protocols around PIII data? How do you prevent a breach? How do you respond to a breach? >> Will that all be under the umbrella of ODPI, that initiative of the partnership or will it be a separate group or? >> Well, so certainly Apache Atlas is part of Apache and remains so. What ODPI is really focused up is that next layer up of how do we engage, not the programmers 'cause programmers can gage really well at the Apache level but the next level up. We want to engage the data professionals, the people whose job it is, the compliance officers. The people who don't sit and write code and frankly if you connect them to the engineers, there's just going to be an impedance mismatch in that conversation. >> You got policy wonks and you got tech wonks so. They understand each other at the wonk level. >> That's a good way to put it. And so that's where ODPI is really coming is that group of compliance people that speak a completely different language. But we still need to get them all talking to each other as you said, so that there's specifications around. How do we do this? And what is compliance? >> Well Alan, thank you very much. We're at the end of our time for this segment. This has been great. It's been great to catch up with you and Hortonworks has been evolving very rapidly and it seems to me that, going forward, I think you're well-positioned now for the new GDPR age to take your overall solution portfolio, your partnerships, and your capabilities to the next level and really in terms of in an Open Source framework. In many ways though, you're not entirely 100% like nobody is, purely Open Source. You're still very much focused on open frameworks for building fairly scalable, very scalable solutions for enterprise deployment. Well, this has been Jim Kobielus with Alan Gates of Hortonworks here at theCUBE on theCUBE at DataWorks Summit 2018 in Berlin. We'll be back fairly quickly with another guest and thank you very much for watching our segment. (techno music)
SUMMARY :
Brought to you by Hortonworks. of Hortonworks and Hortonworks of course is the host a little bit of the genesis of Hortonworks. a bunch of the other engineers to help get started. of the applications, and the data stewards So those tend to be, as you said, the data engineering types But now we also see a lot of data in various places. So NiFi is really focused on that data at the edge, right? So, going forward, do you see more of your customers working I mean, our goal is to help our customers with their data When it's on the edge, when it's in the data center, as you guys have teamed more closely with IBM, I don't know that it's shifted the focus. the industry's going to need to have some So actually one of my responsibilities is the that GDPR requires like right to be forgotten, like and frankly if you connect them to the engineers, You got policy wonks and you got tech wonks so. as you said, so that there's specifications around. It's been great to catch up with you and
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Kostas Tzoumas, data Artisans | Flink Forward 2018
(techno music) >> Announcer: Live, from San Francisco, it's theCUBE. Covering Flink Forward, brought to you by data Artisans. (techno music) >> Hello again everybody, this is George Gilbert, we're at the Flink Forward Conference, sponsored by data Artisans, the provider of both Apache Flink and the commercial distribution, the dA Platform that supports the productionization and operationalization of Flink, and makes it more accessible to mainstream enterprises. We're priviledged to have Kostas Tzoumas, CEO of data Artisans, with us today. Welcome Kostas. >> Thank you. Thank you George. >> So, tell us, let's start with sort of an idealized application-use case, that is in the sweet spot of Flink, and then let's talk about how that's going to broaden over time. >> Yeah, so just a little bit of an umbrella above that. So what we see very, very consistently, we see it in tech companies, and we see, so modern tech companies, and we see it in traditional enterprises that are trying to move there, is a move towards a business that runs in real time. Runs 24/7, is data-driven, so decisions are made based on data, and is software operated. So increasingly decisions are made by AI, by software, rather than someone looking at something and making a decision, yeah. So for example, some of the largest users of Apache Flink are companies like Uber, Netflix, Alibaba, Lyft, they are all working in this way. >> Can you tell us about the size of their, you know, something in terms of records per day, or cluster size, or, >> Yeah, sure. So, latest I heard, Alibaba is powering Alibaba Certs, more than a thousand nodes, terabytes of states, I'm pretty sure they will give us bigger numbers today. Netflix has reported of doing about one trillion events per day. >> George: Wow. >> On Flink. So pretty big sizes. >> So and is Netflix, I think I read, is powering their real time recommendation updates. >> They are powering a bunch of things, a bunch of applications, there's a lot of routing events internally. I think they have a talk, they had a talk definitely at the last conference, where they talk about this. And it's really a variety of use cases. It's really about building a platform, internally. And offering it to all sorts of departments in the company, be that for recommendations, be that for BI, be that for running, state of microservices, you know, all sorts of things. And we also see, the more traditional enterprise moving to this modus operandi. For example, ING is also one of our biggest partners, it's a global consumer bank based in the Netherlands, and their CEO is saying that ING is not a bank, it's a tech company that happens to have a banking license. It's a tech company that inherited a banking license. So that's how they want to operate. So what we see, is stream processing is really the enabler for this kind of business, for this kind of modern business where we interact with, in real time, they interact with the consumer in real time, they push notifications, they can change the pricing, et cetera, et cetera. So this is really the crux of stateful stream processing , for me. >> So okay, so tell us, for those who, you know, have a passing understanding of how Kafka's evolving, how Apache Spark and Structured Streaming's evolving, as distinct from, but also, Databricks. What is it about having state management that's sort of integrated, that for example, might make it easy to elastically change a cluster size by repartitioning. What can you assume about managing state internally, that makes things easier? >> Yeah, so I think really the, the sweet spot of Flink, is that if you are looking for stream process, from a stream processing engine, and for a stateful stream processing engine for that matter, Flink is the definition of this. It's the definite solution to this problem. It was created from scratch, with this in mind, it was not sort of a bolt-on on top of something else, so it's streaming from the get-go. And we have done a lot of work to make state a first-class citizen. What this means, is that in Flink programs, you can keep state that scales to terabytes, we have seen that, and you can manage this state together with your application. So Flink has this model based on check points, where you take a check point of your application and state together, and you can restart at any time from there. So it's really, the core of Flink, is around state management. >> And you manage exactly one semantics across the checkpointing? >> It's exactly once, it's application-level exactly once. We have also introduced end-to-end exactly once with Kafka. So Kafka-Flink-Kafka exactly once. So fully consistent. >> Okay so, let's drill down a little bit. What are some of the things that customers would do with an application running on a, let's say a big cluster or a couple clusters, where they want to operate both on the application logic and on the state that having it integrated you know makes much easier? >> Yeah, so it is a lot about a flipped architecture and about making operations and DevOps much, much easier. So traditionally what you would do is create, let's say a containerized stateless application and have a central centralized data store to keep all your states. What you do now, is the state becomes part of the application. So this has several benefits. It has performance benefits, it has organizational benefits in the company. >> Autonomy >> Autonomy between teams. It has, you know it gives you a lot of flexibility on what you can do with the applications, like, for example right, scaling an application. What you can do with Flink is that you have an application running with parallelism over 100 and you are getting a higher volume and you want to scale it to 500 right, so you can simply with Flink take a snapshot of the state and the application together, and then restart it at a 500 and Flink is going to resolve the state. So no need to do anything on a database. >> And then it'll reshard and Flink will reshard it. >> Will reshard and it will restart. And then one step further with the product that we have introduced, dA Platform which includes Flink, you can simply do this with one click or with one rest command. >> So, the the resharding was possible with core Flink, the Apache Flink and the dA Platform just makes it that much easier along with other operations. >> Yeah so what the dA Platform does is it gives you an API for common operational tasks, that we observed everybody that was deploying Flink at a decent scale needs to do. It abstracts, it is based on Kubernetes, but it gives you a higher-level API than Kubernetes. You can manage the application and the state together, and it gives that to you in a rest API, in a UI, et cetera. >> Okay, so in other words it's sort of like by abstracting even up from Kubernetes you might have a cluster as a first-class citizen but you're treating it almost like a single entity and then under the covers you're managing the, the things that happen across the cluster. >> So what we have in the dA Platform is a notion of a deployment which is, think of it as, I think of it as a cluster, but it's basically based on containers. So you have this notion of deployments that you can manage, (coughs) sorry, and then you have a notion of an application. And an application, is a Flink job that evolves over time. And then you have a very, you know, bird's-eye view on this. You can, when you update the code, this is the same application with updated code. You can travel through a history, you can visit the logs, and you can do common operational tasks, like as I said, rescaling, updating the code, rollbacks, replays, migrate to a new deployment target, et cetera. >> Let me ask you, outside of the big tech companies who have built much of the application management scaffolding themselves, you can democratize access to stream processing because the capabilities, you know, are not in the skill set of traditional, mainstream developers. So question, the first thing I hear from a lot of sort of newbies, or people who want to experiment, is, "Well, it's so easy to manage the state "in a shared database, even if I'm processing, "you know, continuously." Where should they make the trade-off? When is it appropriate to use a shared database? Maybe you know, for real OLTP work, and then when can you sort of scale it out and manage it integrally with the rest of the application? >> So when should we use a database and when should we use streaming, right? >> Yeah, and even if it's streaming with the embedded state. >> Yeah, that's a very good question. I think it really depends on the use case. So what we see in the market, is many enterprises start with with a use case that either doesn't scale, or it's not developer friendly enough to have these database application levels. Level separation. And then it quickly spreads out in the whole company and other teams start using it. So for example, in the work we did with ING, they started with a fraud detection application, where the idea was to load models dynamically in the application, as the data scientists are creating new models, and have a scalable fraud detection system that can handle their load. And then we have seen other teams in the company adopting processing after that. >> Okay, so that sounds like where the model becomes part of the application logic and it's a version of the application logic and then, >> The version of the model >> Is associated with the checkpoint >> Correct. >> So let me ask you then, what happens when you you're managing let's say terabytes of state across a cluster, and someone wants to query across that distributed state. Is there in Flink a query manager that, you know, knows about where all the shards are and the statistics around the shards to do a cost-based query? >> So there is a feature in Flink called queryable state that gives you the ability to do, very simple for now, queries on the state. This feature is evolving, it's in progress. And it will get more sophisticated and more production-ready over time. >> And that enables a different class of users. >> Exactly, I wouldn't, like to be frank, I wouldn't use it for complex data warehousing scenarios. That still needs a data warehouse, but you can do point queries and a few, you know, slightly more sophisticated queries. >> So this is different. This type of state would be different from like in Kafka where you can store you know the commit log for X amount of time and then replay it. This, it's in a database I assume, not in a log form and so, you have faster access. >> Exactly, and it's placed together with a log, so, you can think of the state in Flink as the materialized view of the log, at any given point in time, with various versions. >> Okay. >> And really, the way replay works is, roll back the state to a prior version and roll back the log, the input log, to that same logical time. >> Okay, so how do you see Flink spreading out, now that it's been proven in the most demanding customers, and now we have to accommodate skills, you know, where the developers and DevOps don't have quite the same distributed systems knowledge? >> Yeah, I mean we do a lot of work at data Artisans with financial services, insurance, very traditional companies, but it's definitely something that is work in progress in the sense that our product the dA Platform makes operation smarts easier. This was a common problem everywhere, this was something that tech companies solved for themselves, and we wanted to solve it for everyone else. Application development is yet another thing, and as we saw today in the last keynote, we are working together with Google and the BIM Community to bring Python, GOLD, all sorts of languages into Flink. >> Okay so that'll help at the developer level, and you're also doing work at the operations level with the platform. >> And of course there's SQL right? So Flink has Stream SQL which is standard SQL. >> And would you see, at some point, actually sort of managing the platform for customers, either on-prem or in the cloud? >> Yeah, so right now, the platform is running on Kubernetes, which means that typically the customer installs it in their clusters, in their Kubernetes clusters. Which can be either their own machines, or it can be a Kubernetes service from a cloud vendor. Moving forward I think it will be very interesting yes, to move to more hosted solutions. Make it even easier for people. >> Do you see a breakpoint or a transition between the most sophisticated customers who, either are comfortable on their own premises, or who were cloud, sort of native, from the beginning, and then sort of the rest of the mainstream? You know, what sort of applications might they move to the cloud or might coexist between on-prem and the cloud? >> Well I think it's clear that the cloud is, you know, every new business starts on the cloud, that's clear. There's a lot of enterprise that is not yet there, but there's big willingness to move there. And there's a lot of hybrid cloud solutions as well. >> Do you see mainstream customers rewriting applications because they would be so much more powerful in stream processing, or do you see them doing just new applications? >> Both, we see both. It's always easier to start with a new application, but we do see a lot of legacy applications in big companies that are not working anymore. And we see those rewritten. And very core applications, very core to the business. >> So could that be, could you be sort of the source and in an analytic processing for the continuous data and then that sort of feeds a transaction and some parameters that then feed a model? >> Yeah. >> Is that, is that a, >> Yeah. >> so in other words you could augment existing OLTP applications with analytics then inform them in real time essentially. >> Absolutely. >> Okay, 'cause that sounds like then something that people would build around what exists. >> Yeah, I mean you can do, you can think of stream processing, in a way, as transaction processing. It's not a dedicated OLTP store, but you can think of it in this flipped architecture right? Like the log is essentially the re-do log, you know, and then you create the materialized views, that's the write path, and then you have the read path, which is queryable state. This is this whole CQRS idea right? >> Yeah, Command-Query-Response. >> Exactly. >> So, this is actually interesting, and I guess this is critical, it's sort of like a new way of doing distributed databases. I know that's not the word you would choose, but it's like the derived data, managed by, sort of coming off of the state changes, then in the stream processor that goes through a single sort of append-only log, and then reading, and how do you manage consistency on the materialized views that derive data? >> Yeah, so we have seen Flink users implement that. So we have seen, you know, companies really base the complete product on the CQRS pattern. I think this is a little bit further out. Consistency-wise, Flink gives you the exactly once consistency on the write path, yeah. What we see a lot more is an architecture where there's a lot of transactional stores in the front end that are running, and then there needs to be some kind of global, of single source of truth, between all of them. And a very typical way to do that is to get these logs into a stream, and then have a Flink application that can actually scale to that. Create a single source of truth from all of these transactional stores. >> And by having, by feeding the transactional stores into this sort of hub, I presume, some cluster as a hub, and even if it's in the form of sort of a log, how can you replay it with sufficient throughput, I guess not to be a data warehouse but to, you know, have low latency for updating the derived data? And is that derived data I assume, in non-Flink products? >> Yeah, so the way it works is that, you know, you can get the change logs from the databases, you can use something like Kafka to buffer them up, and then you can use Flink for all the processing and to do the reprocessing with Flink, this is really one of the core strengths of Flink. Basically what you do is, you replay the Flink program together with the states you can get really, really high throughput reprocessing there. >> Where does the super high throughput come from? Is that because of the integration of state and logic? >> Yeah, that is because Flink is a true streaming engine. It is a high-performance streaming engine. And it manages the state, there's no tier, >> Crossing a boundary? >> no tier crossing and there's no boundary crossing when you access state. It's embedded in the Flink application. >> Okay, so that you can optimize the IO path? >> Correct. >> Okay, very, very interesting. So, it sounds like the Kafka guys, the Confluent folks, their aspirations, from the last time we talked to 'em, doesn't extend to analytics, you know, I don't know whether they want partners to do that, but it sounds like they have a similar topology, but they're, but I'm not clear how much of a first-class citizen state is, other than the log. How would you characterize the trade-offs between the two? >> Yeah, so, I mean obviously I cannot comment on Confluent, but like, what I think is that the state and the log are two very different things. You can think of the log as storage, it's a kind of hot storage because it's the most recent data but you know, you cannot query it, it's not a materialized view, right. So for me the separation is between processing state and storage. The log is is a kind of storage, so kind of message queue. State is really the active data, the real-time active data that needs to have consistency guarantees, and that's a completely different thing. >> Okay, and that's the, you're managing, it's almost like you're managing under the covers a distributed database. >> Yes, kind of. Yeah a distributed key-value store if you wish. >> Okay, okay, and then that's exposed through multiple interfaces, data stream, table. >> Data stream, table API, SQL, other languages in the future, et cetera. >> Okay, so going further down the line, how do you see the sort of use cases that are going to get you across the chasm from the big tech companies into the mainstream? >> Yeah, so we are already seeing that a lot. So we're doing a lot of work with financial services, insurance companies a lot of very traditional businesses. And it's really a lot about maintaining single source of truth, becoming more real-time in the way they interact with the outside world, and the customer, like they do see the need to transform. If we take financial services and investment banks for example, there is a big push in this industry to modernize the IT infrastructure, to get rid of legacy, to adopt modern solutions, become more real-time, et cetera. >> And so they really needed this, like the application platform, the dA Platform, because operationalizing what Netflix did isn't going to be very difficult maybe for non-tech companies. >> Yeah, I mean, you know, it's always a trade-off right, and you know for some, some companies build, some companies buy, and for many companies it's much more sensible to buy. That's why we have software products. And really, our motivation was that we worked in the open-source Flink community with all the big tech companies. We saw their successes, we saw what they built, we saw, you know, their failures. We saw everything and we decided to build this for everybody else, for everyone that, you know, is not Netflix, is not Uber, cannot hire software developers so easily, or with such good quality. >> Okay, alright, on that note, Kostas, we're going to have to end it, and to be continued, one with Stefan next, apparently. >> Nice. >> And then hopefully next year as well. >> Nice. Thank you. >> Alright, thanks Kostas. >> Thank you George. Alright, we're with Kostas Tzoumas, CEO of data Artisans, the company behind Apache Flink and now the application platform that makes Flink run for mainstream enterprises. We will be back, after this short break. (techno music)
SUMMARY :
Covering Flink Forward, brought to you by data Artisans. and makes it more accessible to mainstream enterprises. Thank you George. application-use case, that is in the sweet spot of Flink, So for example, some of the largest users of Apache Flink I'm pretty sure they will give us bigger numbers today. So pretty big sizes. So and is Netflix, I think I read, is powering it's a tech company that happens to have a banking license. So okay, so tell us, for those who, you know, and you can restart at any time from there. We have also introduced end-to-end exactly once with Kafka. and on the state that having it integrated So traditionally what you would do is and you want to scale it to 500 right, which includes Flink, you can simply do this with one click So, the the resharding was possible with and it gives that to you in a rest API, in a UI, et cetera. you might have a cluster as a first-class citizen and you can do common operational tasks, because the capabilities, you know, are not in the skill set So for example, in the work we did with ING, and the statistics around the shards that gives you the ability to do, but you can do point queries and a few, you know, where you can store you know the commit log so, you can think of the state in Flink and roll back the log, the input log, in the sense that our product the dA Platform at the operations level with the platform. And of course there's SQL right? Yeah, so right now, the platform is running on Kubernetes, Well I think it's clear that the cloud is, you know, It's always easier to start with a new application, so in other words you could augment Okay, 'cause that sounds like then something that's the write path, and then you have the read path, I know that's not the word you would choose, So we have seen, you know, companies Yeah, so the way it works is that, you know, And it manages the state, there's no tier, It's embedded in the Flink application. doesn't extend to analytics, you know, but you know, you cannot query it, Okay, and that's the, you're managing, it's almost like Yeah a distributed key-value store if you wish. Okay, okay, and then that's exposed other languages in the future, et cetera. and the customer, like they do see the need to transform. like the application platform, the dA Platform, and you know for some, some companies build, and to be continued, one with Stefan next, apparently. and now the application platform
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Ranjana Young, Northern Trust | IBM Think 2018
>> Announcer: Live from Las Vegas, it's The Cube, covering IBM Think 2018, brought to you by IBM. >> Welcome back to The Cube. We are live in sunny Las Vegas at the inaugural IBM Think 2018 event. I'm Lisa Martin with Dave Vellante. Dave, this weather has got to beat Boston hands down, right? >> It was beautiful yesterday, about 15 degrees in Boston, snowy. >> So you thawed out since you've gotten here? >> I took the snowshoes out, actually. Life makes lemons. >> Exactly, and we have another cold-weather guest who's probably thawing out as well, Ranjana Young, the senior vice president of Enterprise Data Services from Northern Trust, welcome. >> Thank you, thanks for having me. >> We're excited to chat with you. You have a role at Northern Trust, and your mission is all-around data, five-core competencies, including data governance and stewardship, data quality, master data management, enterprise integration with data platforms. Tell us a little bit about your role, how long you've been doing that, and really what this focus on data is enabling for Northern Trust. >> Sure, I want to talk first about our mission as you had mentioned. I think it was critical to establish a broad mission for Northern Trust. We wanted to make sure that we establishing an enterprise data program that enabled our customer needs and overall our customer experience, but also truly helped support our regulatory needs that we had, and it was critical to establish those two as the main goals, not just one or the other. And then the role, I call myself a change agent because establishing capabilities that you talked about, it is difficult to do, with a lot of legacy that we have. The firm has been in existence for 128 years To establish a data-driven culture was very different. I think we were known to do provide good business solutions, but a lot with the gut, given that we were good at it, but how do you make sure that you change that culture and have a relationship managers and others really think differently and use data to provide those solutions to our clients. >> I remember when I met Inderpal Bhandari, I'm sure you know him, and he said that he has a framework for a data leader, and he said there are five things a data leader has to do to get started, and three are in parallel, or sorry, three are linear, two are in parallel. I don't know if you've heard this rap, but I'd like to sort of explore them and see how your three are generally. He said you start with understanding how the organization monetizes data, not directly, maybe selling data, but how it contributes, and then the next one was sort of data access and then data quality. Those are the sort of sequential activities, and then the parallel ones were form relationships with a line of business and then re-skill. So those are his five. How did you approach it, what was different, what was similar, what were some of the challenges that you had in doing that? >> Sure. If I had to think about kind of, to correlate some of the components of the strategy, skills is an important thing. When I started establishing the team three years ago, it was critical that we had to bring some of the core skills within the firm because they had the business capabilities, they understood the systems, they understood kind of the skeletons that were in the closets and knew the culture and also embraced the challenges and still could find solutions. And then you had to bring external folks that really had the capability to drive that change, had the mastery of management skills to really support and set up an account domain and a party domain, a reference data domain, especially an asset domain, et cetera. So we had to look at kind of a conglomerate of individuals to do that. And then if you look at kind of where was the starting point in terms of really establishing the program was, we were going through a transformation to really re-platform a lot of our legacy, whether it was our valuation system or our cash platform, others, and data was a thread throughout all of those programs, so it was critical to establish and think and take bite-sized chunks, it was important to think about, okay, throughout all the programs, what is the important data that we could kind of understand, so we focused quite a bit on initially looking at critical data and looking at critical data from a master data perspective, so asset data, which is very critical to the work that we do on the institutional side. As you know, we had a management asset servicing company. Data is an asset for us, we enrich the data. We provide services around that today, and have been, and so embedding data governance through that process was important, and also our clients were really looking for the enriched data but also were looking for clean information but also were looking for where did that data come from? Where does the definition of this data? So kind of giving them that external catalog of here's the data, but here's the enriched data and here's the metrics for data quality around it, and then here's the definitions for it. So to some extent, that drove change because of customers were looking for it, and a lot of the capabilities that were foundational to the firm, we're starting to externalize, especially the meta-data catalog, et cetera. >> So if I could play that back, so you started the team, all right, you said, okay, I need to build a team. I think I heard that, and then the data quality, and then presumably, okay, who has access to this data? Is that about right? >> So I started with the mission to say, we have to do this for both arms, the left arm being our customer experience and making sure that we change the way we're doing our work there, or enhance the work so that our customer experience was better, and then obviously the regulatory, make sure that we need the regulatory. So for that, we needed five core competencies. We knew that we had to establish a role of the steward, a role of the custodian, so the team started to become very critical then, and then we knew that we had some gaps in our master data management capability, a complete gap in having integrated data platforms. I notice I've talked a little bit about we established a whole strategy and architecture for ING. I totally relate to how we had to do the same. Each silo did their own particular thing. The management did their own thing. >> David: By data. >> The institutional side did their own thing. Asset management was, I would say, a lot more mature. So I would say if you were to think about it, it's establishing the mission and establishing the team. >> And then, just one last follow-up. The services that you're providing, data services, those are delivered through your organization, the IT organization, what's the practice? >> We have a partnership, a very collaborative partnership that we work together. The technology team does all the build for the work, we work collaboratively to kind of build a strategy of what solutions need to be first versus later, given the client priorities and our institutional side, our business unit priorities, so that's a collaborative effort, working together. >> So speaking of collaboration, you mentioned earlier that it was really key to have both the veterans within Northern Trust and their expertise that you said kind of the skeletons, that they know where things are buried, as well as that maybe external, you might say more fresh perspective. You also talked about, we chatted before we went live, about governance. Seems like what you guys have done is kind of flipped governance from being viewed as potentially an inhibitor to really empowering, being an empowering capability. Can you tell us how you've leveraged data governance to empower a data-driven culture within a business that is 128, I think, years old, you said? >> Yes, that's right. So, for us, I think that while we were establishing the program, it was very critical to understand kind of the challenges on the institutional side first because they had the maximum number of challenges with data. Again, because we're an asset servicing company, a data is an asset, we enrich that information and provide that information, but what was happening was it was taking us so much longer to provide these solutions to our clients, so we've embedded, now, the data governance framework as a part of that solution, and our clients are seeing the value, so if you look at one of the customers that we're working with, we actually have externalized our catalog where they understand now what data that they're receiving, and you're speaking the same language, and that was not the case before. But again, as I said, if we didn't do the foundational work of cataloging the information, understanding what the data is, where the data is, what the data assets are, we just couldn't have done that, so it's really paying off because of that. >> How has that affected your ability to be prepared for GDPR, which obviously went into effect last year, the fines go into effect in May of this year? What was the relationship there? >> So we have worked very, very closely with our chief privacy officer, and we've really done a phenomenal job of identifying where our highly sensitive data assets are. We're in the process of cataloging all of them through the unified governance framework that we've established, so we leverage IBM's IGC NIA to do all that work, and the lineage all the way to the authentic source, which is something the regulators definitely are looking for, so are we fully, completely done yet? No, so we're in that journey, and with unstructured data, we're looking at discovery tools to kind of provide that. We have a solution that's a little manual at this point, but we hope to kind of make more progress on that side. >> I got to ask you, so around 17%, the data suggests, 17% of the IT, technology industry is women, but I was at an IBM, it was a Data Divas breakfast that I crashed, I snuck in, one of the few guys there. >> Oh, very cool. And there was a stat that around 30% of data leaders are women, I don't know, it was a sort of a small sample, who knows? Sounded a little high. Somebody said it's because it's a thankless job and women have to take it on, so thoughts on women in tech, women in this role, perspectives. >> So I am excited to meet a few here at the conference. That statistic is pretty high that you're stating. I don't see that. >> David: It's outside that. >> In the industry, I do find myself sometimes as a lone warrior, at least in the industry forums, but I think it's growing. I think especially women in technology, women in leadership on the line of business side is growing, and Northern Trust, I'm very proud to say, is big around diversity and providing opportunities to women, so from that perspective, I think I'm excited that women are taking interest in data, yes, it is a very hard job, so I think, I feel like we are organized, we get a lot done at the same time, so I think it's really helped. >> Other than it's the right thing to do, are there other sort of business dimensions? Is it Mars versus Venus? Are there sort of enrichments that a woman leader brings to the equation, or is it just because it's the right thing to do? >> I've seen tenacity women have. No offense to anyone, I think the higher tenacity to be persistent. >> I don't take offense. >> To be methodical, to be methodical, and also to have the hard discussions in a very factual way sometimes, but also in, yes, this is the right thing to do, but is there ways we could make this change happen in a systematic, bite-size chunk way. Sometimes I think those coercive conversations help a lot more than the others, and I think, to me, I would say tenacity, tenacity. >> I love that word. I have to say, that's a word that's oftentimes associated with males. A lot of times a tenacious woman, it's a different adjective, right? It's a term, I don't know, Lisa, what your experience has been, so that's good, a good choice of words in my view. >> I've heard pushy before, and I think what they really meant >> David: There you go, okay. >> Is persistence. (laughs) >> That's right. >> A man is tenacious, a woman is pushy. You hear that a lot. >> Right, I think it's persistence. So last question for you. Here we are at the inaugural IBM Think 2018. You guys are an IBM Analytics Global Elite Partner. Can you talk to us a little bit about that strategic partnership and what it means for Northern Trust? >> This partnership has really helped us tremendously in the last three years while we were putting the strategy to action while operationalizing data governance, while operationalizing a lot of the capabilities we thought we would have but really kind of bringing that to life. We're also really excited because lot of the feedback that we've provided has gone into kind of redoing some of the products within IBM, so we've definitely partnered and done lot of testing for some of the ones, the beta versions, and it's also helped us, I think, sometimes it's been like a marriage. We've had hard times getting through certain hurdles, but it really has paid off, and I think the other thing is we've really operationalized governance to the core at Northern Trust. I think IBM is also seeing value in sharing that our story with others because others have started the journey but may have taken certain different approaches to making that happen, so all in all, I think that the unified governance framework has really helped us, and I think we really love the partnership. >> As a client, what's on their to-do list? What's on IBM's to-do list for you? >> So I think one of the things that we've been talking quite a bit is we have a new CIO, and he's really interested in the cloud strategy, I know you've been talking about that. Again, we're a bank, so due to regulation there's strategies in terms of private versus public cloud. That's one conversation we'll definitely want to take further. We want more integrated tooling within the unified governance platform. That's something that's been a topic that we've discussed quite a bit with them. AI, machine learning, robotics is huge for us, so how do we leverage Watson much more? We've done a few POCs, how do we really operationalize and make sure that that's something that we do more of, so I think I would say those three. >> So sounds like a very symbiotic relationship. >> Ranjana: It is. >> Slash marriage that you have. Ranjana, we want to thank you for joining us and sharing how really kind of you're exhibiting the term change agent in a tenacious way. >> Okay, thank you. >> I feel like I want to say I'm flanked between two data divas, you don't take offense at that, do you? >> No, not at all. It's a compliment. >> You crashed an event. I'm seeing a new >> I like that. >> Twitter handle come up here. We want to thank you so much again for stopping by and sharing. Congrats on your success, and we hope you have a great time here. Enjoy the sunshine! Maybe bring some back to Chicago. >> Will do, will do, yeah. Thanks again, very much. >> And for Dave Vellante, I'm Lisa Martin. We want to encourage you to check out thecube.net to watch all of the videos that we have done so far and will be doing at IBM Think 2018, and of course on all of the shows that we do. Also, head over to siliconangle.com. That's our media site where you're going to find pretty much in near real time synopsis and stories on not just what we're doing here but everything around the globe. Again, for Dave Vellante, I'm Lisa Martin, live from IBM Think 2018 in Vegas. We'll be right back after a short break with our next guest.
SUMMARY :
brought to you by IBM. at the inaugural IBM Think 2018 event. It was beautiful yesterday, I took the snowshoes out, actually. Exactly, and we have We're excited to chat with you. that we were good at it, of the challenges that you had and a lot of the capabilities So if I could play that back, and making sure that we change the way and establishing the team. the IT organization, what's the practice? that we work together. and their expertise that you said kind of and our clients are seeing the value, and the lineage all the way 17% of the IT, technology and women have to take it on, to meet a few here at the conference. so I think, I feel like we are organized, higher tenacity to be persistent. is the right thing to do, I have to say, that's a word Is persistence. You hear that a lot. and what it means for Northern Trust? because lot of the feedback and make sure that that's something So sounds like a very Slash marriage that you have. It's a compliment. You crashed an event. we hope you have a great time here. Thanks again, very much. on all of the shows that we do.
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Seth Dobrin, IBM Analytics - IBM Fast Track Your Data 2017
>> Announcer: Live from Munich, Germany; it's The Cube. Covering IBM; fast-track your data. Brought to you by IBM. (upbeat techno music) >> For you here at the show, generally; and specifically, what are you doing here today? >> There's really three things going on at the show, three high level things. One is we're talking about our new... How we're repositioning our hybrid data management portfolio, specifically some announcements around DB2 in a hybrid environment, and some highly transactional offerings around DB2. We're talking about our unified governance portfolio; so actually delivering a platform for unified governance that allows our clients to interact with governance and data management kind of products in a more streamlined way, and help them actually solve a problem instead of just offering products. The third is really around data science and machine learning. Specifically we're talking about our machine learning hub that we're launching here in Germany. Prior to this we had a machine learning hub in San Francisco, Toronto, one in Asia, and now we're launching one here in Europe. >> Seth, can you describe what this hub is all about? This is a data center where you're hosting machine learning services, or is it something else? >> Yeah, so this is where clients can come and learn how to do data science. They can bring their problems, bring their data to our facilities, learn how to solve a data science problem in a more team oriented way; interacting with data scientists, machine learning engineers, basically, data engineers, developers, to solve a problem for their business around data science. These previous hubs have been completely booked, so we wanted to launch them in other areas to try and expand the capacity of them. >> You're hosting a round table today, right, on the main tent? >> Yep. >> And you got a customer on, you guys going to be talking about sort of applying practices and financial and other areas. Maybe describe that a little bit. >> We have a customer on from ING, Heinrich, who's the chief architect for ING. ING, IBM, and Horton Works have a consortium, if you would, or a framework that we're doing around Apache Atlas and Ranger, as the kind of open-source operating system for our unified governance platform. So much as IBM has positioned Spark as a unified, kind of open-source operating system for analytics, for a unified governance platform... For a governance platform to be truly unified, you need to be able to integrate metadata. The biggest challenge about connecting your data environments, if you're an enterprise that was not internet born, or cloud born, is that you have proprietary metadata platforms that all want to be the master. When everyone wants to be the master, you can't really get anything done. So what we're doing around Apache Atlas is we are setting up Apache Atlas as kind of a virtual translator, if you would, or a dictionary between all the different proprietary metadata platforms so that you can get a single unified view of your data environment across hybrid clouds, on premise, in the cloud, and across different proprietary vendor platforms. Because it's open-sourced, there are these connectors that can go in and out of the proprietary platforms. >> So Seth, you seem like you're pretty tuned in to the portfolio within the analytics group. How are you spending your time as the Chief Data Officer? How do you balance it between customer visits, maybe talking about some of the products, and then you're sort of day job? >> I actually have three days jobs. My job's actually split into kind of three pieces. The first, my primary mission, is really around transforming IBM's internal business unit, internal business workings, to use data and analytics to run our business. So kind of internal business unit transformation. Part of that business unit transformation is also making sure that we're compliant with regulations like GDBR and other regulations. Another third is really around kind of rethinking our offerings from a CDO perspective. As a CDO, and as you, Dave, I've only been with IBM for seven months. As a former client recently, and as a CDO, what is it that I want to see from IBM's offerings? We kind of hit on it a little bit with the unified governance platform, where I think IBM makes fantastic products. But as a client, if a salesperson shows up to me, I don't want them selling me a product, 'cause if I want an MDM solution, I'll call you up and say, "Hey, I need an MDM solution. "Give me a quote." What I want them showing up is saying, "I have a solution that's going to solve "your governance problem across your portfolio." Or, "I'm going to solve your data science problem." Or, "I'm going to help you master your data, "and manage your data across "all these different environments." So really working with the offering management and the Dev teams to define what are these three or four, kind of business platforms that we want to settle on? We know three of them at least, right? We know that we have a hybrid data management. We have unified governance. We have data science and machine learning, and you could think of the Z franchise as a fourth platform. >> Seth, can you net out how governance relates to data science? 'Cause there is governance of the statistical models, machine learning, and so forth, version control. I mean, in an end to end machine learning pipeline, there's various versions of various artifacts they have to be managed in a structured way. Is your unified governance bundle, or portfolio, does it address those requirements? Or just the data governance? >> Yeah, so the unified governance platform really kind of focuses today on data governance and how good data governance can be an enabler of rapid data science. So if you have your data all pre-governed, it makes it much quicker to get access to data and understand what you can and can't do with data; especially being here in Europe, in the context of the EU GDPR. You need to make sure that your data scientists are doing things that are approved by the user, because basically your data, you have to give explicit consent to allow things to be done with it. But long term vision is that... essentially the output of models is data, right? And how you use and deploy those models also need to be governed. So the long term vision is that we will have a governance platform for all those things, as well. I think it makes more sense for those things to be governed in the data science platform, if you would. And we... >> We often hear separate from GDPR and all that, is something called algorithmic accountability; that more is being discussed in policy circles, in government circles around the world, as strongly related to everything you're describing. Being able to trace the lineage of any algorithmic decision back to the data, the metadata, and so forth, and the machine learning models that might have driven it. Is that where IBM's going with this portfolio? >> I think that's the natural extension of it. We're thinking really in the context of them as two different pieces, but if you solve them both and you connect them together, then you have that problem. But I think you're absolutely right. As we're leveraging machine learning and artificial intelligence, in general, we need to be able to understand how we got to a decision, and that includes the model, the data, how the data was gathered, how the data was used and processed. So it is that entire pipeline, 'cause it is a pipeline. You're not doing machine learning or AI in a vacuum. You're doing it in the context of the data, and you're doing it in the context about the individuals or the organizations that you're trying to influence with the output of those models. >> I call it Dev ops for data science. >> Seth, in the early Hadoop days, the real headwind was complexity. It still is, by the way. We know that. Companies like IBM are trying to reduce that complexity. Spark helps a little bit So the technology will evolve, we get that. It seems like one of the other big headwinds right now is that most companies don't have a great understanding of how they can take data and monetize it, turn it into value. Most companies, many anyway, make the mistake of, "Well, I don't really want to sell my data," or, "I'm not really a data supplier." And they're kind of thinking about it, maybe not in the right way. But we seem to be entering a next wave here, where people are beginning to understand I can cut costs, I can do predictive maintenance, I can maybe not sell the data, but I can enhance what I'm doing and increase my revenue, maybe my customer retention. They seem to be tuning, more so; largely, I think 'cause of the chief data officer roles, helping them think that through. I wonder if you would give us your point of view on that narrative. >> I think what you're describing is kind of the digital transformation journey. I think the end game, as enterprises go through a digital transformation, the end game is how do I sell services, outcomes, those types of things. How do I sell an outcome to my end user? That's really the end game of a digital transformation in my mind. But before you can get to that, before you transform your business's objectives, there's a couple of intermediary steps that are required for that. The first is what you're describing, is those kind of data transformations. Enterprises need to really get a handle on their data and become data driven, and start then transforming their current business model; so how do I accelerate my current business leveraging data and analytics? I kind of frame that, that's like the data science kind of transformation aspect of the digital journey. Then the next aspect of it is how do I transform my business and change my business objectives? Part of that first step is in fact, how do I optimize my supply chain? How do I optimize my workforce? How do I optimize my goals? How do I get to my current, you know, the things that Wall Street cares about for business; how do I accelerate those, make those faster, make those better, and really put my company out in front? 'Cause really in the grand scheme of things, there's two types of companies today; there's the company that's going to be the disruptor, and there's companies that's going to get disrupted. Most companies want to be the disruptors, and it's a process to do that. >> So the accounting industry doesn't have standards around valuing data as an asset, and many of us feel as though waiting for that is a mistake. You can't wait for that. You've got to figure out on your own. But again, it seems to be somewhat of a headwind because it puts data and data value in this fuzzy category. But there are clearly the data haves and the data have-nots. What are you seeing in that regard? >> I think the first... When I was in my former role, my former company went through an exercise of valuing our data and our decisions. I'm actually doing that same exercise at IBM right now. We're going through IBM, at least in the analytics business unit, the part I'm responsible for, and going to all the leaders and saying, "What decisions are you making?" "Help me understand the decisions that you're making." "Help me understand the data you need "to make those decisions." And that does two things. Number one, it does get to the point of, how can we value the decisions? 'Cause each one of those decisions has a specific value to the company. You can assign a dollar amount to it. But it also helps you change how people in the enterprise think. Because the first time you go through and ask these questions, they talk about the dashboards they want to help them make their preconceived decisions, validated by data. They have a preconceived notion of the decision they want to make. They want the data to back it up. So they want a dashboard to help them do that. So when you come in and start having this conversation, you kind of stop them and say, "Okay, what you're describing is a dashboard. "That's not a decision. "Let's talk about the decision that you want to make, "and let's understand the real value of that decision." So you're doing two things, you're building a portfolio of decisions that then becomes to your point, Jim, about Dev ops for data science. It's your backlog for your data scientists, in the long run. You then connect those decisions to data that's required to make those, and you can extrapolate the data for each decision to the component that each piece of data makes up to it. So you can group your data logically within an enterprise; customer, product, talent, location, things like that, and you can assign a value to those based on decisions they support. >> Jim: So... >> Dave: Go ahead, please. >> As a CDO, following on that, are you also, as part of that exercise, trying to assess the value of not just the data, but of data science as a capability? Or particular data science assets, like machine learning models? In the overall scheme of things, that kind of valuation can then drive IBM's decision to ramp up their internal data science initiatives, or redeploy it, or, give me a... >> That's exactly what happened. As you build this portfolio of decisions, each decision has a value. So I am now assigning a value to the data science models that my team will build. As CDOs, CDOs are a relatively new role in many organizations. When money gets tight, they say, "What's this guy doing?" (Dave laughing) Having a portfolio of decisions that's saying, "Here's real value I'm adding..." So, number one, "Here's the value I can add in the future," and as you check off those boxes, you can kind of go and say, "Here's value I've added. "Here's where I've changed how the company's operating. "Here's where I've generated X billions of dollars "of new revenue, or cost savings, or cost avoidance, "for the enterprise." >> When you went through these exercises at your previous company, and now at IBM, are you using standardized valuation methodologies? Did you kind of develop your own, or come up with a scoring system? How'd you do that? >> I think there's some things around, like net promoter score, where there's pretty good standards on how to assign value to increases in net promoter score, or decreases in net promoter score for certain aspects of your business. In other ways, you need to kind of decide as an enterprise, how do we value our assets? Do we use a three year, five year, ten year MPV? Do we use some other metric? You need to kind of frame it in the reference that your CFO is used to talking about so that it's in the context that the company is used to talking about. Most companies, it's net present value. >> Okay, and you're measuring that on an ongoing basis. >> Seth: Yep. >> And fine tuning as you go along. Seth, we're out of time. Thanks so much for coming back in The Cube. It was great to see you. >> Seth: Yeah, thanks for having me. >> You're welcome, good luck this afternoon. >> Seth: Alright. >> Keep it right there, buddy. We'll be back. Actually, let me run down the day here for you, just take a second to do that. We're going to end our Cube interviews for the morning, and then we're going to cut over to the main tent. So in about an hour, Rob Thomas is going to kick off the main tent here with a keynote, talking about where data goes next. Hilary Mason's going to be on. There's a session with Dez Blanchfield on data science as a team sport. Then the big session on changing regulations, GDPRs. Seth, you've got some customers that you're going to bring on and talk about these issues. And then, sort of balancing act, the balancing act of hybrid data. Then we're going to come back to The Cube and finish up our Cube interviews for the afternoon. There's also going to be two breakout sessions; one with Hilary Mason, and one on GDPR. You got to go to IBMgo.com and log in and register. It's all free to see those breakout sessions. Everything else is open. You don't even have to register or log in to see that. So keep it right here, everybody. Check out the main tent. Check out siliconangle.com, and of course IBMgo.com for all the action here. Fast track your data. We're live from Munich, Germany; and we'll see you a little later. (upbeat techno music)
SUMMARY :
Brought to you by IBM. that allows our clients to interact with governance and expand the capacity of them. And you got a customer on, you guys going to be talking about and Ranger, as the kind of open-source operating system How are you spending your time as the Chief Data Officer? and the Dev teams to define what are these three or four, I mean, in an end to end machine learning pipeline, in the data science platform, if you would. and the machine learning models that might have driven it. and you connect them together, then you have that problem. I can maybe not sell the data, How do I get to my current, you know, But again, it seems to be somewhat of a headwind of decisions that then becomes to your point, Jim, of not just the data, but of data science as a capability? and as you check off those boxes, you can kind of go and say, You need to kind of frame it in the reference that your CFO And fine tuning as you go along. and we'll see you a little later.
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Alan Nance, Virtual Clarity– DataWorks Summit Europe 2017 #DW17 #theCUBE
>> Narrator: At the DataWorks Summit, Europe 2017. Brought to you by Hortonworks. >> Hey, welcome back everyone. We're here live from Munich, Germany at DataWorks 2017, Hadoop Summit formerly, the conference name before it changed to DataWorks. I'm John Furrier with my cohost Dave Vellante. Our next guest, we're excited to have Alan Nance who flew in, just for the CUBE interview today. Executive Vice President with Virtual Clarity. Former star, I call practitioner of the Cloud, knows the Cloud business. Knows the operational aspects of how to use technology. Alan, it's great to see you. Thanks for coming on the CUBE. >> Thank you for having me again. >> Great to see you, you were in the US recently, we had a chance to catch up. And one of the motivations that we talked with you today was, a little bit about some of the things you're looking at, that are transformative. Before we do that, let's talk a little about your history. And what your role is at Virtual Clarity. >> So, as you guys have, basically, followed that career, I started out in the transformation time with ING Bank. And started out, basically, technology upwards. Looking at converged infrastructure, converged infrastructure into VDI. When you've got that, you start to look at Clouds. Then you start to experiment with Clouds. And I moved from ING, from earlier experimentation, into Phillips. So, while Phillips, at that time had both the health care and lighting group. And then you start to look at consumption based Cloud propositions. And you remember the big thing that we were doing at that time, when we identified that 80% of the IT spend was non differentiating. So the thing was, how do we get away from almost a 900 million a year spend on legacy? How do we turn that into something that's productive for the Enterprise? So we spent a lot of time creating the consumption based infrastructure operating platform. A lot of things we had to learn. Because let's be honest, Amazon was still trying to become the behemoth it is now. IBM still didn't get the transition, HP didn't get it. So there was a lot of experimentation on which of the operating model-- >> You're the first mover on the operating model, The Cloud, that has scaled to it. And really differentiated services for your business, for also, cost reductions. >> Cost reductions have been phenomenal. And we're talking about halving the budget over a three year period. We're talking about 500 million a year savings. So these are big, big savings. The thing I feel we still need to tackle, is that when we re-platform your business, it should leave to agile acceleration of your growth path. And I think that's something that we still haven't conquered. So I think we're getting better and better at using platforms to save money, to suppress the expenditure. What we now need to do is to convert that into growth platform business. >> So, how about the data component? Because you were CIO of infrastructure at Phillips. But lately, you've been really spending a lot of time thinking about the data, how data adds value. So talk about your data journey. >> Well if I look at the data journey, the journey started for me, with, basically, a meeting with Tom Ritz in 2013. And he came with a very, very simple proposition. "You guys need to learn how to create "and store, and reason over data, "for the benefit of the Enterprise." And I think, "Well that's cool." Because up until that point, nobody had really been talking about data. Everyone was talking about the underlying technologies of the Cloud, but not really of the data element. And then we had a session with JP Rangaswami, who was at Salesforce, who basically, also said, "Well don't just think "about data lakes, but think also "about data streams and data rivers. "Because the other thing that's "going to happen here is that data's "not going to be stagnant in a company like yours." So we took that, and what happened, I think, in Phillips, which I think you see in a lot of companies, is an explosion across the Enterprise. So you've got people in social doing stuff. You got CDO's appearing. You've got the IOT. You've got the old, legacy systems, the systems of record. And so you end up with this enormous fragmentation of data. And with that you get a Wild West of what I call data stewardship. So you have a CDO who says, "Well I'm in charge of data." And you got a CMO who says, "Well I'm in charge of marketing data." Or you've got a CSO, says, "Yeah, "but I'm the security data guy." And there's no coherence, in terms of moving the Enterprise forward. Because everybody's focused on their own functionality around that data and not connecting it. So where are we now? I think right now we have a huge proliferation of data that's not connected, in many organizations. And I think we're going to hybrid but I don't think that's a future proof thing for most organizations. >> John: What do you mean by that? >> Well, if I look at what a lot of those suppliers are saying, they're really saying, "The solution "that you need, is to have a hybrid solution "between the public Cloud and your own Cloud." I thought, "But that's not the problem "that we need to solve." The problem that we need to solve is first of all, data gravity. So if I look at all the transformations that are running into trouble, what do they forget? When we go out and do IOT, when we go out and do social media analysis, it all has to flow back into those legacy systems. And those legacy systems are all going to be in the old world. And so you get latency issues, you get formatting issues. And so, we have to solve the data gravity issue. And we have to also solve this proliferation of stewardship. Somebody has to be in charge of making this work. And it's not going to be, just putting in a hybrid solution. Because that won't change the operating model. >> So let me ask the question, because on one of the things you're kind of dancing around, Dave brought up the data question. Something that I see as a problem in the industry, that hasn't yet been solved, and I'm just going to throw it out there. The CIO has always been the guy managing IT. And then he would report to the CFO, get the budget, blah, blah, blah. We know that's kind of played out its course. But there's no operational playbook to take the Cloud, mobile data at scale, that's going to drive the transformative impact. And I think there's some people doing stuff here and there, pockets. And maybe there's some organizations that have a cadence of managers, that are doing compliance, security, blah, blah, blah. But you have a vision on this. And some information that you're tracking around. An architecture that would bring it to scale. Could you share your thoughts on this operational model of Cloud, at a management level? >> Well, part of this is also based on your own analyst, Peter Boris. When he says, "The problem with data "is that its value is inverse to its half life." So, what the Enterprise has to do is it has to get to analyzing and making this data valuable, much, much faster then it is right now. And Chris Sellender of Unifi recently said, "You know, the problem's not big data. "The problem's fast data." So, now, who is best positioned in the organization to do this? And I believe it's the COO. >> John: Chief Operating Officer? >> Chief Operating Officer. I don't think it's going to be the CIO. Because I'm trying to figure out who's got the problem. Who's got the problem of connecting the dots to improving the operation of the company? Who is in charge of actually creating an operating platform that the business can feed off of? It's the C Tower. >> John: Why not the CFO? >> No, I think the CFO is going to be a diminishing value, over time. Because a couple of reasons. First of all, we see it in Phillips. There's always going to be a fiduciary role for the CFO. But we're out of the world of capex. We're out of the world of balancing assets. Everything is now virtual. So really, the value of a CFO, as sitting on the tee, if I use the racquetball, the CFO standing on the tee is not going to bring value to the Enterprise. >> And the CIO doesn't have the business juice, is your argument? Is that right? >> It depends on the CIO. There are some CIO's out there-- >> Dave: But in general, we're generalizing. >> Generally not. Because they've come through the ranks of building applications, which now has to be thrown away. They've come through the ranks of technology, which is now less relevant. And they've come through the ranks of having huge budgets and huge people to deploy certain projects. All of that's going away. And so what are you left with? Now you're left with somebody who absolutely has to understand how to communicate with the business. And that's what they haven't done for 30 years. >> John: And stream line business process. >> Well, at least get involved in the conversation. At least get involved in the conversation. Now if I talk to business people today, and you probably do too, most of them will still say there's this huge communication gulf. Between what we're trying to achieve and what the technology people are doing with our goals. I mean, I was talking to somebody the other day. And this lady heads up the sales for a global financial institution. She's sitting on the business side of this. And she's like, "The conversation should be "about, if our company wants to improve "our cost income ratio, and they ask me, "as sales to do it, I have to sell 10 times "more to make a difference. "Then if IT would save money. "So for every Euro they save. "And give me an agile platform, "is straight to the bottom line. "Every time I sell, because of our "cost income ratio, I just can't sell against that. "But I can't find on the IT side, "anybody who, sort of, gets my problem. "And is trying to help me with it." And then you look at her and what? You think a hybrid solution's going to help her? (laughs) I have no idea what you're talking about. >> Right, so the business person here then says, "I don't really care where it runs." But to your point, you care about the operational model? >> Alan: Absolutely. >> And that's really what Cloud should be, right? >> I think everybody who's going to achieve anything from an investment in Cloud, will achieve it in the operating world. They won't just achieve it on the cost savings side. Or on making costs more transparent, or more commoditized. Where it has to happen is in the operating model. In fact, we actually have data of a very large, transportation, logistics company, who moved everything that they had, in an attempt to be in a zero Cloud. And on the benchmark, saved zero. And they saved zero because they weren't changing the operating model. So they were still-- >> They lifted and shifted, but didn't change the operational mindset. >> Not at all. >> But there could have been business value there. Maybe things went faster? >> There could have been. >> Maybe simpler? >> But I'm not seeing it. >> Not game changing. >> Not game changing, certainly yes. >> Not as meaningful, it was a stretch. >> Give an example of a game changing scenario. >> Well for me, and I think this is the next most exciting thing. Is this idea of platforms. There's been an early adoption of this in Telco. Where we've seen people coming in and saying, "If you stock all of this IT, as we've known it, "and you leverage the ideas of Cloud computing, "to have scalable, invisible, infrastructure. "And you put a single platform on top of it "to run your business, you can save money." Now, I've seen business cases where people who are about to embark on this program are taking a billion a year out of their cost base. And in this company, it's 1/7th of their total profit. That's a game changer, for me. But now, who's going to help them do that? Who's going to help them-- >> What's the platform look like? >> And a million's a lot of money. >> Let's go, grab a sheet of paper how we-- >> So not everybody will even have a billion-- >> But that gets the attention of certainly, the CEO, the COO, CFO says, "Tell me more." >> You're alluding to it, Dave. You need to build a layer to punch, to doing that. So you need to fix the data stewardship problem. You have to create the invisible infrastructure that enables that platform. And you have to have a platform player who is prepared to disrupt the industry. And for me-- >> Dave: A Cloud player. >> A Cloud player, I think it's a born in the Cloud player. I think, you know, we've talked about it privately. >> So who are the forces to attract? You got Microsoft, you got AWS, Google, maybe IBM, maybe Oracle. >> See, I think it's Google. >> Dave: Why, why do you think it's Google? >> I think it's because, the platforms that I'm thinking of, and if I look in retail, if I look in financial services, it's all about data. Because that's the battle, right. We all agree, the battle's on data. So it's got to be somebody who understands data at scale, understands search at scale, understands deep learning at scale. And understands technology enough to build that platform and make it available in a consumption model. And for me, Google would be the ideal player, if they would make that step. Amazon's going to have a different problem because their strategy's not going down that route. And I think, for people like IBM or Oracle, it would require cannibalizing too much of their existing business. But they may dally with it. And they may do it in a territory where they have no install base. But they're not going to be disrupting the industry. I just don't think it's going to be possible for them. >> And you think Google has the Enterprise chops to pull it off? >> I think Google has the platform. I would agree with Alan on this. Something, I've been very critical on Google. Dave brings this up because he wants me to say it now, and I will. Google is well positioned to be the platform. I am very bullish on Google Cloud with respect to their ability to moon shot or slingshot to the future faster, than, potentially others. Or as they say in football, move the goal posts and change the game. That being said, where I've been critical of Google, and this is where, I'll be critical, is their dogma is very academic, very, "We're the technology leader, "therefore you should use Google G Suite." I think that they have to change their mindset, to be more Enterprise focused, in the sense of understand not the best product will always win, but the B chip they have to develop, have to think about the Enterprise. And that's a lot of white glove service. That's a lot of listening. That's not being too arrogant. I mean, there's a borderline between confidence and arrogance. And I think Google crosses it a little bit too much, Dave. And I think that's where Google recognizes, some people in Google recognize that they don't have the Enterprise track record, for sure on the sales side. You could add 1,000 sales reps tomorrow but do they have experience? So there's a huge translation issue going on between Google's capability and potential energy. And then the reality of them translating that into an operational footprint. So for them to meet the mark of folks like you, you can't be speaking Russian and English. You got to speak the same language. So, the language barrier, so to speak, the linguistics is different. That's my only point. >> I sense in your statements, there's a frustration here. Because we know that the key to some really innovative, disruption is with Google. And I think what we'd all like to do, even while I was addressing the camera. I'd love to see Diane, who does understand Enterprise, who's built a whole career servicing Enterprises extremely well, I'd like to see a little bit of a glimpse of, "We are up for this." And I understand when you're part of the bigger Google, the numbers are a little bit skewered against you to make a big impact and carry the firm with you. But I do believe there's an enormous opportunity in the Enterprise space. And people are just waiting for this. >> Well Diane Greene knows the Enterprise. So she came in, she's got to change the culture. And I know she's doing it. Because I have folks at Google, that I know that work there, that tell me privately, that it's happening, maybe not fast enough. But here's the thing. If you walked in the front door at Google, Alan Nance, this is my point, and he said, "I have experience and I have a plan "to build a platform, to knock a billion "dollars off seven companies, that I know, personally. "That I can walk in and win. "And move a billion dollars to their "bottom line with your platform." They might not understand what that means. >> I don't know, you know I was at Google Next a few weeks ago, last month. And I thought they were more, to your point, open to listening. Maybe not as arrogant as you might be presenting. And somewhat more humble. Still pretty ballsy. But I think Google recognizes that it needs help in the Enterprise. And here's why. Something that we've talked about in the past, is, you've got top down initiatives. You've got bottom up initiatives. And you've got middle out. What frequently happens, and I'd love for you to describe your experiences. The leaders say, the top CXO's say, "Okay we're going." And they take off and the organization doesn't follow them. If it's bottoms up, you don't have the top down in premature. So how do you address that? What are you seeing and how do you address that problem? >> So I think that's a really, really good observation. I mean, what I see in a lot of the big transformations that I've been involved in, is that speed is of the essence. And I think when CEO's, because usually it's the CEO. CEO comes in and they think they've got more time than they actually have to make the impact in the Enterprise. And it doesn't matter if they're coming in from the outside or they've grown up. They always underestimate their ability to do change, in time. And now what's changed over the past few years, is the average tenure of a CEO is six years. You know, I mean, Jack Welch was 20 years at GE. You can do a lot of damage in 20 years. And he did a lot of great things at GE over a 20 year period. You've only got six years now. And what I see in these big transformation programs is they start with a really good vision. I mean Mackenzie, Bain, Boston. They know the essence of what needs to happen. >> Dave: They can sell the dream. >> They can sell the dream. And the CEO sort of buys into it. And then immediately you get into the first layer, "Okay, okay, so we've got to change the organization." And so you bring in a lot of these companies that will run 13 work streams over three years, with hundreds of people. And at the end of that time, you're almost halfway through your tenure. And all you've got is a new design. Or a new set of job descriptions or strategies. You haven't actually achieved anything. And then the layer down is going to run into real problems. One of the problems that we had at the company I worked at before, was in order to support these platforms you needed really good master data management. And we suddenly realized that. And so we had to really put in an accelerated program to achieve that, with Impatica. We did it, but it cost us a year and 1/2. At a bank I know, they can't move forward because they're looking at 700 million of technology debt, they can't get past. So they end up going down a route of, "Maybe one of these big suppliers "can buy our old stuff. "And we can tag on some transformational "deal at the back end of that." None of those are working. And then what happens is, in my mind, if the CEO, from what I see, has not achieved escape velocity at the end of year three. So he's showing the growth, or she's showing the digital transformation, it's kind of game over. The Enterprise has already figured out they've stalled it long enough, not intentionally. And then we go back into an austerity program. Because you got to justify the millions you've spent in the last three years. And you've got nothing to show for it. >> And you're preparing three envelopes. >> So you got to accelerate those layers. You got to take layers out and you've got to have a really, I would say almost like, 90 day iteration plans that show business outcomes. >> But the technology layer, you can put in an abstraction layer, use APIs and infrastructure as code, all that cool stuff. But you're saying it's the organizational challenges. >> I think that's the real problem. It is the real problem, is the organization. And also, because what you're really doing in terms of the Enterprise, is you're moving from a more traditional supply chain that you own. And you've matriculated with SAP or with Oracle. Now you're talking about creating a digital value chain. A digital value chain that's much more based on a more mobile ecosystem, where you would have thin text in one area or insurance text, that have to now fit into an agile supply chain. It's all about the operating model. If you don't have people who know how to drive that, the technology's not going to help you. So you've got to have people on the business side and the technology side coming together to make this work. >> Alan, I have a question for you. What's you're prediction, okay, knowing what you know. And kind of, obviously, you have some frustrations in platforms with trying to get the big players to listen. And I think they should listen to you. But this is going to happen. So I would believe that what you're saying with the COO, operational things radically changing differently. Obviously, the signs are all there. Data centers are moving into the Cloud. I mean this is radical stuff, in a good way. And so, what's your prediction for how this plays out vis a vis Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud Platform Azure, IBM Cloud SoftLayer. >> Well here's my concern a little bit. I think if Google enters the fray I think everybody will reconfigure. Because if we'd assume that Google plays to its strengths and goes out there and finds the right partners. It's going to reconfigure the industry. If they don't do that, then what the industry's going to do is what it's done. Which means that the platforms are going to be hybrid platforms that are dominated by the traditional players. By the SOPs, by the Oracles, by the IBMs. And what I fear is that there may actually be a disillusionment. Because they will not bring the digital transformation and all the wonderful things that we all know, are out there to be gained. So you may get, "We've invested all this money." You see it a little bit with big data. "I've got this huge layer. "I've got petabytes. "Why am I not smarter? "Why is my business not going so much better? "I've put everything in there." I think we've got to address the operating problem. And we have to find a dialogue at the C Suite. >> Well to your point, and we talked about this. You know, you look at the core of Enterprise apps, the Oracle stuff is not moving in droves, to the Cloud. Oracle's freezing the market right now. Betting that it can get there before the industry gets there. And if it does-- >> Alan: It's not. >> And it might, but if it does, it's not going to be that radical transformation you're prescribing. >> They have too much to lose. Let's be honest, right. So Oracle is a victim of it's own success, pretty much like SAP. It has to go to the Cloud as a defensive play. Because the last thing either of those want is to be disintermediated by Amazon. Which may or may not happen anyway. Because a lot of companies will disintermediate if they can. Because the licensing is such a painful element for most enterprises, when they deal with these companies. So they have to believe that the platform is not going to look like that. >> And they're still trying to figure out the pricing models, and the margin models, and Amazon's clearly-- >> You know what's driving the pricing models is not the growth on the consumer side. >> Right, absolutely. >> That's not what's driving it. So I think we need another player. I really think we need another player. If it's not Google, somebody else. I can't think who would have the scale, the money to-- >> The only guys who have the scale, you got 10 cents, maybe a couple China Clouds, maybe one Japan Cloud and that's it. >> To be honest, you raise a good point. I haven't really looked at the Ali Baba's and the other people like that who may pick up that mantle. I haven't looked at them. Ali Baba's interesting, because just like Amazon, they have their own business that runs on platforms. And a very diverse business, which is growing faster than Amazon and is more profitable than Amazon. So they could be interesting. But I'm still hopeful. We should figure this out. >> Google should figure it out. You're absolutely right. They're investing, and I thought they put forth a pretty good messaging at the Google Next. You covered it remotely but I think they understand the opportunity. And I think they have the stomach for it. >> We had reporters there as well, at the event. We just did, they came to our studio. Google is self aware that they need to work on the Enterprise. I think the bigger thing that you're highlighting is the operational model is shifting to a scale point where it's going to change stewardship and COO meaning to be, I like that. The other thing I want to get your reaction to is something I heard this morning, on the CUBE from Sean Connelly. Which that goes with some of the things that we're seeing where you're seeing Cloud becoming a more centralized view. Where IOT is an Edge case. So you have now, issues around architectural things. Your thoughts and reaction to this balance between Edge and Cloud. >> Well I think this is where you're also going to have your data gravity challenge. So, Dave McCrory has written a lot about the concept of data gravity. And in my mind, too many people in the Enterprise don't understand it. Which is basically, that data attracts more data. And more data you have, it'll attract more. And then you create all these latency issues when you start going out to the Edge. Because when we first went out to the Edge I think, even at Phillips, we didn't realize how much interaction needed to come back. And that's going to vary from company to company. So some company's are going to want to have that data really quickly because they need to react to it immediately. Others may not have that. But what you do have is you have this balancing act. About, "What do I keep central? "And what do I put at the Edge?" I think Edge Technology is amazing. And when we first looked at it, four years ago, I mean, it's come such a long way. And what I am encouraged by is that, that data layer, so the layer that Sean talks about, there's a lot of exciting things happening. But again, my problem is what's the Enterprise going to do with that? Because it requires a different operating model. If I take an example of a manufacturing company, I know a manufacturing company right now that does work in China. And it takes all the data back to its central mainframes for processing. Well if you've got the Edge, you want to be changing the way you process. Which means that the decision makers on the business need to be insitu. They need to be in China. And we need to be bringing, systems of record data and combining it with local social data and age data, so we get better decisions. So we can drive growth in those areas. If I just enable it with technology but don't change the business model the business is not going to grow. >> So Alan, we always loved having you on. Great practitioner, but now you've kind of gone over to the dark side. We've heard of a company called Virtual Clarity. Tell us about what you're doing there. >> So what we're vested in, what I am very much vested in, with my team at Virtual Clarity, is creating this concept of precision guided transformation. Where you work on the business, on what are the outcomes we really need to get from this? And then we've combined, I would say it's like a data nerve center. So we can quickly analyze, within a matter of weeks, where we are with the company, and what routes to value we can create. And then we'll go and do it. So we do it in 90 day increments. So the business now starts to believe that something's really going to happen. None of these big, insert miracle here after three year programs. But actually going out and doing it. The second thing that I think that we're doing that I'm excited about is bringing in enlightened people who represent the Enterprise. So, one of my colleagues, former COO of Unilever, we just brought on a very smart lady, Dessa Grassa, who was the CDO at JP Morgan Chase. And the idea is to combine the insights that we have on the demand side, the buy side, with the insights that we have on the technology side to create better operating models. So that combination of creating a new view that is acceptable to the C Suite. Because these people understand how you talk to them. But at the same time, runs on this concept of doing everything quickly. That's what we're about right now. >> That's awesome, we should get you hooked up with our new analyst we just hired, James Corbelius, from IBM. Was focusing on exactly that. The intersections of developers, Cloud, AI machine learning and data, all coming together. And IOT is going to be a key application that we're going to see coming out of that. So, congratulations. Alan thank you for spending the time to come in. >> Thanks for allowing me. >> To see us in the CUBE. It's the CUBE, bringing you more action. Here from DataWorks 2017. I'm John Furrier with my cohost Dave Vallante, here on the CUBE, SiliconANGLE Media's flagship program. Where we've got the events, straight from SiliconANGLE. Stay with us for more great coverage. Day one of two days of coverage at DataWorks 2017. We'll be right back.
SUMMARY :
Brought to you by Hortonworks. Thanks for coming on the CUBE. And one of the motivations that So the thing was, how do we get away from that has scaled to it. And I think that's something that we So, how about the data component? of moving the Enterprise forward. And it's not going to be, just So let me ask the question, because on And I believe it's the COO. I don't think it's going to be the CIO. So really, the value of a CFO, as sitting It depends on the CIO. Dave: But in general, And so what are you left with? "But I can't find on the IT side, Right, so the business And on the benchmark, saved zero. change the operational mindset. But there could have Give an example of a And in this company, it's But that gets the And you have to have a platform player a born in the Cloud player. You got Microsoft, you got AWS, Google, So it's got to be somebody who understands So, the language barrier, so to speak, And I think what we'd all like to do, But here's the thing. The leaders say, the top CXO's say, is that speed is of the essence. And at the end of that time, you're almost You got to take layers But the technology It is the real problem, And I think they should listen to you. the industry's going to in droves, to the Cloud. it's not going to be that radical So they have to believe that the platform is not the growth on the consumer side. the scale, the money to-- you got 10 cents, maybe I haven't really looked at the Ali Baba's And I think they have the stomach for it. is the operational model is shifting the business is not going to grow. kind of gone over to the dark side. And the idea is to combine the insights the time to come in. It's the CUBE, bringing you more action.
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