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Adrianna Bustamante, Rackspace Technology | Special Program Series: Women of the Cloud


 

(upbeat music) >> Hey, everyone, welcome to theCube's special program series Women of the Cloud brought to you by AWS. I'm your host, Lisa Martin. I'm very pleased to welcome back one of our alumni Adrianna Bustamante joins me, the VP of Global Alliances at Rackspace Technology. Adrianna, it's great to see you. Thank you so much for joining me today. >> Lisa, thank you so much for having me again. I love this. >> Yeah, me too. Tell me a little bit about you, a little bit about Rackspace Technology, as well as the role that you currently have. >> Sure, so again, I'm Adrianna Bustamante. I look after our global alliances within Rackspace, specifically looking after some of our strategic partners. I've been with Rackspace for a little over 16 years now, working with partners in some form or fashion. Rackspace Technology, we are the multicloud solution experts. We really work with our clients to drive business outcomes and transformations in this multicloud world. And our mission is to embrace technology, empower our customers, and deliver the future. And I get to have the fun pleasure of building and curating and cultivating partnership relationships. So very much our partnerships are important to our success. We are privileged to be able to work with AWS along with other partners across the industry to help do more, and bring more value to clients. >> So you've been with Rackspace Technology for a while. Tell me a little bit about recommendations. Any tactical recommendations that you have for other women, maybe even men who are looking to grow their careers in tech maybe they're wanting to get into tech. What are some of the things that you've learned along the way that you highly recommend? >> Yeah, no, great, great question. I've had the fortune of being at Rackspace now for a number of years, and it's always 'cause I've been able to create my own opportunities and work. And so that really falls in line to some of the recommendations that I hold dear to my heart. And number one is really to stay curious and learn, from reading articles, to staying close, and asking questions from your colleagues. You know, I know just like at AWS and at Rackspace, there are some very talented people across all areas of the business, and they are the best to learn from. You know, I also am a firm believer in developing and expanding that network 'cause that helps you bring and build out your reach and helps you continue to learn in different areas outside the company. I think from raising your hand, leaning in, don't be afraid to speak up. Especially as we think about, you know, women of the cloud which is part of what the theme of this session is. And I think about, you know, how much I love to see women elevated within roles inside of Rackspace and out, you know. It is about raising your hand, getting uncomfortable in speaking up if you're, if you are a bit shy or timid. If there's an area that you are interested in and passionate about, go learn and drive. Because there's opportunities to create new roles for yourself, new ways to bring value into the organization. And then you become memorable for, you know, that, you know this person was known for helping solve this problem. It's been a good fortune. And within our company culture of any Racker, the front lines know how to solve most problems just as much as the top executives. >> Yeah, I love you saying stay curious. I think curiosity is probably one of the best things that people can have. It's, to your point of, I like to call it getting comfortably uncomfortable. Raise your hand, ask a question. I always think, if you're in a meeting, and maybe you tune out or there's something that you don't understand, ask a question. 'Cause I guarantee there's five other people in that room that have the same question, but they're not curious enough or hungry enough to ask the question to learn more. So I think those are such great recommendations that you have provided that I think you probably would tell your younger self stay curious, ask questions. >> Yes, for sure. I also am so big, at least for me personally, context is so important for me. If I understand context, then I'm really able to figure out where can I drive the most value for me personally. And then that goes into leading my teams. And so to me, the only way you get the context is if you're learning or asking the questions if you don't understand. 'Cause it really helps you understand the holistic business. >> A hundred percent. That context is everything. But a lot of people are just a little bit timid sometimes and don't want to be the one to raise their hand in a room or online these days. And I think it's such a great skill that anybody can benefit from. I'd love to know some of your other skills. Some examples of specific success stories where in your current role, where you've really helped organizations solve problems related to the cloud. >> Yes, so, you know, and I think about ultimately we're looking to see and always looking to see how we can help transform our clients' businesses. And often the underlying root of that is through technology solutions. And so, you know, we've helped clients who are mostly, you know, legacy data center based clients that have built large infrastructure components and environments, and they want to learn and lean into the cloud. And they're not really sure how to do that. They probably may have a leader that's told them that they need to do this. Everybody's at a different level of journey. And so, you know, specifically, and especially in partnership with some of our hyperscaler partners just at like AWS is, you know, we can help customers understand what that journey needs to look like. How to successfully move, let's say if they're a large VMware shop today they already have a little bit of cloud native. You know, together through our ecosystem of relationships, we've helped customers not only be able to build and maintain part of their data center footprint that's not ready yet to transform, but move some of this into a facility that is within our data centers to get out of that huge kind of CapEx heavy workload type environment. And then, and especially with AWS, and the partnership that they have along with Rackspace, with VMware, we leverage BMC on AWS solutions. And then we can help them fully embrace that cloud native. And from a Rackspace perspective we are providing those services and expertise across all levels in a single pane of glass. So you can manage from your more traditional workloads to embracing more of a cloud native approach. >> And it's all about helping clients drive business outcomes as you said. Every organization these days, I always like to think, whether it's my grocery store retailer or bank has to be a data driven company. But it has to leverage obviously the cloud. But there's so many options. It's quite nebulous, no pun intended, maybe pun intended. So, but it's all about helping clients drive those business outcomes. I imagine it's quite fulfilling for you to be able to help different types of organizations really maximize their use of technology, their understanding of technology, to really build bridges, deliver the products and services that everybody's expecting these days. >> Yes. No and I think what I, again, it's what I love about being in partnerships because those relationships become fundamental in helping remove those complexities for the clients. And so the more that we as Rackspace are able to connect and deepen these relationships it just becomes less decision making, less things that the client ultimately has to think about. So nothing gives me more joy than being able to help solve the customer's problems. And then in turn we're doing that through our partnership relationships. So we're bringing everybody together to ultimately provide a better outcome for the client. >> Yeah. And as you said, those relationships are foundational to everything and ultimately the outcomes that the end customer is able to deliver to these demanding, whether it's consumer or business or whatnot. A lot of challenges that organizations have today. But it sounds like the relationship cultivating that you're helping lead is really critical in those organizations being able to embrace technology, utilize it in ways that allow them to get products and services to market as fast as the consumer demands. I'd love to get your perspective as a female in technology. We talk a lot about diversity, inclusion, equity. We can talk about it all day long, but there's still some challenges there. What are some of the challenges that you see that are still persistent with respect to diversity and tech today? And maybe some of your recommendations to eradicate some of those? >> No, sure. So, you know, it starts really early. It starts almost in education and making sure that women, and a diverse set of applicants are taking certain, studying certain disciplines. And then I think about it from a recruiting and hiring perspective. Are organizations doing enough to expand their reach? You know, we were actually talking- I have the good fortune of being the executive sponsor of our resource group within Rackspace. It's called Power, which is the professional organization of women's empowerment at Rackspace. And we were talking just I think last week on, we need to make sure we're going where the women are to make sure we are letting them know about Rackspace, the benefits about Rackspace. And it ultimately, in turn that helps build more recruiting into the talent pool. More people are raising their hand and interviewing and hiring. I think talent in general as we're seeing right now, is so hard to come by, and so even more important to retain. And the more diverse pools that we have of Rackers, it's just bringing different perspectives, and Rackers are what we call Rackspace employees. It's bringing those Rackers together to help solve the bigger problems. Because you're able to do more with a diverse set of outlook. And I think, you know, as a woman, I want to have that equitable seat at the table. And so ultimately when I think about myself from a leadership perspective, am I making sure that all of those opportunities are available for the women that come along behind me? And how am I elevating other women within our organization from a day-to-day so they have that spotlight. So, you know, fundamentally, organizations need to focus on how to expand that reach to bring that diverse set of applicants and voices. And then you need strong leaders at every level to be advocates and sponsors to make sure that this is an important topic and top of mind in all organizations. So you can ultimately provide an equitable approach. >> Yeah, I love that. I agree a hundred percent. You know, it's so important to start at the education front, but also to be able to have just the thought diversity alone in organizations. I've seen many studies that show having females in executive positions are, companies that do that, are more profitable. There's a lot of data out there that demonstrates that there are huge advantages to any type of organization to really invest in diversity. But to your point, it's not just about attracting, it's about retaining the talent as well. I mean that, that is critical for every business. >> Yes. No absolutely. You know, more and more we're starting to see that soft benefits are becoming more important as we think about a younger workforce coming in. And when I think about soft benefits, it's more around our employee resource groups. What our benefits look like for our females within our healthcare, within the insurance plans? What type of time off and maternity benefits are we extending? What does that work-life balance look like in a hybrid world or a virtual world? Those questions become, I mean, when I remember years ago no one would even think about asking those questions. And now we see, not only those questions coming up more regularly, but we are trying to be more intentional within our organization. To be proactive about that messaging so we can help show and demonstrate that we are an inclusive community. And that there's support for women to be successful within Rackspace. You know, we have mentoring programs that we do that are you know, that we really try to highlight and promote for our female community. And then also for our broader community. We look at building different circles that women can come together in a space that they feel comfortable to ask questions. To figure out how do they excel and advance in their career. Those become very attractive for getting that talent that we want. >> Absolutely. And you just brought up such a great point, Adrianna and that's intention. Programs like what you're describing that the Rackers have opportunity to access, is that there's intention in all of this. Which is so critical for diversity programs to be successful. To attract the right talent, to retain the right talent. It's like a flywheel, I think it's all, it's all linked together. But I'd love to know what you see that's next in cloud. How do you see your role evolving in the industry? We talked about the great relationship building that you're doing. What do you see as next in cloud? >> No, sure. Again, 'cause I helplessly can't be biased. It is all about to me that that partner ecosystem. It is how we can build strong relationships that help minimize the complexities for the clients. You know, now the pace for innovation and competitive edge is faster than it was than we saw 24 months ago. You know, we saw COVID advance lots of different areas of the business, but really it forced a lot of companies to transform. And this is where I think there's a unique opportunity to really look at what a partner ecosystem looks like. You know, who are the right partners that organizations like AWS, like Rackspace should be working with. 'Cause oftentimes the partners that were our partners and key partners, maybe three to five years ago, maybe aren't going to be as relevant in that same ecosystem in the next five years. So constantly making sure that we have the right ecosystem in place, and the right relationships to help ultimately drive better outcomes for the clients. >> And that's like we said several times already during this interview. It's all about the outcomes for clients. You mentioned COVID, you know, there's been- I call 'em COVID catalysts. A lot of transformation, forcing function. There's definitely been some silver linings, but I'd love to get your perspective if we go back like the last five years. Some of the biggest changes that you've seen in the tech workforce, in innovation, in the last, you know, three to five years that really excite you. >> Yeah, so I think we all had to learn to be virtual by default. And so I think we're just coming out. People are excited to be in person again. You know, when we have different events, whether they be with internal Rackers or with partners or clients, like everyone's excited to to see each other again. But you're still seeing this mix of, we need to be hybrid by default, which I know wasn't in everybody's DNA from a technology perspective. And I think that's enabling more virtual teams, more matrixed type of teams, where you're bringing together different expertise across the organization to move at a faster pace. You know, we talk about, you know, we talk about COVID which led to that great resignation where you saw many people changing their jobs. You know, we saw women not only within Rackspace, but even outside, like really, you know, take a pause and really start thinking about what's important to them in that returning to work. And so I just think all of this has really, as you mentioned, Lisa, of forcing function on being intentional to create the right environments that are building a place that we can retain that level of skill and expertise. And I think that's just going to become something that's more increasingly important with every year and profession choice. >> I agree. It's going to be building upon, like it's that flywheel that I'm talking about. That of successes, of promoting women, of making sure that there's plenty of opportunity. Encouraging women, to your point, to be curious raise your hand, ask the question. There's so much value, it's invaluable for organizations to really have diversity throughout their organization. You did a great job of explaining. Even in the benefits framework. So, I so appreciate you being on theCUBE. Adrianna, it's great to see you again. Thank you for sharing your story, the successes that you've had as a Racker in cloud, and some of the things that you recommend to the next generation. We really appreciate your time. >> No, thank you. If I can walk into more rooms where there is more women at the table and on the calls, I am a happier individual. So I love any opportunity to really see how we can continue to make more space in the rooms for women that are just overly talented and deserve to be there. >> I am with you on that. Again, thank you so much. Great to see you and we'll see you again soon. >> Thank you, Lisa. Take care. Have a good afternoon. >> Thank you. We want to thank you for watching theCube's special program series Women of the Cloud, brought to you by AWS. I'm Lisa Martin, thanks for watching. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Feb 13 2023

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Women of the Cloud brought to you by AWS. Lisa, thank you so that you currently have. And I get to have the along the way that you highly recommend? And so that really falls in line to some in that room that have the same question, And so to me, the only I'd love to know some that they need to do this. to be able to help different And so the more that we as Rackspace and services to market as and so even more important to retain. You know, it's so important to and demonstrate that we But I'd love to know what of companies to transform. innovation, in the last, you know, You know, we talk about, you and some of the things that you recommend and deserve to be there. Great to see you and Have a good afternoon. brought to you by AWS.

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Ash McCarty, Dell Technologies & Josh Prewitt, Rackspace Technology | VMware Explore 2022


 

(modern music) >> Welcome back, everyone to theCUBE's live coverage here in San Francisco for VMware Explore, formerly VMworld. theCUBE's been here 12 years today, we've been watching the evolution of the user conference. It's been quite a journey to see and, you know, virtualization just explode. We got two great guests here, we're going to break it all down. Ash McCarty, director of Multicloud Product Management Dell Technologies, no stranger to the VMworld, now VMware Explore, and Josh Prewitt, Chief Product Officer at Rackspace Technology. Great to see you guys, thanks for coming on. >> Absolutely. >> Yeah, thanks so much, thanks for having us. >> So, you know, the theme this year is multicloud, but it's really all about vSphere 8's out, you got VxRail, you got containers, you got the magic going on around cloud native, which it really points to the future state of where this is going, which is agile enterprises, infrastructure as code, high performance under the hood, I mean, all the things that you guys have been doing for many, many years and decades and business, but now with VMware putting it all together, it feels like, this year, it's like you got visibility into the value proposition, people have clear line of sight into where the performances are from the hardware software and now Cloud, it's kind of coming together, feels like it's coming together. Let's talk about that and the relationship between you guys, Rackspace and Dell and VMware. >> Perfect. That sounds great. Well, thanks so much for having us. You know, I'll sort of kick that off. We've got a huge lifelong partnership and relationship with Dell and VMware and the technologies that these guys create that we're able to put in front of our customers are really what allows us to go drive those business outcomes. So, yeah, happy to dive into it. >> Yeah, and I think to add to that, we understand that customers have a tremendously complex challenge ahead of them on managing their infrastructure. That's why with VxRail, we have intelligent infrastructure. We want it to simplify the outcomes for customers no matter if they're managing VMware or if they're managing the actual hardware infrastructure underneath it. >> Yeah, one of the things that we always talk about, you know, you read about it on the blogs and the news and the startup world, is "Oh, product-market fit," and, well, it kind of applies here, if you think about what's going on on the product side with the Edge emerging, hybrid cloud on pace with private cloud, and obviously, cloud native is great too if you have native applications in there, but now, putting it all together, you're hearing things like the telco cloud, I hear buzzwords like that, I hear supercloud, which we promoting, which you see in companies becoming cloud themselves, with the CapEx being handled by either public cloud or optimized on premise or hosted hardware. I mean, this is now, this is not all about everything's going to the cloud, this is now cloud operations on premise and in hosting hardware, so I'd love to get your perspective on that because you guys are huge hosting, you've got huge experience there, modernizing all the time. What does the modern era look like for the customer? >> Yeah, yeah, so, I mean, I think it's very clear to everybody that it's a multicloud world, right? I think the main question is, are you multicloud as a strategy, or are you multicloud as a situation? Because everybody's multicloud. That ship has sailed, right? >> Yeah, exactly. >> And so, when I look at the capabilities that we have with the partnership with Dell and the VxRail technologies, you know, life-cycle management that you have to go and perform across your fleet can be extremely difficult, and whenever you take something like the VxRail and you add, you know, you have the hardware and you have the software all fully integrated there, it makes it much easier to do life-cycle management, so for a company like Rackspace, where we have tens of thousands of nodes that we're managing for customers across 29 global data centers, and we're all over the place, the ability to have that strength with Dell's hardware, the VMware platform improve life-cycle management makes it so much easier for us to manage our fleet and be able to deliver those outcomes even faster for customers. >> So assuming that VxRail isn't a virtual railroad that delivers data to Rackspace data centers, if it's not that, what is it, Ash? Give us a little premier on what VxRail is. >> Well, VxRail is the first and only jointly engineered HCI system with VMware, so everything we do with VMware is better. >> So hyperconverged infrastructure. >> Hyperconverged infrastructure. >> What we used to call a server because all the bits are in the box, right? >> All the storage is computed in there. >> Everything's in there. Right. >> Simplifies management. And we built in with the VxRail HCI system software, which is really our secret sauce, we built in to actually add those automation capabilities with VMware, so it allows you to scale out very quickly, scale up very quickly. And one of our big capabilities is our life-cycle management, which is full stack, meaning it life-cycles the entire vSphere stack as well as the hardware infrastructure underneath as one continuously validated state, meaning that customers can focus more on their business outcomes and driving their business forward versus spending time managing their infrastructure. >> And when you talk about customers, it's also the value proposition that's flowing through Rackspace because Rackspace, when you install these systems, how long does it take to spin up to have a VM available for use when you install one of these systems? >> Oh, so you can have the system up and running very quickly. So we automate all the day one deployment, so you can have the system up and running in your labs, in your data centers in 45 minutes, and you can have VMs up in provision very shortly after that. >> So what do you do with that kind of agility? >> Oh my gosh, so we've actually taken that, and we've taken the VxRail platform and we've created what we call Rackspace Services for VMware Cloud, and this is our platform that is based on VxRail, it's based on vCloud Director from VMware, and by having the VxRail is already RackStacked, ready to go for our customers, we're able to sign a customer up today, and then, within a matter of minutes, give them access to a vCloud Director portal where they can go in and spin up a new VM anytime they want, but then, it also integrates into all of those cloud management platforms and tools, right? It integrates into your Terraform, so you've got, you know, your full CI/CD pipeline, and so you have that full end-to-end capability. If you want to go click around on a portal, you can using vCloud Director and using vSphere and all that great stuff. If you want to automate it, you can do that too. And we do it all in the backs of that VxRail hyperconverged infrastructure. >> Talk about the DPU dynamic. We're hearing a lot about DPUs. VxRail, you guys have some HCI-like vibe there with DPUs. How is that impacting performance, can you guys see? 'Cause we're hearing a lot of buzz around the VxRail and the VMware DPUs really making things much faster. >> I mean, it's the thing we talk about most with customers now is their challenges with scaling their infrastructure, and VxRail is going to be the first and only jointly engineered system that will have vSphere 8 with DPUs functionality and will have the full life-cycle management, and what this really empowers customers to do is, as they're growing their environments that they're scaling out their workloads in the data center, they need a way to scale to that next generation of networking and network security, and that's what DPUs allow you to do. They give you that offload and that high performance capability. >> Talk about the... I'd love to get your guys' perspective, while we're just riffing on this real quick sidebar for a second, if VxRail has these capabilities which you guys are promoting it does and some of the things go on in the modern era, the next gen apps are going to look a lot different. We're kind of calling it supercloud, if you will, for lack of a better description. Yeah, multicloud is a state, I agree. It's a situation and a state, but supercloud is really the functionality of what cloud does. So what do you guys see as, maybe it's tea leaves reading now or dots connecting, what are some of those next gen apps? I mean the Edge is there with, "Oh, the Edge is going to explode," and I can see the Edge having new kinds of apps that we've never seen before, whether it's on premise building lights and however they work or IoT changing. What do you guys see as the next gen app/apps coming out that's not looking the same as now, or how are apps today changing for next gen? 'Cause you get more performance at the Edge, you get more action, you get more co-locations in GEOS, so it's clear multicloud multi-presence is happening too, right? So what are you guys seeing? What's this... >> Yeah, I would say two areas that resonate most with customers is customers transitioning to their cloud native journey, so beginning it and using things like Tanzu for Kubernetes Operations, which we fully support and have a white paper out there list for customers, another area is really in the AIML space, so we've been partnering with both VMware and Nvidia to simplify how customers deploy new AIML infrastructure. I mean, it's challenging, complex, a lot of customers are wanting to dive in because it really enables them to better operate and operate on insights and analytics they get from running their business. >> Josh? >> And, you know, I think it really comes down to, whether you want to call it Edge or IoT or, you know, smart things, whatever, right? It all comes down to how we are expected, now, to capture all of the data to create a better user experience, and that's what we're seeing the modern applications being built around, right, is how do you leverage all of the data that's now at your fingertips, whether it's from wearables, machine vision, whatever it may be, and drive that improved user experience. And so that's the apps that we're seeing now, right? You know, of course, you still have all your business apps, all your ERP capabilities that need to exist and all of that great stuff, but at the same time, I also expect that, whenever, you know, now, whenever I'm walking into a store and their machine vision picks me up and they're pinging my phone and pushing me push notifications, I expect to have a better user experience. >> And do a database search on you too, by the way. >> Yeah, exactly, right? >> No search warrants out for 'em, you know, you're good. >> That's exactly it, so, you know, you kind of expect that better user experience and that's where I'm seeing a lot of the new app development. >> Yeah, it's fun, as these cases are intoxicating to think about all the weird coolness around it. The thing that I want to get your thoughts on is, we were just talking on the analyst session earlier in theCUBE, if DevOps is here and won, which we believe it has and infrastructure as code is happening, the cloud native discussion, shifting left CI/CD pipeline, that's DevOps in my mind, that's like cloud native developers, that's like traditional IT in my mind, so that's all part of the coding. DataOps and Security Ops seem to be the most robust areas of conversations where that's the new Ops, right? So, I mean, I made the term up, but new Ops, in terms of the focus, what are you making more efficient? What are you optimizing for? What's your guys reaction to that? Because all the conversations that we talk about is data, security, and then the rest seems to be cool, all good on the developer's side. Yeah, shift left events happening up there, Kubernetes containers, but all the action on the Ops side seems to be data and security. >> Yeah. >> What's your reaction to that? Is that right? >> So personally, I do think that it's right. I think that, you know with great power comes great responsibility, right? And so the clouds have brought that to us, all of your infrastructure as code has brought that to us. We have that great power now, right? But then you start to see, kind of, the pipeline attacks that are starting to become more and more popular. And so how you secure something that is as complex as, you know, a cloud native development pipeline is really hard, it's really challenging, so I do think that it warrants the attention. Then on the data side, I think that that matters because when I talked about those examples of a better user experience, I don't want my better user experience tomorrow, I don't want it 20 minutes from now. I want that real time capability, and so with that comes massive requirements from a compute and hardware perspective, massive requirements from a software perspective, and from, you know, what folks are now calling DataOps perspective >> Data addressability, having the data available to be delivered in real time. >> You know, there there's been a lot of talk, here at the conference, about the disaggregation of, you know, the brainularism, if we're going to make up words, you know, the horsepower that's involved, CPU, DPU, GPU. I'll make up another word. We're familiar with the thermometers used during COVID to measure temperature. Pretend that I've invented a device called a Care-o-meter and I'm pointing at various people's foreheads, who needs to care about DPUs and GPUs and CPUs? You know, John was referencing the idea of security at the Edge, data. Well, wow, we've got GPUs that can do things. Who needs to care about that? Obviously, we care about it. You care about it. You care about it. You're building this stuff, you're deploying this stuff, but at what level in the customer stack do they need to care about it? Are you going in, is RackSpace engaging customers and saying, "Look, here's the value proposition: we understand your mission to be this. We believe we can achieve your mission." How far down in the organization do you go before you get to someone where you have to have the DPU conversation? 'Cause we didn't even define DPU yet here, which is always offensive to me. >> I think I defined it actually. >> Did you define DPU? Good. Thank you John. >> Yeah, yeah. >> But so who should care? Who should really care about that? >> Oh, that's such a complex question, right? Because everybody, Rackspace included >> But a good one. But a good question. >> Oh, it's a great question. >> Thank you. >> Great question. (laughing) >> Everybody, Rackspace included, is talking about selling business outcomes, right? And ultimately, that is what matters. It is what matters, is selling those business outcomes to the customer. And so of course we're dealing with our business buyers who are just looking for, "Hey, improve my KPIs, make this run faster, better, stronger, all of that great stuff," but ultimately you get down to an IT staff, and to the IT staff, these things matter because the IT staff, they all have budgets that they have to hit. The realities start to hit them and they can't just go and spend whatever they want, you know, trying to hit the KPIs of the marketing department or the finance department, right? And so you have your business buyers that do care significantly about buying their outcomes, and so we're having, you know, the business outcomes conversations with them and then, oftentimes, they will come back to us and say, "Okay, but now we need you to talk to this person over in our IT organization. We need you to talk with our CIO, with our VP of infrastructure," whatever that may be, where we really get down to the nuts and bolts and we talk about how, you know, we can stretch the hardware coming from Dell, we can stretch the software coming from VMware, and we can deliver a higher caliber experience, a lower TCO, by taking advantage of some of the new technologies coming out. >> Yeah, so there's a reason why I ask that awesome question, and it's because I can imagine a scenario where, and this speaks to RackSpace's position in the market today and moving forward and what your history has been, people want to know, "Well, why should I work with Rackspace instead of some mega-hyper-monster-cloud?" If part of the answer is: well, it's because, for very specific application environments, like healthcare we talked about earlier, that might be a conversation where you're actually bringing in Dell to have a conversation about how you are specifically optimizing hardware and software to achieve things that otherwise can't be achieved with t-shirt sizes of servers in a hyperscale cloud. I mean, is that part of the Rackspace value proposition moving forward, that you can do things like that with partners like Dell that the other folks aren't going to focus on? >> Absolutely, it is, right? And a lot of the power of Rackspace is that, you know, we're the best-in-class pure play cloud solutions provider, and we can talk to you about your AWS, your Azure, your GCP, all of that great stuff, but we can also talk to you about private cloud solutions that are built on the backs of Dell Technologies, and in this multicloud world, you don't have that one size fits all for every single application. There are some things that run great in a hyperscale provider, and we can help you get there, but just exactly like you said, there are these verticals where you have applications that don't necessarily run all that well or they're not modernized, they haven't been refactored to be able to take advantage of cloud native services. And if all you're going to do is run that on bare metal in VMs, a hosted private cloud is, by far, the best way to do that, right? And Rackspace provides that hosted private cloud on the backs of Dell technology, on the backs of VMware technology, and we can go deliver those custom bespoke solutions to customers. >> So the infrastructure and the hardware still matters, Ash, yes? >> Absolutely, and I think he just highlighted, while what he does with his customers and what's important to his internal organization is being to deliver faster outcomes, better outcomes, give those customers, to meet those KPIs of those customers consuming their infrastructure at Rackspace, so I think, really, what the DPU and the underlying infrastructure enables is all that full stack integration to allow them to quickly scale to the demands of those customers and what they need in their infrastructure. >> Guys, while we got you here, what do you think about this year's VMware Explore, a lot of anticipation around how many people are going to show up and, you know, all kinds of things around the new name and Broadcom. Big attendance here, I mean, I was very surprised about the size of the attendance and the show floor, the ecosystem, this train is not stopping. I mean, this is VMware's third act, no matter what the contextual situation is. What's your observation of the show? Do you agree, or is there anything that you could want to share about for folks who didn't make it, what they missed? >> Yeah, I mean it really highlights, I mean, you've seen the breadth of the show, I know people that aren't here that aren't able to see it are really missing the excitement. So there's a lot of great announcements around multicloud, around all the announcements, around the vSphere 8 with the DPUs, the vSAN Express Storage architecture, ton of new exciting technologies that are really empowering how customers, you know, the future of how customers are going to consume their workloads in their data centers. >> Josh, they're not short on products and stuff. A lot of moving parts. vSphere 8, a bunch of new stuff. And the cloud native stuff's looking pretty good too, off the tee. >> You know, it does feel like a focus on the core, though, in a way. So I don't think there's been a lot of peripheral noise at the show. Sometimes it's, you know, "And we got this, and this, and this, and this." It's vSphere 8, vSAN 8, cloud software, you know, really hammering it home and refining it. >> But you don't think of it as a little bit of a circus act. I mean the general keynote was theatrical, I thought, I mean, I thought they did a good job on that. I think vSphere 8 was buried a little bit, I thought they could have... They checked the box at the beginning. >> That's true, that's true. >> I mean, they mentioned it, but we didn't see the demos. You know? Demos are usually great. But that's my only criticism. >> Well, that's why we supplemented it with the VxRail announcements, right? With our big announcements around vSphere 8 and with the DPUs as well as the vSAN Express Storage architecture being integrated into VxRail, so I think, you know, it's always that ongoing partnership and, you know, doing what's best for our customers, showing them the next generation and how they consume that technology. >> Yeah, you guys got good props on VxRail. We had a great chat about it yesterday. Rackspace, you guys doing good? Quick update on what's happening with you guys. Give a quick plug. What's going on at Rackspace? What's hot? What's going on? Give a quick plug for what the services are and the products you got going on there. >> Yeah, absolutely. So we are that end-to-end cloud provider, right? And so we've got really exciting offers in market, helping customers take advantage of all the hyperscale providers, and then giving them that private cloud experience. We've got everything from single-tenant running in our data centers on the backs of vSphere, vCloud Director, and VxRails, all the way through to, like, multi-tenant burstable capability that runs within our own data centers as well. It's a really exciting time for technology, a really exciting time for Rackspace. >> Congratulations, we've been following your journey for a long time. Dell, you guys do continue to do a great job and end-to-end phenomenal work. The telco thing's a huge opportunity, we didn't even go there. But Ash, thanks. Josh, thanks for coming on. Appreciate it. >> Yeah, thanks so much. Thanks for having us. >> Thank you very much. >> Okay, thanks for watching theCUBE. We're live, day two of three days of wall-to-wall coverage. Two sets here in Moscone West on the ground level, in the lobby, checking out all the action. Stay with us for more coverage after this short break. (modern music)

Published Date : Aug 31 2022

SUMMARY :

to see and, you know, Yeah, thanks so much, Let's talk about that and the and the technologies Yeah, and I think to add to that, and the startup world, or are you multicloud as a situation? and you have the software that delivers data to Well, VxRail is the first and only infrastructure. All the storage Everything's in there. so it allows you to and you can have VMs up in provision and so you have that full and the VMware DPUs really and that's what DPUs allow you to do. and some of the things another area is really in the AIML space, And so that's the apps that on you too, by the way. 'em, you know, you're good. a lot of the new app development. the rest seems to be cool, And so the clouds have brought that to us, having the data available to How far down in the organization do you go Thank you John. But a good question. Great question. and we talk about how, you know, I mean, is that part of the and we can talk to you about and the underlying infrastructure enables to show up and, you know, around the vSphere 8 with the DPUs, And the cloud native stuff's like a focus on the core, I mean the general keynote but we didn't see the demos. VxRail, so I think, you know, and the products you got going on there. centers on the backs of Dell, you guys do Yeah, thanks so much. West on the ground level,

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Hannah Duce, Rackspace & Adrianna Bustamante, Rackspace | VMware Explore 2022


 

foreign greetings from San Francisco thecube is live this is our second day of wall-to-wall coverage of VMware Explorer 2022. Lisa Martin and Dave Nicholson here we're going to be talking with some ladies from Rackspace next please welcome Adriana Bustamante VP of strategic alliances and Hannah Deuce director of strategic alliances from Rackspace it's great to have you on the program thank you so much for having us good afternoon good morning is it lunchtime already almost almost yes and it's great to be back in person we were just talking about the keynote yesterday that we were in and it was standing room only people are ready to be back they're ready to be hearing from VMware it's ecosystem its Partners it's Community yes talk to us Adriana about what Rackspace is doing with Dell and VMware particularly in the healthcare space sure no so for us Partnerships are a big foundation to how we operate as a company and um and I have the privilege of doing it for over over 16 years so we've been looking after the dell and VMware part partnership ourselves personally for the last three years but they've been long-standing partners for for us and and how do we go and drive more meaningful joint Solutions together so Rackspace you know been around since since 98 we've seen such an evolution of coming becoming more of this multi-cloud transformation agile Global partner and we have a lot of customers that fall in lots of different verticals from retail to public sector into Healthcare but we started noticing and what we're trying trying to drive as a company is how do we drive more specialized Solutions and because of the pandemic and because of post-pandemic and everyone really trying to to figure out what the new normal is addressing different clients we saw that need increasing and we wanted to Rally together with our most strategic alliances to do more Hannah talk about obviously the the pandemic created such problems for every industry but but Healthcare being front and center it still is talk about some of the challenges that Healthcare organizations are coming to Rackspace going help yeah common theme that we've heard from some of our large providers Healthcare Providers has been helped me do more with less which we're all trying to do as we navigate The New Normal but in that space we found the opportunity to really leverage some of our expertise long-term expertise and that the talent and the resource pool that we had to really help in a some of the challenges that are being faced at a resource shortage Talent shortage and so Rackspace is able to Leverage What what we've done for many many years and really tailor it to the outcomes that Health Care Providers are needing nowadays that more with less Mantra runs across the gamut but a lot of it's been helped me modernize helped me get to that next phase I can't I can't I don't have the resources to DIY it myself anymore I need to figure out a more robust business continuity program and so helping with business continuity Dr you know third copies of just all all this data that's growing so it's not just covered pandemic driven but it's that's definitely driving the the need and the requirement to modernize so much quicker it's interesting that you mentioned rackspace's history and expertise in doing things and moving that forward and leveraging that pivoting focusing on specific environments to create something net new we've seen a lot of that here if you go back 10 years I don't know if that's the perfect date to go back to but if you go back 10 years ago you think about VMware where would we have expected VMware to be in this era of cloud we may have thought of things very very differently differently Rackspace a Pioneer in creating off-premises hey we will do this for you didn't even really call it Cloud at the time right but it was Cloud yeah and so the ability for entities like Rackspace like VMware we had a NetApp talking to us about stuff they're doing in the cloud 10 years ago if you I would say no they'd be they'll be gone they'll be gone so it's really really cool to see Rackspace making this transition and uh you know being aware of everything that's going on and focusing on the best value proposition moving forward I mean am I am I you know do I sound like somebody who would who would fit into the Rackspace culture right now or do I not get it yes you sound like a rocker we'll make you an honorary record that's what we call a Rackspace employees yes you know what we've noticed too and is budgets are moving those decision makers are moving so again 10 years ago just like you said you would be talking to sometimes a completely different Persona than we do than we do today and we've seen a shift more towards that business value we have a really unique ability to bring business and Technical conversations together I did a lot of work in the past of working with a lot of CMO and and digital transformation companies and so helping bring it and business seeing the same and how healthcare because budgets are living in different places and even across the board with Rackspace people are trying to drive more business outcomes business driven Solutions so the technical becomes the back end and really the ingredients to make all of that all of that happen and that's what we're helping to solve and it's a lot it's very fast paced everyone wants to be agile now and so they're leaning on us more and more to drive more services so if you've seen Rackspace evolve we're driving more of that advisement and those transformation service type discussions where where our original history was DNA was very much always embedded in driving a great experience now they're just wanting more from us more services help us how help us figure out the how Adriana comment on the outcomes that you're helping Healthcare organizations achieve as as we as we it's such a relatable tangible topic Healthcare is Right everybody's everybody's got somebody who's sick or you've been sick or whatnot what are some of those outcomes that we can ex that customers can expect to achieve with Rackspace and VMware oh great great question so very much I can't mentioned earlier it's how do I modernize how do I optimize how do I take the biggest advantage of the budgets and the landscape that I have I want to get to the Cloud we need to help our patients and get access to that data is this ready to go into the cloud is this not ready to go into the cloud you know how do we how do we help make sure we're taking care of our patients we're keeping things secure and accessible you know what else do you think is coming up yeah and one specific one uh sequencing genetic sequencing and so we've had this come up from a few different types of providers whether it's medical devices that they may provide to their end clients and an outcome that they're looking for is how do we get how do we leverage um here's rip here's what we do but now we have so many more people we need to give this access to we need them to be able to have access to the sequencing that all of this is doing all of these different entities are doing and the outcome that they're trying to get to to is more collaboration so so that way we can speed up in the face of a pandemic we can speed up those resolutions we could speed up to you know whether it's a vaccine needed or something that's going to address the next thing that might be coming you know um so that's a specific one I've heard that from a handful of different different um clients that that we work with and so trying to give them a Consolidated not trying to we are able to deliver them a Consolidated place that their application and tooling can run in and then all of these other entities can safely and securely access this data to do what they're going to do in their own spaces and then hopefully it helps the betterment of of of us globally like as humans in the healthcare space we all benefit from this so leveraging the technology to really drive a valuable outcome helps us all so so and by the way I like trying to because it conveys the proper level of humility that we all need to bring to this because it's complicated and anybody who looks you in the eye it pretends like they know exactly how to do it you need to run from those people no it is and and look that's where our partners become so significant we we know we're Best in Class for specific things but we rely on our Partnerships with Dell and VMware to bring their expertise to bring their tried and true technology to help us all together collectively deliver something good technology for good technology for good it is inherently good and it's nice when it's used for goodness it's nice when it's yeah yeah talk about security for a second you know we've seen the threat landscape change dramatically obviously nobody wants to be the next breach ransomware becoming a household term it's now a matter of when we get a head not F where has security gone in terms of conversations with customers going help us ensure that what we're doing is delivering data access to the right folks that need it at the right time in real time in a secure fashion no uh that's another good question in hot and burning so you know I think if we think about past conversations it was that nice Insurance offering that seemed like it came at a high cost if you really need it I've never been breached before um I'll get it when I when I need it but exactly to your point it's the win and not the if so what we're finding and also working with a nice ecosystem of Partners as well from anywhere from Akamai to cloudflare to BT it's how do we help ensure that there is the security as Hannah mentioned that we're delivering the right data access to the right people and permissions you know we're able to help meet multitude of compliance and regulations obviously health care and other regulated space as well we look to make sure that from our side of the house from the infrastructure that we have the right building blocks to help them Reach those compliance needs obviously it's a mutual partnership in maintaining that compliance and that we're able to provide guidance and best practices on to make sure that the data is living in a secure place that the people that need access to it get it when they when they need it and monitor those permissions and back to your complexity comment so more and more complex as we are a global global provider so when you start to talk to our teams in the UK and our our you know clients there specializing um kind of that Sovereign Cloud mentality of hey we need to have um we need to have a cloud that is built for the specific needs that reside within Healthcare by region so it's not just even I mean you know we're we're homegrown out of San Antonio Texas so like we know the U.S and have spent time here but we've been Global for many years so we just get down into the into the nitty-gritty to customize what's needed within each region well Hannah is that part of the Rackspace value proposition at large moving forward because frankly look if I if I want if I want something generic I can I can swipe credit card and and fire up some Services sure um moving forward this is something that is going to more characterize the Rackspace experience and I and I understand that the hesitancy to say hey it's complicated it's like I don't want to hear that I want to hear that it's easy it's like well okay we'll make it easy for you yes but it's still complicated is that okay that's the honest that's that's the honest yeah that's why you need help right that's why we need to talk about that because people people have a legitimate question why Rackspace yep and we don't I don't want to put you on the spot but no yeah but why why Rackspace you've talked a little bit about it already but kind of encapsulate it oh gosh so good good question why Rackspace it's because you can stand up [Laughter] well you can you do it there's many different options out there um and if I had a PowerPoint slide I'd show you this like lovely web of options of directions that you could go and what is Rackspace value it's that we come in and simplify it because we've had experience with this this same use case whatever somebody is bringing forward to us is typically something we've dealt with at numerous times and so we're repeating and speeding up the ability to simplify the complex and to deliver something more simplified well it may be complex within us and we're like working to get it done the outcome that we're delivering is is faster it's less expensive than dedicating all the resources yourself to do it and go invest in all of that that we've already built up and then we're able to deliver it in a more simplified manner it's like the duck analogy the feet below the water yes exactly and a lot of expertise as well yes a lot talk a little bit about the solution that that Dell VMware Rackspace are delivering to customers sure so when we think about um Healthcare clouds or Cloud specific to the healthcare industry you know there's some major players within that space that you think epic we'll just use them as an example this can play out with others but we are building out a custom or we have a custom clouds able to host epic and then provide services up through the Epic help application through partnership so that is broadening the the market for us in the sense that we can tailor what the what that end and with that healthcare provider needs uh do they do they have the expertise to manage the application okay you do that and then we will build out a custom fit Cloud for that application oh and you need all the adjacent things that come with it too so then we have reference architecture you know built out already to to tailor to whatever all those other 40 80 90 hundreds of applications that need to come with that and then and then you start to think about Imaging platforms so we have Imaging platforms available for those specific needs whether it's MRIs and things like that and then the long-term retention that's needed with that so all of these pieces that build out a healthcare ecosystem and those needs we've built those we've built those out and provide those two to our clients yesterday VMware was talking about Cloud chaos yes and and it's true you talk about the complexity and Dave talks about it too like acknowledging yes this is a very complex thing to do yeah there's just so many moving parts so many Dynamics so many people involved or lack thereof people they they then talked about kind of this this the goal of getting customers from cloud chaos to Cloud smart how does that message resonate with Rackspace and how are you helping customers get from simplifying the chaos to eventually get to that cloud smart goal so a lot of it I I believe is with the power of our alliances and I was talking about this earlier we really believe in creating those powerful ecosystems and Jay McBain former for Forester analyst talks about you know the people are going to come ahead really are serve as that orchestration layer of bringing everybody together so if you look at all of that cloud chaos and all of the different logos and the webs and which decisions to make you know the ones that can help simplify that bring it all together like we're going to need a little bit of this like baking a cake in some ways we're going to need a little bit of sugar we'll need this technology this technology and whoever is able to put it together in a clean and seamless way and as Hannah said you know we have specific use cases in different verticals Healthcare specifically and talking from the Imaging and the Epic helping them get hospitals and different you know smaller clinics get to the edge so we have all of the building blocks to get them what they need and we can't do that without Partners but we help simplify those outcomes for those customers yep so there's where they're Cloud smart so then they're like I want I want to be agile I want to work on my cost I want to be able to leverage a multi-cloud fashion because some things may may inherently need to be on Azure some things we inherently need to be on VMware how do we make them feel like they still have that modernized platform and Technology but still give the secure and access that they need right yeah we like to think of it as are you multi-cloud by accident or multi-cloud by Design and help you get to that multi-cloud by Design and leveraging the right yeah the right tools the right places and Dell was talking about that just that at Dell Technologies world just a couple months ago that most most organizations are multi-cloud by default not designed are you seeing any customers that are are able or how are you able to help customers go from that we're here by default for whatever reason acquisition growth.oit line of business and go from that default to a more strategic multi-cloud approach yes it takes planning and commitment you know you really need the business leaders and the technical leaders bought in and saying this is what I'm gonna do because it is a journey because exactly right M A is like inherited four different tools you have databases that kind of look similar but they're a little bit different but they serve four different things so at Rackspace we're able to help assess and we sit down with their teams we have very amazing rock star expertise that will come in and sit with the customers and say what are we trying to drive for it let's get a good assessment of the landscape and let's figure out what are you trying to get towards in your journey and looking at what's the best fit for that application from where it is now to where it is where it wants to be because we saw a lot of customers move to the cloud very quickly you know they went Cloud native very fast some of it made sense retailers who had the spikiness that completely made sense we had some customers though that we've seen move certain workloads they've been in the public Cloud now for a couple years but it was a static website it doesn't make as much sense anymore for certain things so we're able to help navigate all of those choices for them so it's interesting you just you just said something sort of offhand about having experts having them come in so if I am a customer and I have some outcome I want to achieve yes the people that I'm going to be talking to from Rackspace or from Rackspace and the people from Rackspace who are going to be working with the actual people who are deploying infrastructure are also Rackspace people so the interesting contrast there between other circumstances oftentimes is you may have a Global Systems integrator with smart people representing what a cloud provider is doing the perception if they try to make people perceive that okay everybody is working in lockstep but often there are disconnects between what the real capabilities are and what's being advertised so is that I mean I I know it's like a leading question it's like softball get your bats out but I mean isn't that an advantage you've got a single you know the saying used to be uh one throat to show now it's one back to pack because it's kind of Contour friendly yeah yeah but talk about that is that a real Advantage it does it really helps us because again this is our our this is our expertise this is where we where we live we're really close to the infrastructure we're great at the advisement on it we can help with those ongoing and day two management and Opera in operations and what it feels like to grow and scale so we lay this out cleanly and and clearly as possible if this is where we're really good we can we can help you in these areas but we do work with system integrators as well and part of our partner Community because they're working on sometimes the bigger overall Transformations and then we're staying look we understand this multi-cloud but it helps us because in the end we're doing that end to end for for them customer knows this is Rackspace and on hand and we we really strive to be very transparent in what it is that we want to drive and outcomes so sometimes at the time where it's like we're gonna talk about a certain new technology Dell might bring some of their Architects to the table we will say here is Dell with us we're doing that actively in the healthcare space today and it's all coming together but you know at the end of the day this is what Rackspace is going to drive and deliver from an end to end and we tap those people when needed so you don't have to worry about picking up the phone to call Dell or VMware so if I had worded the hard-hitting journalist question the right way it would have elicited the same responses that yeah yeah it drives accountability at the end of the day because what we advised on what we said now we got to go deliver yeah and it's it's all the same the same organization driving accountability so from a customer perspective they're engaging Rackspace who will then bring in dell and VMware as needed as we find the solution exactly we have all of the certification I mean the team the team is great on getting all of the certs because we're getting to handling all of the level one level two level three business they know who to call they have their dedicated account teams they have engagement managers that help them Drive what those bigger conversations are and they don't have to worry about the experts because we either have it on hand or we'll pull them in as needed if it's the bat phone we need to call awesome ladies thank you so much for joining Dave and me today talking about what Rackspace is up to in the partner ecosystem space and specifically what you're doing to help Healthcare organizations transform and modernize we appreciate your insights and your thoughts yeah thank you for having us thank you pleasure for our guests and Dave Nicholson I'm Lisa Martin you're watching thecube live from VMware Explorer 2022 we'll be back after a short break foreign [Music]

Published Date : Aug 31 2022

SUMMARY :

ready to go into the cloud you know how

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Ajay Patel, VMware & Peter FitzGibbon, Rackspace | VMworld 2019


 

>> Announcer: Live, from San Francisco celebrating 10 years of high-tech coverage it's theCUBE. Covering VMworld 2019. Brought to you by VMware and its ecosystem partners. >> Welcome back, this is theCUBE two stages, three days of coverage, our tenth year here at the VMworld show. I'm Stu Miniman and my co-host for this segment is Bobby Allan. And welcome back, two of our CUBE alumni. >> How are you? >> As I said back in 2010 we didn't even know what a CUBE alumni was. People were trying to figure out what we're doing but now we have thousands of them and both of these gentlemen have been on the program, a few times. >> Thanks for having us back. >> You're welcome. So, first, over we have Ajay Patel, who I believe was doing another filming evening with our crew-- >> Absolutely >> Earlier today. >> The Accenture Innovation Center. >> Ah, excellent. Beautiful building Accenture has here in San Francisco. >> Ajay: Beautiful (mumbles) >> One of the other benefits of being back in San Francisco is we brought in people and it's really easy to get in and out and do other things in the Valley. But Ajay is the senior vice president and general manager of the cloud provider software business unit inside VMware. And one of his partners is Rackspace. We have Peter FitzGibbon who is the vice president of Product Alliances, with for mentioned Rackspace. >> Yeah, super to be back in San Francisco. It's a great change from Vegas. >> Yeah, you know, there is some debate in the community of course it's a little more expensive here in San Francisco and there are other logistic challenges. We're excited to be back here and yeah, really excited to be talking with both of you. Peter, let's start, you know Rackspace has had a long, long partnership with VMware. When I remember back to like VMware Environments Hosted it's like, Rackspace was the one with the lion's share in that market. And, you know, Rackspace has gone through a lot of changes in the last 10 years that we've been doing this coverage. When I think about multi cloud, all of these environments you've got a nice perspective on this and lots of customers you've worked with. So, give us the update on what you're hearing from customers and your relationship with VMware. >> Yeah, so, 20-year history with VMware that we're very proud of. I would say it's almost being re-birthed in the last two years though. Two years ago, we were one of the first VMware Cloud Verified partners. We launched our VMware Cloud VMware Cloud Foundation Private Cloud. We added that about six months later in customer data centers. We're now one of the major partners of VMware Cloud AWS >> Ajay: VMware Cloud AWS yep. >> And that's one of the areas that we're continuing to expand upon. We announced some new services this week, specifically around VMware Cloud AWS or support of HDX, both for migrations for ongoing support as well as a number of, what we call Rackspace service blocks. Which are additional manage services that we are applying, specifically for VMware Cloud and AWS. So, exciting times at Rackspace and VMware continues to be a look, a major part of our portfolio. >> Ajay: And thank you for all the support, Peter. >> Yeah, so Ajay, bring us up to speed of what's happening in your space you know, a lot of attention gets paid, you know Every time, you know, I saw Sanjay Poon, up on stage at the Goolge clould event, and of course the AWS partnership has been one of the biggest stories in all of tech, for the last couple of years. And that's been extending to, you know first it was like, wait, you know Rackspace has data centers and many of your other partners have data centers, but how did these all, play together and how does the VMware software pull them all together. >> So Stu, I think, you and I have been talking about this world of hybrid multi and we've been arguing, whether it's just a transitionary stage, or here to stay. Hopefully that debate's over, right? Hybrid's a new reality, multi cloud's a new reality and we talk about these hyper scales but you know, Rackspace and many of my VCP partners they've been longstanding in this journey with us. I don't know if you caught Pat's keynote? We demonstrated, that we have over 10 000 data centers through our VCPP network and Rackspace being one of our top 10 partners. So you start, to start seeing this mix of VMware everywhere. Whether it's trough our service provider cloud the customer manage cloud or even a hyper scale VMware cloud. You now have the ubiquitous VMware infrastructure to play with. >> At some point it's just cloud. (chattering) >> That is a great point, when I talk to customers most of them, they have a cloud strategy it's usually not a hybrid or a multi or all these things. Here's the nuance I want to, you know, ask for a second then I definitely want Bobby to jump in with what he's been talking to customers about. You know, hybrid cloud is a reality because customers have their own data centers and they have public cloud. The ideal of multi cloud, customers have multiple clouds, but, you know, one of the definitions I put out there is, multi cloud exists when the multi cloud solution is more valuable than the sum of the pieces. And I'm not sure that we're quite there yet. I think we're starting to move down that path. But what are you both seeing? And does that resonate with what you see today? >> Yeah like, all of our customers have workloads in multiple locations and trying to provide the assessments of where to put the right workloads at the right time is one of the key values that we hold dear. And before we ever talk about where we're going to but a workload we assess whether, what our clients environments is and determine, maybe this is an AWS workload maybe this is a WMS workload maybe this workload really belongs in the data center for, due to laws of the lands laws of gravity and physics. >> And I think, what's happening, really is any application, typically choosing a platform or the cloud service that's driving the decision. Collectively what ends up happening because of that, you are in multiple clouds. So, I think what's it's a result of the reality that applications are driving location and platform choices and the way to drive consistency is trying to pick a few common things whether it's kubernetes as a platform or VMware, right? Those are a way to, kind of, unify these desperate choices that are made individually. That are collectively making each of our customers multi cloud, right? >> Ajay, I want to piggyback on that because you talked about the applications driving a lot of the choices, when applications teams in my experience are, kind of, making the choices they don't care about a centralized strategy and obviously, this very powerful partnership can support multiple places and ways around your workloads. How do you lead the witness, a little bit towards simplification and just because you can do it doesn't mean you should do it. >> Yes, so I think what's happening from our perspective is depending on which side of the IT house you're at if you're part of the core IT that's running and maintaining mission critical systems you're really looking for something that's reliable, performance scalable, secure. And you, maybe, looking at a hardware refresher looking at your data center strategy and you're looking to migrate that workload. You're not really looking to re-change the app just because it's cool. >> Bobby: Right. >> If you're part of digital transformation effort you're looking to say, okay how do I get something out there quickly? >> Bobby: Right. >> How do I integrate on the average my data and application assets while leveraging cloud services? >> Bobby: Right. So, we're seeing this tension in some ways where the, kind of, net new is really pushing the envelope of cloud with self service elasticity, new capability while as the old guard is like I got to keep my running business, running keep it secure. And how do you bridge these two worlds and bring them together? We call it DevOps and, you know, ITA and the traditional, kind of new developer. Reality is, you're trying to bring the two worlds on a common platform. Whether it's VM's or containers and so the exciting part for us is, how do we unify? How do we deliver this experience and give them the choice, where it makes more sense. And blur the lines between public and private. Those are just locations and makes more sense for your customer or your application that you can drive. >> Bobby: Right, excellent. >> We find ourselves in those conversations, all the time trying to bridge two sides of the equation at a customer and trying to get them together on a uniformed strategy and weighing the pros and cons of different locations or different workloads. So, it's not easy, it's not a challenge of course. >> Peter, I'd love you to bring us inside some of those VMware on AWS customers because, you know, some of the first customers I talked to, it was, you know, I'm a VMware shop and there's a part of your group that's like oh my gosh, I can't change and this was a driver saying hey, you don't need to, we can bring you along. But, the value, once again needs to be Oh hey, I need to do some innovative things I want to be able to access some of those cool amazing services that, you know everybody is providing on a daily basis. So, you know, are you seeing that progression are there any interesting use cases that are coming out? >> Progression is the word, we could call it progressive transformation inside Rackspace. Like, you're a VMware customer let's bring you ion the journey towards public cloud. And let's help you leverage those address services. So, we find ourselves in a great position where a very large number of engineers, that support our native AWS workloads, we've brought those two groups together from our VMware expertise and address expertise. So when a customer lands on a VMware address I consider it a failure, if they haven't transformed part of the application in three months. If they're not really consuming those native AWS services. And that's what we really try inject. It's like, get our AWS engineers looking at those workloads let's start consuming those native services and that's what we're finding really exciting about how customers are starting to adopt and starting to plug and play into some of those services. >> Oh I look at it, as you know, you'll see a team Sanjay called it M&MS, migrate and modernize but a part of the migrate is often modernize your infrastructure first by putting on a modern cloud platform. And then modernize your application using cloud services. How it says, it's M-M and M, right, to follow through because it's not just about lifting and shifting keeping the old crap as it is. You got to really start to look at how do you drive innovation drive your Cube to a better place. So that you can operate it more affectively and then modernize for application results. And your service blocks, are really catered to helping that customers. So you can talk a little bit about how they're building the services that compliment our offer. >> Yeah, so our service blocks is... In the past, we offered them one big block manage service to a customer. We realized, let's decompose that and offer the customer what they need at a specific point in time. So we, think about Lego blocks, where at some point you may need, just some support or at some point you might need some architectural services and design and other times you might say cost optimization. That sort of stuff. So over time, we're adding on these Lego blocks if you will, to add a customer, to give them what they need at the point they need it, and not more. So, it's an exciting concept that every month, we're adding more services. We launched a Rackspace manage security service block today specifically for VMware cloud. So, we continue to add these and provide incremental value. >> I want to ask you a little bit of a controversial question. There's a saying, pioneers take the arrows but settlers take the land. >> Right >> So, if I'm a technology leader how do I embrace all this newness without getting shot, partnering with your firms. >> So, you know, we always say lock-ins bad but reality is, we always choose to reject technology platforms. And if you're a VMware customer I hate to say it, you're running on VMware infrastructure you have VMware ecosystem, you have VMware run books you have VMware partners, managing your on-prem assets what if I could you a path forward on any cloud of your choice without having to change any of your day-tot-day operation while leveraging the innovation future. What is the safest path for you, Mr Customer? And so, in this world, you can think of us being laggard in some sense. Because we're not pushing them to a single destination. We're giving them that choice, leveraging the strength. I think the innovative part that we've done today has really brought containers and VM'S in a single solution. We talked about containers killing VM'S two years ago, right? You know, VMware was getting trouble with docker VMware was going to be trouble with Openstack. Where are those two companies today and where is VMware? It's about simplifying for the customer a common solution. And we're taking those choices away and making this easy. Giving partners who can help them on their journey. So, I would say we're the safer choice. >> Okay >> That will be my response. >> Peter, we're not going to ask you about Openstack. (Giggles) >> I'm really back to VMware, it's working progress. (Giggles) >> Interesting point, the settlers right? At this point VMSware and AWS is two years old I think that first year, what was definitely some pioneers our there. But now I think we're really in there where the settlers are coming on and we're seeing large-scale adoption in the platform and now that VMware is offering more and more services, natively we can add more those managed services and help those customers really transform and not worry about the underlying IS that's rock-solid at this point. >> Peter, I would like you to get into it a little bit, kind of, the containerization and the kubernetes, you know, Docker, obviously a lot of hype, but containerization that's hugely important, you know a lot of the keynote this morning was talking about cloud native. I talked to lots of customers, you know there's some that, yes, they will want the VMware journey but many of them say, well, If I'm going to cloud I can just use containers. Why would I have the overhead of VM's? when cloud founders was originally created it was not for that type of environment. So where does that fit into, you know your world containers? >> Yeah, we actually launched some more services on that today as well, some more professional services and manage services, so safely around advanced kubernetes support, across all our platforms so this isn't just a VMware announcement this is on AWS, Microsoft, Badger and Google. So, another exciting progression, or hybrid could story and making investments in those resources to deliver kubernetes. We also launched a cloud native service block today, as well, that is really giving customers access to deep engineering skills and giving them cloud reliability engineers that can help them transform their workloads and get them ready for the cloud. >> I think, for us, if you... Project (mumbles) sorry tan zoo as a solution, and project pacific. Our two marquee announcements we made this week and if you look at the way we're focusing on the bull run manage aspects of the full life cycle and our active participation in the kubernetes community we're starting the beginnings of what I felt, like Java in 2000 when I was at BA, right? Where Weblogic and Java was the runtime for rolling and building new apps. Kubernetes and containers are the new runtime for building distributed apps across Cal platforms. And we're in this early journey and we are uniquely in opposition with the combination of pivotal for build. With project Pacific we're bringing containers into V&V-sphere, so VM's and containers become first class. Trough your point, we demonstrated eight percent performance improvement over bare metal on a V-sphere container based solution. Starting to engineer, based on a key scheduling work that we do in the kernel and in the hypervisor we're driving that deep into the kubernetes platform into the core platform itself. And then manage is going to be the new interesting bit. What is that control panel that everyone is going to fight over? And the manage services partner can help them choose. So, I think the battleground is more and more going to manage I think we secured our base with the runtime. And the bill will be about choice. (Mumbles) >> And Tan zoo is music to our ears we can now, again, focus on what's the additional manage services and service-- >> How do you help customers build apps? And change the engineering culture is what you provide. We just give you the runtime across any of these clouds. >> We want to help everyone, transform applications also transform the culture and how they do their business all that rapport-- >> Engineering transformation is a big one. Sajay transformation we talked about, internally for us VMware, same with our customers. You got to change the mindset of how you build the applications. In this container service based architecture >> Agree, agree >> What else is keeping folks up at night? That you talk to? Love to know that, just hot tail. >> Nothing keeps me up at night it's an exciting world we live in so loaded question, what excites me? What excites me is the progression, that VMware is making and the announcement Lydon video and GPU access link I think, early next year. I think that can be another wave of VMC adoptions. So, not keep me up at night but keep me interesting and excited. >> I think to that point I can build on what Pat said about tech for good, I mean we have a joined customer feeding America, right? We're now taking technology and making it available so that, you know, the 60 000 plus distribution centers they have, are up all the time. They're not even worried about infrastructure. They can focus on feeding the cause which is, I think 47 million people being fed. It's scary, right? >> Well, we want to bring it back to the organization of the discussion, you said you're helping customers with because we are worried you know, about how racking, stacking, configuring how doing all of those things, you know how do you help them? I talked to a number of customers at this show and they said look, my roles in my organization is still hardware to find And it's tough to move into a software role but if I want to get into the6 tech for good I need to be able to uplift my skills uplift my organizations, yeah. >> It's difficult, right? Organizational changes differ for every company but as part of the digital transformation there is also organizational transformation so we're having customers think about what is the progression form a VMware administrator to a DevOps-- >> Or cloud, I bet. (Giggles) >> It's not easy, it's your short answer on that. >> I think for us, is really starting to drive the cultural chance providing the tools and bring the self service in where they can be a coach, right? Be the trailblazer, who can come in and help change your organization. Teach them how to do it right. Not everyone will get there, hopefully bulk of the organization can shift right. >> Peter, I want to give you the final word you know, your partners and customers to understand. Take aways from VMware 2019. >> Yeah, it's great to be here, as usual thanks for having us. I think, Tan Zoo is really exciting. The progression that we're making with adding service blocks on top of VMware and AWS and or other hybrid cloud announcements. So, great to be here, but the Tan Zoo is kind of the story of the show. >> For me, it's a VMware is here to stay. We want to be, be have been, your strategic partner for the last decade. We're here to stay for the next decade. We're going to help you solve these hard complex problems and give you the choice you need. Across a broader ecosystem of partners and solutions. so, very excited to be here and to deliver that value. >> And Peter, thank you so much for joining us again, Bobby Allen, thank you for co-hosting. I'm Stu Miniman and as always thank you for watching theCUBE.

Published Date : Aug 27 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by VMware I'm Stu Miniman and my co-host for this segment and both of these gentlemen So, first, over we have Ajay Patel, has here in San Francisco. and it's really easy to get in and out Yeah, super to be back in San Francisco. Yeah, you know, there is some debate in the last two years though. And that's one of the areas that we're continuing and how does the VMware software pull them all together. but you know, Rackspace and many of my VCP partners At some point it's just cloud. Here's the nuance I want to, you know, ask for a second and determine, maybe this is an AWS workload and the way to drive consistency driving a lot of the choices, when applications teams and you're looking to migrate that workload. And how do you bridge these two worlds and cons of different locations or different workloads. I talked to, it was, you know, I'm a VMware shop And let's help you leverage those address services. So that you can operate it more affectively and offer the customer what they need I want to ask you a little bit of a controversial question. how do I embrace all this newness And so, in this world, you can think of us Peter, we're not going to ask you about Openstack. I'm really back to VMware, it's working progress. in the platform and now that VMware is offering and the kubernetes, you know, Docker, obviously and manage services, so safely around and if you look at the way we're focusing And change the engineering culture is what you provide. how you build the applications. That you talk to? and the announcement Lydon video and GPU access link so that, you know, the 60 000 plus distribution centers of the discussion, you said (Giggles) and bring the self service in you know, your partners and customers So, great to be here, but the Tan Zoo is kind of and give you the choice you need. And Peter, thank you so much

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Prashanth Chandrasekar, Rackspace | AWS Summit London 2019


 

>> live from London, England. It's the queue covering a ws summat London twenty nineteen, brought to you by Amazon Web services >> Hello and welcome to the A W s summit here in London's Excel Center. This is the Cube. Is my co host a Dilantin also. Now we're joined by present Chandrasekhar, who is the senior vice president and general manager act rack space and everything. If you're here to talk about really the next generation of cloud services, what are they on? What do you communicating to you? Partners here at the >> conference? Absolutely. Thank you, Susanna and day, for having me back on the show. Big fan of the Cube. Eso No, >> really, I >> think Rackspace next generation Cloud services absolutely foundational to what we do for our customers. And so, you know, ultimately what we're trying to deliver is a utility based model of service is very similar to how Amazon thinks about the cloud and what you know, they were effectively lead over the mass passed many years. So I think that the world we believe the world of traditional I t services of large, monolithic contracts where you got traditional size that are going and working with companies to say, Let us transform you with little transformation and you know, what about so services? I think those days are effectively gone and they're dead. So from our perspective, customers are on this journey from one platform to another. They're moving from traditional workloads through the public cloud. There's that hybrid journey that's underway, and we've talked about how Amazon has, you know, really acknowledged that through its working outposts, etcetera. But the idea is for us to say Listen, customers are in a very bespoke journey. Everyone's in a different journey. Individual journey. Let's feed them exactly where they are in that journey. Whether that's you know, right now moving, uh, traditional I t work loads to the public cloud. So let's go on architect and deploy them and migrate them based on best practices that we've gained from thousands of these engagements. Or, you know, if they're further along and they're actually did need to manage and operate these in a very you know, container centric or Cuban Eddie centric world, we can help them. They're too, or if they're already know several years in and there you see, the costs are getting hard to control because they've got sprawl within the organization. We can help them with cast optimization and governance. And all this is enabled through what we call a service walks model attract space, which really stitches together various of the's no peace part, if you will, of services across the infrastructure, security applications across the whole stack. And so that's the idea. So how would you categorize first? Not the rackspace strategy people remember. Of course. You guys catalyzed in incubated the open stack movement, which was kind of a Hail Mary against eight of us. And then others chimed in. And then you realize that Wow, we're going to step away. Yeah, it was great. Open source project. Amazing on DH. Now you partnering on Amazon? What's the strategy? How would you describe that? Yes. You know, I think if you've learned anything over the past, you know, ten, twenty years and that practice has been around for now, twenty one years, you know that it's an extremely dynamic market and is driven by customers ultimately and their pace of change and so on. So when we started as a company, you know, twenty years ago, we started manage hosting business and services is the foundation element of what we do and support and expertise for customers enabled by technology. And so that really helped us, you know, take us to the first ten years of our journey. And then the cloud movement enabled a lot by Amazon really took off and where it was really a mainstream consideration or an early consideration to say its more mainstream now, obviously. But back then, So we competed with the open stack from the cloud business on. Then, very soon we realised our customers were all also operating in Amazon, and so that really said, Listen, we've always historically said, Lets go where customers want to go and we've always been a services technology serves this company at heart, so it doesn't make a lot of sense for us to do move away from that DNA and that ethos. So it's no different from fasten it, saying, uh at a high level, you know, Windows O. R. Lennox. We can have a very kind of, you know, dogmatic view about one of the other. We just have to say this and what the customers want to work on based on what their various various factors that the take in consideration so no different. Here. Platforms are just platforms, their choices that customers have. And so we started saying, You know what? If customers want help on Amazon, there's still asking us for it. Lets go in partners with Amazon to do exactly that. So that's exactly what we did in twenty fifteen. >> So where do you fit in that value change? How do you help customers and weirdos? Rackspace add unique value. >> Yeah, so I think ultimately, you know there's various elements of value along the way, and I sort of describe the service rocks model is the way in which we really bring it together. So customers are either looking for help to get to the cloud. And they're asking us, You know, what is the best way for me to get there, given my current state. And so there's a deep, you know, assessment that's done from a kind of way, have a lot of expertise, and Laxmi is over a thousand data be a certified experts on certification. So we bring those experts to the customer, talk about you know why they're trying to go. Hey, they're trying to really reduce your meantime to recovery. You're trying to increase your release cycles on a kind of, you know, per you know, a certain rate that's very aggressive operate with the devil's principle and mindset. You know all those things are the object of the customers has and then be then enable them to go and say Okay, given all that here, the workloads we'd would enable you to kind of, like move or to kind of like build from scratch, bring an entire set of services with their infrastructure, security or applications services, start with the value added set of workloads, and then build from that effectively prove the case and then move on. To >> date, the very fact that Amazon websites its growth has bean so rapid. And there are so many new services coming online. You know, every bump that's actually helping you because people need help to navigate. >> Indeed. I mean, that's a that's a phenomenal point. I mean that ultimately, you know, bar the reason why customers in our install base we're reaching out to us and saying, Hey racked with you, done a phenomenal job helping us in our first evolution of our journey. Can you help us now in this new world where it's actually quite complicated? You know, that's sixteen hundred features on average of forty hundred features on average are being launched by Amazon on a yearly basis. And that's just, you know, despite what we hear in the headlines where cloud first companies and us, the startups of today are absolutely leveraging. You know, Lambda out of the gate or containers out of the gate, you know. But there there's a whole host of companies that are going through this massive digital disruption, trying to compete with these startups that >> need >> a lot of help to re skill their workforce, to change the way they think about process within the within their organization, between their business development and technology and operations teams. And then, ultimately, you know, how do they actually build out much more agile? We have respond to customers so that work requires a company like Rackspace to come and help them navigate through that. Really, really, you know, large, you know, set of features. >> I suppose that it's a space that you certainly didn't forsee ten years ago. >> Oh, absolutely, No. That's what's so dynamic about the space where I think that nobody, I think, could have predicted, You know, even today we're seeing this's a ton of kind of like, you know, momentum with concepts that were very nascent only a few years ago. The Cuban Eddie's There's a concept, you know, almost every one of our eight of us customers at Rackspace, what we call fanatical A W s eyes absolutely looking for help on communities. And so, you know, when we think about Doctor A few years ago on Doc Enterprise on, we think about communities and there was that, you know, battle today, you know, the battle has been won Carbonetti XYZ pretty much pretty much the defacto orchestration engine. So nobody could have predicted that a couple years ago tomorrow. Somebody else. Exactly. So it's fascinating, And that's why customers need help navigating. >> You know, all those guys are. The experts carried people through the journey. It's mentioned hybrid before customers want choice. You know, even the Amazon wants everybody to put their data. Their cloud. Yeah, customers sometimes have multi clouds and absolutely as a hybrid. And Marty, I think, >> is a is becoming a lot more. I think even Amazon is very much acknowledging that the big opportunity is high. Isn't hybrid Cloud Because if you think about where we are and the technology adoption curve and the trillion dollars have spent that ultimately going to move, there's no doubt that it's a class for cloud First World. Their destination is the cloud, but the vast majority. The workloads exists in traditional i t. And so how do we take that hybrid moment? You know, and outposts? It's a great acknowledgement of that on. So they're very aggressively investing. We're investing with them and helping our customers along that money effectively. >> Okay, Present for a second. Thank you very much for talking to us from Iraq Space. And my co host, David Lynch has been helping us. Navigator, What's happening here had the A W s Web something. I'm Susanna Street. Thanks for watching the Cube.

Published Date : May 8 2019

SUMMARY :

a ws summat London twenty nineteen, brought to you by Amazon Web services What do you communicating to you? Big fan of the Cube. is very similar to how Amazon thinks about the cloud and what you know, they were effectively lead over the mass passed So where do you fit in that value change? And so there's a deep, you know, assessment that's done from a kind of way, You know, every bump that's actually helping you because people need And that's just, you know, despite what we hear in the headlines where cloud first companies and us, Really, really, you know, large, you know, set of features. You know, even today we're seeing this's a ton of kind of like, you know, momentum with concepts that were very nascent You know, even the Amazon wants everybody to put their data. Isn't hybrid Cloud Because if you think about where we are and the technology adoption curve Thank you very much for talking to us from Iraq

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Prashanth Chandrasekar, Rackspace & Ajay Patel, VMware | AWS re:Invent 2018


 

>> Live from Las Vegas, it's theCUBE. Covering AWS re:Invent 2018. Brought to you by Amazon Web Services, Intel, and their ecosystem partners. >> And welcome back once again here, to Hall D in the Sands Expo. We're at AWS re:Invent for the third day of our three days of coverage here on theCUBE, of this fantastic show. Justin Warren, John Walls. We're now joined by Prashanth Chandrasekar, who is the SVP and GM of managed public cloud at Rackspace. Prashanth, good to see you this morning. >> Absolutely, thank you for having me. >> You bet, and Ajay Patel who is the SVP and GM of cloud provider services at VMware. Good morning, to you as well >> Glad to be here, good morning. >> Alright, first off, let's just talk about Rackspace, a little bit, if we can Prashanth. You're kind of going through this metamorphosis, right? This transformation of sorts. So kind of get us up to speed a little bit about your journey, about where you've been and where you're going. >> Yeah absolutely, I'd love to. I think Rackspace has been been on a phenomenal journey over the past 20 years. This is our 20th year anniversary as a company. So obviously we've been know historically for our managed hosting DNA and we came from that, a long time ago. But over the years, we very much are very, very focused on customers, just like Amazon is and VMware is and we really thought about, how do we make sure that we're at where our customers want to go. And so we evolved effectively to support the leading technologies in either the public cloud space, like an Amazon, Microsoft Azure, Google, Alibaba or in the private cloud space with VMware and even our own OpenStack Private Cloud deployments, along with our traditional managed hosting business. So over the years, and also with a very, very phenomenal new owner in Apollo, we've been transforming as a company that's truly a next generation IT services company, looking to take enterprises into the future, at their pace by the way, meeting them where they are and really making sure that we bring to bare, really, best of read services, cloud services, to really kind of manage their transition into the cloud and to make the most of that investment. >> Yeah, use that carrot approach, right? Not the-- >> That's right, that's right. >> Bring them along gently which many people need. Alright, so each of you has your expertise. I'm talking about the companies here. But now this partnership, this synergy that you have, it's kind of like peanut butter and chocolate in a way, right? Great combination! Everybody's going to love it! Talk about that partnership and how it's come together and how that's playing out right now. >> Yeah-- >> So from a philosophy perspective, we're both goal aligned, right? We're starting to see this world being a multi-cloud world and more importantly, it's all about the customer on their journey. They're going to have existing assets, existing data centers, for a long time. They're going to need support in terms of the legacy applications but also they replatform, rehost, and modernize the application. And they need a strategic partner, so Rackspace sees the same way. Starting to provide that set of choice and help the customer on their journey, at their own pace, enabled by a common technology platform. And so us as a company, we've also transformed ourself from we're going to be a vSphere-only company, to starting to embrace public clouds. Whether it's VMware cloud on AWS or our recent CloudHealth acquisition, which allows us to start managing native public cloud. So in this journey, we're seeing ourself as peanut butter and chocolate, as you said, working together, hand-in-hand for the benefit of our customers. >> Yeah, I really love that analogy and thank you for it, because in some ways, VMware and Rackspace, are very much, our philosophies are exactly the same in terms of where the customer journey is, but we approach the problem with two different angles. One, we come from it from a technology-services angle, 'cause we're a service company at heart, right? We're fanatical experience and we're known for that, and VMware is obviously a phenomenal, technology platform company. But we both believe in a multi-cloud and a hyper-cloud world where we see that, hey, the journey to the cloud is a very, very, long-standing one. We're in the early innings of this, where customer workloads are actually moving and this is, you can talk about the projections, you're literally probably over a trillion dollars spent over the next decade or so that's going to move >> in the cloud, exactly. >> with this very form factor, so it's a really exciting time and we're really, really aligned with our partners with VMware and of course AWS and the other public cloud partners. >> Yeah so, you mentioned that we are at the beginning. This is just the start of how things are working, So with customers who are looking at this transformation journey and trying to make this decision about, what do I keep onsite, what do I transform, what do I re-platform, what do I just completely replace with something new and let the old one die. How do you help customers make those decisions? >> Yes, absolutely, so this is the heart of what Rackspace is doing for our customers today, right? We are very much a company that's basically taking a very unbiased approach upfront. We're taking about literally, thinking about the planning stage and assessing their workloads, going through an application assessment and doing all the work that's required to understand, you know what, which workloads need to go on each of the public clouds? Which one runs well on Amazon? Which ones actually should be better leveraged on a VMware on AWS sort of scenario and so on, right? So there's a very deep assessment that's done upfront and then we go through the process of architecting and deploying, based on best practices that we've gained from, by the way, thousands of these customers that we've actually moved and then actually managing and operating in these environments, which we've been talking about at Rackspace, that's our DNA, and optimizing those environments, for cost and the greatest and latest of features that any of these providers provide. So that's the journey and the way we do that is, using a true next-generation cloud services set of capabilities which we announced a couple weeks ago in a press release and that includes something with a notion of service blocks, as we call at Rackspace, service blocks where you're literally able to mix and match all the things that I just mentioned along the journey, dependent on where the customer is on their journey. So we could say, let's focus just on architecting, deploying and migrating apps and that's it. That's what the enterprise wants, because they want to enable an internal, focused motion to manage these, and they want to skill up their internal people to do that. Or you might encounter a company that actually wants us to actually manage the whole thing, and that's fine too. And then maybe, by the way, nine months into their experience that they realize that or later down the line, they want us to help 'em with cost optimization or Kubernetes expertise to actually move into the container world. So that whole curve and the transitioning through that process, is our job to make sure, meet the customer where they are and make sure we deliver value very specifically at that point in time, for them, and not be, not put customers into some long-term, monolithic sort of contract. So really being agile around us. >> You know it's funny, it's very interesting, because as you see the complexity has only gone up. It hasn't gone down. That's when you talk about cloud benefits, the amount of services being launched, the complexity of all the different technologies. Rackspace is uniquely set up, they're going to have their VMware expertise and the AWS certified partners, that we can start to bring the value together. So we're excited about kind of mixing and matching and kind of this modular set of services and capability, that you can bring to bare for the customers. So I think, it actually puts us in a unique position in some ways, right? To be that trusted partner as we move on this journey. >> And to put some numbers around that, very specifically, that Ajay said, we have over a thousand, no, eleven hundred Amazon certified certifications at Rackspace. We have probably a very similar number of VMware, right? Over a thousand VMware people that actually service customers and that's all-- >> With Enterprise DNN Enterprise support, right? >> That's correct, that's right, and then ultimately we know that combination of expertise is very material in that scale for our customers to be able to leverage. >> So Ajay, you've got a long history with the Enterprise customers. The people have been using VMware for a long, long, time. What are you seeing from your existing customer base? What kind of technologies are they interested in? What are they moving to? Where is the momentum? >> So, clearly the excitement hype is around containers, Kubernetes, serverless, et cetera. But their bread and butter workloads, are existing applications. They're looking to optimize their data center costs, some trying to eliminate data centers, they're looking to lift and shift entire landscapes of application, move them to cloud. They're looking for expertise, building a center of excellence. Start up a prominent operation model or on a multi-cloud world So they're now starting to hit, what I call, real-world problems, where the experiments are working, they need to now create operational model around it and it's starting to go back to the trusted partners, VMware is a platform provider, Rackspace is a trusted managed services provider. Whether it's up front and design or to help operate. So we're starting to see this maturities coming in place and cost is not really the driver. They're starting to find that public out cost is actually an issue. So cost management too. If you just walk around the shop floor, it's all about cost management, security, visibility. These are all signs of a maturing market. >> And because of that, and you talk about a maturing market, if I'm just now making my entry, alright? I've decided, hey we're running our company, it's time to jump into the public cloud. Is there benefit to us being maybe a bit-- >> A bit more lore? >> more reticent yeah, than others, because there've been other growing pains, you've already kind of, you've found where the wrinkles were and so we will benefit by those past experiences? >> Absolutely, yeah. >> So I'm giving you a chance, I mean talk to somebody who hasn't made that commitment yet, and they're thinking I'm so far behind >> Yes. >> But they're not. >> Yeah, I mean I think this is a spot-on point, right? So when we work with enterprises, what we're really seeing is that, let's say a company has got 10 divisions within the company and you know, generally speaking, you've got maybe a couple divisions that have gone ahead of the pack. They've already done it, because they actually went with the cloud curve. They're leading the world internally. They're being the internal sponsors and the champions for the movement and you've got some laggards along the way as well. So Rackspace, our job is to really bring true up, if you will, the level of capability with the groups that are actually lagging. And also, not to do it in an artificial way, but actually do it on their terms, to say, you know what, you may not be ready for, a containerized world tomorrow. Maybe you actually start leveraging basic, easy to, and that's the way to get started. Which is fewer and fewer number of companies that are not there already, but the ability for you to move along and use advanced services, that's our job, to keep moving them and encouraging them to do it, bu enabling them through our tooling that we built and leveraging through partners like VMware or even on the top of each of the public clouds that we built, proprietary tooling, or through the expertise that we bring up to bat. So that's the combination. >> It's never to late to get started, so for customers who might've just decided that, actually I've decided, yes, it's time to go to cloud, I'm ready. How do they begin? How should they start on this journey? How would they start to engage with you? >> Yeah, I think for us, it's a what we've noticed, is that it's very important to just make sure that you take a success-based and phase-based approach. And so, starting with a place in the organization, where it actually makes a difference, there's a differentiated set of applications that are going to make a difference for the customer that they're trying to serve. Or it could be, listen, they have actually a problem where they have 27 DC's, as a customer that I was talking to yesterday that is about to join us, they're trying to consolidate down to six data centers over the next two years. So how do you go about that problem of doing DC consolidation and how do you figure out which workloads go on which platform, et cetera. So starting with some very specific problems, could be as big as a DC problem, or it could be as specific as, let's go work on this very specific differentiated critical application on the cloud et cetera, and that really creates a mushrooming effect, 'cause you notice the difference it makes in terms of developer productivity, your agility, your ability to deploy coded production multiple times and that just drives, you know, it gains the attention of, what we've seen is, that finally gets the attention of the CIO in the company and then the CIO is like, listen I better get control of this, because in some situations we have hundreds and thousands of Amazon accounts within these organizations, that they ultimately now want governance and visibility, and so that's when it starts creating a more holistic, enterprise-wide strategy around cloud and adoption and one of the various form factors they should use, to actually to keep moving on. So really it's mushrooming with a center of excellence and a sponsor or a line of business that's really starting and that's really where we've seen success. >> You know one other thing I'll add to that is, the guys who are fast followers now, are getting the benefit of hindsight of other partners, as you just said. And couple things I'm starting to see in the market. They're starting to make some strategic bets. They're picking a strategic technology partner from a technology platform perspective. They're looking for a strategic service provider partner, a managed service partner. And they're starting to look at them as trusted partners. The conversations are moving away from being transactional, to more success oriented. Now even Andy talk about that. It's really about outcomes and in this journey, I think you're starting to find the right partners, building the core competency within your organization and finding those sustaining technology platform choices that guide you through this hybrid world. That's what the world went with, the battlefield now is all about hybrid. It's no longer about private or public. Everyone's just, even Amazon finally recognized, the world is a hybrid with their outpost announcement, right? And starting to look at how do I work in this hybrid world and what's the right operating model. So it's a really interesting time to kind of make, say look, the world is going to be public and private, how do I operate in this? >> Cloud all the things >> Makes sense. I do want to say, before we say goodbye, that when Prashanth was talking about laggards, he was really looking at us (all laughing) an awful lot, but I don't know, I don't know what to make of that, but we won't take it too personally >> Might be the beard maybe. >> Thanks for being with us. >> Absolutely. >> Thank you for having us, >> Thank you so much. >> Thank you gentlemen. Back with more from AWS re:Invent. We're live in Las Vegas and you're watching the Cube. (relaxing music)

Published Date : Nov 29 2018

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by Amazon Web Services, Intel, Prashanth, good to see you this morning. Good morning, to you as well So kind of get us up to speed a little bit about your journey, and really making sure that we bring to bare, and how that's playing out right now. and help the customer on their journey, at their own pace, and this is, you can talk about the projections, and the other public cloud partners. This is just the start of how things are working, So that's the journey and the way we do that is, and the AWS certified partners, And to put some numbers around that, very specifically, for our customers to be able to leverage. Where is the momentum? and it's starting to go back to the trusted partners, And because of that, and you talk about a maturing market, and that's the way to get started. it's time to go to cloud, I'm ready. and that just drives, you know, it gains the attention of, So it's a really interesting time to kind of make, I do want to say, before we say goodbye, Thank you gentlemen.

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Peter Fitzgibbon, Rackspace & David Trigg, Dell EMC | VMworld 2018


 

[Narrator] Live from Las Vegas, it's theCUBE. Covering Vmworld 2018. Brought to you by VMware, and its ecosystem Partners. >> Welcome back to theCUBE. We are live at Vmworld 2018, Mandalay Bay in Las Vegas. I'm Lisa Martin with Dave Vellante, hey Dave. >> Hey Lisa, how's it going? >> Great, this morning started off with tremendous amount of momentum from Pat Gelsinger, including a new tattoo that he debuted. 20th anniversary of VMware, 20th anniversary of the Rackspace, DellEMC partnership, please welcome to theCUBE a veteran and alumni, Peter Fitzgibbon, the VP and GM of the VMware practice at Rackspace. Peter it's great to have you back. >> It's great to be back here at Vmworld. >> And we're excited to welcome David Trigg to theCUBE, the Global Vice President of Market Development and Service Providers from DellEMC, welcome. >> Thank you, glad to but be here. So happy 20th anniversary to Rackspace and DellEMC. >> Thank you. >> Longstanding partnership, what's going on? A lot of momentum at Dell Tech World just, what, four months ago? What's some of the momentum that you guys have seen in your joint customer space this summer? >> Yeah, so at Dell Technologies World we launched our Rackspace private cloud, R by VMware, our Everywhere edition, as we're referring to it, which is extending Rackspace private clouds into customer data centers and colos. And since that announcement back at Dell Technologies World, we've seen fantastic adoption from both our existing installed base that's interested, and knows the Rackspace brand, and our fanatical experience, as well as new customers that know now we can service them in new locations. >> And then David, for you, Dell Technologies World was all about IT transformation, digital transformation, security transformation, and making it real. How is DellEMC working with Rackspace to help customers make these transformations a successful reality? >> Yeah, well one of the fist things, in my opinion, to highlight is the length of time that we have worked together, and through that length of time, Rackspace has made incredible investments in their skill set, their ability to manage infrastructure, you know, there's a lot of a deep knowledge there, so customers can feel very confident about the ability to provide the services. And as customers go through transformation, customers have more choices now, and more things, as we talk about the edge, and the core, and the cloud, they have to manage infrastructure in more places than they've ever had to manage before. So we're very proud of the relationship that we've had, the investments that they've made, because our customers are needing help in managing through, not only the transformations, but all of the choices that they have to make on where's the best place to put an application? Where's the best place to put a workload, and how do they manage the migrations and the modernization? So yeah, it plays very, very close into our transformation message, and quite frankly, we couldn't do it without partners like Rackspace. >> Let's talk a little bit more about that, because you're talking about more than just a storage partnership, right? Is that, >> Oh, yeah. >> A lot more to its, it's much more comprehensive, >> Absolutely. >> Sets of integration, practices, and areas of expertise, so let's double click on that a little bit. >> Yeah, there's a lot of skill sets that are required to even just do assessments, where I'm really understanding where do the applications go. Really then making sure that they understand, how do you support the infrastructure? How do you monitor the infrastructure and how do you make sure that it's running a lot? And again, Rackspace has made a lot of investments, is one of the best in the world in being able to do a lot of this. >> Let's talk a little bit more about that. Why Rackspace? >> Well, we are offering customers strategic flexibility, really. Whether they want to deploy in a Rackspace data center, a customer data center, get access to our deep expertise, not just a DellEMC, but our 150 plus VMware certified experts that our customers can now tap into, because this world gets more and more complex. And you saw the evening announcements this morning. It was like, how do our customers get the best value from those technologies, and not simply have shelf ware? Tap into Rackspace, with our partnerships with DellEMC and VMware to get the real value out of that expensive technology. >> So from a customer's standpoint, help us understand what's really going on. We asked the question a lot this week, is things like the AWS VMware partnership, is it a one-way trip to the cloud, or is it boom for the data center? And a lot of people are saying the latter. What are customers saying? What do they really want to do? >> Listen, customers are going to be living their data center for a long time yet to come. We've got legacy applications, they've got mainframes, we got client server applications, and then we have direct cloud-native applications, but there's a slew of applications in the middle where customers are kind of unsure about where to go, and they lean on a trusted partner like Rackspace, who really is cloud agnostic to help them figure out should they go public cloud? Should they be private cloud? Or are they in a hybrid cloud journey like everybody is on? So we want to be the Switzerland, where we can help people determine where they should go, and really offer unbiased expertise. >> So you guys announced, kind of along the lines of being Switzerland, at Dell Technologies World, Rackspace Private Cloud Everywhere, powered by VMware, Everywhere. I know you've got, what, five data centers in five continents. Talk about that Everywhere. How does it help customers to embrace the reality of multi-cloud, and to actually do so in a way that allows them to understand, working with you guys, where different applications should be placed at different times in the year? >> Yeah so, Everywhere is a natural evolution of what we've offered in our own data centers over time. So now deploying out in customer data centers and colos, well later this year, we hope to launch a formal VMware on AWS software as well. So Everywhere constitutes three parts, really, Rackspace data centers, customer data centers, to get as close to their data as needs be, and VMware on AWS as our product matures, as you saw from a number of announcements this morning. >> And to add on to John's question about the promise of the cloud, I think the original promise, and maybe the threat of the cloud was everything was going at the cloud. Well as we're learning through IoT and other new, emerging trends, that's not realistic. Customers really have to think about the edge, their own data center, because their own data centers are not going away. They have to think about the SLAs that they're providing to their end users, to their employees, and that's where you have to place the application, the workload in the right place to enable the best customer experience for their customers and their employees. And that's were a company like Rackspace, that can really get to the edge, the core, the cloud, by managing that infrastructure regardless. Obviously, the investments that VMware's making to help enable that as well, and being supported by a lot of the DellEMC stuff. It's an exciting time, I think. >> I Want to follow up on that, because Peter, off camera said cloud migration doesn't mean leaving your data center. >> Absolutely. >> This Gartner analyst came out, not that recently, but I think it was last year, and said that 80% of data centers will shut down by 2025, so that caused a lot of, right? Both eye rolling and no way, and et cetera. The Wikibon crew, which is affiliated with theCUBE, a sister company, sister division, just came out with a report that said true private cloud is going to be a $32 billion market this year. So that means on-prem cloud. >> Yep. >> So you have all these countervailing messages going on. Then you see, of course, the epitome of Andy Jassy up on stage today with Pat Gelsinger talking about hybrid cloud. What do you guys make of all of this? What's really happening and going to happen? >> I think customer data centers are going to live for some time to come, as people figure out where should the workload actually go? What can they do with that specific workload? Can they refactor it and rebuild it and go cloud-native? Great. Can they move to a hosted private cloud model with Rackspace rolling racks into a customer data center? Or is it a legacy application that really needs to be kept and maintained over time until the next disruption happens, where they really have to refactor it? >> Yeah, really, in that case there may be no business case. Why lift in and shift it, for what? Just to say, >> Exactly, they get it. >> Hey I'm in the cloud. >> Exactly, I think with cloud migrations, does not mean leaving your data center. I think that's going to continue for some time, where people can get the benefits from Rackspace, moving from a CapEX to an OpEx model with managed services, with industry leading SLAs, but still in their own data center, because they have applications running that cannot be moved. >> Well it's interesting, David to see this equilibrium that's kind of being reached, you know? A few short years ago, there was sort of antagonism between VMware and the AWS. You know, the whole book seller comment. Andy Jassy was like, pfft, on-prem cloud, there's no such thing, and now you see those worlds coming together, underscoring the reality that you can't just shove your business into the public cloud. You can't just move all your data there, and there may not be a business case, or an advantage of doing that. >> Right, right. >> What do you think? >> Well a lot of times the answer to the question in the, one, I'm not an analyst, so it's not my job to really predict where it's going to go. I mean, obviously we watch trends and look where it's going. You know, my job and our job is to help customers deal with the realities that they're dealing with right now, right? And they have data centers. They are thinking about the cloud. They are having to take care of the edge, right? And in time, we've seen some of those shifts, right? There was a lot of the, where are we going with the cloud? Where's it going to go? Are they going to shut down all their data centers? Regardless of that, we will adjust to the market and make sure that we're adjusting the market. But more importantly, we're going to do what's right for our customers, to help enable them to those journeys, and it's still yet to be proven. There's a lot of Predictions out there. Will they shut down all data centers? I'm sure there'll be some consolidation of it, but yeah, it's getting more complex. >> Okay, so VMware, Rackspace, DellEMC, you're not screwed, check. (David laughs) what about the edge? Help us unpack that a little bit, you know, whether VMware at the edge, Rackspace, DellEMC, what do you guys see evolving there? >> I think there's many definitions of the edge, and when you talk about it, everything's IoT initially, but even just deploying smaller data centers in customer locations in partnerships with these guys, to kind of meet customers where they are, and get smaller, roll in racks into different locations is continuing to be something that customers are looking for. >> So there's the hinterland edge, which is a bunch of devices, you know IP cameras, they're going to be instrument, most of the data's going to stay there anyway, but then I think you guys call it, I don't know, the core. There's a aggregation point, >> Well the core, >> if you will. >> which is typically what we refer to as kind of the customer data center, and then there's the cloud, right? So kind of the two different, customer data center versus the cloud, and then, truly, the edge, capturing, And it started, and we referred to everything from laptops, phones, as well as, really a lot of the sensors that are going to be out there, and your ability to have to process and analyze and react real time at the edge. And so a lot of use cases, public safety use cases, where, you know, when an event happens, that connection back to a place where you would analyze it. Obviously the autonomous cars, right? They can't have to connect to a data center every time it wants to make a left turn. So a lot of that ability has to be pushed out to the edge, but yet, then also being able to bring that data back, be able to manage that, and be able to update those computers, or those data centers. I mean, an autonomous car is basically a mini data center. Someone's got to manage that, patch that, make sure it's running, and manage that. So yeah, to your point, the edge is beginning to mean a lot of different things. There are the hinterlands, I think was the word you used, and some of those things, but then there are the more traditional work cases, and even just running a phone app is now considered an app, versus, you know, and that's were people start to really look at, is how do you deliver that experience on a phone, and that's an application. >> A lot of data. Well, I like to follow the data, you know? A lot of data at the edge. There's a lot of data, like I say, at the aggregation point, and then if you want to do some hardcore modeling, go to the cloud, and that cloud can be your own, on-prem data center. >> Yeah. >> Right. >> Yeah, there's just so much data being generated, and data is power, I think was one of the key taglines of DellEMC Worlds. And I was like, it truly is. Where the data is, is where the power is. So some has to be transferred back to the core. Some may be pushed up to the cloud for deep processing with AI and ML type processing, but there'll be data at all these different points. >> Well that's the other point, is it's just like the innovation engine no longer is Moore's Law in this industry. it's the data, applying machine intelligence, and then cloud scale. And then, you got to, as suppliers in this business, you better be playing in some way, shape, or form, in all three of those, right? >> Absolutely. >> So how, and speaking of that, I think Pat Gelsinger talked about it this morning in the context of superpowers. He talked about autonomous vehicles, AI machine learning, advanced analytics, IoT. How is DellEMC and their technology, Peter, helping to enable Rackspace to optimize your offerings to be able to take advantage of machine learning AI? To be able to deliver on customer expectations? >> Yeah, we're deeply partnered with these guys from those announcements you head earlier this year, that we're already investigating the different capabilities they're having from an AIML perspective, and really seeing what sort of technologies are they launching that we can then put into our private cloud practice, and offer to our customers. So it's our deep partnership allows us to kind of get a front seat at that and working closely to investigate and to do a lot of R&D with the new capabilities they're coming out with so. >> What superpower does that give Rackspace? In terms of differentiation? >> Uh, you've stumped me on that one. (laughs) >> Well customers have, we talked about, everybody wants flexibility. They also have choice. >> Yeah. >> What are some things that this 20 year partnership infuses into Rackspace to give you those differentiation points? >> Yeah, it's the deep partnership, and knowing, working so long together that we know who to pick up the phone to solve some of these complex problems. >> Yeah, and of us, from my perspective, we always start with out joint customers in mind first. So it's our job to bring the advance technologies, the advanced capabilities that we're making big investments in, and make sure that Rackspace is able to support and leverage those within their business so that we'd provide a better experience for the end customer, but then also making sure that we show Rackspace how they make money on that, and how they can run a business on that, that's really, is differentiated to your point. Because a lot of, you know, you painted a very pretty vision of what the world might look like. Most customers aren't there yet. Most customers aren't taking advantage of AI and deep learning. They're still dealing with some very traditional legacy issues, and it's that gap that becomes very, we love talking about the cool, new, exciting stuff, but for a lot of customers, they're stuck somewhere in the middle, and that's were partnerships like this, because you can not only help them with the legacy, old stuff. How do you migrate, and then how do you take advantage of the really new stuff? Or how do start at least thinking about that and exploring that and looking. A lot of the original IoT use cases, the ROI wasn't known. They're setting up projects, then they hoped they'd get a benefit out of it, right? And that's continuing to emerge and evolve as time goes on. >> Well it's hard, too. I mean, everybody's afraid of getting Uberized and disrupted, et cetera, et cetera, but they, at the same time, if you over rotate, to a new, you can spend bunch of money and not get any return. >> Yeah. >> Everybody's trying to get digital right, it seems, but it's unclear what that means. So they look to partners like you to help them figure that out. >> Well, it's a scary journey to your point, because they obviously have existing revenue streams. It's the inventor's dilemma, right? It's they have existing revenue streams, but how do they digitize their business? How do they reach customers in a different way? And so they don't become Uberized or Airbnbed, or whatever, what term you want to use. Every CIO, every executive is thinking about that. IT for a long time was about taking cost out of the business which, after a while, that's no fun, because that usually means head count reductions, that usually, I mean, that's not a fun conversation to have every single day. Now with the digital transformations mode, how do you generate new revenue streams? How do you, in a way, a lot of companies never, one of the most older industries, being taxis, a little bit not that exciting. It's gotten reinvigorated through some of these things. So it's kind of cool. >> Yeah, and you said digital transformation, right? What does that really mean? Cloud transformation, security transformation, app transformation, so there's many different factors. And companies like Rackspace can offer expertise in all those different areas, where some of our competitors may only hit on one of those. They're only a security company, or only a VMware shop, or only an AWS shop. >> Helping customers really glean the power from that data, because if they can't, it's not powerful. Gentlemen, thank you so much for stopping by theCUBE and talking with Dave and me. We appreciate hearing what's going on with Rackspace and DellEMC. >> Thanks guys. >> Thank you so much, I appreciate it. >> Thanks very much. I appreciate the time. >> Thank you. >> We want to thank you for watching theCUBE. For Dave Vellante, I am Lisa Martin. We're at VMworld day one. Stick around, we'll be back after break. (upbeat electronic music)

Published Date : Aug 27 2018

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by VMware, Welcome back to theCUBE. Peter it's great to have you back. to welcome David Trigg to Rackspace and DellEMC. and knows the Rackspace brand, to help customers make about the ability to provide the services. on that a little bit. in being able to do a lot of this. bit more about that. to get the real value And a lot of people are saying the latter. to be living their data center and to actually do so to get as close to their data as needs be, that can really get to the I Want to follow up is going to be a $32 and going to happen? Can they move to a hosted Just to say, I think that's going to that you can't just shove your business Are they going to shut down the edge, Rackspace, DellEMC, is continuing to be something that most of the data's going the edge is beginning to Well, I like to follow the data, you know? So some has to be Well that's the other to be able to take advantage and offer to our customers. me on that one. Well customers have, we talked about, the phone to solve some So it's our job to bring at the same time, if you So they look to partners like you journey to your point, Yeah, and you said digital glean the power from that data, Thank you so much, I appreciate the time. We want to thank you

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Sean Wedige, Rackspace and Scott Delandy, Dell EMC | Dell Technologies World 2018


 

>> Announcer: Live from Las Vegas, it's theCUBE. Covering Dell Technologies World, 2018. Brought to you by Dell EMC and its ecosystem partners. (techno music playing) >> Welcome back to theCUBE, day three in Vegas. Dell Technologies World, I'm Lisa Martin with John Troyer. Welcoming some distinguished CUBE alumni back to our set here at Dell Technologies World, and back to theCUBE. We've got Sean Wedige, CTO of Enterprise Solutions at Rackspace, and Scott Delandy, Technical Director at Dell EMC. Hey, guys. >> Hey. >> Hey. >> Good afternoon. >> Thanks so much for coming back and talking with us about what you guys are up to lately. So, Rackspace. Sean, you guys have been a longtime Dell EMC partner. >> Sean: We have been. >> We are interested to learn about what you guys are doing from a service provider's perspective with the new PowerMax. What are some of the unique requirements that you are looking to bring into your environment versus just traditional enterprise? >> Sure, so we have been a longtime user of Dell and EMC technologies, going way back into the early 2000s, almost to the inception of our company. And we've always relied on them for availability for high performance to be able to support our customers, specifically, now, we're looking at the PowerMax release, and the capabilities it brings to us, and Dell EMC has really taken service provider needs into account, so they've created additional capabilities around monitoring, around visualization, around role-based access, that allows us to extend features out to our customers. Things like easier migration tools, things like incredible performance, that allows us to not have to micromanage workloads, and so it's a extremely powerful platform that we're looking to put to work for a hundred thousand plus customers. >> Yeah, and I think some of the things that Rackspace has as far as use-cases are very much things that influenced a lot of the functionality in the new features that went into the product, and I'll give you a couple of examples. So, one of the things that we introduced is the ability to do provisioning of storage based on service levels. So what that means is, I can figure out what I want my performance to be for a specific workload, with folks getting higher performance, using more resources, and having a premium associated with that, but also being able to provide good performance at economical cost points. So I now have a range of options that we can now provide through the service providers. But what's cool about the technology is, years ago in order to do that, you had to really be able to understand the underlying technology, so that you could go ahead and you could tune the knobs and the buttons and the levers to make sure that, if gold was supposed to be this, it would give you gold, and if you had platinum it was supposed to do this, but those things were very manual in terms of how they were set up. The new system, basically, is more about what is the result that you're trying to achieve from a performance perspective? And then we use all of the automation, the machine learning, the predictive analytics, to figure out, okay, where do I place and move that data based on the policy that's assigned for it to make sure I'm in compliance with that service level. So again, a lot of those things are specifically done to help service providers meet a wide range of requirements for the users and use-cases that they have for their customers. >> And our engineers are very excited not to have to spin so many knobs and stare at the blinking dots, and those are the types of things that keep 'em up at night, "how am I guaranteeing the service levels "and the performance that my customers need?" So the A.I. capability, the ability to do tiering on the fly, that we don't have to manage that, allows us to really focus on higher-value activities for our customers. >> Yeah, I was interested in your experience, and one of the marquee features on this new release is the labeled A.I., and that means a lot of things to a lot of people, and in drilling down yesterday there was a lot of really interesting stuff about its learning capabilities and the fact that it would look back farther and infer, it knows about certain things like Oracle files, it knows how to treat them and it'll learn more, there'll be more roles and it'll figure some stuff out itself, so I don't actually care whether it's called A.I. or not, at the end of the day, does it lower your operational costs and make you more efficient, right? And it sounds like that's been your experience. It makes us more efficient, but more so, it makes us more effective in delivering to customers. So if we're doing VNX, or wherever the platform might be in our PowerMax, and we're putting hundreds to thousands of workloads underway, we have to make sure there's not contention between customers, right? Every one of those customers are relying on us, and they may have different workload cycles. We have certain customers for whom their busiest seasons are the weekends, the holidays, and they will have different cycles than customers that are traditional income, or some digital marketing companies, so this allows us not to have to worry about tuning individually, that the system can adjunct and take care of that and ensure that we're meeting those service levels that we've provided for our customers. So, absolutely, a huge step forward. >> And one of the other things, again, around service providers is you've got the performance, you've got the management, you've got the system, but then the other key driver for some of the new features is around the security of the platform. Because now you're moving into a world of multi tenancy. You've got different organizations that are now sharing a resource. So number one, you want to make sure that everybody gets the performance and the predictability, and that's where the machine learning and analytics comes into play, but then you also want to be able to provide the individual users access to be able to do certain things, to view certain things, but make sure that they're only able to access the pieces of storage that they should only be accessing. So by adding additional controls around role-based security, and in building that into the system, and allowing you to control who has access to what specific functions within the system, who can see what, all these different roles makes it a lot easier for Sean to be able to take the rich reporting that they can now provide, and to be able to share that up with their users and make sure that they're doing it in a very secure way. >> On that security, Brian. Sorry Sean, I'm just curious, security transformation, IT transformation, digital transformation, all themes of this make-it-real event that we're at, We talk with customers that say "Data isn't valuable unless we can actually glean "and extract and act on insights from it "to be able to deliver better customer experiences, "and different chain of products to market." On the differentiation front, what is, for Rackspace's perspective, what is this partnership and use of PowerMax going to be able to deliver for you? Not revealing secret sauce, but how is this differentiating where you're able to offer your customers? >> I think we should talk about how Rackspace differentiates themselves from other players in the market. >> Yes. >> I think that's a key part of the solution. >> Was just going to go there. So Rackspace has a long history of being a managed service provider to customers, and traditionally it's been the managed hosting space, everything was dedicated. And increasingly through our acquisitions of the last couple of years, our portfolio has broadened. Everything from collocation to private clouds, to public cloud capabilities to hybrid solutions, and an increased focus on application security, ERP, digital applications, and so our customers are coming to us with this wide range of platforms and going, "I'm struggling with this transformation, "How do I do this, What's the right form-factor? "How do I look at my applications?" So increasingly, Rackspace has built out capabilities around a professional services arm, to help customers navigate that transformation. Is this a really legacy application that should go on one of our collocation facilities? Is this a high-secure, really highly governed, heavy compliance-requirement that should go under private cloud, or should we look at a public cloud systems? And increasingly, customers are saying, "I am needing to stay in the private cloud", the customer you're talking to, "because of security, "because I need to be able to guarantee performance, "because I need to have visibility "and configurability of my solution." So this gives us all of those. It gives us the ability to have a secure, single tenant or multi tenant environment. It gives us the ability to have that high-performance. It gives the ability to federate out that visibility to give customers a cloud-like control, a cloud-like visibility, or I'd say even beyond cloud-like visibility, despite going through a service provider and not being able to put their hands on the infrastructure themselves. >> Yeah, I would even extend that, because again, you've got the technology side, but then the other thing I think that people really appreciate in partnering with Rackspace is the amount of expertise that they bring to the table. Expertise, not just in the technology side, but understanding different industries, and different customer environments, and what are the best practices, and how do we set things up and make sure that we're not just meeting expectations, but we're exceeding what those users expect to see from an IT perspective. I know that that's a big part of why people go to Rackspace. >> And Dell EMC is making the infrastructure easier for us as we move up the stack. We, like our customers, don't want to spend a lot of time in the hardware tier and the infrastructure tier. I'm seeing some real iCharts out here around all the different technologies; containerization, various types of databases, big data. Just absolute iCharts that on some of these very large screens you still can't read right. So the technologies that are on top that are really driving value are becoming more complex. That's where we want to focus our time and energy, and let the infrastructure play a larger role in self-managing. >> That's actually a really interesting segue maybe into the bigger industry for a second. I think if the industry goes in hype cycles, in the public conversation anyway, and if you would have just picked up some magazines or whatever, do they still print magazines? Some websites a year or two ago, you'd think that hyper-converged architectures were going to eat the world, one size was going to fit all, and in the cloud and on prep. In the meantime, in the background for many people, but front of mind, they're chugging along. There's a huge portfolio at Dell. A new Dell EMC never stepped back from saying "We have a portfolio." And one of those tiers is this VMAX, and now the next generation, this PowerMax. I don't know, Scott, can you talk a little bit about to the needs of those customers and applications that have always been there, and how you're addressing them? >> I will tell you this, the thing that we're all clearly seeing is that IT is becoming consumerized. From a user perspective, they just expect things to work. They expect everything to be like a mobile device, and it's just that simple, and if I need an app, I download the app, and it gets on there, and if I need to replace it, everything just all magically happens. The analogy is when they look at IT from a user perspective, They see the duck on the pond, and the duck is just kind of moving along slowly. What they don't see are the things that folks like Sean and Rackspace are doing where underneath that, you've got these feet that are just mad pedaling away to keep the duck moving forward. Now, I think that that's the thing that's changed, is we want to make sure that we are delivering the technology in the way users want to be able to consume that, but there's still a lot of heavy lifting, there's still a lot of complexity, there's still a lot of core infrastructure that happens underneath that, but the consumer doesn't want to be exposed to that. Matter of fact, most consumers aren't even aware That that's happening under the covers. It's in the cloud, it just works! >> You talked about the iCharts, here, everywhere, because there is so much complexity as more and more technologies need to be integrated. How does Rackspace help demystify some of that, and make things more simple for your customers in any industry, especially as data privacy and security are household terms now, and everybody being really wrapped around that, how do you help make it less complex? >> Dell EMC, we have a massive portfolio. And so everything they have got, everything VMware has got, everything that Microsoft has got, we support all of that plus networking infrastructure, plus security, it is a very broad capability to be able to help customers meet their needs. And what we're seeing is, we're seeing customers coming to us and going, "I just don't have the capability "to rationalize all this, I need help." We're also seeing customers that are pivoting the other way, that have gone, "I went to public cloud buying into the economics "and that everything was going to be great. "What I'm finding out is that I can just shift back "to private cloud, it gets some better economics, "depending upon workload, "depending upon whether it's always on, "the performance requirements, security." So we're seeing a lot of changes. There's no one-size-fits-all, it's not everybody's going public cloud, like was the big mantra two, three years ago. So what Rackspace has done is a few things. I mentioned earlier, we've grown through acquisition. We've expanded our footprint into new services around collocation into Asia-Pacific region, into state and federal government capabilities that came through an acquisition of Datapipe. We've moved into more the application management space through the acquisition of TriCore. Customers struggling with "How do I run ERP? "I've got to consolidate my data centers "from 25 data centers, I want to get down to three. "I need to move everything to a managed service provider, "but you have to be able to help me with these "mission critical applications, "it's no longer enough just to be "at the infrastructure tier." And so wrapping around all this, we've created a very large professional services capability, because going to a customer and saying, "What do you want?" "What can we sell you?" Is not the right way. Going to the customer these days, You're having to say "What is your business paying? "What can we help you with, "and how can we supplement your teams "and provide the expertise to be "able to get you there?" In areas like data center consolidation, cloud transformation, Dev bombs enabled, and big data capabilities. >> Last question guys, in the last 30 seconds or so, early tester of PowerMax, longtime Dell EMC partner, as we've talked about, what are your expectations as this thing rolls out? >> We have very high expectations for it. We always have high expectations of next generation. Last year we were here talking about unity for some of our mid tier customers now looking to PowerMax looking for a real high-end enterprise-type customers. Our expectation is that's going to simplify our management. It's going to empower our internal users and our customers more. And then we haven't even talked about the efficiencies that's going to bring in the data center in terms of the smaller amounts of space and power and cooling that are needed for something of this scale. So for us, data center is a very large operating expense. So the more we can put in a smaller space, the better off it is for a second on with it. >> Awesome. Well guys, thanks so much for stopping by theCUBE again, sharing what's going on with Rackspace, the continuation of the Dell EMC partnership. We appreciate your time. >> Glad to be here, thank you. >> Thank you. >> We want to thank you for watching theCUBE, again, we're live, day three of Dell Technologies World. I'm Lisa Martin for John Troyer. Stick around, we'll be right back with our next guest. (techno music playing)

Published Date : May 2 2018

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by Dell EMC and its ecosystem partners. and back to theCUBE. and talking with us about what you guys are up to lately. We are interested to learn about what you guys are doing and the capabilities it brings to us, is the ability to do provisioning of storage So the A.I. capability, the ability to do tiering and one of the marquee features on this new release and to be able to share that up with their users going to be able to deliver for you? from other players in the market. It gives the ability to federate out is the amount of expertise that they bring to the table. and let the infrastructure play and now the next generation, this PowerMax. and if I need to replace it, as more and more technologies need to be integrated. "and provide the expertise to be the efficiencies that's going to bring in the data center the continuation of the Dell EMC partnership. We want to thank you for watching theCUBE, again,

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Peter FitzGibbon, Rackspace & Ajay Patel, VMware | VMworld 2017


 

>> Narrator: Live from Las Vegas, it's the Cube. Covering VM World 2017. Brought to you by VM Ware and its ecosystem partners. >> I'm Stu Miniman, here with my cohost Keith Townsend, and you're watching wall to wall coverage of VM World 2017 on the Cube here in Las Vegas. You know, third day of programming. We've done so many interviews. A lot of people went to parties last night, you know up early for lots of executive meetings, but you know we go strong through the whole show because we've got great guests, so happy to welcome to the program first time guest, Peter FitzGibbon, Vice President and General Manager with Rackspace, and welcome back to the program Ajay Patel with VM Ware. >> Great to be here. >> Alright, so Peter, you know, Rackspace, interesting transformation over the last few years. You know we've had the Cube at OpenStack for a bunch of years. I've heard almost no discussion of OpenStack this week at the show. >> Man: I'm not complaining. >> I talked to Rackers though, at Reinvent. You have, you know, kind of reinvented the business there, but the VM partnership is one that's been going on for many years. Some people I talk to don't understand. I mean this is a sizable business that you've been doing. I said, you know, let's measure the Rackspace managed VM Ware business against the entire revenue stream of OpenStack outside of what RackSpace does, you know, and it's an interesting comparison. >> So RackSpace continues through the multi cloud company, offering our customers the choice and flexibility they want, so our OpenStack practice continues to grow strong and we continue to invest there, as we do in our VM Ware practice, which we have a great partnership with. Ajay and his team, over the last 10 plus years. >> Also for us, the partnership's only growing stronger. If you walk around WM World with all the banners, you've walked into the airports, the investment RackSpace is making around VM Ware technology, I couldn't be much more happier, so thank you for that. >> So Peter, to Stu's point, RackSpace has been part of the VM Ware community for a long time. I've run into a couple of Rackers on the show floor, talked through kind of what they're doing with their feet on the ground, great work. Can you talk through the relationship with the customer to this point? I mean RackSpace is known for fanatical support. How has that conversation changed over the past three years or so as we've gone through this changing VM Ware strategy to where we're at today? >> Yeah, we're continuing to try to support the customer on whichever technology they really want to land on, so it starts with the planning and analysis phase that we sit with customers and analyze their work loads and try to figure out what's the best fit for them outside of determining is it OpenStack, is it VM Ware? Is it our fanatical support on top of AWS? From a VM Ware perspective, we're really helping people to determine how to move out of the data center, or at least not extend the data centers as they have them right now. We recently launched our RackSpace private cloud powered by VM Ware Cloud foundations. It went to general availability last week, so that's a global effort that we're discussing with our clients and it's proving a very attractive options for those looking for an alternative to their own private cloud and moving to hosting private cloud model. >> Peter, that operating experience is one of the things that customers have been challenged with, and RackSpace, you know, known for, you know, they know how to do this. Talk to us about some of this journey as to how your customers are seeing things. You know RackSpace has had a few different private cloud options you talk about. You've given your customers choice, but what's different now in 2017 and what's the mindset of your customers? >> Yeah, we continue to offer 24 by seven, 365 fanatical support. It's what we really see as our true differentiator in the market, or we have 150 certified VM Ware Rackers on the team that really go beyond, above and beyond every single day for these customers, and looking at not just how to migrate into our private cloud, but how to optimize them when we're there, when they've landed on a VM Ware private hosted cloud solution, how do we really optimize it and really get the full value of the technology? And these are expensive and difficult technologies to use, so you want to make sure people are really getting the true value out of NSX and VSAN, and now with VCF, which we're really excited about. >> Yeah, for us, it's, you know, as you were speaking, I mean the biggest challenge and the constraints exclude resources. Having 150 specialists out there with fanatical support with the great VM Ware technology. And in some ways the VM Ware cloud announcement is kind of making the awareness that you have a cloud stack, that you can now get through, you know RackSpace private cloud, so for us it's really all boats are rising as a result, and not having the skilled capability to then accelerate deployment and delivery and operations is pretty exciting. >> So Ajay, can you talk a little bit about working with RackSpace specifically because RackSpace has a tradition of having a very pronounced way of supporting customers, whether you're a Fortune 500 or you're a small ma and pa shop, RackSpace is going to come with full engineering might and help build the most reliable solution, and that comes with kind of, I imagine, a predisposed position on something like VCF, VM Ware Cloud Foundation. What has it been like to engineer? >> I'll speak the best thing from one of the joint customers that we had the opportunity to be on a panel with, Show Tell, right, and it was interesting to say how Show Tell said RackSpace is part of their operating team, so they enrolled up front in terms of having a partner who can help them with the choice, they made the selection based on the excellent support, but more importantly, they're just an extension of the operating team, and being able to have a single team manage both the on prem and the cloud without having to build a separate kind of cloud team, that was a critical piece of this decision, so kind of this common operating model, which they seamlessly augment with skillset, you know, that was really what resonated for Show Tell and was the reason they chose. >> The operating model is something I was just going to go to in terms of really helping people how they're going to live in this multi cloud world across multiple different technology stacks, and that's what our fanatical support is intended to be, to really be an extension of their, of a homegrown IT team so we can really get the full benefit of these complicated technologies. >> Alright, Peter, you talk multi cloud, and one of the things we talk to customers is a lot of times they say they have a cloud strategy, but how they got there wasn't necessarily as plan full as they might have liked. I had somebody writing for Wikibon a couple years ago said we have composite cloud because you kind of look at it and you always said, you know, do I have Amazon? Yeah, everybody does, you know. Oh I've got some app that somebody needed on GCP. RackSpace is a manage service provider for a lot of different pieces. How do you help customers get their arms around it, you know, and you know, maybe talk, the VM Ware on Amazon, the VMC stuff, how do you look at that in the future, how does that tie into kind of the skillset that your team has? >> So we often see customers coming in with that composite cloud situation where they're like we think we're multi cloud, but we're not truly because they don't have a defined strategy about why they put certain workloads in certain places, it just grew up organically, often through lines of business. VMC is a really exciting offer for us and we're going to be launching it in early 2018. It really gives more choice for customers in terms of where they're going to run their workloads, be it running them in different availability zones that RackSpace doesn't cover or potentially used as a DR solution. >> So let's dive into that composite cloud space, and I really love that comment. What, cloud, multi cloud is one of those things, you don't know you don't have a multi cloud until you don't know you don't have a multi cloud. What are some of the surefire indicators that customers are in where a composite cloud experience or environment versus a true multi cloud? Like what is that conversation like? >> Man: What's a good best practice, yeah? >> Well I think there isn't a lot of good best practices from our customers' point of view. I think they often come in and we lay out their, look at their architectures, look at their different applications, and they're often just, central IT doesn't know where most of it is running half the time, so it's really like okay, let's look at each part of this and decide for you what's the best fit, where should it go? Should we be putting something on Azure or Azure Stack? Should it be better suited to OpenStack? Or is it, they're very familiar with VM Ware and they want to continue to leverage VM Ware either on a host model or internally in their own data center. >> What we're learning is you just don't have visibility, so the biggest interest and the demand when we launched our cross cloud or cloud services, the notion of having visibility of what's running where. And the second question is how much is it costing me, and what can I move and what are the data security leakages that I want to put in place because these things weren't controlled. So those are kind of just knowing, right, knowing where your data is, knowing where your workloads are and how much they're costing you. That's the first baseline they're looking for help on. Once they've got that, then they're like okay, how do I still provide some level of self service and control to the end user while putting some structure by which I can go to a multi cloud strategy? So that's the journey we're just about to see with IT coming into play. >> Peter, I have to mention human interest viewpoint on the ecosystem. RackSpace, I think I understand better now than a few years ago what services you did. VM Ware just launched a bunch of SAS offerings. There were some launched last year. I can't count how many companies are helping people with cloud cost management, licensing, you know, you name it, 12 different aspects to take bites out of this giant elephant of multi cloud and do that. What are the biggest pain points you're hearing from customers? How do you help advise some of them and bring some of the pieces together? >> And it's not even what we see from a customer standpoint. You think of RackSpace, we have to integrate all of these clouds into our own internal system, so we get to experience it firsthand as the customer how we create unified billing systems, how we have unified monitoring, how we integrate all their own legacy systems to deal with these clouds, so we effectively learn from integrating into our own systems, then can advise our customers on the pain points we've seen and bring them on that journey to help them through their true multi cloud approach. >> So if we blow it out and a customer comes to you and they want a multi cloud strategy, and you know, you kind of show them the ugly, you show them the truth for where they're at, what's the next step, like from a practical tactical perspective? What's like step one to helping with SAS applications and for viability for each one of the RackSpace offerings? >> Yeah, so we have a framework which we call PADMO. It's plan, analyze, design, migrate, optimize. It took me a second to get the last part out, and trying to, that planning stage is really where we sit with the customer aside, okay, what does your environment look like and why is it that way? Were things made in a conscious decision or did it just happen organically? So we try to figure out what did they do intentionally and what, what just grew up organically? And move from there into designing or analyzing what's best fit for the different cloud strategies, then start designing it, migrating it, and then effectively optimizing it when they land on RackSpace and show the value of our 24 seven, 365 fanatical support. >> For us, it's about, for us the technology part, and we want to enable the core VM Foundation, but we also believe that network connectivity's the next big thing, so things like NSXT is something we're already having conversation with, like how are we going to stitch these clouds together, how do we make it more software defined so as we move towards this kind of policy driven, you know management abstraction, how do we then open up the different clouds and service that capability? So that's really the next journey for both of us from VCM, or VM Ware Cloud Foundation to the broader multi cloud strategy. >> And Ajay, your, you know, cloud provider partners, what about services? Is there any joint engagement or things that VM Ware helps write that are? >> So one of the big service for all, we're kind of coming together is around DR. Consistently the easy step to get to a hybrid or a leverage cloud is disaster recovery. What if we made that a native feature of the VM Ware stack? We could have our customer right click on a VM and protected by all these service provider clouds. That's an example of something we're kind of trying to generalize. Now on each of them, the complexity of operating it, the scale, the visibility, the service levels, those are unique to each partner, but we're trying to make sure that the platform gives you this basic capability to capture workloads. >> I feel like DR is essential to everyone's road map right now. Most of our customers, maybe all of our customers are requiring DR when they land on RackSpace, and we're really looking at that on our 2018 roadmap to see how we make DR, as a service, consistently part of the offering. >> So what works well and what doesn't work well? When you go through that initial setup complication, so DR's a great example of oh, this is low hanging fruit. We either don't have a DR that's working or we don't have DR at all, and there's kind of this, you know, when you whiteboard it, it works extremely well. What are some of the practical business challenges that you see customers experience on that journey? >> There's definitely some easy options to move first for customers. DR is a common one that we see, DevTest as well in terms of okay, how can you test out our environments and do it in a low risk way? There's always going to be those more core applications, those mission critical applications that people will wait till the end until they migrate, so let's migrate them to RackSpace private cloud and see how it operates, maybe as a DR environment, or as a DEV environment test environment, and then as they build confidence and see what fanatical support we offer, then they start moving more mission critical workloads. >> I share the same. Tier one usually is high availability, high design, high touch, tier two often ignored, too expensive, too hard. We're trying to go after the tier two or tier three apps and just provide a convenient cloud economics for protecting those workloads. >> Peter, I'm curious, how often are customers trying one thing and then moving into another? You know I get calls all the time, you know, data gravity of course is a big issue, but you know if I'm building an application, sometimes it's like oh wait, you know maybe this isn't the best place to live. Lots of customers, you know, will build one place and run production in another place. You know we've seen that. How much is mobility in turn, is lock in still a challenge? You know, how much, what's real and what's not? >> I think lock in is still a challenge, but we're certainly looking into how we're helping our customers move from one cloud to another. We continue work in our different business units across RackSpace, be it VM Ware, AWS, Azure Open Stack, and see how we can offer flexibility for customers. When they realize they've gone too far on one or another, we're not seeing specific use cases of everybody moving from one to another, it's more of a pick and choose, and so we're helping customers migrate from one to another as needed. >> So I'd be interested to know what, not percentage, what type of customer kind of has this hybrid IT or hybrid cloud approach in RackSpace where they build cloud native applications and then connect them to a VCF or VM Ware private cloud, and I think more specifically, I think the question that I would like to get at is that a real thing that, not necessarily real thing, is that impacting friction between the public cloud with cloud native applications and your ability to manage that and add that fanatical support in the developer looking to consume that, to integrate it to VM Ware? >> I'm not seeing that friction between the different technologies. I think, at RackSpace we try work across all of them to offer the choice to our clients and our customers as much as possible, make sure we really offer them the best choice and put the workloads in where they really are best suited to run. >> And opposition is you know container and micro sourced architecture are going to provide an excellent frameworks and tools. The maturity's still in the works, and our goal is to say can we make, you know, either VM or physical, be it the best place for deploying, and what are the tools and capability you need to provide? So for us, networking, security, those are kind of fundamental problems regardless if you're building a cloud native app or a traditional app, and how do we insert our value into the equation versus trying to own the whole solution, right? >> Peter FitzGibbon, thank you so much for getting the update on RackSpace. Ajay, always a pleasure. I'm trying to remember what the five time award is. We'll talk to John Furrier, make sure we have it ready for the next time we have you on. For Keith Townsend, I'm Stu Miniman. This is VM World 2017 and you are watching the Cube. >> Man: Thank you guys. (upbeat instrumental music)

Published Date : Aug 30 2017

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by VM Ware so happy to welcome to the program first time guest, Alright, so Peter, you know, Rackspace, I said, you know, let's measure the Rackspace managed Ajay and his team, over the last 10 plus years. so thank you for that. How has that conversation changed over the past three years and moving to hosting private cloud model. Peter, that operating experience is one of the things and really get the full value of the technology? and not having the skilled capability and that comes with kind of, I imagine, the opportunity to be on a panel with, Show Tell, of really helping people how they're going to live and one of the things we talk to customers and we're going to be launching it in early 2018. and I really love that comment. and decide for you what's the best fit, where should it go? and control to the end user and bring some of the pieces together? and bring them on that journey to help them through Yeah, so we have a framework which we call PADMO. and we want to enable the core VM Foundation, Consistently the easy step to get to a hybrid to see how we make DR, as a service, and there's kind of this, you know, when you whiteboard it, DR is a common one that we see, I share the same. You know I get calls all the time, you know, and see how we can offer flexibility for customers. and put the workloads in where they really and our goal is to say can we make, you know, for the next time we have you on. Man: Thank you guys.

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Bryan Thompson, Rackspace - Red Hat Summit 2017


 

>> Man: Live from Boston, Massachusetts, it's theCUBE! Covering Red Hat Summit 2017, brought to you by Red Hat. (energetic music) >> Bryan, good to see you again. >> Bryan: Thanks for having me. >> You're welcome. I said, "Good to see you again." We thought we had you on before, but maybe not. But anyway-- >> Bryan: I have lots of Rackers. >> We feel like Rackspace is one of ours, with theCUBE alone. Red Hat Summit, obviously a big show for the industry. Big show for Rackspace. But your focus is on OpenStack, you're the general manager of the OpenStack business. You guys started OpenStack, I mean, you and some others. But it was really the seed and the vision of Rackspace. So bring us up to date as to where you are now. >> Yeah, I see your point. It kind of goes back to 2010, where Rackspace and NASA essentially co-invented OpenStack and opened it up as a community project, and made it open source. Again, the intent was, how do you help leverage the innovation of a community to help build cloud infrastructure? At that time, it was really focused on public and private cloud. Rackspace over the years, certainly, our public cloud was built on OpenStack and we continue to do a lot of that focus in upstream innovation and contributing in, how do you make this platform scale very massively? Over the last several years, where we've seen great adoption of OpenStack specifically, though, is in private cloud solutions. We have built a practice over the last several years building, deploying, and operating private clouds for customers in our data centers, in their data centers, third party data centers. And that's where we've seen a lot of growth in that. >> Bryan, I wonder if you could help us unpack that a little bit. I know you and I are going to be back here in Boston down the road at the Hynes for OpenStack Summit next week. But when you hear the general discussion, OpenStack has changed a lot in the last few years. So there are people that throw stones and are like, "Oh, well, it's done, it's over." Sounds like you've got a good, robust business. Tell us where are people using it, how are they using it, what is it replacing, or helping them grow their business? >> OpenStack itself, if you think of this arc of an open source project in the rapid innovation, how quickly it's matured, over the last couple years OpenStack itself has really become a solid platform. Infrastructure as a service. In fact, I think I heard a comment as of the Barcelona summit where an analyst or media or somebody said, "OpenStack is now boring." Because a lot of the drama or rapid change has really come out of it, many of the core projects have very much matured. You do hear, "Is OpenStack dead? "Are people going straight to containers on bare metal? "Is this the end of the space?" In practice, we are seeing it is still, how am I consuming or building cloud-native apps? I'm consuming cloud services, and certainly in a private cloud context I'm looking for that power and agility that I see from a public cloud, but delivered in a private cloud form factor. We're still seeing huge adoption for OpenStack in that use case. >> Well, there's a lot of misconceptions about OpenStack over the years, and part of it is it was just sort of put out there and said, "Okay, let's see what happens." But I remember when it went public, John Furrier, other co-host of theCUBE, called it a Hail Mary against Amazon. >> Bryan: Yeah. >> Okay, well, in a way, people needed some kind of alternative. And it's really emerged as the only, correct me if I'm wrong, really the only open platform to build private clouds on. >> Bryan: Yeah. >> And when you say you hear, "Oh, is OpenStack it?", you hear that from a lot of the legacy enterprise companies who are sort of doing their own proprietary private cloud. To your point, it's become a platform with momentum. Further thoughts on that? >> Yeah, I think to your point that those that are really saying it's dead and they're doing their own proprietary cloud, that's really just virtualization at scale. They're not really consuming cloud services in the same framework that OpenStack delivers it. It is still a vibrant and growing platform. We're seeing it as the platform of choice for not just, how do I move virtualized workloads, but even for containers and other orchestrated solutions on top of that as well. It really is this underpinning technology that people are consuming for private and hybrid types of scenarios. >> Red Hat would argue, I wonder if you could weigh in on this, that in order for you to build a true hybrid cloud, we use the term true private cloud, we can extend that to true hybrid cloud, you've got to have a sort of modern infrastructure that's open on-prem. Or else you're going to be just force-fitting square pegs in round holes. >> I think there's a lot of validity to that. Especially when you think about the concept of portability or leveraging moving applications between different platforms. If I have a truly siloed infrastructure, I don't have that capability. Whereas if you look at leveraging these open platforms of OpenStack and the tooling that I could use on top of that, cloud forms and ether services, and certainly as I move into paths and containers, I now have much more portability on where I can deploy and operate these different technologies. >> Bryan, congratulations. You guys are an Innovation Award winner. Can you talk a little bit about the solutions and what you guys are working closely with Red Hat to give to your customers? >> It's really exciting. We were awarded one of their Innovator of the Year awards for cloud infrastructure. The way this came about is, Rackspace and Red Hat have a mutual customer that really came to us where they were looking for a private cloud delivered as a service. They're looking for the operational expertise that Rackspace brings in operating these technologies at scale, but were looking for a fully certified Red Hat stack. At that time, we didn't have an offering around the Red Hat OpenStack platform. We obviously have a long-standing relationship with Red Hat, and support a number of Red Hat technologies across our businesses, but in the OpenStack space we had not productized or brought to market a main service around the Red Hat OSP Platform. And so we partnered very closely with them to bring this solution to market. But it's not as simple as just saying, "Voilà, now we have our Red Hat offering." Our focus is really to bring the operators' perspective to it. So we spent eighteen months in total, if you think about from when we really kicked off this effort with them, deploying and operating and scaling and testing, and going through all the stages of patching, and upgrading and running different workload profiles and really, scalability testing. And feeding back a lot of innovation into the Red Hat team. It led to a number of enhancements that have come in later releases of RHEL OSP, which allowed us to really get to a platform that we could stand behind, provide as a main service and deliver a four nines availability SLA around it. This is the offering that we brought together. We're being recognized for some of those innovations that we fed back into it. We consume their Distributed Continuous Integration environment, so through the DCI platform we execute over 1500 tests on a daily basis, which allows us to deliver the latest release of RHEL OSP to our customers within two weeks of a given major release. We made a number of networking plainly-needed enhancements in how can we break out the bouncing from the control plane? Things that allow us to deploy and operate these solutions at a much larger scale. >> Maybe if you could speak to one of the challenges we've heard for OpenStack for years is, it's kind of complicated, and how do we do this? And I have to think, the Red Hat service and support model partnered with the fanatical support from Rackspace should be able to address some of those concerns for customers. >> That's honestly where I think we've found the most success with customers is, OpenStack itself is a very powerful tool. But it is complex. It's not something that you're just going to download and run on a VM in your laptop to gain experience with it. >> Stu: Built by rocket scientists! What do you expect? >> Literally, quite literally! So the complexity does continue to be a barrier to adoption for many enterprises. That's where our focus of being the operators and delivering it as a service has been so key for many customers. And then, given that fully compliant or certified stack from Red Hat, the software assurance that comes with that has been a great fit to a lot of customers who really grow. >> You mentioned platform as a service. Stu, earlier, you made the comment of The Platform Formerly Known As PaaS. There's a lot of discussion about PaaS, well, it's really not here anymore. Can you guys, at least start with Bryan, maybe Stu, you can chime in, what's happening with PaaS? Is it getting subsumed? I often say infrastructure's a service plus, or a SaaS minus. What's happening with PaaS? 'Cause when you talk to companies like Oracle, it's like, "Oh, our PaaS business is rockin'!" So what's really happening out there? >> I'm sure you have thoughts on this, too. I believe that PaaS is still a very strong plane. That's where many organizations, now they're embracing cloud and cloud-native development, are looking to move up the step and leverage more fabric-like services. Things that a PaaS can provide them, that integrated development environment. How do I make it easy to consume different data services? Removing the coarse-grained building blocks that I would otherwise have to orchestrate or manage myself. So we do see a lot of adoption for that. It's kind of that progression, as I'm moving up, I'm moving into cloud-native designs and architectures. Now I'm looking to really empower and enable my developers to consume these fabric services. Moving up the stack. >> Comment I'll make on it is, if you look at what's happening with the container space, you heard about what Red Hat talked, is how they take that piece. I want to be able to take my application, have how I built that and have some flexibility as to where that lives. And that was one of the core values of what PaaS was going to offer because, if I want to do Red Hat as the AMP with OpenShift, I want to do it on-premises, I want to do it in AWS, I want to do it with Google, I have that flexibility. Maybe we're just not calling it PaaS anymore. >> Yeah, I think that's good. I think if you look at the move to containerization, there are still those other components or services that I need to consume. How am I solving for identity and networking and storage and all these other components that go into it? This is where some of the PaaS frameworks can help that. >> Just one piece. Rackspace has a really interesting portfolio of services. You're partnering with all the big cloud guys. You've got private cloud. What do your customers think when you say hybrid cloud, or multi-cloud, how does that fit in to where they are today and where they're making their strategy for cloud going forward? >> Again, Rackspace does represent a very large portfolio. We are the managed cloud company. I obviously am very focused on our private cloud and OpenStack, but we have as practices, we help enable customers to either migrate to, deploy or operate on Amazon web services. Certainly, the Azure platform, and recently we announced Google Compute, providing support for that. We have customers that are coming to us looking for help in architecting or moving to these. But the reality is almost all customers, and they touched on that during the keynote here, we live in a multi-vendor strategy or multi-cloud strategy. Certain clouds, either geographically or feature-set-wise are better suited for certain applications or workloads. Many of our customers are living in that hybrid cloud world, where I'm leveraging multiple different platforms depending on workload placement or other rules to that. Where Rackspace has really stepped it is providing that cloud expertise and helping them leverage that, providing tooling to help them deploy and operate in these different environments. In some cases where it's portability, move the same application around, but oftentimes it's really workload placement and how do I more effectively use it. >> We were talking in our open about the bromide from Marc Andreessen in Software's Eating The World, and the implication, tying that into Benioff's statement that there'll be more SaaS companies coming out of non-tech companies than tech companies. You're seeing some big SaaS tech companies like Workday and Salesforce, and Infor's always been there, moving to the Amazon cloud. And others who are maybe saying, "Well, I'm not sure I want to move to the Amazon Cloud." So my specific question is, relative to SaaS takeup on things like OpenStack, what are you seeing there? >> Ironically, certainly in private cloud, that's probably one of our biggest areas of growth is companies that are launching SaaS platforms for all the same reasons that they would be using an AWS to back that, right? They have the agility and rapid growth and elasticity that they can build into it, but they're running their platform, and depending on HR, you mentioned Workday, we have another great example. Ultimate software. They run their platform. Again, it's HR management and other services they want to run in a private cloud context, but deploying that framework where they can leverage cloud-native deployment. OpenStack has been a great fit for that, and helped them grow and scale. >> What's next for you guys in your world of OpenStack? Can you give us a little road map, and what we should expect going forward? >> For us, very specifically, if you focus on the IaaS layer, we continue to be very focused on operational efficiencies. How are we helping customers get the right unit economics out of a private cloud? Getting to greater densities, higher performance, more optimal usage of their cloud as we bring more visibility to actual capacity planning and capacity management, and make sure they're really leveraging or growing their cloud as they can. And then certainly from a feature set where we continue to move up and adopt these other services. I know we touched on earlier on the PaaS. This is an area where we're starting to get a lot of customer demand saying, "Can you help us in this area? "Are there things that you could be doing?" Going straight to native Kubernetes or looking at the different PaaS frameworks like OpenShift or Cloud Foundry. These are areas that we're starting to work more and more to potentially bring services to help customers really leverage these platforms. >> Paul Cormier was talking about how, you know, early days of the Cloud everybody thought everything was going to Amazon and so forth. But everything is going to the Cloud. Whether it's a private cloud or a public cloud, I know somebody told me the other day they're running an application in VMS. Okay, so some stuff never dies. But generally, the world will be cloud. Maybe we'll stop using the words like cloud and digital. Look at a camera! It's not a digital camera. Your thoughts on that? You buy that? >> No, I think you're spot-on. There's a long tale, there's still a lot of AS/400 out there. Although with OpenPOWER, maybe you could make the argument it's coming to OpenStack anyway. It is. If you think about any greenfield development, it's all being done in cloud-native ways. If you look at folks coming out of school and new application development, nobody's developing in the context of bare metal or legacy client/server apps that are built in that framework. I think even as enterprises continue to replatform services, they're moving into that cloud way. So they can take the long-term benefits of agility and cost-savings they're looking for. So we'll become ubiquitous. You're right, at some point, we're going to stop calling it cloud. It's just the way you're consuming infrastructure. >> Final question I have for you. A piece that I hadn't heard enough about when it comes to OpenStack is that kind of application modernization and replatforming. How does OpenStack fit into that discussion with your customers? I'm worried we talked in the keynote this morning about, it's like, oh, okay. We're going to do new stuff, but we might move the old stuff. We're not just moving the old stuff and leaving it, right? >> You're absolutely right. If you think of enterprises that are adopting or going all-in on OpenStack, they have, if you go back to the pets vs. cattle analogy everybody knows, they have lots of pets that they need to care for. We've looked at it and we've actually worked very hard with many customers on, how do I leverage things like Ceph to back Nova, and help bring things like live migration and other services that help OpenStack still cater to those pets and not force them in a full cloud-native model. How can I still deliver some amount of resiliency and failover in the infrastructure so the app doesn't have to be aware of it, and that way they can have one environment to run both new cloud development, but also still care for those legacy apps. >> Excellent. Bryan, thanks very much for coming to theCUBE. It was great to have you. >> Thank you guys. >> Enjoy the rest of the show. >> Bryan: Thank you. >> Keep it right there, everybody. We'll be back with our next guest at theCUBE. We're live from Red Hat Summit in Boston. Be right back. (energetic music)

Published Date : May 3 2017

SUMMARY :

brought to you by Red Hat. I said, "Good to see you again." So bring us up to date as to where you are now. Again, the intent was, how do you help leverage Bryan, I wonder if you could help us as of the Barcelona summit where an analyst over the years, and part of it is it was just sort of really the only open platform to build private clouds on. And when you say you hear, "Oh, is OpenStack it?", Yeah, I think to your point that those that in order for you to build a true hybrid cloud, and the tooling that I could use on top of that, and what you guys are working closely with Red Hat have a mutual customer that really came to us And I have to think, the Red Hat service and support the most success with customers is, So the complexity does continue to be 'Cause when you talk to companies like Oracle, I believe that PaaS is still a very strong plane. I have that flexibility. or services that I need to consume. to where they are today and where they're We have customers that are coming to us looking for help and the implication, tying that into Benioff's and elasticity that they can build into it, on the IaaS layer, we continue to be early days of the Cloud everybody thought make the argument it's coming to OpenStack anyway. We're going to do new stuff, but we might move the old stuff. so the app doesn't have to be aware of it, It was great to have you. We'll be back with our next guest at theCUBE.

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Aaron Sullivan, Rackspace | OpenPOWER Summit 2016


 

hi this is David flora back at the open power foundation conference here in San Jose and with me I've got Erin Sullivan who is a distinguished engineer at Rackspace welcome our thank you so what do you think of the conference so far it's amazing it's grown so much in the last year 15 designs to almost 60 in a year and lots of system launches yeah very impressed well one of the things that has been announced today which was caught my eye in a big big way was the agreement so the announcement that you and Google have can you paint a little more put a little more light on that announcement yeah sure so Rackspace and Google started working together when Rackspace was developing barrel I of course Google had already had their system available at the time and our collaboration just on what we had with barrel I was very positive we were just kind of looking to trade notes and you know share our experience and a few months ago we got back in touch and said hey this was ministers posit enough we should think about doing the next one together from the start and so that's basically what we're doing now we're going to do a power 9 system that comes in multiple mechanical form factors but just one motherboard and we're going to like we did with barrel I we're going to contribute that to open compute when we're finished out of the Open Compute foundation part of the OpenStack yes heart of the open power founder that's right open everything open ever yeah yeah excellent so what about the barreleye that you also announced some things about today can you what is barrel i and what's what's what's different about it so so paralyzed named after a fish that's got a transparent body most of our servers are named after we thought having a server that was fully open would be great to have that name barrel I just entered its first data center shipments it's headed to our Virginia data centers right now and in a few months we expect we will begin providing services to customers on it so that's the progress on barrel I so far we contributed to open compute about 2-3 months ago now and it was accepted so the specifications are online and if you look around the show floor here you will see there are other companies that have put their brand on it or something else and are also taking at the market which is exactly what we hope for great well I've got a question which is why have you why have you put these resources into barrel I and in the future into the power 9 etc what are you looking for that's different about open power that for example you couldn't get with a standard x86 server yeah so I know it gets to be tired and people get tired of hearing the word open but really even with open compute and OpenStack the freedom that comes with developing in that particular universe is really significant before open power even started there were parts of the system we really wish we could get into in an open way where we could develop and share instead of just doing it all on our own and having open power come in the first place fit that but then we also have this problem this Moore's Law problem and the types of changes that we're going to have to implement as an industry to continue to accelerate and and and get higher performance computing and more efficient computing over the next year's they're really huge challenges they go from the chips all the way to the top of the stack and if you don't have the chip part open and you don't have the firmware part open it becomes really difficult to collaborate you can't bring to bear the sort of force of the world software developers onto it you end up in these little silos and niches so for us beryl I provides a lot of value as a business and it has a great influence on the industry at large and so wills IOUs the power 9 system Google but it also is there as a platform for developers to begin to start wrapping their minds around these new problems and opportunities that we have and if it's not done in the open these types of software aren't really scalable across the whole industry that that's a very interesting answer indeed and as you say um does laura has come to a screeching halt from the point of Mount of power per CPU is still going on in terms of the number of transistors etc that you can have what are the what are the things you as a distinguished engineer what are the things that really are most important about the power architecture that allow you to develop these new ways of doing things yeah I think it's it depends on the type of your business you're in but in our business I think in many cloud service providers and in some other environments certainly some HPC and a lot of enterprise the performance of a single core is still really important and it will continue to be for as long as we can keep getting more performance out of a single core so power provided a great platform with a very powerful core and it also has a huge number of threads per core so you get a little bit of the best of both worlds there and you need a really powerful core you have it if you want to spread your load really wide over a more cloudy webby type application you get to use all those threads and there's all that memory bandwidth and so forth so so that was the benefit of power in general and then we run out of core performance and those cycles per you know CPU aren't going up and maybe we can't even scale cores like we used to anymore which is coming in a few years I the the fact that the platform is open in areas that others aren't allows us to bend the rules about how components communicate and we cut out a lot of overhead between them so that's a sort of software in silicon type argument you want to bring the software closer to the silicon yeah closer and in many cases to do the same work that we do today like that's the hard part is people think it's all about genomics or oil and gas or something it's the same work but you know we've already demonstrated that open harcum you it 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Published Date : Apr 19 2016

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Muddu Sudhakkar, Aisera | VMare Explore 2022


 

(upbeat music) >> Good morning, everyone. Welcome back to "theCUBE." Lisa Martin here with John Furrier. This is day three of our wall-to-wall coverage of VMware Explore. John and I are pleased to welcome back one of our alumni, Muddu Sudhakar, the CEO of AISERA. Welcome to the program, Muddu. It's great to meet you. >> Thank you, Lisa. Thanks for having me. Thank you, John. >> Great to see you again. You're like an industry analyst coming on "theCUBE". You should be like a guest analyst, breaking down. I know you got your own company to run, and by the way, the recent funding you had, congratulations. >> Thank you. >> In a market that's not getting a lot of funding. You get an up around. Congratulations on that. >> Thank you. >> Business is good? >> Very good, thank you. Look, Goldman Sachs Investing, along with Zoom and Thoma Bravo, it was great for us. >> Great stuff. Well, I'm glad we could get you in. This day three, Lisa and I and Dave Vellante and Dave Nicholson have all been talking to everyone for two days here at VMware Explore, formerly VMworld, our 12th year covering their annual conference, as you know, and we've been telling the executives, but day three is more of, we're going to mix it up. We're going to bring people in and get their opinions about Supercloud, does VMware go post-Broadcom? Obviously, that's going to happen. Looks like nothing's going to stop that from happening. What's next? What's the impact? Who wins? Who loses? VMware certainly not acting like they're going to get gutted. They're all full throttle ahead. They're laying down some announcements, vSphere 8, you got vSAN 8, they got cloud-native, they're talking multi-cloud. VMware's not looking like they're flinching. What's going on, in your view, outside of the bubble that we're here in San Francisco, out in the real world, in the trenches. What are people talking about? What do you see? >> Lot to unpack. (all laugh) >> Start at wherever you want. >> Yes. You know, I was a VMware alumni too. >> Yes >> You sold the company to VMware. You know the inside. Okay, So then, even then- >> I worked with Paul and Pat and Raghu. It's great to be back at VMware now. I think there's a lot going on in VMware. VMware is here to stay. The brand will stay. The VMware customers will stay for years to come. I think Broadcom and VMware, I think it's a great industry consolidation, the way in which I see it. And it is going to help all the customers too, right? Broadcom, having such a large foot play into both CA, the software business, the hardware business. I think what will happen is that Broadcom will try to create a hybrid cloud of their own with VMware. So there'll be a fourth player in the cloud industry. And then back to John, your Supercloud. The Supercloud by definition, there'll be private clouds, public clouds, hybrid clouds. I think Broadcom with VMware will help your vision of the Supercloud and what your customers are asking. >> Yeah, one of the things I want to get your thoughts on, Lisa and I were talking yesterday with the executives, AJ Patel in particular, he's a middleware guy. >> Right. >> So what he did was Oracle. He did a lot of the fusion stuff at Oracle. He now runs Modern Apps. And you came in at the time, I think, when they were just getting that app vision going, and Paul Moritz actually had it early with his 2010 vision, but too early on the app side. But that ended up happening too. So the question is, is Broadcom going to be this middleware layer, and treat the cloud like hardware. And then, apps or apps. Companies are apps. In a digital transformation, technology is the company. >> Right >> So the company is the app. >> That's right, >> Is an application. So apps and hardware, middle, a middleware model emerging. Do you think they're going for that? Or am I just making this up in my head? >> No, I think to me, I see Broadcom as much more, they're like a peer company at the high level. So they're funded by- >> Like a private equity company. >> Private equity company. >> You mean from a dollar standpoint. >> From a dollar standpoint. So Broadcom is going to fund companies. They're going to buy companies. They bought CA, they bought all the other assets. So Broadcom will have always hardware. The middle level could be VMware, but they also have CA, right? They have a bunch of apps here. So I see the Broadcom is also using VMware to run applications. So the consolidation will be they'll create a Supercloud using VMware. They're going to own their own apps. I don't think Broadcom's story is stopped. Its journey to come. They're going to buy more acquisitions, more apps companies. I won't be surprised, in the future, they buy Zendesk. I won't be surprised, in the future, they buy other apps companies, SaaS companies and cloud enterprise companies. Right? So that's where the P is coming. So the broad conversion is, I need a base middleware, like you're saying. There's no other middleware on top of hardware better than VMware. >> So do you think that they'll keep the stuff that's coming out of the other? 'Cause we've been speculating on "theCUBE" this week. They have the core business, but there's all this stuff that's kind of coming out of the oven that's not EBITDA-oriented yet. Do you think they keep that or they let it go? >> I think that's a great question to hang their CEO of Broadcom. But to me, I think, knowing them, they're going to keep, and if you look at Symantec, they kept parts of Symantec, this whole parts of it. So I think all options are on the table for them, right? They'll do whatever it is. But I think it has to be the ones that high growth companies they may give it. It all goes back to is it a profitability to it or not? But his vision is very good. I want to own the middleware, right? He will own the middleware using VMware to your vision, create a Supercloud and own the apps. So I think you'll see Broadcom is the fourth vendor in the cloud race. You have Microsoft, AWS, Google, and Broadcom is actually going to compete with this four. >> So you think there'll be a hyper scale? They'll be in the top three or four. >> There'll be top four. >> Okay. >> Along with Oracle. So now, we are talking about the five vendors will be Amazon, Azure, Google, Oracle, and Broadcom. >> We had Amazon guy on, Steve Jones. I should have asked him that question. I just don't see that happening yet. They have to have the full hardware side. How do you see that coming in? 'Cause Amazon's innovating at the atom level and they're working on stuff that's physical, transit, physics stuff, like down to the root level. >> I think Broadcom figure, look, they own the chips out right, at the end of the day. They also have a lot of chips such to supply to both mobile and this. So if there's anybody who can figure out the hardware, it will be Broadcom. That is their core of area. They didn't have the core in the software and the middleware. VMware is going to give them the OS, the Kubernetes, the VMs. Once you have that layer, I think you can innovate both up and below, right? So I think, John, I think Broadcom VMware will be a force to reckon with and I think these guys are going to get into healthcare space though. So if you see the way they battle, you and me are talking Lisa, like Microsoft bought new ones, Oracle bought Cerner. So they all paid 30 billion each. So the next battle ground will be, they'll start in the healthcare industry. Somebody's going to go look at the healthcare apps like Epic, right? They're going to look at how we can do the hospitals. They're going to look at hospital healthcare professionals. That area will be disrupted a lot in the same. >> What other industries do you think, besides healthcare, are ripe for disruption with Broadcom VMware? >> I think endpoint management, like remember VMware bought AirWatch when I was there back then, right? That whole area is called digital experience management. So that endpoint mainly will be disrupted. So Broadcom with VMware will go again into endpoint. I'm talking endpoint could be the servers, desktops, VMware Max, right? Virtual Desktop VDI. So that whole management of mobile devices to desktop, that whole industry will be disrupted. A lot of players are there trying to do more consulting services. I think VMware is a great assets and tools. If I'm Broadcom, my chip sets are going into the endpoint. So that area will be disrupted a lot with Broadcom in VMware. >> Yeah, one of the things that VMware, people have been talking about, is that the CA acquisition that Broadcom did was the playbooks public. Everyone saw what they did. They killed sales and market and they killed all the execs, metaphorically speaking. They fired them. VMware's got a different vibe here. I'm feeling like it could go one way or the other. I think they should keep them, personally. But you don't know. If they're a PE company, they EBIDA driven, maybe it's just simply numbers. >> Right. >> If that's the case, then I'm worried. But VMware's got pride, they got mojo, and they've got expertise in software. Maybe a little bit different circumstance? What's take on this? Or do you think it's going to be black and white to the numbers? >> I think, knowing Hank's playbook, if he knows what he's going to do, right? His playbook will be consistent with Symantec. >> You think he already knows what he wants to do? >> I think so. I think at that level, both with Simulink and Broadcom, they already know the playbook. At this stage the games, people already know their game. It's like a chess move. They already know. They'll look at VMware and see which assets to keep, which one not to keep, which organization, but I think Hank is a master at this one. To me, I'm personally excited with the VMware Broadcom combination. It's a great thing for the industry. It's great for VMware and VMware customers and partners. >> Well, John, you and Dave had a chance to sit down with Raghu. What were some of the things that he unpacked about the Broadcom acquisition? >> He was on talking points. He was on message. He was saying the things that any CEO was going to make a lot of cash on this deal. And he's proud. I think it wasn't about the money for him. I sensed that he's certainly going to make a lot of cash on this deal as an executive, but he's a long time VMware employee and a well loved and revered person. He's done a lot of great work, technically set the agenda. So I think their mindset is we're going to just continue to do an amazing job as VMware as we are and then let Broadcom, let the chips fall where they may, and hopefully, if they do a good job, maybe they'll either refactor some of their base plans or they laid it all out in the field, so to speak. So that's my vibe. Now specifically, he made some comments, like, "Yeah, we're really proud." And he staying technical. He's still like, "This is really happening." So I think he's going to, essentially, to the very end, be like, "Cross cloud and hybrid cloud. This is our third generation." So there he's hanging onto the VMware third act that they're saying, and he hopes that it comes home. And I think he's going to just deal with it. He didn't seem flustered and he didn't seem overly confident. >> Okay. >> I guess that's my opinion. What do you think? >> Personally worked with Raghu, worked for Raghu, so I think of him as the greatest CEO for VMware ever could have, right? It's a journey. It was Paul Maritz, then Pat Gelsinger, now Raghu. I think he's in the right place, right time to lead VMware, and Raghu's doing a fantastic job. And personally, getting these two companies married, I think Raghu did the right partnership with Broadcom. >> Well, I think if this event's any indication if they're just sitting back and waiting, they're not, and this event was well done, it was pulled off. The branding's amazing. I thought they did a good job with the name change. And then in light of all the Broadcom issues, the execution was great. It was not a bad show here. It was a good show. It wasn't terrible at all. People were excited. I think the ecosystem also felt that Broadcom, like an electronic shock to the system, like something's going to happen. Let's wait and see. I'm going to go to the event to see if it's going to be around and kind of getting a feel first party, in person, what's happening. Again, remember VMware didn't have an event since 2019. This is a community that thrives on physical, face to face camaraderie, community. And so, I think the show was a success. And I think that's a result of Raghu and his team. >> Because we have a booth there for AISERA, my company, we have a booth. We are offering coffee and donuts. You guys should come by and tell people. You'll get a free coffee and a donut, but it's one of the best shows I've seen. Well, I think people after pandemic are back, people are interacting. We have 500 people in one day at our booth. So for a startup company like us, getting that much crowd is unheard of. So it's great. We're very excited. >> The vibe from the partner community, I had a chance to talk with a lot of partners, AWS, NetApp, Rackspace, really seems like the partnerships side of VMware is very, very strong and the partners are excited about what's next for VMware. Did you have a chance to talk with any of the partners? >> Actually, look. I'm actually meeting with Karen. So Karen Egan is my contact at VMware too, and Sumit, (indistinct) a bunch of the customer success organization. We talk to people in their digital experience management team. We are very excited to be partner with both VMware's customer, partner, and all experts, right? I'll need the VMware ecosystem for my company to thrive. So for us, VMware customers are my customers and leveraging VMware APIs into VMware, that's that's important for us. >> Lisa, that's a great question because that brings us to the question of, okay, clearly this show also proves to us from our conversations and exploring the floor, the wave is coming. This next cloud wave is here. We're calling it Supercloud, whatever you want to call it, it's coming and it's real, and people know it. And also the lines of sight into economics around where people can fit in this next level ecosystem is becoming clear. So I think people kind of know what's the right side of the street to be on in this next shift. So that's coming. That's independent of Broadcom. So the floor represents to me the excitement for not only the VMware workload powering software, with or without Broadcom, but the next wave. So the question is if Broadcom goes down their path and Hank does what he does, who wins and who loses on where things flow? Because this energy is going to flow somewhere. Is it going to flow to AWS? Is it going to flow to Microsoft? Is it going to flow to HPE with Green Lake getting some great traction? NetApp's doing great. We just heard from them. So the partners aren't hurting. It's only going to get better. re:Invent's right around the corner. That's a packed house. Their ecosystem's growing like a weed. Who wins? 'Cause the customers at VMware are enterprise customers. They're used to being serviced. They have sales reps from Microsoft, they got sales reps from Hewlett Packard Enterprise, real senior enterprise stakeholders there. So someone's going to end up filling in as VMware settles into their broad composition. Who wins and who loses, in your mind? >> A Very good question. So my thing is, I think it's... Well, I put Microsoft and Amazon the winners. In that way, actually mean Microsoft will win because in a true Supercloud, your vision, back to hybrid cloud on-prem and public cloud, VMware disruption with Broadcom, as if there's any bridge in the market, Microsoft will take advantage of it. Azure, right? Amazon VMware is there. Then, you have Google and VMware. So I think Azure will probably try to take advantage of this, but very next will be Amazon, right away there. That leaves you with Google Cloud, right? Google Cloud is the one. So they're the people that are able to figure out what to do in this equation. And then, obviously, the other one is Oracle. Oracle has no hearts in this game. So to me, the people who are going to probably lose impact model will be Oracle if the Broadcom and VMware will happen. So it's Azure, Amazon winning the race, probably Google is right behind them. Oracle will be distinct. Other side is Dell. Actually, Dell has no game in this. Our Broadcom and VMware, Dell should be the one. >> Dell might have a little secret sauce on the table with Michael Dell. >> That's true. >> If he convert his shares, he might be the largest shareholder at Broadcom. >> That's true. >> He could end up owning all the back. >> So he may be the winner all the time. (all laugh) >> Don't count him out. Well, this is a good question. I want to just double click on this. So you get customer dynamic. Where do they go? You get the community, which is a big force multiplier in this world, and if you had to bet on community between Microsoft and Amazon Web Services, Amazon trumps Microsoft on force multiplier community. Ecosystem, AWS beats Microsoft on that one. So it's interesting because it's now multiple dimensions we're talking about here. It's customers. That's the top order, right? The customers. But also, you got community, the people who put on sessions, the people in the community that are the influencers that are leading the trends, and developers are very trending, relative to what kind of code they use, what's their environments? So the developers is changing that landscape and, ultimately, the ecosystem of partners, right? 'Cause there's a lot more overlap between AWS and VMware's ecosystem than there is between Microsoft and that. And HPE is just starting an ecosystem. So it's going to be very interesting. >> It is. It is. I think Broadcom and VMware cannot be any best time for the industry, right? As you said. HP is coming in. Oracle is coming in. And to your point, VMware and AWS are another best partners. Now, this going to create any gap for Microsoft to enter for Azure? I think that's where the market is saying that it's going to open up a hybrid cloud player for Microsoft to enter what is to be a tight relationship with VMware and Amazon. Right? So people will rethink through their apps. And more importantly, the end point to me. See, the key is, like you talk about with Supercloud, nobody's talking about Supercloud for the endpoint. >> You mean Edge or security? >> Not an Edge endpoint. Endpoint could be your devices, laptop, desktop. >> Or a building or a light bulb or whatever. >> Desktop or VDI desktop services servers, right? So we call it endpoint cloud. There's no endpoint Supercloud. John, that's an area that you should double click on. Super cloud for the servers is different from Supercloud for endpoint. >> Well, SuperCloud.World is the URL out there. If you're interested in Supercloud, we are adding tracks to that body of work. So we had our event on August 9th. It was virtual event, where Dave and I are going to add a data track, we're going to add a security track, and we should add, maybe, an endpoint workspace, work. >> That's a VMware brand, Workspace and Horizon. So that whole workspace endpoint for Supercloud is going to happen. >> Yes. >> Right. That kind of deviates from- >> Do you like Supercloud? Are you bullish on Supercloud? >> I'm very bullish on Supercloud because I, myself, is running on-prem in VPCs, public clouds, private clouds. Supercloud kind of composites it so app should be designed. 'Cause I don't want to design an app for one cloud. It's not going to work. So it's like how Java came and I can run it on any platform. The ideas you build it on Supercloud, run it, whatever you want. Right? >> That's exactly it. So what would you want to see in Supercloud as it evolves? And we were part of this open conversation. This is our point for today. We're going to have a great panel come up later today. We're going to have the influencers come on to debate what Supercloud should or shouldn't be. If you want to add to the contribution, we'll add this into the work, what should what's needed in Supercloud? What's table stakes. >> I think we need a Java compiler that will happen for Supercloud. I build it once, execute in any place I want, right? Using the Terraform, HashiCorp (indistinct) So what I don't want is keep building this thing for every cloud. I want to abstract that out. The whole idea of Supercloud is how Java gave me the abstraction for hardware 20 years back or 30 years back, we need the same abstraction for the cloud today. Otherwise, I'm customizing for VM Cloud, I'm customizing for AWS, Azure, Google Cloud. We, as an application vendor, it's too hard to keep doing it. I have now thousand tuners. I don't need thousand DevOps people. I need maybe 10 DevOps people. So there's a clear abstraction complexity that industry should develop, and your concept Supercloud with everybody thinking that, and it has to start from the grassroots with ecosystem. >> What do you think about the participants in this abstraction layer? Because someone said on "theCUBE" here this week, the people in the abstraction layer shouldn't be participants in the below or above the abstraction. >> I think it should be everybody, right? It's all inclusive. You need the apps guys to come in. You need the OS players to come in. You need the cloud vendors to come in, infrastructure. So you need everybody. >> Okay, let's just say that you were the spokesperson for the Supercloud organization, Supercloud.World. How would you sell AWS on why it's important for them? >> It's because they can build it and sell it in AWS and multiple AWS Gov Cloud, AWS On-prem, VPCs. It's even important for them, their expansion, their market time upfront. If I'm (indistinct), if I'm built on Supercloud, I can increase my time share. Otherwise I'm bringing only to public cloud. >> Okay, so I'll say, I'm Amazon and we have a concept called "One Way Doors." We don't want to go through a one way door. Is Supercloud a one way door for them? What's in it for them? Do they make more? Does it help their ecosystem? And the same question from Microsoft Azure and Google cloud. >> They're make more money. They're making their apps run in multiple places. It's a natural expansion. You are solving your customer problems for Amazon and DGC, right? My job is give people choices. I give choice to Lisa. Lisa can run it on public cloud. John, you can run it on VPC, AWS. >> So you're saying, so you think customers are asking for this right now? >> Everybody's asking. >> But don't really know how to say it? >> Customers are asking. Partners are asking. All of us are asking. >> Okay, what's the ask? >> Ask is give me a one place to build applications and run it anywhere without adding the complexity. >> Okay. Done. That's Supercloud. It'll ship tomorrow. (Lisa laughs) Well done. (John laughs) All right, well done. Final question for you. Lisa and I have been talking with folks here. What advice would you give the folks that are in here? 'Cause we have a lot of activity, people with marketing their solutions and products. They're trying to put a voice out there around thought leadership and trying to figure out what side of the street they should be on relative to the next 10 years as they're here at VMware Explore, as the next gen cloud comes around. What's the right narrative? What's the right positioning for companies to be on right now to be the most relevant and in the flow? >> I don't know about 10 years, but right now we are in difficult economic times, right? Markets are down. Inflation is up. So I think the fastest cost, people should focus on cost. How can it take cost? Automation is the key, right? Whether you use AI or automation , like you and me talking, John, last week, right? That's important. Every CEO I talk to is focused on cost. How do I cut my cost? How can I do with fewer resources? How can I do with fewer people, right? So the new budget right now is cut your budget in half. So every company, every exec should think about how can you be a good citizen? How can I get growth and scale? How can I do more with less? And that should be the next 12 months. >> That was a lot of the theme of conversations that I had with the VMware ecosystem, doing more with less. So that's definitely on everyone's minds. >> Right, and that's what my company is fully focused on. AISERA is all about AI automation. How can we solve your thing? We want to be solving customer problem. We are like your automation engine for your enterprise, right? We are a platform of platform. That's why I like the Supercloud. I can run AISERA as a platform on top of Supercloud. >> Excellent. >> Wow! If only we had more time! I know that you guys could really dig into Supercloud and take it even further. So you have to come back, Muddu. >> I will. >> He always wants to come back. >> I will be back. >> He's on the team. He's has contributed to the open source effort of Supercloud. Thank you. >> Yes. >> All right, thank you so much for joining John and me and kind of breaking down your vision on VMware Broadcom and the future. Next step, we've got to get some customers on here. I really want to understand what the customer experience is going to be like, but we'll have to another segment on that one. >> We will do that. Thank you, Lisa, for having me. >> My pleasure. >> John. >> Thank you very much. Thank you. >> For our guest and John Furrier, I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching "theCUBE" live on day three of our coverage of VMware Explore. We'll be back after a short break. (upbeat corporate music)

Published Date : Sep 1 2022

SUMMARY :

John and I are pleased to Thank you, John. and by the way, the recent You get an up around. along with Zoom and Thoma Bravo, What's the impact? Lot to unpack. You know, I was a VMware alumni too. the company to VMware. of the Supercloud and what Yeah, one of the things I So the question is, So apps and hardware, middle, No, I think to me, So the consolidation will be So do you think that But I think it has to be the They'll be in the top three or four. about the five vendors They have to have the full hardware side. So the next battle ground will be, are going into the endpoint. is that the CA acquisition If that's the case, I think, knowing Hank's playbook, I think so. to sit down with Raghu. in the field, so to speak. I guess that's my opinion. I think he's in the the execution was great. but it's one of the best shows I've seen. and the partners are excited a bunch of the customer of the street to be on in this next shift. So to me, the people who are going secret sauce on the table he might be the largest owning all the back. So he may be the winner all the time. So it's going to be very interesting. And more importantly, the end point to me. Endpoint could be your Or a building or a Super cloud for the servers is different is the URL out there. is going to happen. That kind of deviates from- It's not going to work. So what would you want to see and it has to start from the the people in the abstraction layer You need the apps guys to come in. for the Supercloud only to public cloud. And the same question from I give choice to Lisa. All of us are asking. adding the complexity. What's the right narrative? So the new budget right now So that's definitely on everyone's minds. Right, and that's what my I know that you guys could He always He's on the team. and the future. We will do that. Thank you very much. of our coverage of VMware Explore.

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Sarbjeet Johal | VMware Explore 2022


 

>>Welcome back everyone to Cube's live coverage, VMware Explorer, 2022 formerly world. I've been saying now I gotta get that out. Dave, I've been sayingm world. It just kind of comes off the tongue when I'm tired, but you know, wall to wall coverage, again, back to back interviews all day two sets. This is a wrap up here with the analyst discussion. Got one more interview after this really getting the analyst's perspective around what we've been hearing and seeing, observing, and reporting on the cube. Again, two sets blue and green. We call them here on the show floor on Moscone west with the sessions upstairs, two floors of, of amazing content sessions, keynote across ed Moscone, north and south SBI here, cloud strategists with the cube. And of course, what event wouldn't be complete without SBE weighing in on the analysis. And, and, and I'm, you know, all kidding aside. I mean that because we've had great interactions around, you know, digging in you, you're like a roving analyst out there. And what's great about what you do is you're social. You're communicating, you're touching everybody out there, but you're also picking up the puzzle pieces. And we, you know, of course we recognize that cuz that's what we do, but you're out, we're on the set you're out on the floor and you know your stuff and, and you know, clouds. So how you, this is your wheelhouse. Great to see you. Good to >>See you. I'm good guys. Thank you. Thank you for having >>Me. So I mean, Dave and I were riffing going back earlier in this event and even before, during our super cloud event, we're reminded of the old OpenStack days. If you remember, Dave OpenStack was supposed to be the open source version of cloud. And that was a great ambition. And the cloud AATI at that time was very into it because it made a lot of sense. And the vision, all the infrastructure was code. Everything was lined up. Everything was religiously was on the table. Beautiful cloud future. Okay. 20 2009, 2010, where was Amazon? Then they just went off like a rocket ship. So cloud ended up becoming AWS in my opinion. Yeah. OpenStax then settled in, did some great things, but also spawns Kubernetes. Okay. So, you know, we've lived through thiss we've seen this movie. We were actually in the trenches on the front lines present at creation for cloud computing. >>Yeah. I was at Rackspace when the open stack was open sourced. I was there in, in the rooms and discussions and all that. I think OpenStack was given to the open source like prematurely. I usually like we left a toddler on the freeway. No, the toddler >>Got behind the wheel. Can't see over the dashboard. >>So we have learned over the years in last two decades, like we have seen the open source rise of open source and we have learned quite a few lessons. And one lesson we learned from there was like, don't let a project go out in the open, tell it mature enough with one vendor. So we did that prematurely with NASA, NASA and Rackspace gave the, the code from two companies to the open source community and then likes of IBM and HPE. No. Now HPE, they kind of hijacked the whole thing and then put a lot of developers on that. And then lot of us sort of second tier startup. >>But, but, but I remember not to interject, but at that time there wasn't a lot of pushback for letting them it wasn't like they infiltrated like a, the vendors always tried to worry about vendors coming in open source, but at that time was pretty people accepted them. And then it got off the rails. Then you remember the great API debate. You >>Called it a hail Mary to against AWS, which is, is what it was, what it was. >>It's true. Yeah. Ended up being right. But the, the battle started happening when you started seeing the network perimeters being discussed, you starting to see some of the, in the trenches really important conversations around how to make essentially cross cloud or super cloud work. And, and again, totally premature it continue. And, and what does that mean today? So, okay. Is VMware too early on their cross cloud? Are they, is multi-cloud ready? >>No >>For, and is it just vaporware? >>No, they're not too early, actually on, on, on, on that side they were premature to put that out there, but this is like very mature company, like in the ops area, you know, we have been using, we VMware stuff since 2000 early 2000. I, I was at commerce one when we started using it and yeah, it was for lab manager, you know, like, you know, put the labs >>Out desktop competition. >>Yeah, yeah. Kind of thing. So it, it matured pretty fast, but now it it's like for all these years they focused on the op site more. Right. And then the challenge now in the DevOps sort of driven culture, which is very hyped, to be honest with you, they have try and find a place for developers to plug in on the left side of the sort of whole systems, life cycle management sort of line, if you will. So I think that's a, that's a struggle for, for VMware. They have to figure that out. And they are like a tap Tansu application platform services. They, they have released a new version of that now. So they're trying to do that, but still they are from the sort of get ups to the, to the right, from that point to the right on the left side. They're lot more tooling to helpers use as we know, but they are very scattered kind of spend and scattered technology on the left side. VMware doesn't know how to tackle that. But I think, I think VMware should focus on the right side from the get ups to the right and then focus there. And then how in the multi-cloud cross cloud. >>Cause my sense is, they're saying, Hey, look, we're not gonna own the developers. I think they know that. And they think they're saying do develop in whatever world you want to develop in will embrace it. And then the ops guys, we, we got you covered, we got the standards, we have the consistency and you're our peeps. You tend then take it, you know, to, to the market. Is that not? I mean, it seems like a viable strategy. I >>Mean, look at if you're VMware Dave and start, you know, this where they are right now, the way they missed the cloud. And they had to reboot that with jazzy and, and, and Raghu to do the databases deal. It's essentially VMware hosted on AWS and clients love it cuz it's clarity. Okay. It's not vCloud air. So, so if you're them right now, you seeing yourself, wow. We could be the connective tissue between all clouds. We said this from day one, when Kubernetes was hitting in the scene, whoever can make this, the interoperability concept of inter clouding and connect clouds so that there could be spanning of applications and data. We didn't say data, but we said, you know, creating that nice environment of multiple clouds. Okay. And again, in concept, that sounds simple, but if you're VMware, you could own that abstraction layer. So do you own it or do you seed the base and let it become a defacto organization? Like a super layer, super pass layer and then participate in it? Or are you the middleware yourself? We heard AJ Patel say that. So, so they could be the middleware for at all. >>Aren't they? The infrastructure super cloud. I mean, that's what they're trying to be. >>Yeah. I think they're trying, trying to do that. It's it's I, I, I have said that many times VMware is bridged to the cloud, right? >>The sorry. Say bridge to >>The cloud. Yeah. Right. For, for enterprises, they have virtualized environments, mostly on VMware stacks. And another thing is I wanna mention touch on that is the number of certified professionals on VMware stack. There it's a huge number it's in tens of thousands. Right? So people who have got these certifications, they want to continue that sort of journey. They wanna leverage that. It's like, it's a Sunco if they don't use that going forward. And that was my question to, to during the press release yesterday, like are there new certifications coming into the, into the limelight? I, I think the VMware, if they're listening to me here somewhere, they will listen. I guess they should introduce a, a cross cloud certification for their stack because they want to be cross cloud or multi-cloud sort of vendor with one sort of single pane. So does actually Cisco and so do many others. But I think VMware is in a good spot. It's their market to lose. I, I, I call it when it comes to the multi-cloud for enterprise, especially for the legacy applications. >>Well, they're not, they have the enterprise they're super cloud enabler, Dave for the, for the enterprise, cuz they're not hyperscaler. Okay. They have all the enterprise customers who come here, we see them, we speak to them. We know them will mingle, but >>They have really good relationships with all the >>Hyperscale. And so those, those guys need a way to the cloud in a way that's cloud operation though. So, so if you say enterprises need their own super cloud, I would say VMware might wanna raise their hands saying we're the vendor to provide that. Yes, totally. And then that's the middleware role. So middleware isn't your classic stack middleware it's middle tissue. So you got, it's not a stack model anymore. It's completely different. >>Maybe, maybe my, my it's >>Not a stack >>Industry. Maybe my industry super cloud is too aspirational, but so let's assume for a second. You're not gonna have everybody doing their own clouds, like Goldman Sachs and, and capital one, even though we're seeing some evidence of that, even in that case, connecting my on-prem to the cloud and modernizing my application stack and, and having some kind of consistency between your on-prem and it's just call it hybrid, like real hybrid, true hybrid. They should dominate that. I mean, who is who, if it's not it's VMware and it's what red hat who else? >>I think red hat wants it too. >>Yeah. Well, red hat and red, hat's doing it with IBM consulting and they gotta be, they have great advantage there for all the banks. Awesome. But what, what about the other 500,000 customers that are >>Out there? If VMware could do what they did with the hypervisor, with virtualization and create the new thing for super cloud, AKA connecting clouds together. That's a, that's a holy grail move right >>There. But what about this PA layer? This Tansu and area which somebody on Twitter, there was a little SNAR come that's V realized just renamed, which is not. I mean, it's, it's from talking to Raghu unless he's just totally BSing us, which I don't think he is. That's not who he is. It's this new federated architecture and it's this, their super PAs layer and, and, and it's purpose built for what they're trying to do across clouds. This is your wheelhouse. What, what do you make of that? >>I think Tansu is a great effort. They have put in lot of other older products under that one umbrella Tansu is not a product actually confuses the heck out of the market. That it's not a product. It's a set of other products put under one umbrella. Now they have created another umbrella term with the newer sort of, >>So really is some yeah. >>Two >>Umbrella on there. So it's what it's pivotal. It's vRealize it's >>Yeah. We realize pivotal and, and, and older stack, actually they have some open source components in there. So, >>So they claim that this ragus claim, it's this new architecture, this new federated architecture graph database, low latency, real time ingestion. Well, >>AJ, AJ that's AJ's department, >>It sounded good. I mean, this is that >>Actually I think the newer, newer stuff, what they announced, that's very promising because it seems like they're building something from scratch. So, >>And it won't be, it won't be hardened for, but, but >>It won't be hardened for, but, >>But those, but they have a track record delivering. I mean, they gotta say that about yeah. >>They're engineering focus company. They have engineering culture. They're their software engineers are top. Not top not, >>Yes. >>What? >>Yeah. It's all relatives. If they, if the VMware stays the way they are. Well, >>Yeah, >>We'll get to that a second. What >>Do you mean? What are you talking >>About? They don't get gutted >>The elephant in the room if they don't get gutted and then, then we'll see it happens there. But right now I love, we love VMware. We've been covering them for 12 years and we've seen the trials, not without their own issues to work on. I mean, everyone needs to work on stuff, but you know, world class, they're very proud of their innovation, but I wanna ask you, what was your observations walking around the floor, talking to people? What was the sense of the messaging? Is it real in their minds? Are they leaning in, are they like enthused? Are they nervous, apprehensive? How would you categorize the attitude of the folks here that you've talked to or observed? >>Yeah. It at the individual product level, like the people are very confident what they're building, what they're delivering, but when it comes to the telling a cohesive story, if you go to all the VMware booth there, like it's hard to find anybody who can tell what, what are all the services under tens and how they are interconnected and what facilities they provide or they can't. They, I mean, most of the people who are there, they can are walking through the economic side of things, like how it will help you save money or, or how the TCR ROI will improve. They are very focused on because of the nature of the company, right. They're very focused on the technology only. So I think that that's the, that's what I learned. And another sort of gripe or negative I have about VMware is that they have their product portfolio is so vast and they are even spreading more thinly. And they're forced to go to the left towards developers because of the sheer force of hyperscalers. On one side on the, on the right side, they are forced to work with hyperscalers to do more like ops related improvements. They didn't mention AI or, or data. >>Yeah. Data storage management. >>That that was weak. That's true. During the, the keynote as well. >>And they didn't mention security and their security story, strong >>Security. I think they mentioned it briefly very briefly, very briefly. But I think their SCO story is good actually, but no is they didn't mention it properly, I guess. >>Yeah. There wasn't prominent in the keynote. It was, you know, and again, I understand why data wasn't P I, they wanted to say about data, >>Didn't make room for the developer story. I think this was very much a theatrical maneuver for Hawk and the employee morale and the ecosystem morale, Dave, then it had to do with the nuts bolt of security. They can come back to get that security. In my opinion, you know, I, I don't think that was as bad of a call as bearing the vSphere, giving more demos, which they did do later. But the keynote I thought was, was well done as targeted for all the negative sentiment around Broadcom and Broadcom had this, the acquisition agreement that they're, they are doing, they agree >>Was well done. I mean, >>You know, if I VMware, I would've done the same thing, look at this is a bright future. We're given that we're look at what we got. If you got this, it's on you. >>And I agree with you, but the, the, again, I don't, I don't see how you can't make security front and center. When it is the number one issue for CIOs, CSOs, CSOs boards or directors, they just, it was a miss. They missed it. Yeah. Okay. And they said, oh, well, there's only so much time, but, and they had to put the application development focus on there. I get that. But >>Another thing is, I think just keynote is just one sort of thing. One moment in this whole sort of continuous period, right. They, I think they need to have that narrative, like messaging done periodically, just like Amazon does, you know, like frequent events tapping into the practitioners on regional basis. They have to do that. Maybe it's a funding issue. Maybe it is some weakness on the, no, >>I think they planning, I talked to, we talked to the CMO and she said, Explorer is gonna be a road show. They're gonna go international with, it's gonna take a global, they're gonna have a lot of wood behind the arrow. They're gonna spend a lot of money on Explorer is what, they're, what we're seeing. And that's a good thing. You got a new brand, you gotta build it. >>You know, I would've done, I would've had, I would've had a shorter keynote on day one and doing, and then I would've done like a security day, day two. I would've dedicated the whole morning, day two keynote to security cuz their stories I think is that strong? >>Yeah. >>Yeah. And I don't know the developers side of things. I think it's hard for VMware to go too much to the left. The spend on the left is very scattered. You know, if you notice the tools, developers change their tools on freaking monthly basis, right? Yeah. Yeah. So it's hard to sustain that they on the very left side and the, the, the >>It's hard for companies like VMware to your point. And then this came up in super cloud and ins Rayme mentioned that developers drive everything, the patterns, what they like and you know, the old cliche meet them where they are. You know, honestly, this is kind of what AJ says is the right they're doing. And it's the right strategy meeting that develops where they are means give them something that they like. They like self-service they like to try stuff. They like to, they don't like it. They'll throw it away. Look at the success that comes like data, dog companies like that have that kind of offering with freemium and self-service to, to continue the wins versus jamming the tooling down their throat and selling >>Totally self-serve infrastructure for the, in a way, you know, you said they missed cloud, which they did V cloud air. And then they thought of got it. Right. It kind of did the same thing with pivotal. Right. It was almost like they forced to take pivotal, you know, by pivotal, right. For 2 billion or whatever it was. All right. Do something with it. Okay. We're gonna try to do something with it and they try to go out and compete. And now they're saying, Hey, let's just open it up. Whatever they want to use, let 'em use it. So unlike and I said this yesterday, unlike snowflake has to attract developers to build on their unique platform. Okay. I think VMware's taken a different approach saying use whatever you want to use. We're gonna help the ops guys. And that, to me, a new op >>Very sensitive, >>The new ops, the new ops guys. Yes. Yes. >>I think another challenge on the right right. Is on, on the op site is like, if, if you are cloud native, you are a new company. You just, when you're a startup, you are cloud native, right. Then it's hard for VMware to convince them to, Hey, you know, come to us and use this. Right. It's very hard. It is. They're a good play for a while. At least they, they can prolong their life by innovating along the way because of the, the skills gravity, I call it of the developers and operators actually that's their, they, they have a loyal community they have and all that stuff. And by the way, the name change for the show. I think they're trying to get out of that sort of culty kind of nature of the, their communities that they force. The communities actually can force the companies, not to do certain things certain way. And I've seen that happening. And >>Well, I think, I think they're gonna learn and they already walked back their messaging. Not that they said anything overtly, but you know, the Lori, the CMO clarified this significantly, which was, they never said that they wanted to replace VM world. Although the name change implies that. And what they re amplified after the fact is that this is gonna be a continuation of the community. And so, you know, it's nuanced, they're splitting hairs, but that's, to me walking back the, you know, the, the loyalty and, and look at let's face it. Anytime you have a loyal community, you do anything of change. People are gonna be bitching and moaning. Yeah. >>But I mean, knew, worked, explore, >>Work. It wasn't bad at all. It was not a bad look. It wasn't disastrous call. Okay. Not at all. I'm critical of the name change at first, but the graphics are amazing. They did an exceptional job on the branding. They did, did an exceptional job on how they handled the new logo, the new name, the position they, and a lot of people >>Showed >>Up. Yeah. It worked >>A busy busier than all time >>It worked. And I think they, they threaded the needle, given everything they had going on. I thought the event team did an exceptional job here. I mean, just really impressive. So hats up to the event team at, at VMware pulling off now, did they make profit? I don't know. It doesn't matter, you know, again, so much going on with Broadcom, but here being in Moscone west, we see people coming down the stairs here, Dave's sessions, you know, lot of people, a lot of buzz on the content sold out sessions. So again, that's the ecosystem. The people giving the talks, you know, the people in the V brown bag, you know, got the, the V tug. They had their meeting, you know, this week here, >>Actually the, the, the red hat, the, the integration with the red hat is another highlight of, of, they announced that, that you can run that style >>OpenShift >>And red hats, not here, >>Red hat now here, but yeah, but, but, but >>It was more developers, more, you know, >>About time. I would say, why, why did it take so long? That should >>Have happened. All right. Final question. So what's the bottom line. Give us the summary. What's your take, what's your analysis of VMware explore the event, what they did, what it means, what it's gonna mean when the event's over, what's gonna happen. >>I think VMware with the VMware Explorer have bought the time with the messaging. You know, they have promised certain things with newer announcements and now it, it, it is up to them to deliver that in a very sort of fast manner and build more hooks into other sort of platforms. Right? So that is very important. You cannot just be closed system people. Don't like those systems. You have to be part of the ecosystem. And especially when you are sitting on top of the actually four or four or more public clouds, Alibaba cloud was, they were saying that they're the only VMware is only VMware based offering in mainland China on top of the Alibaba. And they, they can go to other ones as well. So I think, especially when they're sitting on top of other cloud providers, they have to build hooks into other platforms. And if they can build a marketplace of their own, that'll be even better. I think they, >>And they've got the ecosystem for it. I mean, you saw it last night. I mean, all the, all the parties were hopping. I mean, there was, there's >>A lot of buzz. I mean, I pressed, I pressed them Dave hard. I had my little, my zingers. I wanted to push the buttons on one question that was targeted towards the answer of, are they gonna try to do much more highly competitive maneuvering, you know, get that position in the middleware. Are they gonna be more aggressive with frontal competitiveness or are they gonna take the, the strategy of open collaborative and every single data point points to collaborative totally hit Culbert. I wanna do out in the open. We're not just not, we're not one company. So I think that's the right play. If they came out and said, we're gonna be this, you know? >>Yeah. The one, the last thing, actually, the, the one last little idea I'm putting out out there since I went to the Dell world, was that there's a economics of creation of software. There's economics of operations of software. And they are very good on the operation economics of operations side of things that when I say economics, it doesn't mean money only. It also means a productivity practitioner, growth. Everything is in there. So I think these vendors who are not hyperscalers, they have to distinguish these two things and realize that they're very good on the right side economics of operations. And, and that will go a long way. Actually. I think they muddy the waters by when DevOps, DevOps, and then it's >>Just, well, I think Dave, we always we've had moments in time over the past 12 years covering VMware's annual conference, formally world now floor, where there were moments of that's pat Gelsinger, spinal speech. Yeah. And I remember he was under a siege of being fired. Yeah. There was a point in time where it was touch and go, and then everything kind of came together. That was a moment. I think we're at a moment in time here with VMware Dave, where we're gonna see what Broadcom does, because I think what hop 10 and Broadcom saw this week was an EBI, a number on the table that they know they can probably get or squeeze. And then they saw a future value and net present value of future state that you could, you gotta roll back and do the analysis saying, okay, how much is it worth all this new stuff worth? Is that gonna contribute to the EBITDA number that they want on the number? So this is gonna be a very interesting test because VMware did it, an exceptional job of laying out that they got some jewels in the oven. You >>Think about how resilient this company has been. I mean, em, you know, EMC picked them up for a song. It was 640 million or whatever it was, you know, about the public. And then you, another epic moment you'll recall. This was when Joe Tuchi was like the mafia Don up on stage. And Michael Dell was there, John Chambers with all the ecosystem CEOs and there was Tucci. And then of course, Michael Dell ends up owning this whole thing, right? I mean, when John Chambers should have owned the whole thing, I mean, it's just, it's been incredible. And then Dell uses VMware as a piggy bank to restructure its balance sheet, to pay off the EMC debt and then sells the thing for $60 billion. And now it's like, okay, we're finally free of all this stuff. Okay. Now Broadcom's gonna buy you. And, >>And if Michael Dell keeps all in stock, he'll be the largest shareholder of Broadcom and own it off. >>Well, and that's probably, you know, that's a good question is, is it's gonna, it probably a very tax efficient transaction. If he takes all stock and then he can, you know, own against it. I mean, that's, that's, >>That's what a history we're gonna leave it there. Start be great to have you Dave great analysis. Okay. We'll be back with more coverage here. Day two, winding down after the short break.

Published Date : Sep 1 2022

SUMMARY :

And we, you know, of course we recognize that cuz that's what we do, but you're out, we're on the set you're Thank you for having And the cloud AATI at that time was very into it because I think OpenStack was given to Got behind the wheel. project go out in the open, tell it mature enough with one vendor. And then it got off the rails. the network perimeters being discussed, you starting to see some of the, in the trenches really important it was for lab manager, you know, like, you know, put the labs And they are like a tap Tansu And then the ops guys, we, we got you covered, we got the standards, And they had to reboot that with jazzy and, and, and Raghu to do the databases I mean, that's what they're trying to be. I, I have said that many times VMware is bridged to the cloud, right? Say bridge to And that was my question to, They have all the enterprise So you got, it's not a stack model anymore. I mean, who is who, if it's not it's VMware and for all the banks. If VMware could do what they did with the hypervisor, with virtualization and create the new thing for What, what do you make of that? I think Tansu is a great effort. So it's what it's pivotal. So, So they claim that this ragus claim, it's this new architecture, this new federated architecture I mean, this is that Actually I think the newer, newer stuff, what they announced, that's very promising because it seems like I mean, they gotta say that about yeah. They have engineering culture. If they, if the VMware stays the way they are. We'll get to that a second. I mean, everyone needs to work on stuff, but you know, world class, on the right side, they are forced to work with hyperscalers to do more like ops related That that was weak. I think they mentioned it briefly very briefly, very briefly. It was, you know, and again, I understand why data wasn't Hawk and the employee morale and the ecosystem morale, Dave, then it had to do with the I mean, If you got this, it's on you. And I agree with you, but the, the, again, I don't, I don't see how you can't make security done periodically, just like Amazon does, you know, like frequent events tapping I think they planning, I talked to, we talked to the CMO and she said, Explorer is gonna be a road show. I would've dedicated the whole morning, I think it's hard for VMware to go that developers drive everything, the patterns, what they like and you know, the old cliche meet them where they are. It kind of did the same thing with pivotal. The new ops, the new ops guys. Then it's hard for VMware to convince them to, Hey, you know, come to us and use Not that they said anything overtly, but you know, the Lori, the CMO clarified They did an exceptional job on the branding. The people giving the talks, you know, the people in the I would say, why, why did it take so long? what it means, what it's gonna mean when the event's over, what's gonna happen. And especially when you are sitting on top of the actually four or I mean, you saw it last night. answer of, are they gonna try to do much more highly competitive maneuvering, you know, I think they muddy the waters by when DevOps, DevOps, and then it's And I remember he was under a siege of being fired. I mean, em, you know, EMC picked them up for a song. If he takes all stock and then he can, you know, own against it. Start be great to have you Dave great analysis.

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Wrap with Stu Miniman | Red Hat Summit 2022


 

(bright music) >> Okay, we're back in theCUBE. We said we were signing off for the night, but during the hallway track, we ran into old friend Stu Miniman who was the Director of Market Insights at Red Hat. Stu, friend of theCUBE done the thousands of CUBE interviews. >> Dave, it's great to be here. Thanks for pulling me on, you and I hosted Red Hat Summit before. It's great to see Paul here. I was actually, I was talking to some of the Red Hatters walking around Boston. It's great to have an event here. Boston's got strong presence and I understand, I think was either first or second year, they had it over... What's the building they're tearing down right down the road here. Was that the World Trade Center? I think that's where they actually held it, the first time they were here. We hosted theCUBE >> So they moved up. >> at the Hines Convention Center. We did theCUBE for summit at the BCEC next door. And of course, with the pandemic being what it was, we're a little smaller, nice intimate event here. It's great to be able to room the hall, see a whole bunch of people and lots watching online. >> It's great, it's around the same size as those, remember those Vertica Big Data events that we used to have here. And I like that you were commenting out at the theater and the around this morning for the keynotes, that was good. And the keynotes being compressed, I think, is real value for the attendees, you know? 'Cause people come to these events, they want to see each other, you know? They want to... It's like the band getting back together. And so when you're stuck in the keynote room, it's like, "Oh, it's okay, it's time to go." >> I don't know that any of us used to sitting at home where I could just click to another tab or pause it or run for, do something for the family, or a quick bio break. It's the three-hour keynote I hope has been retired. >> But it's an interesting point though, that the virtual event really is driving the physical and this, the way Red Hat marketed this event was very much around the virtual attendee. Physical was almost an afterthought, so. >> Right, this is an invite only for in-person. So you're absolutely right. It's optimizing the things that are being streamed, the online audience is the big audience. And we just happy to be in here to clap and do some things see around what you're doing. >> Wonderful see that becoming the norm. >> I think like virtual Stu, you know this well when virtual first came in, nobody had a clue with what they were doing. It was really hard. They tried different things, they tried to take the physical and just jam it into the virtual. That didn't work, they tried doing fun things. They would bring in a famous person or a comedian. And that kind of worked, I guess, but everybody showed up for that and then left. And I think they're trying to figure it out what this hybrid thing is. I've seen it both ways. I've seen situations like this, where they're really sensitive to the virtual. I've seen others where that's the FOMO of the physical, people want physical. So, yeah, I think it depends. I mean, reinvent last year was heavy physical. >> Yeah, with 15,000 people there. >> Pretty long keynotes, you know? So maybe Amazon can get away with it, but I think most companies aren't going to be able to. So what is the market telling you? What are these insights? >> So Dave just talking about Amazon, obviously, the world I live in cloud and that discussion of cloud, the journey that customers are going on is where we're spending a lot of the discussions. So, it was great to hear in the keynote, talked about our deep partnerships with the cloud providers and what we're doing to help people with, you like to call it super cloud, some call it hybrid, or multi-cloud... >> New name. (crosstalk) Meta-Cloud, come on. >> All right, you know if Che's my executive, so it's wonderful. >> Love it. >> But we'll see, if I could put on my VR Goggles and that will help me move things. But I love like the partnership announcement with General Motors today because not every company has the needs of software driven electric vehicles all over the place. But the technology that we build for them actually has ramifications everywhere. We've working to take Kubernetes and make it smaller over time. So things that we do at the edge benefit the cloud, benefit what we do in the data center, it's that advancement of science and technology just lifts all boats. >> So what's your take on all this? The EV and software on wheels. I mean, Tesla obviously has a huge lead. It's kind of like the Amazon of vehicles, right? It's sort of inspired a whole new wave of innovation. Now you've got every automobile manufacturer kind of go and after. That is the future of vehicles is something you followed or something you have an opinion on Stu? >> Absolutely. It's driving innovation in some ways, the way the DOS drove innovation on the desktop, if you remember the 64K DOS limit, for years, that was... The software developers came up with some amazing ways to work within that 64K limit. Then when it was gone, we got bloatware, but it actually does enforce a level of discipline on you to try to figure out how to make software run better, run more efficiently. And that has upstream impacts on the enterprise products. >> Well, right. So following your analogy, you talk about the enablement to the desktop, Linux was a huge influence on allowing the individual person to write code and write software, and what's happening in the EV, it's software platform. All of these innovations that we're seeing across industries, it's how is software transforming things. We go back to the mark end reasons, software's eating the world, open source is the way that software is developed. Who's at the intersection of all those? We think we have a nice part to play in that. I loved tha- Dave, I don't know if you caught at the end of the keynote, Matt Hicks basically said, "Our mission isn't just to write enterprise software. "Our mission is based off of open source because open source unlocks innovation for the world." And that's one of the things that drew me to Red Hat, it's not just tech in good places, but allowing underrepresented, different countries to participate in what's happening with software. And we can all move that ball forward. >> Well, can we declare victory for open source because it's not just open source products, but everything that's developed today, whether proprietary or open has open source in it. >> Paul, I agree. Open source is the development model period, today. Are there some places that there's proprietary? Absolutely. But I had a discussion with Deepak Singh who's been on theCUBE many times. He said like, our default is, we start with open source code. I mean, even Amazon when you start talking about that. >> I said this, the $70 billion business on open source. >> Exactly. >> Necessarily give it back, but that say, Hey, this is... All's fair in tech and more. >> It is interesting how the managed service model has sort of rescued open source, open source companies, that were trying to do the Red Hat model. No one's ever really successfully duplicated the Red Hat model. A lot of companies were floundering and failing. And then the managed service option came along. And so now they're all cloud service providers. >> So the only thing I'd say is that there are some other peers we have in the industry that are built off open source they're doing okay. The recent example, GitLab and Hashicorp, both went public. Hashi is doing some managed services, but it's not the majority of their product. Look at a company like Mongo, they've heavily pivoted toward the managed service. It is where we see the largest growth in our area. The products that we have again with Amazon, with Microsoft, huge growth, lots of interest. It's one of the things I spend most of my time talking on. >> I think Databricks is another interesting example 'cause Cloudera was the now company and they had the sort of open core, and then they had the proprietary piece, and they've obviously didn't work. Databricks when they developed Spark out of Berkeley, everybody thought they were going to do kind of a similar model. Instead, they went for all in managed services. And it's really worked well, I think they were ahead of that curve and you're seeing it now is it's what customers want. >> Well, I mean, Dave, you cover the database market pretty heavily. How many different open source database options are there today? And that's one of the things we're solving. When you look at what is Red Hat doing in the cloud? Okay, I've got lots of databases. Well, we have something called, it's Red Hat Open Database Access, which is from a developer, I don't want to have to think about, I've got six different databases, which one, where's the repository? How does all that happen? We give that consistency, it's tied into OpenShift, so it can help abstract some of those pieces. we've got same Kafka streaming and we've got APIs. So it's frameworks and enablers to help bridge that gap between the complexity that's out there, in the cloud and for the developer tool chain. >> That's really important role you guys play though because you had this proliferation, you mentioned Mongo. So many others, Presto and Starbursts, et cetera, so many other open source options out there now. And companies, developers want to work with multiple databases within the same application. And you have a role in making that easy. >> Yeah, so and that is, if you talk about the question I get all the time is, what's next for Kubernetes? Dave, you and I did a preview for KubeCon and it's automation and simplicity that we need to be. It's not enough to just say, "Hey, we've got APIs." It's like Dave, we used to say, "We've got standards? Great." Everybody's implementation was a little bit different. So we have API Sprawl today. So it's building that ecosystem. You've been talking to a number of our partners. We are very active in the community and trying to do things that can lift up the community, help the developers, help that cloud native ecosystem, help our customers move faster. >> Yeah API's better than scripts, but they got to be managed, right? So, and that's really what you guys are doing that's different. You're not trying to own everything, right? It's sort of antithetical to how billions and trillions are made in the IT industry. >> I remember a few years ago we talked here, and you look at the size that Red Hat is. And the question is, could Red Hat have monetized more if the model was a little different? It's like, well maybe, but that's not the why. I love that they actually had Simon Sinek come in and work with Red Hat and that open, unlocks the world. Like that's the core, it's the why. When I join, they're like, here's a book of Red Hat, you can get it online and that why of what we do, so we never have to think of how do we get there. We did an acquisition in the security space a year ago, StackRox, took us a year, it's open source. Stackrox.io, it's community driven, open source project there because we could have said, "Oh, well, yeah, it's kind of open source and there's pieces that are open source, but we want it to be fully open source." You just talked to Gunnar about how he's RHEL nine, based off CentOS stream, and now developing out in the open with that model, so. >> Well, you were always a big fan of Whitehurst culture book, right? It makes a difference. >> The open organization and right, Red Hat? That culture is special. It's definitely interesting. So first of all, most companies are built with the hierarchy in mind. Had a friend of mine that when he joined Red Hat, he's like, I don't understand, it's almost like you have like lots of individual contractors, all doing their things 'cause Red Hat works on thousands of projects. But I remember talking to Rackspace years ago when OpenStack was a thing and they're like, "How do you figure out what to work on?" "Oh, well we hired great people and they work on what's important to them." And I'm like, "That doesn't sound like a business." And he is like, "Well, we struggle sometimes to that balance." Red Hat has found that balance because we work on a lot of different projects and there are people inside Red Hat that are, you know, they care more about the project than they do the business, but there's the overall view as to where we participate and where we productize because we're not creating IP because it's all an open source. So it's the monetizations, the relationships we have our customers, the ecosystems that we build. And so that is special. And I'll tell you that my line has been Red Hat on the inside is even more Red Hat. The debates and the discussions are brutal. I mean, technical people tearing things apart, questioning things and you can't be thin skinned. And the other thing is, what's great is new people. I've talked to so many people that started at Red Hat as interns and will stay for seven, eight years. And they come there and they have as much of a seat at the table, and when I talk to new people, your job, is if you don't understand something or you think we might be able to do it differently, you better speak up because we want your opinion and we'll take that, everybody takes that into consideration. It's not like, does the decision go all the way up to this executive? And it's like, no, it's done more at the team. >> The cultural contrast between that and your parent, IBM, couldn't be more dramatic. And we talked earlier with Paul Cormier about has IBM really walked the walk when it comes to leaving Red Hat alone. Naturally he said, "Yes." Well what's your perspective. >> Yeah, are there some big blue people across the street or something I heard that did this event, but look, do we interact with IBM? Of course. One of the reasons that IBM and IBM Services, both products and services should be able to help get us breadth in the marketplace. There are times that we go arm and arm into customer meetings and there are times that customers tell us, "I like Red Hat, I don't like IBM." And there's other ones that have been like, "Well, I'm a long time IBM, I'm not sure about Red Hat." And we have to be able to meet all of those customers where they are. But from my standpoint, I've got a Red Hat badge, I've got a Red Hat email, I've got Red Hat benefits. So we are fiercely independent. And you know, Paul, we've done blogs and there's lots of articles been written is, Red Hat will stay Red Hat. I didn't happen to catch Arvin I know was on CNBC today and talking at their event, but I'm sure Red Hat got mentioned, but... >> Well, he talks about Red Hat all time. >> But in his call he's talking backwards. >> It's interesting that he's not here, greeting this audience, right? It's again, almost by design, right? >> But maybe that's supposed to be... >> Hundreds of yards away. >> And one of the questions being in the cloud group is I'm not out pitching IBM Cloud, you know? If a customer comes to me and asks about, we have a deep partnership and IBM will be happy to tell you about our integrations, as opposed to, I'm happy to go into a deep discussion of what we're doing with Google, Amazon, and Microsoft. So that's how we do it. It's very different Dave, from you and I watch really closely the VMware-EMC, VMware-Dell, and how that relationship. This one is different. We are owned by IBM, but we mostly, it does IBM fund initiatives and have certain strategic things that are done, absolutely. But we maintain Red Hat. >> But there are similarities. I mean, VMware crowd didn't want to talk about EMC, but they had to, they were kind of forced to. Whereas, you're not being forced to. >> And then once Dell came in there, it was joint product development. >> I always thought a spin in. Would've been the more effective, of course, Michael Dell and Egon wouldn't have gotten their $40 billion out. But I think a spin in was more natural based on where they were going. And it would've been, I think, a more dominant position in the marketplace. They would've had more software, but again, financially it wouldn't have made as much sense, but that whole dynamic is different. I mean, but people said they were going to look at VMware as a model and it's been largely different because remember, VMware of course was a separate company, now is a fully separate company. Red Hat was integrated, we thought, okay, are they going to get blue washed? We're watching and watching, and watching, you had said, well, if the Red Hat culture isn't permeating IBM, then it's a failure. And I don't know if that's happening, but it's definitely... >> I think a long time for that. >> It's definitely been preserved. >> I mean, Dave, I know I read one article at the beginning of the year is, can Arvin make IBM, Microsoft Junior? Follow the same turnaround that Satya Nadella drove over there. IBM I think making some progress, I mean, I read and watch what you and the team are all writing about it. And I'll withhold judgment on IBM. Obviously, there's certain financial things that we'd love to see IBM succeed. We worry about our business. We do our thing and IBM shares our results and they've been solid, so. >> Microsoft had such massive cash flow that even bomber couldn't screw it up. Well, I mean, this is true, right? I mean, you think about how were relevant Microsoft was in the conversation during his tenure and yet they never got really... They maintained a position so that when the Nadella came in, they were able to reascend and now are becoming that dominant player. I mean, IBM just doesn't have that cash flow and that luxury, but I mean, if he pulls it off, he'll be the CEO of the decade. >> You mentioned partners earlier, big concern when the acquisition was first announced, was that the Dells and the HP's and the such wouldn't want to work with Red Hat anymore, you've sort of been here through that transition. Is that an issue? >> Not that I've seen, no. I mean, the hardware suppliers, the ISVs, the GSIs are all very important. It was great to see, I think you had Accenture on theCUBE today, obviously very important partner as we go to the cloud. IBM's another important partner, not only for IBM Cloud, but IBM Services, deep partnership with Azure and AWS. So those partners and from a technology standpoint, the cloud native ecosystem, we talked about, it's not just a Red Hat product. I constantly have to talk about, look, we have a lot of pieces, but your developers are going to have other tools that they're going to use and the security space. There is no such thing as a silver bullet. So I've been having some great conversations here already this week with some of our partners that are helping us to round out that whole solution, help our customers because it has to be, it's an ecosystem. And we're one of the drivers to help that move forward. >> Well, I mean, we were at Dell Tech World last week, and there's a lot of talk about DevSecOps and DevOps and Dell being more developer friendly. Obviously they got a long way to go, but you can't have that take that posture and not have a relationship with Red Hat. If all you got is Pivotal and VMware, and Tansu >> I was thrilled to hear the OpenShift mention in the keynote when they talked about what they were doing. >> How could you not, how could you have any credibility if you're just like, Oh, Pivotal, Pivotal, Pivotal, Tansu, Tansu. Tansu is doing its thing. And they smart strategy. >> VMware is also a partner of ours, but that we would hope that with VMware being independent, that does open the door for us to do more with them. >> Yeah, because you guys have had a weird relationship with them, under ownership of EMC and then Dell, right? And then the whole IBM thing. But it's just a different world now. Ecosystems are forming and reforming, and Dell's building out its own cloud and it's got to have... Look at Amazon, I wrote about this. I said, "Can you envision the day where Dell actually offers competitive products in its suite, in its service offering?" I mean, it's hard to see, they're not there yet. They're not even close. And they have this high say/do ratio, or really it's a low say/do, they say high say/do, but look at what they did with Nutanix. You look over- (chuckles) would tell if it's the Cisco relationship. So it's got to get better at that. And it will, I really do believe. That's new thinking and same thing with HPE. And, I don't know about Lenovo that not as much of an ecosystem play, but certainly Dell and HPE. >> Absolutely. Michael Dell would always love to poke at HPE and HP really went very far down the path of their own products. They went away from their services organization that used to be more like IBM, that would offer lots of different offerings and very much, it was HP Invent. Well, if we didn't invent it, you're not getting it from us. So Dell, we'll see, as you said, the ecosystems are definitely forming, converging and going in lots of different directions. >> But your position is, Hey, we're here, we're here to help. >> Yeah, we're here. We have customers, one of the best proof points I have is the solution that we have with Amazon. Amazon doesn't do the engineering work to make us a native offering if they didn't have the customer demand because Amazon's driven off of data. So they came to us, they worked with us. It's a lot of work to be able to make that happen, but you want to make it frictionless for customers so that they can adopt that. That's a long path. >> All right, so evening event, there's a customer event this evening upstairs in the lobby. Microsoft is having a little shin dig, and then serves a lot of customer dinners going on. So Stu, we'll see you out there tonight. >> All right, thanks you. >> Were watching a brewing somewhere. >> Keynotes tomorrow, a lot of good sessions and enablement, and yeah, it's great to be in person to be able to bump some people, meet some people and, Hey, I'm still a year and a half in still meeting a lot of my peers in person for the first time. >> Yeah, and that's kind of weird, isn't it? Imagine. And then we kick off tomorrow at 10:00 AM. Actually, Stephanie Chiras is coming on. There she is in the background. She's always a great guest and maybe do a little kickoff and have some fun tomorrow. So this is Dave Vellante for Stu Miniman, Paul Gillin, who's my co-host. You're watching theCUBEs coverage of Red Hat Summit 2022. We'll see you tomorrow. (bright music)

Published Date : May 11 2022

SUMMARY :

but during the hallway track, Was that the World Trade Center? at the Hines Convention Center. And I like that you were It's the three-hour keynote that the virtual event really It's optimizing the things becoming the norm. and just jam it into the virtual. aren't going to be able to. a lot of the discussions. Meta-Cloud, come on. All right, you know But the technology that we build for them It's kind of like the innovation on the desktop, And that's one of the things Well, can we declare I mean, even Amazon when you start talking the $70 billion business on open source. but that say, Hey, this is... the managed service model but it's not the majority and then they had the proprietary piece, And that's one of the And you have a role in making that easy. I get all the time is, are made in the IT industry. And the question is, Well, you were always a big fan the relationships we have our customers, And we talked earlier One of the reasons that But in his call he's talking that's supposed to be... And one of the questions I mean, VMware crowd didn't And then once Dell came in there, Would've been the more I think a long time It's definitely been at the beginning of the year is, and that luxury, the HP's and the such I mean, the hardware suppliers, the ISVs, and not have a relationship with Red Hat. the OpenShift mention in the keynote And they smart strategy. that does open the door for us and it's got to have... the ecosystems are definitely forming, But your position is, Hey, is the solution that we have with Amazon. So Stu, we'll see you out there tonight. Were watching a brewing person for the first time. There she is in the background.

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AWS Heroes Panel | Open Cloud Innovations


 

(upbeat music) >> Hello, and welcome back to AWS Startup Showcase, I'm John Furrier, your host. This is the Hero panel, the AWS Heroes. These are folks that have a lot of experience in Open Source, having fun building great projects and commercializing the value and best practices of Open Source innovation. We've got some great guests here. Liz Rice, Chief Open Source Officer, Isovalent. CUBE alumni, great to see you. Brian LeRoux, who is the Co-founder and CTO of begin.com. Erica Windisch who's an Architect for Developer Experience. AWS Hero, also CUBE alumni. Casey Lee, CTO Gaggle. Doing some great stuff in ed tech. Great collection of experts and experienced folks doing some fun stuff, welcome to this conversation this CUBE panel. >> Hi. >> Thanks for having us. >> Hello. >> Let's go down the line. >> I don't normally do this, but since we're remote and we have such great guests, go down the line and talk about why Open Source is important to you guys. What projects are you currently working on? And what's the coolest thing going on there? Liz we'll start with you. >> Okay, so I am very involved in the world of Cloud Native. I'm the chair of the technical oversight committee for the Cloud Native Computing Foundation. So that means I get to see a lot of what's going on across a very broad range of Cloud Native projects. More specifically, Isovalent. I focus on Cilium, which is it's based on a technology called EBPF. That is to me, probably the most exciting technology right now. And then finally, I'm also involved in an organization called OpenUK, which is really pushing for more use of open technologies here in the United Kingdom. So spread around lots of different projects. And I'm in a really fortunate position, I think, to see what's happening with lots of projects and also the commercialization of lots of projects. >> Awesome, Brian what project are you working on? >> Working project these days called Architect. It's a Open Source project built on top of AWSM. It adds a lot of sugar and terseness to the SM experience and just makes it a lot easier to work with and get started. AWS can be a little bit intimidating to people at times. And the Open Source community is stepping up to make some of that bond ramp a little bit easier. And I'm also an Apache member. And so I keep a hairy eyeball on what's going on in that reality all the time. And I've been doing this open-source thing for quite a while, and yeah, I love it. It's a great thing. It's real science. We get to verify each other's work and we get to expand and build on human knowledge. So that's a huge honor to just even be able to do that and I feel stoked to be here so thanks for having me. >> Awesome, yeah, and totally great. Erica, what's your current situation going on here? What's happening? >> Sure, so I am currently working on developer experience of a number of Open Source STKS and CLI components from my current employer. And previously, recently I left New Relic where I was working on integrating with OpenTelemetry, as well as a number of other things. Before that I was a maintainer of Docker and of OpenStack. So I've been in this game for a while as well. And I tend to just put my fingers in a lot of little pies anywhere from DVD players 20 years ago to a lot of this open telemetry and monitoring and various STKs and developer tools is where like Docker and OpenStack and the STKs that I work on now, all very much focusing on developer as the user. >> Yeah, you're always on the wave, Erica great stuff. Casey, what's going on? Do you got some great ed techs happening? What's happening with you? >> Yeah, sure. The primary Open Source project that I'm contributing to right now is ACT. This is a tool I created a couple of years back when GitHub Actions first came out, and my motivation there was I'm just impatient. And that whole commit, push, wait time where you're testing out your pipelines is painful. And so I wanted to build a tool that allowed developers to test out their GitHub Actions workflows locally. And so this tool uses Docker containers to emulate, to get up action environment and gives you fast feedback on those workflows that you're building. Lot of innovation happening at GitHub. And so we're just trying to keep up and continue to replicate those new features functionalities in the local runner. And the biggest challenge I've had with this project is just keeping up with the community. We just passed 20,000 stars, and it'd be it's a normal week to get like 10 PRs. So super excited to announce just yesterday, actually I invited four of the most active contributors to help me with maintaining the project. And so this is like a big deal for me, letting the project go and bringing other people in to help lead it. So, yeah, huge shout out to those folks that have been helping with driving that project. So looking forward to what's next for it. >> Great, we'll make sure the SiliconANGLE riders catch that quote there. Great call out. Let's start, Brian, you made me realize when you mentioned Apache and then you've been watching all the stuff going on, it brings up the question of the evolution of Open Source, and the commercialization trends have been very interesting these days. You're seeing CloudScale really impact also with the growth of code. And Liz, if you remember, the Linux Foundation keeps making projections and they keep blowing past them every year on more and more code and more and more entrance coming in, not just individuals, corporations. So you starting to see Netflix donates something, you got Lyft donate some stuff, becomes a project company forms around it. There's a lot of entrepreneurial activity that's creating this new abstraction layers, new platforms, not just tools. So you start to see a new kickup trajectory with Open Source. You guys want to comment on this because this is going to impact how fast the enterprise will see value here. >> I think a really great example of that is a project called Backstage that's just come out of Spotify. And it's going through the incubation process at the CNCF. And that's why it's front of mind for me right now, 'cause I've been working on the due diligence for that. And the reason why I thought it was interesting in relation to your question is it's spun out of Spotify. It's fully Open Source. They have a ton of different enterprises using it as this developer portal, but they're starting to see some startups emerging offering like a hosted managed version of Backstage or offering services around Backstage or offering commercial plugins into Backstage. And I think it's really fascinating to see those ecosystems building up around a project and different ways that people can. I'm a big believer. You cannot sell the Open Source code, but you can sell other things that create value around Open Source projects. So that's really exciting to see. >> Great point. Anyone else want to weigh in and react to that? Because it's the new model. It's not the old way. I mean, I remember when I was in college, we had the Pirate software. Open Source wasn't around. So you had to deal under the table. Now it's free. But I mean the old way was you had to convince the enterprise, like you've got a hard knit, it builds the community and the community manage the quality of the code. And then you had to build the company to make sure they could support it. Now the companies are actually involved in it, right? And then new startups are forming faster. And the proof points are shorter and highly accelerated for that. I mean, it's a whole new- >> It's a Cambrian explosion, and it's great. It's one of those things that it's challenging for the new developers because they come in and they're like, "Whoa, what is all this stuff that I'm supposed to figure out?" And there's no right answer and there's no wrong answer. There's just tons of it. And I think that there's a desire for us to have one sort of well-known trot and happy path, that audience we're a lot better with a more diverse community, with lots of options, with lots of ways to approach these problems. And I think it's just great. A challenge that we have with all these options and all these Cambrian explosion of projects and all these competing ideas, right now, the sustainability, it's a bit of a tricky question to answer. We know that there's a commercialization aspect that helps us fund these projects, but how we compose the open versus the commercial source is still a bit of a tricky question and a tough one for a lot of folks. >> Erica, would you chime in on that for a second. I want to get your angle on that, this experience and all this code, and I'm a new person, I'm an existing person. Do I get like a blue check mark and verify? I mean, these are questions like, well, how do you navigate? >> Yeah, I think this has been something happening for a while. I mean, back in the early OpenStack days, 2010, for instance, Rackspace Open Sourcing, OpenStack and ANSU Labs and so forth, and then trying, having all these companies forming in creating startups around this. I started at a company called Cloudccaling back in late 2010, and we had some competitors such as Piston and so forth where a lot of the ANSUL Labs people went. But then, the real winners, I think from OpenStack ended up being the enterprises that jumped in. We had Red Hat in particular, as well as HP and IBM jumping in and investing in OpenStack, and really proving out a lot of... not that it was the first time, but this is when we started seeing billions of dollars pouring into Open Source projects and Open Source Foundations, such as the OpenStack Foundation, which proceeded a lot of the things that we now see with the Linux Foundation, which was then created a little bit later. And at the same time, I'm also reflecting a little bit what Brian said because there are projects that don't get funded, that don't get the same attention, but they're also getting used quite significantly. Things like Log4j really bringing this to the spotlight in terms of projects that are used everywhere by everything with significant outsized impacts on the industry that are not getting funded, that aren't flashy enough, that aren't exciting enough because it's just logging, but a vulnerability in it brings every everything and everybody down and has possibly billions of dollars of impact to our industry because nobody wanted to fund this project. >> I think that brings up the commercialization point about maybe bringing a venture capital model in saying, "Hey, that boring little logging thing could be a key ingredient for say solving some observability problems so I think let's put some cash." Again then we'd never seen that before. Now you're starting to see that kind of a real smart investment thesis going into Open Source projects. I mean, Promethease, Crafter, these are projects that turned off companies. This is turning up companies. >> A decade ago, there was no money in Dev tools that I think that's been fully debunked now. They used to be a concept that the venture community believed, but there's just too much evidence to the contrary, the companies like Cash Court, Datadog, the list goes on and on. I think the challenge for the Open Source (indistinct) comes back to foundations and working (indistinct) these developers make this code safe and secure. >> Casey, what's your reaction to all of this? You've got, so a project has gained some traction, got some momentum. There's a lot of mission critical. I won't say white spaces, but the opportunities in the big cloud game happening. And there's a lot of, I won't say too many entrepreneurial, but there's a lot of community action happening that's precommercialization that's getting traction. How does this all develop naturally and then vector in quickly when it hits? >> Yeah, I want to go back to the Log4j topic real quick. I think that it's a great example of an area that we need to do better at. And there was a cool article that Rob Pike wrote describing how to quantify the criticality. I think that's sort of quantifying criticality was the article he wrote on how to use metrics, to determine how valuable, how important a piece of Open Source is to the community. And we really need to highlight that more. We need a way to make it more clear how important this software is, how many people depend on it and how many people are contributing to it. And because right now we all do that. Like if I'm going to evaluate an Open Source software, sure, I'll look at how many stars it has and how many contributors it has. But I got to go through and do all that work myself and come up with. It would be really great if we had an agreed upon method for ranking the criticality of software, but then also the risk, hey, that this is used by a ton of people, but nobody's contributing to it anymore. That's a concern. And that would be great to potential users of that to signal whether or not it makes sense. The Open Source Security Foundation, just getting off the ground, they're doing some work in this space, and I'm really excited to see where they go with that looking at ways to stop score critically. >> Well, this brings up a good point while we've got everyone here, let's take a plug and plug a project you think that's not getting the visibility it needs. Let's go through each of you, point out a project that you think people should be looking at and talking about that might get some free visibility here. Anyone want to highlight projects they think should be focused more on, or that needs a little bit of love? >> I think, I mean, particularly if we're talking about these sort of vulnerability issues, there's a ton of work going on, like in the Secure Software Foundation, other foundations, I think there's work going on in Apache somewhere as well around the bill of material, the software bill of materials, the Secure Software supply chain security, even enumerating your dependencies is not trivial today. So I think there's going to be a ton of people doing really good work on that, as well as the criticality aspect. It's all like that. There's a really great xkcd cartoon with your software project and some really big monolithic lumps. And then, this tiny little piece in a very important point that's maintained by somebody in his bedroom in Montana or something and if you called it out. >> Yeah, you just opened where the next lightening and a bottle comes from. And this is I think the beauty of Open Source is that you get a little collaboration, you get three feet in a cloud of dust going and you get some momentum, and if it's relevant, it rises to the top. I think that's the collective intelligence of Open Source. The question I want to ask that the panel here is when you go into an enterprise, and now that the game is changing with a much more collaborative and involved, what's the story if they say, hey, what's in it for me, how do I manage the Open Source? What's the current best practice? Because there's no doubt I can't ignore it. It's in everything we do. How do I organize around it? How do I build around it to be more efficient and more productive and reduce the risk on vulnerabilities to managing staff, making sure the right teams in place, the right agility and all those things? >> You called it, they got to get skin in the game. They need to be active and involved and donating to a sustainable Open Source project is a great way to start. But if you really want to be active, then you should be committing. You should have a goal for your organization to be contributing back to that project. Maybe not committing code, it could be committing resources into the darks or in the tests, or even tweeting about an Open Source project is contributing to it. And I think a lot of these enterprises could benefit a lot from getting more active with the Open Source Foundations that are out there. >> Liz, you've been actively involved. I know we've talked personally when the CNCF started, which had a great commercial uptake from companies. What do you think the current state-of-the-art kind of equation is has it changed a little bit? Or is it the game still the same? >> Yeah, and in the early days of the CNCF, it was very much dominated by vendors behind the project. And now we're seeing more and more membership from end-user companies, the kind of enterprises that are building their businesses on Cloud Native, but their business is not in itself. That's not there. The infrastructure is not their business. And I think seeing those companies, putting money in, putting time in, as Brian says contributing resources quite often, there's enough money, but finding the talent to do the work and finding people who are prepared to actually chop the wood and carry the water, >> Exactly. >> that it's hard. >> And if enterprises can find peoples to spend time on Open Source projects, help with those chores, it's hugely valuable. And it's one of those the rising tide floats all the boats. We can raise security, we can reduce the amount of dependency on maintain projects collectively. >> I think the business models there, I think one of the things I'll react to and then get your guys' comments is remember which CubeCon it was, it was one of the early ones. And I remember seeing Apple having a booth, but nobody was manning. It was just an Apple booth. They weren't doing anything, but they were recruiting. And I think you saw the transition of a business model where the worry about a big vendor taking over a project and having undue influence over it goes away because I think this idea of participation is also talent, but also committing that talent back into the communities as a model, as a business model, like, okay, hire some great people, but listen, don't screw up the Open Source piece of it 'cause that's a critical. >> Also hire a channel, right? They can use those contributions to source that talent and build the reputation in the communities that they depend on. And so there's really a lot of benefit to the larger organizations that can do this. They'll have a huge pipeline of really qualified engineers right out the gate without having to resort to cheesy whiteboard interviews, which is pretty great. >> Yeah, I agree with a lot of this. One of my concerns is that a lot of these corporations tend to focus very narrowly on certain projects, which they feel that they depend greatly, they'll invest in OpenStack, they'll invest in Docker, they'll invest in some of the CNCF projects. And then these other projects get ignored. Something that I've been a proponent of for a little bit for a while is observability of your dependencies. And I don't think there's quite enough projects and solutions to this. And it sounds maybe from lists, there are some projects that I don't know about, but I also know that there's some startups like Snyk and so forth that help with a little bit of this problem, but I think we need more focus on some of these edges. And I think companies need to do better, both in providing, having some sort of solution for observability of the dependencies, as well as understanding those dependencies and managing them. I've seen companies for instance, depending on software that they actively don't want to use based on a certain criteria that they already set projects, like they'll set a requirement that any project that they use has a code of conduct, but they'll then use projects that don't have codes of conduct. And if they don't have a code of conduct, then employees are prohibited from working on those projects. So you've locked yourself into a place where you're depending on software that you have instructed, your employees are not allowed to contribute to, for certain legal and other reasons. So you need to draw a line in the sand and then recognize that those projects are ones that you don't want to consume, and then not use them, and have observability around these things. >> That's a great point. I think we have 10 minutes left. I want to just shift to a topic that I think is relevant. And that is as Open Source software, software, people develop software, you see under the hood kind of software, SREs developing very quickly in the CloudScale, but also you've got your classic software developers who were writing code. So you have supply chain, software supply chain challenges. You mentioned developer experience around how to code. You have now automation in place. So you've got the development of all these things that are happening. Like I just want to write software. Some people want to get and do infrastructure as code so DevSecOps is here. So how does that look like going forward? How has the future of Open Source going to make the developers just want to code quickly? And the folks who want to tweak the infrastructure a bit more efficient, any views on that? >> At Gaggle, we're using AWS' CDK, exclusively for our infrastructure as code. And it's a great transition for developers instead of writing Yammel or Jason, or even HCL for their infrastructure code, now they're writing code in the language that they're used to Python or JavaScript, and what that's providing is an easier transition for developers into that Infrastructure as code at Gaggle here, but it's also providing an opportunity to provide reusable constructs that some Devs can build on. So if we've got a very opinionated way to deploy a serverless app in a database and do auto-scaling behind and all stuff, we can present that to a developer as a library, and they can just consume it as it is. Maybe that's as deep as they want to go and they're happy with that. But then they want to go deeper into it, they can either use some of the lower level constructs or create PRs to the platform team to have those constructs changed to fit their needs. So it provides a nice on-ramp developers to use the tools and languages they're used to, and then also go deeper as they need. >> That's awesome. Does that mean they're not full stack developers anymore that they're half stack developers they're taking care of for them? >> I don't know either. >> We'll in. >> No, only kidding. Anyway, any other reactions to this whole? I just want to code, make it easy for me, and some people want to get down and dirty under the hood. >> So I think that for me, Docker was always a key part of this. I don't know when DevSecOps was coined exactly, but I was talking with people about it back in 2012. And when I joined Docker, it was a part of that vision for me, was that Docker was applying these security principles by default for your application. It wasn't, I mean, yes, everybody adopted because of the portability and the acceleration of development, but it was for me, the fact that it was limiting what you could do from a security angle by default, and then giving you these tuna balls that you can control it further. You asked about a project that may not get enough recognition is something called DockerSlim, which is designed to optimize your containers and will make them smaller, but it also constraints the security footprint, and we'll remove capabilities from the container. It will help you build security profiles for app armor and the Red Hat one. SELinux. >> SELinux. >> Yeah, and this is something that I think a lot of developers, it's kind of outside of the realm of things that they're really thinking about. So the more that we can automate those processes and make it easier out of the box for users or for... when I say users, I mean, developers, so that it's straightforward and automatic and also giving them the capability of refining it and tuning it as needed, or simply choosing platforms like serverless offerings, which have these security constraints built in out of the box and sometimes maybe less tuneable, but very strong by default. And I think that's a good place for us to be is where we just enforced these things and make you do things in a secure way. >> Yeah, I'm a huge fan of Kubernetes, but it's not the right hammer for every nail. And there are absolutely tons of applications that are better served by something like Lambda where a lot more of that security surface is taken care of for the developer. And I think we will see better tooling around security profiling and making it easier to shrink wrap your applications that there are plenty of products out there that can help you with this in a cloud native environment. But I think for the smaller developer let's say, or an earlier stage company, yeah, it needs to be so much more straightforward. Really does. >> Really an interesting time, 10 years ago, when I was working at Adobe, we used to requisition all these analysts to tell us how many developers there were for the market. And we thought there was about 20 million developers. If GitHub's to be believed, we think there is now around 80 million developers. So both these groups are probably wrong in their numbers, but the takeaway here for me is that we've got a lot of new developers and a lot of these new developers are really struck by a paradox of choice. And they're typically starting on the front end. And so there's a lot of movement in the stack moved towards the front end. We saw that at re:Invent when Amazon was really pushing Amplify 'cause they're seeing this too. It's interesting because this is where folks start. And so a lot of the obstructions are moving in that direction, but maybe not always necessarily totally appropriate. And so finding the right balance for folks is still a work in progress. Like Lambda is a great example. It lets me focus totally on just business logic. I don't have to think about infrastructure pretty much at all. And if I'm newer to the industry, that makes a lot of sense to me. As use cases expand, all of a sudden, reality intervenes, and it might not be appropriate for everything. And so figuring out what those edges are, is still the challenge, I think. >> All right, thank you very much for coming on the CUBE here panel. AWS Heroes, thanks everyone for coming. I really appreciate it, thank you. >> Thank you. >> Thank you. >> Okay. >> Thanks for having me. >> Okay, that's a wrap here back to the program and the awesome startups. Thanks for watching. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Jan 26 2022

SUMMARY :

and commercializing the value is important to you guys. and also the commercialization that reality all the time. Erica, what's your current and the STKs that I work on now, the wave, Erica great stuff. and continue to replicate those and the commercialization trends And the reason why I and the community manage that I'm supposed to figure out?" in on that for a second. that don't get the same attention, the commercialization point that the venture community believed, but the opportunities in the of that to signal whether and plug a project you think So I think there's going to be and now that the game is changing and donating to a sustainable Or is it the game still the same? but finding the talent to do the work the rising tide floats all the boats. And I think you saw the and build the reputation And I think companies need to do better, And the folks who want to in the language that they're Does that mean they're not and some people want to get and the acceleration of development, of the realm of things and making it easier to And so finding the right balance for folks for coming on the CUBE here panel. the awesome startups.

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Sirish Raghuram | KubeCon + CloudNativeCon NA 2021


 

welcome back to la we are live in los angeles at kubecon cloudnativecon 21 lisa martin and dave nicholson we've been talking to folks all day great to be here in person about 2 700 folks are here the kubernetes the community the cncf community is huge 138 000 folks great to see some of them in person back collaborating once again dave and i are pleased to welcome our next guest we have suresh ragaram co-founder and ceo of platform 9. sarish welcome to the program thank you for having me it's a pleasure to be here give our audience an overview of platform 9 who are you guys what do you do when were you founded all that good stuff so we are about seven years old we were founded with a mission to make it easy to run private hybrid and edge clouds my co-founders and i were early engineers at vmware and what we realized is that it's really easy to go use the public cloud because the public clouds have this innovation which is they have a control plane which serves as a it serves as a foundation for them to launch a lot of services and make that really simple and easy to use but if you need to get that experience in a private cloud or a hybrid cloud or in the edge nobody gives you that cloud control plane you get it from amazon in amazon get it from azure in azure google and google who gives you a sas cloud control plane to run private clouds or edge clouds or hybrid clouds nobody and this is uh this is what we do so this is we make it easy to run these clouds using technologies like kubernetes with our our sas control plane now is it limited to kubernetes because when you you you mentioned your background at vmware uh is this a control plane for what people would think of as private clouds using vmware style abstraction or is this primarily cloud native so when we first started actually docker did not exist like okay so at the time our first product to market was actually an infrastructure service product and at the time we looked at what is what is out there we knew vmware vsphere was out there it's a vmware technology there was apache cloud stack and openstack and we had look the open ecosystem around vms and infrastructure as a service is openstack so we chose open source as the lingua franca for the service endpoint so our control plane we deliver openstack as a service that was our first product when kubernetes when the announcement of communities came out from google we knew at that time we're going to go launch because we'd already been studying lxc and and docker we knew at the time we're going to standardize on kubernetes because we believe that an open ecosystem was forming around that that was a big bet for us you know this this this foundation and this this community is proof that that was a good bet and today that's actually a flap flagship product it's our you know the biggest biggest share of revenue biggest share of install base uh but we do have more than one product we have openstack as a service we have bare metal as a service we have containers as a service with kubernetes i want to ask you some of the the i'm looking at your website here platform9.com some of the three marketing messages i want you to break these down for me simplify day two ops multi-cloud ready on day one and we know so many businesses are multi-cloud and percentage is only going up and faster time to market talk to me about this let's start with simplified day two ops how do you enable that so you know one of the biggest if you talk to anyone who runs like a large vmware environment and you ask them when was the last time you did an upgrade or for that matter somebody who's running like a large-scale kubernetes environment or an openstack environment uh probably in a private cloud deployment awesome when was the last time you did an upgrade how did that go when was the last time you had an outage who did you call how did that go right and you'll hear an outpouring of emotion okay same thing you go ask people when you use kubernetes in the public cloud how do these things work and they'll say it's pretty easy it's not that hard and so the question the idea of platform 9 is why is there such a divide there's this you know we talk about digital divide there is a cloud divide the public clouds have figured out something that the rest of the industry has not and people suffer with private clouds there's a lot of demand for private clouds very few people can make it work because they try to do it with a lot of like handheld tools and you know limited automation skills and scripting what you need is you need the automation that makes sure that ongoing troubleshooting 24x7 alerting upgrades to new versions are all fully managed when amazon doesn't upgrade to a new version people don't have to worry about it they don't have to stay up at night they don't deal with outages you shouldn't have to deal with that in your private cloud so those are the kinds of problems right the troubleshooting the upgrades the the remediation when things go wrong that are taken for granted in the public cloud that we bring to the customers who want to run them in private or hybrid or edge cloud environments how do you help customers and what does future proofing mean like how do you help customers future proof their cloud native journey what does that mean to platform 9 and what does that mean to your customers i'll give you one of my favorite stories is actually one of our early customers is snapfish it's a photo sharing company it's a consumer company right when they got started with us they were coming off of vmware they wanted to run an openstack environment they started nearly four years ago and they started using us with openstack and vms and infrastructure as a service fast forward to today 85 percent of the usage on us is containers and they didn't have to hire openstack experts nor do they have to hire kubernetes experts but their application development teams got went from moving from a somewhat legacy vmware style id environment to a modern self-service developer experience with openstack and then to containers and kubernetes and we're gonna we're gonna work on the next generation of innovation with serverless technologies simplifying you know building modern more elastic applications and so our control plane the beauty of our model is our control plane adds value it added value with openstack it added value with kubernetes it'll add value with what's next around the evolution of serverless technologies right it's evergreen and our customers get the benefit of all of that so when you talk about managing environments that are on premises and in clouds i assume you're talking hyperscale clouds like aws azure gcp um what kind of infrastructure needs to be deployed and when i say infrastructure that's can be software what needs to be deployed in say aws for this to work what does it look like so some 30 of our users use us on in the public cloud and the majority of that actually happens in aws uh because they're the number one cloud and we really give people three choices right so they can choose to use and consume aws the way they want to so we have a small minority of customers that actually provisions bare metal servers in aws that's a small minority because the specific use cases they're trying to do and they try to deploy like kubernetes on bare metal but the bare metal happens to be running on aws okay that's a small minority a larger majority of our users in aws or some hyperscale cloud brings their vpc under management so they come in get started sign up with platform 9 in their platform 9 control plane they go and say i want to plug in this vpc and i want to give you this much authorization to this vpc and in that vpc we essentially can impersonate them and on their behalf provision nodes and provision clusters using our communities open source kubernetes upstream cncf kubernetes but we also have customers that said hey i already have some clusters with eks i really like what the rest of your platform allows me to do and i think it's a better platform for me to use for a variety of reasons can you bring my eks clusters under management and then help me provision new new clusters on top and the answer is you can so you can choose to bring your bare metal you can choose to bring your vpc and just provision like virtual machine and treat them as nodes for communities clusters or you can bring pre-built kubernetes clusters and manage them using our management uh product what are your routes to market so we have three routes to market um we have a completely self-serve completely free forever uh experience where people can just go sign up log in get access to the control plane and be up and running within minutes right they can plug in their server hardware on premises at the edge in the cloud their vpcs and they can be up and running from there they can choose to upgrade upsell into a grow into an uh growth tier or you know choose to request for more support and a higher touch experience and work with our sales team and get into an enterprise tier and our that is our second go to market which is a direct go to market uh companies in the retail space companies tech companies uh companies in fintech companies that are investing in digital transformation a big way have lots of software developers and are adopting these technologies in a big way but want private or hybrid or edge clouds that's the second go to market the third and and in the last two years this is new to us really exciting go to market to us is a partner partner let go to market where partners like rackspace have oem platform line so we have a partnership d partnership with rackspace all of rackspace's customers and they install base essentially including customers who are consuming public cloud services wire rackspace get access to platform 9 and rackspace working together with rackspace's ability to kind of service the whole mile uh and also uh we have a very important partnership with maveneer in the 5g space so 5g we think is a large opportunity and there's a there's a joint product there called maven webscape platform to run 5g networks on our community stack so platform nine why what does that mean harry potter harry potter so it's platform nine and three quarters okay we had this realization my cofounders and i were at vmware for 10 for 10 15 years and we were struggling with this problem of why is the public cloud so easy to use why is it so hard to run a private cloud and even today i think not many people realize uh and that's the analogy to platform nine and three quarters it's like it's right in the middle of king's cross station you go through it and you enter the whole new world of magic that that secret door that platform nine and three quarters is a sas control plane that is a secret sauce that amazon has and azure has and google has and we're bringing that for anybody who wants to use it on any infrastructure of their choice where can customers go to learn more about platform nine so platform nine dot com uh follow us on twitter platform line says or on linkedin you know and if any of our viewers are here at kubecon they can stop by your booth what are some of the things that you're featuring there we are at the booth we have our product managers we have our support engineers we have the people that are actually doing the real work behind the product right there we're talking about our roadmap we're talking about the product demos we're doing like specific show talks on specific deep dives in our product and we're also talking about some some really cool things that are coming up in the garage uh in the in the next six months can you leave us with any teasers about what some of the cool things are that are coming up in the garage yeah one one one thing that is a really big deal is um uh is the ability to manage kubernetes clusters as as as cattle right kubernetes makes node management and app management lets you treat them as cattle instead of pets but kubernetes clusters themselves our customers tell us like even in amazon eks and others these clusters themselves become pets and they become hard to manage so we have a really really interesting capability to manage these as more as you know from infrastructure code with githubs uh as cattle we actually have an announcement that i'm not able to share at this point which is coming out in two weeks uh in the ed space so you'll have to stay tuned for that so folks can go to platformnine.com.com check out that announcement two weeks two weeks from now by the end of october that's right awesome sharers thank you so much for joining us i love the fact that you asked that question because i kept thinking platform nine where do i know that from and i just googled harry potter that's right from nine and five dying because i didn't automatically make the correlation because my son and i are the most unbelievable potterheads ever yeah well so we have that in common that's fantastic awesome thank you for joining us sharing what platform mine is some of the exciting stuff coming out and two weeks learn to hear some great news about the edge absolutely awesome thank you for joining us my pleasure thank you for having me uh our pleasure as well for dave nicholson i'm lisa martin live in los angeles thecube is covering kubecon cloudnativecon21 stick around we'll be right back with our next guest

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Chris Sachse, ThinkStack, and Michael Matthews, Mutual Credit Union | AWS PS Partner Awards 2021


 

>>Mhm >>Hello and welcome to today's session of the 2021 AWS Global Public Sector Partner Awards And I'm delighted to introduce our next guests. They are chris Saks Ceo of think stack and Michael Matthews President Ceo at mutual Credit Union. I'm your host for the cube Natalie. Ehrlich of course. And we're going to highlight the most impactful nonprofit partner award. Thank you gentlemen for joining the program. >>Thank you so much for having us. >>Terrific. Well delighted for you to be here. And Michael, I'd love to start with you. How did you figure out that cloud technology was critical to the future of mutual credit union? >>It's kind of by chance, Natalie, we're sitting down, we're looking at uh, racks of equipment in our I. T. Room and trying to keep everything up to date, um software updated, become a full time job and all of my staff and sat around and it come to a point where we were spending more time keeping upgrades, keeping servers upgraded. And we asked we reached out the things that they were a network provider at the time and we said, hey, whatever, what are our options? And they came back with several options and one of them was a W. S. And we explored it and uh we've not looked back. >>Terrific. Well, can you explain in further detail how you identified some of the gaps and what stood out to you about think stack, how this uh collaboration happened specifically? >>Well, some of the major gaps that you have is, you know, we're in Vicksburg Mississippi and I would say it's probably not the I. T mecca of the United States and staffing. What was a huge requirement for us if you're gonna make a move such as this, you've got to have the staffing and then along with the staffing is okay if you go out and we hire all these individuals to help help with this journey, are they going to become bored and you know, if we uh personally, if if I asked think stack, they would say, oh yes, don't do that hire us, but that's their job there, there there are parker vendor and so we went out, we asked other vendors that we use and what are the chances of us doing this and it was slim to none. And this type of technology you want, somebody who you can call and and all honesty, I want to be able to call chris and say chris, I'm having a problem versus, you know, one of my team called me and say we're having a problem, I'd rather call it and I love the vendor relationship. It has worked out well. Our major gaps in staffing though, Natalie >>what about staffing? >>That was our major gap. >>Oh God, it got it. Well, chris let's move on to you now. I'd love it if you could explain, you know, in some detail for our audience about the methodology of your company and also how you help your clients visualize their transformation processes. >>Yeah, for sure. Thanks Natalie. So we work with credit unions around the country and many of them are facing similar challenges to Michael at mutual. And in addition to staffing, they're often challenged with just the uncertain future of technology and that can include things like hurricanes, wildfires, various different disasters, pandemics and having to work remotely. But it also includes all of the opportunities that exist in transformative technologies for credit union. They need to keep pace with organizations like Robin Hood and stash and some of these other organizations that are providing cutting edge mobile apps and technology to their customers. And so how do you as an organization generally, that's a small nonprofit organization. How do you build the technology that will allow you to have a foundation to respond and react to whatever the world happens to throw actually, be that an opportunity to take advantage of for growth or some kind of risk from a cyber attack to a natural disaster. So what we try to do with our clients is take a very human centered approach first. And the idea behind that is to not walk in the door and talk about all the wonderful benefits of AWS or any other particular technology, but rather look at What do you expect. So if you take Michael, for example, you know, sitting down with him and trying to look out 10 years, what do you expect the industry to look like? What do you expect your organization to look like in? What goals do you have as a credit? You need to take advantage of those opportunities and to mitigate those risks. Once you identify those business needs, we can start looking at the humans that are involved in that experience. And so that would obviously be the employees and partners and vendors that support and make up the team at the credit union. And then obviously it's their current members and then any other members that they want to attract. And so you have to look at both sides of this. How how do you work securely efficiently? Um, as an employee on the flip side, how do you serve your members as well as you can serve them with cutting edge technology with technology that's always up and available. And then obviously with, with utmost security. So as we identify and build that picture, uh, we we generally do that with stick figures Natalie so we try to go in and and you know take um different personas and we use journey mapping and we use strategic foresight and various other exercise that help us uh literally paint a picture. Um and then from there we kind of back into that and say okay in order for you to accomplish these things into Have the organization that you want to have the next 10 years, what is your technology foundation and footprint need to look like to support that. And that's where we start to then back into that design which typically would include some type of public cloud services like AWS among other technologies from a cyber security perspective to build out that foundation and then allow them To respond and react to whatever the world throws at him over the next 10 years. >>Terrific. Well Michael would love to get your insight. How did you experience that human centered design focus, that think stack uh you know, is known for >>I think that's what says things take apart. You know, we there's numerous vendors you can go direct, there's there's plenty of software, there's plenty of technology out there you can buy. And as a credit union we can go out, we can just about get anything we wanted. But when we have a problem that we're trying to solve, it's not about that, it's about sitting down with chris his team and saying chris this this is a problem. We recently had one in password management, but we just this is a problem we're having. How do we solve this problem? And so the focus is not about trying to sell you another software. The focus is about solving the problem and having your staff and your team work more efficiently and effectively at their task. At the end of the day, you know, we're not arty people were in the financial service business. We rely on the solutions that we have to to help us do our jobs better and serve our members more effectively. >>Yeah, well, chris uh, you know, from your perspective, obviously human centered designed a really big component of your business, but what other key feature set your business apart from the competitive landscape? >>So I think the human centered design bleeds into another area that we really pride ourselves on, which is which is education and what I will call plain talk. So again, as Michael said, these organizations are our financial services, they're not technology experts, so you need to be able to communicate to those teams, those boards of directors, executive teams in a way that they can understand, and it can be uh somewhat difficult to talk about complex technical problems, um but when you boil it down back to that experience level, or you boil it down to a picture, it becomes a little easier to talk about. And what we want to be able to do as a partner is make sure our clients have confidence in the services or the products that they're purchasing, that they understand. How is this investment going to impact our credit union? How is this going to impact our members? And is this the right investment? It investments are, are significant. So we need to make sure that both parties understand the expectations of that investment and why they're doing that. So we take a lot of pride in the education and then probably the biggest piece uh and you know, it's one of those things that can be unappreciated, but its cybersecurity building, our infrastructure's with the tools and the processes and and the techniques so that everyone stays secure. I can tell you that there is nothing that would derail a digital transformation of an organization faster than a breach. So it's very important for us to make sure that those organizations, that everything that we do as fun as it is to talk about transformational technology equally as important that everything stays secure as we do it. >>Yeah. Well, excellent point. Certainly cybersecurity going to be a top uh topic for 2021 and beyond. Now, Michael, I'd like to move to you um what were the expected and unexpected business outcomes as a result of this partnership? >>Well, now we we we expected to have issues in the transition, which we really didn't um, I'll be honest with you, we we expected to have failures of servers. We expected stuff not to work because we were told by some of our other vendors that this will not work in a W S. Um and we were very surprised that most everything worked on AWS and it worked even better. Um some of the unexpected. So one of the main drivers of us moving to AWS was, I told you we had were limited on Rackspace I T room is when we want to implement a new service today, everything requires its own server. So everything needs an independent service, virtual server or physical server. We did not know how fast that could be done. So we would send a ticket in uh and we would say, hey, we need a new server here. The specs we're putting on this vendor, this is our time frame and we will get an email back the next morning. The servers ready to go where before? We weren't we didn't have that. That that was not an option. The main delay for new projects was to build up time and we weren't expecting that speech. No longer was that we all we expected that hey, we're not in a rush, but it'll be at least three months. And so now the team has to be ready to go as soon as you send the request in that we need this server is done uh and its speed up, speed up our time from uh, the idea our concept to going live with projects and we weren't that was something we had to get adjusted to. >>Yeah. And following up on that. What were some of the rational as well as the emotional impacts as a result of this collaboration? >>All right too. Two things and I don't know if they meet their, meet your that answer your question directly. But so one item we had in in a call, it's been several weeks back is when is the last time that anyone had to call it? Said, hey, I'm not working. My my can't access the server or I can complete dysfunction. And it's not been that way. We we've seen significantly improved up time, not only externally for our members who are logging in to do home banking or any other, any other feature, but internally for our staff we saw and I think it's just the entire transformation just made our company more resilient. What that was. I was as the metric we were seeing fewer instances of downtime. If we have downtown now, it's a power. We had an ice storm here in Mississippi, which is rare. Uh and we were down for a day. Um and if you lose internet today at any business you're down um The emotional side of I tell you, and it's been several years back on July four, we had a major major failure and our entire network was down and we this is prior to us moving to AWS and I'll just tell you I go home at night, this is the peace of mind that you can't put a dollar value on. I go home at night. And the last thing I'm worried about is my I. T. Network. I'm not worried about up time, I'm not worried about members, you know, going on facebook or any other social media and saying hey we can't we can't access your site what's going on and we don't have that anymore. And you know, I'm sure we could have had it any other way. But I leave that to the process of us moving from an in house holding everything on premise to moving to AWS, not only did it want to improve the results of those servers were able to back up to do different things, but it is to improve the overall working, working the functionality of our network. And I like I said I you can't put a dollar on this peace of mind and that is something I don't think there's any metric out there. You can measure, you can't measure that, but you know me and my team, we see it all the time. So >>Yeah, I agree, a peace of mind is certainly a priceless now Chris Let's move to you if you could outline to our audience some of the solutions that you provide, some of your other clients as well. Just give us a fuller picture of the services that you provide. Let's perhaps talk about, you know, 24/7 socks um services as well as data loss prevention or anything else that you think would be of interest to our audience? >>Yeah, for sure. So so obviously we I like to think of us like we design so we come in and we like to help you design and and figure out what your network needs to look like. That's not only your server and production network but also routing, switching. So Land Win S T Win various other networking projects equally. It's important that you can access the cloud as it is to move to the cloud, help with with productivity suite collaboration tools. Um and then finally, cyber security is a big part of that as well. So we try to come in and and look at all those things on the cybersecurity side. Very similar concept of what we do on the, on the cloud side, which is well design the tools and the infrastructure on the perimeter of the network, the configuration of any cloud environments, um such that they're secure and appropriate for your organization. Uh look at active directory or whatever organizational user management system you have to be using, implement those tools. Um and then as you mentioned, Natalie, we have a 24 x seven socks um with analysts watching that um that are all things that employees watching that board responding and reacting um using our our sin platform. And then we also have a 24 by seven uh network operations center or knocked. Um that is managing both the on site uh tools and network as well as any cloud uh networks that that they may have, keeping them up to date, doing all the routine maintenance, I will say from a cyber security perspective while it's not called the sock, the knock is just as important for cybersecurity as is the knock because we see that many cybersecurity attacks are often just taking advantage of systems that are not kept up to date. So the knock and that preventative maintenance is so important. So we do that for a lot of our clients. Some people pick and choose certain features. Some people use all of our services. >>Yeah. Terrific. Is that what you mean by security that's made to order? >>Yeah, exactly. Um you know, I think that's true of all technology. Um the biggest thing that we can do his look at the systems that you have during that design phase, we not only look at what technology should be should you be using, but also we take an assessment of your current team, What talent does your team have and where can we fill gaps if you have people that are doing security really well or you're doing preventative maintenance or some of these features? Uh Certainly you should keep that in house and we'll try to build services around those individuals that you have so that you're utilizing your talent to the best of your abilities and we're really fitting in um where you need us. >>Yeah. Terrific. Well, um you know, Michael, I'd like to shift to you now. What do you think will be the broader impact, you know, for the credit union industry? If others are not, you know, adopting the same kind of technologies um you know, to secure their cloud strategies. Mhm. >>I think whether credit unions want to or not, they're moving to the cloud. Um Most of our newest vendors are all cloud based. Um And so yes, he's either do it now or do it later. Which one do you want to be? And I do think that you're going to see more and more larger credit unions begin to move and it's scalable. It's more up time. It's easier to back up. A lot of people are hesitant. They don't want to take their information and move it out of town. They try to find a local data center are somewhere secure. And, and we looked at is what's the difference? You know, we, we we don't have latency issues with internet and fiber today. And so what is the difference of movement out of town and move to AWS by moving out of town? I still on the servers. I still leased the space. I still have to go over there. We have to have somebody there at all the time. And I'll be honest with you, I look at AWS as a trusted partner versus trying someone and then, and then it's not working locally and there's a lot of data centers you can, you can move to um I think I think it's going to come to the industry one way or the other. >>Yeah. Well, Terrific. Do you have any insight or you know, perhaps advice for another credit union who will, you know, like to take the next step? But, you know, as you mentioned, maybe a bit hesitant, >>I think doing your homework on it and looking at it as a, as a viable option is the first step. I know when I took it to my board and I talked about this um with chris and several people have so we we we talk about these things like the cloud, like it's this magical space and and our data is out there in Netherland and who knows where our data is. But when you break it down, you say, I have a East Coast data center and I have a West Coast data center. These are physical spaces where my dad is higher is held. Um I think it makes people think about a little differently. And and so when when you're if you're thinking about moving, if your if your in house today and you're thinking about how I'm gonna start outsourcing evaluate the cost, what are your ongoing cost, You know, who's gonna service you, Who's going to provide that service? And we've looked at other vendors over the years and I'll tell you, chris and his team have something unique that I found. Um I found very desirable in our situation is at our size and we're just under $300 million credit union. I don't think we have major projects that are too complicated to chris we're still, we're one of his better customers. I assume, chris me tell you something different in a minute, but we're not just a number, so I wouldn't go into a cube. You know, everybody knows each other. We're both small enough companies to where they're getting a lot bigger than we are now, but they're both small of companies where we're still, we we mean something to them, they care about moving to start versus just checking the box off. And so that's that's been our journey so far. Mhm. >>Yeah. Well, um, so, chris, uh, you know, first I want to know if Michael is one of your better customers, but uh, you know, really what I would I would really like to know is um, you know, what is your like, big sales pitch to? You know, as I mentioned to Michael, just some of those companies that are a little bit hesitant, a little bit on the edge. >>Michael is our best client of course because he's here doing this interview with us. No, um, you know, that that's something for us that are those, those human connections are, are, are so important and we do get very invested with any of the clients that we work with. But, um, in, in terms of the industry, I think Michael started to say at the beginning, which is, you're already there. We hear a lot of times from folks that they, I can't move to the cloud that the examiners or that the regulations do not allow them to be there. And that's, that's not true. Um, so what we're trying to do in partnership with KWS is educate the marketplaces as well as we can. Um, one of the biggest things that the cloud offers is this idea of flexibility and nimbleness and you know, unfortunately, I think Covid taught us that lesson, but there's, there's other lessons out there. I don't want to harp on Covid, I feel like that's all we talk about. Um, but if you look at any opportunity, whether it's a I machine learning, um, you know, Blockchain, pick the next technology, right? The reality is, none of us can really tell you where you're going to be in two years, maybe one year, three years, right? Like can you truly sit down after the past three years and tell me that you with no uncertainty, can tell me where your organization is going to be. And the reality is if you build your own data center right now, you have to make that guess Because you have to build something and designed for something and if you're making that investment, then you're doing that for the next probably 5-7 years. Whereas if you move to amazon you have the flexibility, whether that's scaling your organization up quickly, whether that's moving to the cloud, whether that's leveraging one of these technologies I just mentioned or in some cases even scaling back because things have hit a recession, we don't know what the future holds. But if you're in an environment like AWS, then you have the scalability and the flexibility to be able to move and pivot with that. And if you build your own and you happen to pick the wrong future, then then you could be in a bind and you've created your own limitations because you've decided to build for yourself. And I think that's the biggest thing is you can't build for yourself. You have to be flexible in this environment. That is that is the key. And the organizations that are flexible are the ones that are going to survive and thrive through all this uncertainty. Yeah. >>Well, really excellent point there. I totally agree with you. Wonderful to have you on our program. That was chris Saks Ceo of think stack as well as Michael Matthews, the president and Ceo at Mutual Credit Union. Thank you gentlemen for joining the show. Thanks so much. And that's all for this session of the AWS Global Public Sector Partner Awards. I'm your host Natalie or like thanks for >>watching. Mm.

Published Date : Jun 30 2021

SUMMARY :

Thank you gentlemen for joining the program. Well delighted for you to be here. And we asked we reached out the things that they were a network provider at the time and we said, hey, whatever, and what stood out to you about think stack, how this uh collaboration happened specifically? Well, some of the major gaps that you have is, you know, we're in Vicksburg Mississippi and I would say it's you know, in some detail for our audience about the methodology of your company and also how you picture, uh, we we generally do that with stick figures Natalie so we try to go in and and you centered design focus, that think stack uh you know, And so the focus is not about trying to sell you another so you need to be able to communicate to those teams, those boards of directors, Now, Michael, I'd like to move to you um what were the expected And so now the team has to be ready to go as a result of this collaboration? And I like I said I you can't put a dollar on this peace of mind and that is something you could outline to our audience some of the solutions that you provide, some of your other clients as so we come in and we like to help you design and and figure out what your network Is that what you mean by security that's made to order? Um the biggest thing that we can do his look at the systems that you have during Well, um you know, Michael, I'd like to shift to you now. lot of data centers you can, you can move to um I think I think it's going to come to the industry who will, you know, like to take the next step? But when you break it down, you know, what is your like, big sales pitch to? And the reality is if you build your own data center right now, Wonderful to have you on our program.

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Ed Walsh, ChaosSearch | AWS re:Invent 2020 Partner Network Day


 

>> Narrator: From around the globe it's theCUBE, with digital coverage of AWS re:Invent 2020. Special coverage sponsored by AWS Global Partner Network. >> Hello and welcome to theCUBE Virtual and our coverage of AWS re:Invent 2020 with special coverage of APN partner experience. We are theCUBE Virtual and I'm your host, Justin Warren. And today I'm joined by Ed Walsh, CEO of ChaosSearch. Ed, welcome to theCUBE. >> Well thank you for having me, I really appreciate it. >> Now, this is not your first time here on theCUBE. You're a regular here and I've loved it to have you back. >> I love the platform you guys are great. >> So let's start off by just reminding people about what ChaosSearch is and what do you do there? >> Sure, the best way to say is so ChaosSearch helps our clients know better. We don't do that by a special wizard or a widget that you give to your, you know, SecOp teams. What we do is a hard work to give you a data platform to get insights at scale. And we do that also by achieving the promise of data lakes. So what we have is a Chaos data platform, connects and indexes data in a customer's S3 or glacier accounts. So inside your data lake, not our data lake but renders that data fully searchable and available for analysis using your existing tools today 'cause what we do is index it and publish open API, it's like API like Elasticsearch API, and soon SQL. So give you an example. So based upon those capabilities were an ideal replacement for a commonly deployed, either Elasticsearch or ELK Stack deployments, if you're hitting scale issues. So we talk about scalable log analytics, and more and more people are hitting these scale issues. So let's say if you're using Elasticsearch ELK or Amazon Elasticsearch, and you're hitting scale issues, what I mean by that is like, you can't keep enough retention. You want longer retention, or it's getting very expensive to keep that retention, or because the scale you hit where you have availability, where the cluster is hard to keep up running or is crashing. That's what we mean by the issues at scale. And what we do is simply we allow you, because we're publishing the open API of Elasticsearch use all your tools, but we save you about 80% off your monthly bill. We also give you an, and it's an and statement and give you unlimited retention. And as much as you want to keep on S3 or into Glacier but we also take care of all the hassles and management and the time to manage these clusters, which ends up being on a database server called leucine. And we take care of that as a managed service. And probably the biggest thing is all of this without changing anything your end users are using. So we include Kibana, but imagine it's an Elastic API. So if you're using API or Kibana, it's just easy to use the exact same tools used today, but you get the benefits of a true data lake. In fact, we're running now Elasticsearch on top of S3 natively. If that makes it sense. >> Right and natively is pretty cool. And look, 80% savings, is a dramatic number, particularly this year. I think there's a lot of people who are looking to save a few quid. So it'd be very nice to be able to save up to 80%. I am curious as to how you're able to achieve that kind of saving though. >> Yeah, you won't be the first person to ask me that. So listen, Elastic came around, it was, you know we had Splunk and we also have a lot of Splunk clients, but Elastic was a more cost effective solution open source to go after it. But what happens is, especially at scale, if it's fall it's actually very cost-effective. But underneath last six tech ELK Stack is a leucine database, it's a database technology. And that sits on our servers that are heavy memory count CPU count in and SSDs. So you can do on-prem or even in the clouds, so if you do an Amazon, basically you're spinning up a server and it stays up, it doesn't spin up, spin down. So those clusters are not one server, it's a cluster of those servers. And typically if you have any scale you're actually having multiple clusters because you don't dare put it on one, for different use cases. So our savings are actually you no longer need those servers to spin up and you don't need to pay for those seen underneath. You can still use Kibana under API but literally it's $80 off your bill that you're paying for your service now, and it's hard dollars. So it's not... And we typically see clients between 70 and 80%. It's up to 80, but it's literally right within a 10% margin that you're saving a lot of money, but more importantly, saving money is a great thing. But now you have one unified data lake that you can have. You used to go across some of the data or all the data through the role-based access. You can give different people. Like we've seen people who say, hey give that, help that person 40 days of this data. But the SecOp up team gets to see across all the different law. You know, all the machine generated data they have. And we can give you a couple of examples of that and walk you through how people deploy if you want. >> I'm always keen to hear specific examples of how customers are doing things. And it's nice that you've thought of drawn that comparison there around what what cloud is good for and what it isn't is. I'll often like to say that AWS is cheap to fail in, but expensive to succeed. So when people are actually succeeding with this and using this, this broad amount of data so what you're saying there with that savings I've actually got access to a lot more data that I can do things with. So yeah, if you could walk through a couple of examples of what people are doing with this increased amount of data that they have access to in EKL Search, what are some of the things that people are now able to unlock with that data? >> Well, literally it's always good for a customer size so we can go through and we go through it however it might want, Kleiner, Blackboard, Alert Logic, Armor Security, HubSpot. Maybe I'll start with HubSpot. One of our good clients, they were doing some Cloud Flare data that was one of their clusters they were using a lot to search for. But they were looking at to look at a denial service. And they were, we find everyone kind of at scale, they get limited. So they were down to five days retention. Why? Well, it's not that they meant to but basically they couldn't cost-effectively handle that in the scale. And also they're having scale issues with the environment, how they set the cluster and sharding. And when they also denial service tech, what happened that's when the influx of data that is one thing about scale is how fast it comes out, yet another one is how much data you have. But this is as the data was coming after them at denial service, that's when the cluster would actually go down believe it or not, you know right. When you need your log analysis tools. So what we did is because they're just using Kibana, it was easy swap. They ran in parallel because we published the open API but we took them from five days to nine days. They could keep as much as they want but nine days for denial services is what they wanted. And then we did save them in over $4 million a year in hard dollars, What they're paying in their environment from really is the savings on the server farm and a little bit on the Elasticsearch Stack. But more importantly, they had no outages since. Now here's the thing. Are you talking about the use case? They also had other clusters and you find everyone does it. They don't dare put it on one cluster, even though these are not one server, they're multiple servers. So the next use case for CloudFlare was one, the next QS and it was a 10 terabyte a day influx kept it for 90 days. So it's about a petabyte. They brought another use case on which was NetMon, again, Network Monitoring. And again, I'm having the same scale issue, retention area. And what they're able to do is easily roll that on. So that's one data platform. Now they're adding the next one. They have about four different use cases and it's just different clusters able to bring together. But now what they're able to do give you use cases either they getting more cost effective, more stability and freedom. We say saves you a lot of time, cost and complexity. Just the time they manage that get the data in the complexities around it. And then the cost is easy to kind of quantify but they've got better but more importantly now for particular teams they only need their access to one data but the SecOP team wants to see across all the data. And it's very easy for them to see across all the data where before it was impossible to do. So now they have multiple large use cases streaming at them. And what I love about that particular case is at one point they were just trying to test our scale. So they started tossing more things at it, right. To see if they could kind of break us. So they spiked us up to 30 terabytes a day which is for Elastic would even 10 terabytes a day makes things fall over. Now, if you think of what they just did, what were doing is literally three steps, put your data in S3 and as fast as you can, don't modify, just put it there. Once it's there three steps connect to us, you give us readability access to those buckets and a place to write the indexy. All of that stuff is in your S3, it never comes out. And then basically you set up, do you want to do live or do you want to do real time analysis? Or do you want to go after old data? We do the rest, we ingest, we normalize the schema. And basically we give you our back and the refinery to give the right people access. So what they did is they basically throw a whole bunch of stuff at it. They were trying to outrun S3. So, you know, we're on shoulders of giants. You know, if you think about our platform for clients what's a better dental like than S3. You're not going to get a better cross curve, right? You're not going to get a better parallelism. And so, or security it's in your, you know a virtual environment. But if you... And also you can keep data in the right location. So Blackboard's a good example. They need to keep that in all the different regions and because it's personal data, they, you know, GDPR they got to keep data in that location. It's easy, we just put compute in each one of the different areas they are. But the net net is if you think that architecture is shoulders of giants if you think you can outrun by just sheer volume or you can put in more cost-effective place to keep long-term or you think you can out store you have so much data that S3 and glacier can't possibly do it. Then you got me at your bigger scale at me but that's the scale we'r&e talking about. So if you think about the spiked our throughput what they really did is they try to outrun S3. And we didn't pick up. Now, the next thing is they tossed a bunch of users at us which were just spinning up in our data fabric different ways to do the indexing, to keep up with it. And new use cases in case they're going after everyone gets their own worker nodes which are all expected to fail in place. So again, they did some of that but really they're like you guys handled all the influx. And if you think about it, it's the shoulders of giants being on top of an Amazon platform, which is amazing. You're not going to get a more cost effective data lake in the world, and it's continuing to fall in price. And it's a cost curve, like no other, but also all that resiliency, all that security and the parallelism you can get, out of an S3 Glacier is just a bar none is the most scalable environment, you can build an environment. And what we do is a thin layer. It's a data platform that allows you to have your data now fully searchable and queryable using your tools >> Right and you, you mentioned there that, I mean you're running in AWS, which has broad experience in doing these sorts of things at scale but on that operational management side of things. As you mentioned, you actually take that off, off the hands of customers so that you run it on their behalf. What are some of the areas that you see people making in trying to do this themselves, when you've gone into customers, and brought it into the EKL Search platform? >> Yeah, so either people are just trying their best to build out clusters of Elasticsearch or they're going to services like Logz.io, Sumo Logic or Amazon Elasticsearch services. And those are all basically on the same ELK Stack. So they have the exact same limits as the same bits. Then we see people trying to say, well I really want to go to a data lake. I want to get away from these database servers and which have their limits. I want to use a data Lake. And then we see a lot of people putting data into environments before they, instead of using Elasticsearch, they want to use SQL type tools. And what they do is they put it into a Parquet or Presto form. It's a Presto dialect, but it into Parquet and structure it. And they go a lot of other way to, Hey it's in the data lake, but they end up building these little islands inside their data lake. And it's a lot of time to transform the data, to get it in a format that you can go after our tools. And then what we do is we don't make you do that. Just literally put the data there. And then what we do is we do the index and a polish API. So right now it's Elasticsearch in a very short time we'll publish Presto or the SQL dialect. You can use the same tool. So we do see people, either brute forcing and trying their best with a bunch of physical servers. We do see another group that says, you know, I want to go use an Athena use cases, or I want to use a there's a whole bunch of different startups saying, I do data lake or data lake houses. But they are, what they really do is force you to put things in the structure before you get insight. True data lake economics is literally just put it there, and use your tools natively to go after it. And that's where we're unique compared to what we see from our competition. >> Hmm, so with people who have moved into ChaosSearch, what's, let's say pick one, if you can, the most interesting example of what people have started to do with, with their data. What's new? >> That's good. Well, I'll give you another one. And so Armor Security is a good one. So Armor Security is a security service company. You know, thousands of clients doing great I mean a beautiful platform, beautiful business. And they won Rackspace as a partner. So now imagine thousand clients, but now, you know massive scale that to keep up with. So that would be an example but another example where we were able to come in and they were facing a major upgrade of their environment just to keep up, and they expose actually to their customers is how their customers do logging analytics. What we're able to do is literally simply because they didn't go below the API they use the exact same tools that are on top and in 30 days replaced that use case, save them tremendous amount of dollars. But now they're able to go back and have unlimited retention. They used to restrict their clients to 14 days. Now they have an opportunity to do a bunch of different things, and possible revenue opportunities and other. But allow them to look at their business differently and free up their team to do other things. And now they're, they're putting billing and other things into the same environment with us because one is easy it's scale but also freed up their team. No one has enough team to do things. And then the biggest thing is what people do interesting with our product is actually in their own tools. So, you know, we talk about Kibana when we do SQL again we talk about Looker and Tableau and Power BI, you know, the really interesting thing, and we think we did the hard work on the data layer which you can say is, you know I can about all the ways you consolidate the performance. Now, what becomes really interesting is what they're doing at the visibility level, either Kibana or the API or Tableau or Looker. And the key thing for us is we just say, just use the tools you're used to. Now that might be a boring statement, but to me, a great value proposition is not changing what your end users have to use. And they're doing amazing things. They're doing the exact same things they did before. They're just doing it with more data at bigger scale. And also they're able to see across their different machine learning data compared to being limited going at one thing at a time. And that getting the correlation from a unified data lake is really what we, you know we get very excited about. What's most exciting to our clients is they don't have to tell the users they have to use a different tool, which, you know, we'll decide if that's really interesting in this conversation. But again, I always say we didn't build a new algorithm that you going to give the SecOp team or a new pipeline cool widget that going to help the machine learning team which is another API we'll publish. But basically what we do is a hard work of making the data platform scalable, but more importantly give you the APIs that you're used to. So it's the platform that you don't have to change what your end users are doing, which is a... So we're kind of invisible behind the scenes. >> Well, that's certainly a pretty strong proposition there and I'm sure that there's plenty of scope for customers to come and and talk to you because no one's creating any less data. So Ed, thanks for coming out of theCUBE. It's always great to see you here. >> Know, thank you. >> You've been watching theCUBE Virtual and our coverage of AWS re:Invent 2020 with special coverage of APN partner experience. Make sure you check out all our coverage online, either on your desktop, mobile on your phone, wherever you are. I've been your host, Justin Warren. And I look forward to seeing you again soon. (soft music)

Published Date : Dec 3 2020

SUMMARY :

the globe it's theCUBE, and our coverage of AWS re:Invent 2020 Well thank you for having me, loved it to have you back. and the time to manage these clusters, be able to save up to 80%. And we can give you a So yeah, if you could walk and the parallelism you can get, that you see people making it's in the data lake, but they end up what's, let's say pick one, if you can, I can about all the ways you It's always great to see you here. And I look forward to

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Breaking Analysis: 2H 2020 Tech Spending: Headwinds into 2021


 

>> From theCube Studios in Palo Alto in Boston, bringing you data driven insights from theCube and ETR, this is breaking analysis with Dave Vellante. >> As we reported in our last episode tech spending overall continues to be significantly muted relative to 2019. Now, our forecast continues to project a 4 to 5% decline in 2020 spending, and a tepid 2% increase in 2021. This is based on the latest data from ETR surveys of CIOs and other it buyers. Nonetheless, there continues to be some sectors and vendor bright spots in what is generally an overall challenging market. Hello everyone, and welcome to this week's Wikibon Cube Insights powered by ETR. My name is Dave Vellante, and in this breaking analysis, we welcome back Erik Bradley from ETR to provide added color from my solo flight from last time. Erik always a pleasure to see you, thanks so much for coming back in theCube. >> I always enjoy it. Happy Friday Dave, We're almost through. >> Happy Friday. They just blend together. Guys, if you would bring up the first slide, I just want to summarize the situation. This is from ETR's latest findings, I just extracted some. And I want to go down very quickly, Erik, and then get your take. As I said, technology buyers expect the downturn for 2020, but this quarter, coming into fourth quarter, minus 3.2% was ETR's forecast, that's year to year spending decline and a 2% uptick in 2021. Now, Erik this is slightly, what I call it slightly less bad, relative to last quarter. So sequentially it's less bad. >> Yeah, there's a couple of things to break down there. So first to begin with, beginning of the year, when we launched not only our spending attention surveys, we did a simultaneous COVID impact survey, and that's where we caught originally a 5% decline was expected. So although negative 3.2 was probably the worst quarter over quarter lapse we've seen, as a matter of fact it is the lowest drop we've had theory, going into 2021, the IT people that we've actually surveyed are actually expecting a 2% increase. So there is a reason for optimism, but if we're looking at the current data set, there is no doubt the picture remains a little bit bleak. We can go into different sectors and vendors where they are impacted, but I think maybe if you're willing, I think it might be worth just sort of breaking down the demographics of the survey a little bit and how we got to that 3.2% survey over survey decline. >> Yeah, and we have a chart on that. But before we get that, I just wanted to lay out some of the other key points of your analysis. The other one, which is we talked about this in the last episode, we call it a slow thawing. Hiring an IT project freezes are thawing, with fewer companies expecting layoffs. So that gives us some bright spots, but there are definitely a widening bifurcation between vendors gaining share and those who are donating share. And then, you know, again, relative to last quarter survey we're seeing government and education and fortune 100, you guys are showing the deepest cuts from the last survey. Where's IT Telco, retail and retail consumer are showing a little bit more stability. And then of course you talked about the work from home which we've covered doubling from pre pandemic. Pretty interesting findings from your COVID survey. >> Yeah, it's a fantastic, and this is the fourth iteration of this survey that we've done now. So we've been able to track it very quickly, launched it in the field when we realized the true impact of what was happening in early March. This is our fourth version, and we've been able to track it overall. Yes, without a doubt government, education are being the biggest impact, the biggest declines without a doubt. Now, clearly the caveat to that is if there's any sort of government policy maybe those could actually help a little bit, but for right now, those are getting hit the most. Retail consumer is fairing much, much better, and the IT companies, as generally, we're seeing in the market as well, they can, you know, are still spending money and still moving. But the reason for optimism actually comes from multiple metrics. And I will say, we have caught a bottom on all of the negative metrics at this point. Now, who knows what will happen the next time we do it, right? The world is always fluid. But based on this, this is our fourth iteration of this survey, whether it be IT projects being frozen, whether it be layoffs, whether it be just overall expected budget increase, everything looks like it is already bottomed and there is some optimism going into 2021. Of course, the January survey that we launched will be able to corroborate that hopefully, and we'll have much more granularity into those findings at that time. >> Great. Okay, now let's get into the demographics that you referenced for. This next slide shows those. The record number of respondents Erik, congratulations on that. And so take us through the makeup of the survey respondents guys, if you bring up this next slide. >> Yeah. So for the October 20, what we're really doing here is we're asking the it decision makers to update the survey responses they gave us in July. We're basically saying, okay, you thought you were going to spend this in the back half, what did you actually do? And in this particular survey we had 1,438 qualified IT decision makers get involved. That's 60% of the fortune 100 is represented, almost a quarter of the global 1000, and we had about 35% of the fortune 500. The industry breakdown is all across the board, whether it's financials/insurance, IT/Telco, we have industrials/manufacturing, we have energy/utilities, we have government. So it's really a great cross section. Now, geographically, that tends to be about 80% North America. We are heavily concentrated in that area, but we also have a 12% EMEA, 5% APAC and remainder is Latin AmErika. If there were any visibility concerns at all would probably be in China. It's just not that easy to get qualified IT decision makers from China to respond to us. But that's an area we are working on going forward, but overall a huge survey response, certainly meaningful end, and we're very happy with the data that we collected this time. >> Okay, thank you for that. Now, I want to go into the next graphic here, and I want to look at how net score has changed over time. And I want to remind people that, so this slide basically goes back to 2016, and shows some ebbs and flows and then some real strength coming in, 'cause you see 17 and 18, and you may forget going into Q4'19 and into 2020, the ETR data was telling us, hey, things are going to slow down a little bit. It's hard to remember that. And so, and the thinking back then was okay, last couple of years, people have spent a lot on digital transformation, and would a lot of experimentation, they were hanging on to their legacy stuff, and with all that technical debt and they were experimenting with a lot of the new technologies. And what we saw coming into Q4 2019 was people beginning to unplug some of that and making bets basically, unplugging some of the legacy stuff. Oh, and by the way, maybe saying hey, the new stuff that we tried didn't work, we're going to do less experimentation. So we saw a somewhat depressed next score, and you can see that in here coming into 2020, and then of course COVID hit and you can see the bottom fell out. But wow what a drop, I mean, that says it all, a lot different than what we're seeing in the stock market. >> Yeah, first of all, just a great recap on what we caught last year. Really well done. So at that time there was concurrent spending. There was a lot of proof of concepts being done. People weren't exactly sure how to transition off, how fast they were going to get into the cloud, how fast they could make that digital transformation. And they were kicking the tires on everything, and there was a ton of spend. It was the golden era of IT spending at the time. But we did catch that some of that was coming down. So what we will see now is obviously that spending was going to cool off either way, but now with the global pandemic impact hitting what we've caught, of course, is the biggest survey over survey decline. 3.2% was matched at one other point in our survey's history, but that was at very elevated spendings, so that drop was not as meaningful. When we're seeing from a more baseline that drop right now is extremely seasonal, and extremely meaningful, my apologies. Now, I do want to make a quick caveat that usually the October survey catches some seasonality, because a lot of people have expected spend in the back half that doesn't always materialize. But make no mistake, this is way beyond our normal seasonality. This trough is a real metric. >> Yeah, and when I talk to buyers and I talk to even salespeople, for if you want the truth, you'll talk to salespeople, if you can get the truth out of them, which you usually can. Sales and engineering, that's really if we want to know what's happening in companies, but they will tell you that their visibility, same with the buyers, they're saying, look, I think I'm going to spend and I think I'm going to get approval on it, but the normal buying signals, you kind of have to take with a grain of salt because it's, the buyers don't know the sellers don't really know. I mean, they think they've got reasonable visibility but things change so fast as we know. So you have to be really, really careful. All right, let's drill in to some of the sectors, and that's really the next two slides, guys, if you bring up the first of the next two. So this shows the change from July to October. So the last survey to this survey, 2020, and the green bars of July, yellow bars are October. And you can see right away, jumps out at you, container orchestration and ML and AI, and we've got some other data on this jump right off the charts. They're still elevated levels, so that's a real positive. You can see AI actually, maybe waning a bit, and I think that's probably, Erik, is a lot of it is just, you don't even see it, it's just embedded. But take us through this first chart and then we'll dig into some of these sectors. What are you seeing? >> Yeah, certainly. So from a sector breakdown point of view, that lesson, none of them were spared, let's be honest, right? There's a slow down in spending. But containers and containerization were by far the most stable. So clearly this is a priority. People are recognizing that they need to go that route. Nobody wants to be tied to any particular cloud provider. So container and containers are moving the best, they are looking about as stable as they can be. When we drill down a little bit further in there, we're seeing Kubernetes of course, Microsoft and AWS really supporting in that sector. Now, when you talk about the ones that had the biggest survey over survey declines, we are looking at ML/AI, but like you said, still elevated spend. So even though there was a big survey over survey decline, the overall spending intentions are healthy. Nobody is getting away from it. Also to corroborate that in the COVID impact study, we asked people, given the current situation where their priorities are, and unfortunately in that area ML/AI and the RPA we're actually not positioned as well. So it actually corroborates the COVID impact survey, corroborates what we're seeing here in our larger intentions. Now, when you look at ML/AI, Microsoft is still very well suited in that area. Virtualization was another big area that dropped, which was interesting because I think the immediate COVID impact and the work from home, we saw a little spike there. I think we definitely saw companies like Citrix, right? F5 and Nutanix and AWS workspaces. They all had a really good impact, positive, when we first hit, but virtualization is dropping quite a bit there. And again, no surprise, Microsoft is well positioned as well. And then lastly, enterprise content management also had a big, big drop-off, and there you're looking at Adobe Box, Open Text, those are the type of companies that seem to be having the biggest survey over survey decline and ECM. >> Yeah. And I just want to make a comment on this first of the two slides. Is you see security, it's okay, there's a little bit of decline, but there's the story of the haves and the have nots. If you're an end point security, you're in cloud security, you're in identity access management, there's some real tailwinds for you right now. You're seeing that with Octa, CrowdStrike and Zscaler, SailPoint, you know, had a really good quarter. So that's the story of kind of the, a mixed bag. If you go to the next slide, guys, what jumps out here on the second sector breakdown, and Erik you alluded to this as RPA, very elevated, although down, somewhat still, again, very elevated and cloud computing. I mean, that's all everybody wants to talk about. This is a large market that continues to grow very, very fast. >> Yeah. It's a A2 cloud, right? I mean, even the cloud, we're kind of shocked and we saw that too. But, you know, again, it's still a healthy survey at 4Cloud. Spending is still there, but what we are seeing is a pretty big survey over-serving decline that is probably, if you had to translate that, it's going to show slower growth. Still double digit growth, but slower than we expected. And interestingly in the cloud, again, Microsoft is very steady, GCP steady. We saw AWS soften a little bit, and that's something that I think we need to keep an eye on there, we are seeing some softening trends. IBM and Oracle, unfortunately, no matter how hard they push, it doesn't really seem to be making a dent, at least with our it decision makers that respond to the survey. But one thing that was interesting was VMware on AWS actually looked much, much better than VMware alone. So on the cloud side, those are pretty interesting takeaways. >> Yeah, we talked about that a couple of episodes back as the, well, couple of things to pick up on your comments. You mentioned IBM and Oracle, they're just so large, they're growing businesses are not growing fast enough and they're not large enough to offset the decline and their declining businesses. Yet they're huge, they have, they throw off a lot of cash and so maybe their stock's not going through the roof, but they're pretty stable companies from that regard. I wonder, maybe AWS is starting to hit some of those, the law of large numbers. I mean, it's still growing very, very rapidly for a 45 plus billion dollar organization, still growing well into the double digits, so it just gets harder. And then, but the other thing I wanted to pick up on is you mentioned VMware cloud on AWS, we're seeing those hybrid solutions really start to pick up the multi-cloud solutions, which I was a real skeptic a couple of years ago 'cause it wasn't really real, now becoming real. And I think when you talk to, you know this well from your Ven discussions, people are looking at options for cloud. They want multiple clouds, the right horse for the right course, they want to reduce their risk, they want to ensure exit strategies and some clouds are just better at some things than others. >> Yeah, completely agree. And as you know, I do interview a lot of these IT decision makers that we survey to get a little more granularity and to dig into the details, and you and I just, great example. We did a session on Data Warehousing as a Service, we're at Snowflake. And the main reason that people love them is 'cause they have cloud portability. They can move across multiple clouds. Nobody wants to be tied to one cloud provider, they need to be agnostic. And if you look at, you know, something like Microsoft, right? Their Software Suite is fantastic. So most people are going to be aligned for them. They provide great active directory, the enterprise applications are absolutely incredible. But if you're looking to do straight ML/AI or straight data warehousing, maybe AWS Redshift, maybe Google Big Query might be a better fit for you. There's no reason to be tied into one. So what we're seeing more and more is those vendors that offer cloud portability or hybrid availability to do some on-prem for security, some cloud, they're really taking a step up in our recent surveys. Another comment you made Dave, if I can just backtrack to it is, you kind of mentioned how some of the vendors are taking more and more share. We are continuing to see this theme of a widening bifurcation, where although the overall spend that pie is shrinking, the leading vendors are taking much bigger slices from that pie. And that is continuing across the entire year. >> Yeah, definitely a time of disruption. So thank you for bringing that up. Okay, the next graphic I want to show you is actually a motion graphic, and what we're showing here is one of our favorite views. On the vertical axis you've got net score, remember, net score, essentially ETR, every quarter like clockwork asks customers are you spending more you're spending less, it's more granular than that, but essentially they subtract the red from the green and that leaves you with net score. So the higher the net score the better on the vertical axis, on the on the horizontal is axis is market share, its presence, its pervasiveness in the dataset. So you want to be up into the right, of course, like all these charts and XY's. And what we're showing here is, we go back to October, 2018. Remember this is the October survey and you can see the movement and what's happening. And a couple of points here really is one is container orchestration and container platforms, cloud, RPA, ML, they all stand out. And now we, you can see the the context of their "market share" as well, and you see that bunching, you see some of the Legacy stuff, the more mature markets like storage and PC tablets and laptops. They don't have a huge next or outsourcing, not a big net score, but they're there and they're kind of bunched up, down in the middle. But you can also see how they've slowly got depressed over time, even the elevated ones. Nobody in the recent survey is over a 60% net net score. I think you guys said that the overall net score was the lowest in history. So this is just a good way to visualize the various sectors and how spending, momentum and share is shifting. >> Yeah, that's a very good point, and you are right. The overall survey net score is actually 25.3% and it is the lowest ever we've captured. So that actually is translating into what we expect to be single digit declines in overall growth in IT budgets, which again is in line with what we've been saying. We caught early on about negative 5 1/2, that is improved now it's in this quarter to about negative 3 1/2, but if you look at the mid point here, we're very clearly in mid single digit declines, and the entire area is being impacted. Now, there are certainly some areas that are more important than others, there's no doubt about it. But yeah, outsourcing is one you mentioned, absolutely getting decimated. Nobody really has the money right now to be doing IT outsourcing, that's just not a priority. The priority is remote connectivity, remote security, how do I get identity access and governance to make sure that my employees are doing what they're supposed to be doing, even though they're not on my network anymore. All of those things are continuing. And as you saw on the COVID-19 Impact Survey, they're not going away. You had mentioned on a solo session you did, I think a week ago, where you have cited our data saying that permanent workforce is going to double from where it was in pre-pandemic levels. So that means a lot of the people that slapped a bandaid on their networking to get their employees to work from home, that bandaid solution is not going to work. They need to find one that's permanent now. So the areas of spend, although it is declining, there are very clear delineations of where that spend is going. >> Yeah, I want to just pick up on something you said about the work from home doubling, 'cause I've shared that data with some folks and had some discussions. We're talking about people that work from home, not come in a couple of times a week, this is the work from home component. And so I think the hybrid is going to increase as well, but the hardcore work from home, I think it was mid-teens, 16% or something doubling in the post pandemic was the expectation. And again, I just wanted to sort of clarify that I think your data there is quite good. How about some of the vendors? I think, now that's Snowflakes public, you guys may be doing some forecasts there. Let's start there. >> Sure, yeah. So it's fun to talk about the high level, right? And talk about the sector breakdown and where we're seeing things, but at the end of the day, people just love to talk about the individual vendors. So there's a few things that were interesting, yeah. We were able to finally come out with a real viewpoint on Snowflake now that they're out in public, and we kind of launched with a positive to neutral viewpoint. I don't think there's going to be anything here that shocks you. We're absolutely outstanding expansion rates. All the commentary we get from our CIOs are just incredible, the market share gains are about as high as you're going to see in the survey, they are extremely well positioned to continue executing, and this is not in the data set, but we also know that that management team is fantastic. I would think that they had set themselves up coming out as a public company not to completely disappoint. And everything in our data set shows absolutely no reason why they would disappoint. >> Well, and so you may be wondering folks, like, well, wait a minute, with all that great news, I mean, how could they be positive to neutral. Maybe it maybe neutral, the reason is because they have a 66, roughly $66 billion valuation. And what ETR is doing is they're taking that into consideration as well relative to, so they're looking at the street forecast, the consensus forecast and saying, okay, how does the data line up to that? And so a lot of people are asking the question, can Snowflake live up to its valuation. I don't think there's any lack of total available market here. I mean, it's very, very large, the data market, it's enormous. And as, just a plug for an event that we're doing on November 17th, it starts, we're doing a global event, and we're going to be looking at this issue very closely, interviewing customers and partners and executives and, you know, you can judge for yourself if you think the vision, they're putting out this vision of a data cloud. You see this, if this vision, you think is going to have a big enough term that they can grow into, and as Erik said, great management team, will they be able to execute? Decide for yourself, but very exciting IPO obviously that we've tracked quite closely. Elastic is another one that you guys have followed quite closely. I know you've got some data there that you want to share as well. >> Yeah, I certainly do. The APM spaces is really interesting. One last quick point on Snowflake. We don't have regression forecasts on them, because they haven't been out public long enough for us to be able to do that sort of back-testing. So without that data science behind us, we will never really go with a full positive. So to your point that saying positive to neutral is not negative or neutral stance whatsoever, it's just without that regression support behind our data, that's what we just tend to do. Because at the end of the day, we're a data science company, so.. >> Yeah. You need some some history there to really make those calls. But yeah, let's talk about Elastic. >> Yeah, sure, you got it. So recently I hosted a panel on the APM and monitoring space. It was incredibly enlightening. It's a very crowded space that our CIOs told us is right for disruption. And it ended up being a little bit of an avalanche in our data, because it wasn't just Elastic, but it was also Splunk and Dynatrace that we ended up putting ratings on. Now, Elastic as we know is an open source model, a freemium to pay type of model. And we normally try to stay away from open source models, 'cause it's kind of hard to predict how that converts to revenue, but the data was so strong that again, we came out with a positive to neutral rating on Elastic. It was based on just elevated spend levels across, there was almost no negativity, we weren't seeing any decrease or replacement indications, really solid positioning in the fortune 500 accounts, which I was a bit surprised about. And the other thing here is that Elastic tends to be really expanding in the information security. This is no longer just about monitoring and logging, they are becoming a very relevant infosec play and they are breathing down the necks of Splunk. They can do the same thing and they can do it much cheaper. The caveat being, you need to have the IT and the human skillset to run Elastic. So it really comes down to, are you sophisticated enough with the human capital management to run it? But everything we saw here just incredibly improved competitive positioning, they actually had the number one net score in all of information security in any vendor that had over 50 citations. It was just too hard to ignore, we had to come out with a positive neutral. >> That's super interesting Erik, and of course, yeah, we covered that space recently. Everybody wants a piece of Splunk and have for a number of years, but, you know, you see in Datadog come after it, then you see some startups getting into the space. Jeremy Burton launched his company, Observe, Honeycomb is in that, they kind of coined the term observability. Kakao Search is another one. Ed Wall's joined that company, and so you see a lot of folks really going after that space, why not? I mean, it's such a successful company. The pickup of SignalFX filling some holes, we talked about that on the Ven, and it's a very interesting space, and one I think has some somewhat depressed levels from a net score standpoint but as some of your Ven observers said, this market is here to stay and it becoming much more important as part of digital transformation, as part of a dashboard of digital transformation. >> Yeah. Coining that term observability really just hit it on the nail on the head. When we just talked about monitoring an application, that's not what it's about anymore, right? You need to have observability in multi hybrid cloud environments, whether it's your infrastructure or people actually writing code for your application. And so that single pane of glass, end-to-end is the holy grail of monitoring, and that's what these guys are pushing for. The New Relics, the Datadog's, the Elastics, they're getting there more quickly than Splunk and Dynatrace or AppDynamics from Cisco are. That's what the people are telling us, the ones I speak to, the CIOs that use it in the field. They're getting there more quickly and they're doing it more cheaply. Now, this is not to say Splunk is not a great company, we know it is. And also Splunk has more API integration into any ecosystem you want. They're not getting pulled or ripped out anytime soon, we're not saying that. But when we look at our data, we had no choice but to come out with a neutral to negative. They are deteriorating and their spending intentions, their customer growth is completely stalling, we're not seeing any more increased perversion in our dataset or among customers. There just wasn't really anything we could really do. Looking at the data set and that's what we do, we had no choice. There's a lot of skepticism heading into the back half of this year and next year, there's so much competition coming after them, and some of these people are just giving it away for free. It's pretty hard to compete with free. >> Yeah, free is very powerful. All right, speaking of skepticism, Rackspace had their IPO, what do you see in there? >> Oh man, I'm not really sure how to start there. But listen, I don't want to beat a company while it's down, but their net scores are actually negative. I think at the negative 20% range, if I could possibly recall that. But listen, Rackspace, when they were private, let's give them some credit, right? They decided to go out and buy a bunch of different managed service providers, they tried to align themselves with AWS, with Oracle. So they've got this whole bundle thing right now that isn't just straight cloud computing anymore. We'll see if that plays out. But clearly we saw that the IPO was not a very special IPO. In this environment the valuations in the technology stocks being very elevated, having a negative IPO was very telling. But sticking straight to the data, basically we're seeing negativity across several years, it's the worst position vendor in cloud computing that we even cover. We just had to take a look at it right now, and just be honest and say according to the data, this is a very negative data set, there just isn't much we can do about it. Wish them the best, I hope their MSP revenue starts kicking in, and hopefully it'll change. But for right now the snapshot of our data was quite dire. >> Okay, Erik, Well, thanks so much. So let's update folks, so the ETR is exiting, it's quiet, period, which I love, because that means I can have the data and share with you. So we'll be updating our cloud scenarios, security, automation, our infrastructure, and many other segments as well. Certainly the data piece, we've been tracking snowflake very closely. And of course, Erik, you guys are already gearing up for your January survey. So, you know... >> It never ends Dave. And I've... >> Well, I got a really... I've got a sizzle panel that I'm doing next week as well, where we got four sizzles talking about security threats and priorities for 2021. So as soon as I wrap that, you'll be the first one I get my summary to. >> Oh, those are great. I mean, there's such deep dives with practitioners, and it's just an open discussion. So Erik Bradley, thanks so much for coming back in theCube. >> Have a great weekend Dave. >> Yeah, you too. And thank you for watching everybody this episode of Cube Insights powered by ETR. Go to etr.plus, that's where all the survey action is. I publish every week on wikibon.com and siliconangle.com. All these episodes are available on podcast. Wherever you watch, you can DM me, I'm @DVelllante. I post on LinkedIn, you can comment there or email me @david.vellanteat, @siliconangle.com. This is Dave Vellante for Erik Bradley. Thanks for watching everybody, we'll see you next time. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Oct 16 2020

SUMMARY :

bringing you data driven This is based on the latest data I always enjoy it. expect the downturn for 2020, beginning of the year, Yeah, and we have a chart on that. Now, clearly the caveat to that is if of the survey respondents guys, So for the October 20, what and the thinking back then was okay, is the biggest survey over survey decline. So the last survey to this survey, 2020, and the work from home, and Erik you alluded to this as RPA, So on the cloud side, And I think when you talk to, and to dig into the details, and that leaves you with net score. and it is the lowest ever we've captured. in the post pandemic was the expectation. All the commentary we get Well, and so you Because at the end of the day, to really make those calls. and the human skillset getting into the space. is the holy grail of monitoring, what do you see in there? But for right now the snapshot of our data so the ETR is exiting, And I've... and priorities for 2021. and it's just an open discussion. And thank you for watching everybody

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Rick Villars, IDC | VMware Cloud on Dell EMC


 

from the cube studios in Palo Alto in Boston connecting with thought leaders all around the world this is a cube conversation hi I'm Stu min a man and welcome to this special cube conversation over helping cover the second generation of the VMware cloud on Dell EMC happy to welcome to the program brick Villiers who's the vice president of data center and cloud with IDC not too far from me physically even the worse in today's day and age we're all practicing social distance Oh Rick great to see you thanks so much for joining no thanks - pleasure to be here looking forward to a great conversation all right so Rick you know usually this time of year you and I see other more than we their families because we're traveling a both circuit going to the analyst events like and one of the topics we spent a lot of time talking about over the years is of course cloud you know VMware's partnership with Amazon is of course one that the entire industry but notice of and the relationship of Amazon VMware and Dell is an interesting one what we're talking about today though is the VMware cloud or in the shorthand VM see on L EMC and it's the second generation of this product help us understand kind of where this fits in the categorization and the research that you in an IDC like that yes - it's an interesting question it's one that we've actually been thinking about for several years now and it had to do with some early conversations we were having back then with companies about their private cloud environment they've been deploying those for the last four or five years we were seeing them up on a sort of refresh cycle and when he started asking about how satisfied they'd been with those and where they wanted to use them and we got back some very consistent feedback saying that they had had some problems with their first generation of their private cloud environment and that they needed to address those and one of them was a consistency problem is that you know every private cloud they built whether they build it themselves or whether they looked at a host of private cloud provider even in their own company we're different different technologies different and figure different sets of tools and that was a big problem for them the second big problem they'd run into was basically every time there's a new technology or an upgrade or a fix we basically can't adopt it quickly we can't use it till the next refresh cycle so we're always behind we're playing catch-up and and neither one of those things really aligned with what they felt cloud should be and what they've been seeing in their public cloud environment and so when we looked at that and we started looking at the feedback a boat was coming on or we realized that we were about to see a new generation of private cloud environment but we said but this will be different not just because of new technology but it'll be actually different use cases and a different approach and the first thing is we said its first of all these are it's not so much a private cloud is that they dedicated cloud it's it's I have resources that are dedicated to a business or a service an application I want to get done and and I want to basically operate that just like all those other cloud and then the second thing is is they said and by the way this is less and less about a general-purpose new data center and we just run my data center same way it's I want this to be a platform for creating new services that I want to deliver in a location a factory a hospital you know a city block whatever that is and and so we brought those together and we started looking at those and we said well this is really going to lead to the emergence of a whole new product class which we started calling local cloud as a SERP because it reflected both of those things it says like it is no longer assembling piece parts but it was consuming these resources and as a service method with all the benefits of agility and responsiveness and continual enhancement that come with that but it was also about I need to be able to put these in new location not just in my corporate data center but out where I'm trying to do new businesses and services in and that's what led us to start talking about this in this new product category of local cloud as a service and then we started seeing solutions that came out on the market that fit very much with this idea okay yeah Rick really interesting because you're right you know private cloud is a conversation we've been having in the industry for about a dozen years and one of the biggest challenges is you talk to 100 customers and you get a hundred and fifty definitions of what a private cloud is so if I hear you right local cloud is in some ways it's an extension of what we see in the public cloud so you know I think back it used to be hey can I get this same stack in both place we saw companies like you know IBM and Oracle and even VMware thing you know how can I match what you have in your data center there as opposed to you know as your stack AWS outposts we're saying hey we're actually going to give you the you know the same you know same hardware you know same software and as a service as you said yeah you talked about also some of those new locations so you know without getting into too much depth so it sounds like and I've looked a little bit of research there there is the data center piece and then really emerging there's the potential for edge use cases do I see that right is just just like you know we've got kind of the hyper scalars we've the data center edge is pulling on everything so yeah your city you're saying edge doesn't kill the cloud and everything before it it's gonna just be another op in oh absolutely I mean for us this is it's more of an extension of the cloud environment and by that we also said one of the other critical things in this is it's it changes if you think about new applications that you're trying to create whether it's in the public cloud or whether one of these local cloud environments they're being built on a cloud native architecture and that's one of the other key elements of this solution is these become the platforms that allow enterprises to bring things like containers and service designs and this sort of you know DevOps driven application development model into both the corporate data centers which absolutely this these solutions like but also again to extend it out to places where in the past you didn't have a lot of IT you didn't have a lot of compute and storage but now if you're trying to do things like real-time monitoring for you know in the world we're living in today oh and air you know can I use machine vision to track the health of the people going through the airport I need to deliver a cloud service essentially at that Airport I have latency issues I have availability issues I can't do it from a data center you know sitting out halfway across the country it has to be at the airport but I need to be able to basically have a reliable consistent cloud environment but now I can put in 10 airports or 100 or so it's that combination of location but consistency everywhere I put it that's part of what this this new stories about and and I think that's the other big part of the message here excellent Rick so one of the things I we get into the numbers and talk specifically about the VMware solution how do customers get from where they are who these type of solutions you know one of the discussions around private cloud is could I upgrade what I have moved to these environment and I think about many of the solutions that are extending public clouds it it it doesn't necessarily mesh into what I have today so it did how do we get from you know the environments that I have today you know and how do these local cloud as a services fit in yeah so this is this is actually one of the interesting use cases for this is one way you can use this is to deploy this in your corporate data set where you but yet it's creating that public cloud environment you can do a lift and shift and leverage this as a way to MA I guess you would say now it's shift and lift because now you can bring it into this local cloud as a service platform and still run it locally get those kind of things tested and I wait and as you decide which functions you may want to move offload to a public cloud or add dr you can use this platform to do that but i think there's there's more to it than that the the other part of of what we talk about here is is and I think it's something that that needs to be addressed as something that helps people do this faster is these new systems while very modern very consistent there is a great value they like many of the more modern merged systems that are coming on the market have very different power profiles very different network requirements then what's in a lot of corporate data centers and that's one thing we've seen again and again when we've talked to people about deploying these is the technology's great the solutions great but you know I have to make sure I've got the right power and I've opened up the firewalls and all those things there one thing that I found interesting is we're starting to see companies say one way to remove that friction is you know there if there's a colocation facility near the customer site that has great power has great network connectivity you know I can use that place to now deliver this service in days instead of weeks because it's concentrated there you know it's a pure environment and I think that's one thing that's also helping with this shift is people can leverage those facilities in that activity to basically make this migration a lot easier for companies when they want to when they want to transform their environment yeah really important points there Rick absolutely we you know we've been telling companies for years you need to understand what you're good at and what you're not and you know we're in concrete and managing power and bullying there's a handful of companies that are excellent at that most of the rest of you companies you suck at it so therefore if you can leverage other people that you can do that so when you say local it does not need to mean a piece of real estate that I own it could be you know that that spectrum of boosting or to the environment yeah all right let's get to the numbers Rick so we're gonna pull up a light here with some of your research you know for years we've been talking about you know the private cloud category is huge compared to public cloud because while public cloud is growing huge numbers compared to traditional IT it is small so let's take a look at the slides and talk us through what we're looking at here yeah so this is the thing part of it when we were talking about this forecast and we again we're looking at product like you know the VMware cloud on Dell you see and the alternative solutions out there is is for part of the you space which we've talked about whereas this is a the next-generation of the corporation private cloud with better connectivity and better consistency in some ways that's the easy activity but what you're doing is as we've said is I'm translate I'm transferring from a upfront capital expenditure to a 3-4 year subscription and so when we look at this and we started thinking about the forecast and what we're saying is what I've done is I've moved from you know an upfront spend in one year to spreading it out over three years and from a forecast standpoint that means in the early years while you may be deploying and lot of companies are gonna be leveraging these and they're in their private cloud and their data centers the revenue stream to the provider in this case VMware and WMC or the group were talking about today streams over three years so the forecasts can look really big or grows very fast but that's because that subscription revenue keeps growing and growing so today when we've looked at you know comments some of the solutions that have been out there you brought up earlier you know the Rackspace and others as early versions of this but you know it's still relatively new these types of solutions have only really the market now for six months seven months so 2020 even without Co vid wasn't going to be some huge year one thing we see actually is that these types of solutions are even more attractive in the world we're living in because they give you that promise of rapid deployment and scale but absolutely by 2022 you know that accumulated revenue stream that subscription scream both for enterprise and for a growing number of edge use cases we're talking you know revenues up and around the five seven billion dollar range and that only accelerates one thing that's not really showing in here yet but it's also part of this local conversation is is the 5g build-out in the extension and use of these local clouds in connection with the 5g environment and that's part of this edge use case too so so absolutely if you want to see you know total revenue streams here over you know in 2022 as we talked about here just under five billion dollars going from you know a half a billion dollars this year but even the biggest growth in the business expansion is after that and why we think this is is the value why why people are willing to pay for this is because of that value of consistency continuous enhancements and a platform for innovation that's what makes this all come together and why we think this is gonna be such a big and important market in the coming years yeah absolutely and you know has an impact on your job rake instead of counting all that is in the growth there you're you're now talking to Wall Street about you know oh well Dell might have shipped X number of boxes but they can't recognize it over this period of time so let's talk about the customers though how does a solution like this you know what do you see it affecting their adoption of what they're doing with their overall you know I mean this is the case specifically for VMware cloud on Delhi see is you know without a doubt as we all know that VMware and and is is a critical part of most corporations IT environments today many of their applications are there they've invested great amounts of resources and expertise and understanding how to operate and drive those environments and and one thing this does is again it gives them that ability to leverage those investments and the things they've done there for application design and that's to recovery and and and sort of the AB neo management of their IT environment but now again use it in this as a service way so it's definitely one of the big benefits we see is it helps people make that transition removing the friction of that modernization for a lot of companies if they want to move to a cloud environment that's step one I think that's value one I would say and point out you know VMware also now is being very you know focused on making sure that it's also a strong platform for these next-generation cloud native development environment and that's been added to these platforms and will absolutely expect to see this and all the VMware cloud solution so that's another great part of this is there again preserving that ability for their customers who both do better with their existing environment and also have a platform for going forward with these new systems you know for us the big thing is is a continual focus by VMware and Dell as partners to make sure that it can scale its ability to operate these environments one of the things they're making a commitment to to their customers we are going to make these ingenuously available available on very good short notice and that they continually improve and that's gonna take a lot of back-end investment because really VMware has to now centrally manage not a hundred or a thousand potentially tens of thousands of system for many customers around the world that's the real next big step here we see is when you can add that fleet management ability so the company has the ability to say I can now deploy some great new service in one place a hundred places a thousand places while still being secure while still offering my end users you know the availability and the latency that they want that's a very powerful thing that companies are gonna be able to offer in the coming years alright well Rick fillers really important items they're really glad you brought up you know about a modern application about their data of course you know the inverse partner Dell has a strong legacy in data you know some pcs track you know the explosive growth of that or you know more than a decade now so thanks a lot and I think you captured that perfectly the data control part of this is is critical all right lots more from the VMware cloud on Dell EMC I'm sue minimun and thank you for watch the cube [Music]

Published Date : May 21 2020

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Will Grannis, Google Cloud | CUBE Conversation, May 2020


 

(upbeat music) >> Announcer: From theCUBE studios in Palo Alto in Boston, connecting with thought leaders all around the world, this is a CUBE conversation. >> Everyone, welcome to this CUBE conversation. I'm John Furrier with theCUBE, host of theCUBE here in our Palo Alto office for remote interviews during this time of COVID-19. We're here with the quarantine crew here in our studio. We've got a great guest here from Google, Will Grannis, managing director, head of the office of the CTO with Google Cloud. Thanks for coming on, Will. Appreciate you spending some time with me. >> Oh, John, it's great to be with you. And as you said, in these times, more important than ever to stay connected. >> Yeah, and I'm really glad you came on because a couple of things. One, congratulations to Google Cloud for the success you guys had. Saw a lot of big wins under your belt, both on the momentum side, on the business side, but also on the technical side. Meet is available now for folks. Anthos is doing very, very well. Partner ecosystem's developing. Got some nice use cases in vertical markets, so I want to get in and unpack with you. But really, the bigger story here is that the world has seen the future before it was ready for it. And that is the at-scale challenge that the COVID-19 has shown everyone. We're seeing the future has been pulled forward. We're living in a virtualized environment. It's funny to say that, virtualization (laughs). Server virtualization is a tech term, but that enabled a lot of things. We're living in a virtualized world now 'cause we have to, but this is going to set in motion a series of new realities that you guys have been experiencing and supporting for many, many years. But now as a provider of Google Cloud, you guys have to operate at scale, you have. And now the whole world realizes that scale is a big deal. And so you guys have had some successes. I want to get your thoughts on the this at scale problem that the world now realizes. I mean, everyone's at home. That's a disruption that was unforecasted. Whether it's under-provisioning VPNs in IT to a surface area for security, to just work and play. And activities are now confined, so people aren't convening anymore and it's a huge issue. What's your take on all this? >> Well, I mean, to your point just now, the fact that we can have this conversation and we can have it fluidly from our respective remote locations just goes to show you the power of information technology that underlies so many of the things that we do today. And for Google Cloud, this is not a new thing. And for Google, this is not a new thing. For Google Cloud, we had a mission of trying to help companies accelerate their transformation and enable them in these new digital environments. And so many companies that we've been working with, they've already been on the path to operating in environments that are digital, that are fluid. And when you think about the cloud, that's one of the great benefits of cloud, is that scalability in common with the business demand. And it also helps the scale situation without having to do the typical, "Oh wait, "you need to find the procurement people. "We need to find the server vendors. "We need to get the storage lined up." It really allows a much more fluid response to unexpected and unforecasted situations. Whether that's customer demand or in this case a global pandemic. >> Yeah, one of the things I want to get in with you on, you have explained what your job is there 'cause obviously Google's got a new CEO now for over a year. Thomas Kurian came from Oracle, knows the enterprise up and down. You had Diane Greene before that. Again, another enterprise leader. Google Cloud has essentially rebuilt itself from the original Google Cloud to be very enterprise centric. You guys have great momentum, and this is a world where cloud-native is going to be required. I mean, everyone now sees it. The tide has been pulled out, everything's exposed, all the gaps in business from a tech standpoint is kind of exposed. And so the smart managers and companies are looking at things and saying, "Double down on that. "Let's kill that. "We don't want to pay that supplier. "They're not core to our business." This is going to be a very rapid acceleration of what I call a vetting of the new set of players that are going to emerge because the folks who don't adapt to this new cloud-native reality, whether it's app workloads for banking to whatever are going to have to reinvent themselves now and reset and tweak to come out of this crisis. So it's going to be very cloud-native. This is a big deal. Can you share your reaction to that? >> Absolutely. And so as you pointed out, there are kind of two worlds that exist right now. Companies that are moving to become more digital and transform, and you mentioned the momentum in Google Cloud just over the last year, greater than 50% revenue growth. And in a greater than $10 billion run rate business and adding customers at a really quick clip, including just yesterday, Splunk, and along the way, Telecom Italia, Major League Baseball, Vodafone, Lowe's, Wayfair, Activision Blizzard. This transformation and this digitization is not just for a few or just for any one industry. It's happening across the board. And then you add that to the implementations that have been happening across Shopify and the Spotify and HSBC, which was a early customer of ours in the cloud and it already has a little bit of a headstart into this transformation. So you see these new companies coming in and seeing the value of digital transformation. And then these other companies that have kind of lit the path for others to consider. And Shopify is a really good example of how seeing drastic uptick in demand, they're able to respond and keep roughly half a million shops up and running during a period of time where many retailers are trying to figure out how to stay online or even get online. >> Well, what is your role at Google? Obviously, you're the managing director. Title is managing director, head of the office of the CTO. We've seen these roles before, head of the CTO, obviously a technical role. Is it partnering with the CEO on strategy? Is it you're tire kicking new things? Are you overseeing any strategic initiatives? What is your role? >> So a little bit of all of those things combined into one. So I spent the first couple of decades of my career on the other side of the fence in the non-tech community, both in the enterprise. But we were still building technology and we were still digitally minded. But not the way that people view technology in Silicon Valley. And so spending a couple of decades in that environment really gave me insights into how to take technology and apply them to a specific problem. And when I came to Google five years ago, selfishly, it was because I knew the potential of Google's technology having been on the other side. And I was really interested in forming a better bridge between Google's technology and people like me who were CTOs of public companies and really wanted to leverage that technology for problems that I was solving. Whether it was aerospace, public sector, manufacturing, what have you. And so it's been great. It's the role of a lifetime. I've been able to build the team that I wanted as an enterprise technologist for decades and the entire span of technologies at our disposal. And we do two things. One is we help our most strategic customers accelerate their path to cloud. And two, we create these signals by working with the top companies moving to the cloud and digitally transforming. We learned so much, John, about what we need to build as an organization. So it also helps balance out the Google driven innovation with our customer driven innovation. >> Yeah, and I can attest. I've been watching you guys from day one. Hired a lot of great enterprise people that I personally know. So you get in the enterprise chops and stuff and you've seen some progress. I have to ask you though, because first of all, big fan of Google at scale from knowing them from when they were just a little search engine to what they are now. There was an expression a few years ago I heard from enterprise customers. It goes along the lines like this. "I want to be like Google," because you guys had a great network, you had large scale. You had all these things that were like awesome. And then they realized, "Well, we can't be like Google. "We don't have SREs. "We don't have large scale data centers." So there was a little bit of a translation, and I want to say a little bit of a overplay of the Google hand, and you guys had since realized that it wasn't just people are going to bang at your doorstep and be adopting Google Cloud because there was a little bit of a cultural disconnect from wanting to be like Google, then leveraging Google in their business as they transform. So as you guys have moved from that, what's changed? They still want to be like Google in the sense you have great security, got a great network, and you've got that scale. Enterprises are a little bit slower to adopt that, which you're focused on now. What is the story there? Because I think that's kind of the theme that I'm hearing. Okay, Google now understands me. They know I'm not as fast as Google. They got super great people (laughs). We are training our people. We're retraining them. This is the transformation that they're going through. So you might be a little bit ahead of them certainly, but now they need to level up. How do you respond to that? >> Well, a lot of this is the transformation that Thomas has been enacting over the last year plus. And it comes in kind of three very operational or tactical pillars that I think of. First, we expanded our customer and we continue to expand our customer facing teams. Three times what they were before because we need to be there. We need to be in those situations. We need to hear from the customer. We need to learn more about the problems they're trying to solve. So we don't just take a theoretical principle and try to overlay it onto a problem. We actually get very visceral understanding of what they're trying to solve. But you have to be there to gain that empathy and that understanding. And so one is showing up, and that has been mobilizing a much larger engine of customer facing personnel from Google. Second, it's also been really important that we evolve our own. Just as Google brought SRE principles and principles of distributed systems and software design out to the world, we also had a little bit to learn about transitioning from typical customer support and moving to more customer experience. So you've seen that evolution under Thomas as well with cloud changing... Moving from talking about support to talking about customer experience, that white glove experience that our customers get and our partners get from the beginning of their journey with us all the way through. And then finally making sure that our product roadmap has the solutions that are relevant across key priority industries for us. Again, that only comes from being present from having a focus in those industries and then developing the solutions that progress those companies. This isn't about taking a principle and trying to apply it blindly. This is about adding that connection, that really deep connection to our customers and our partners and letting that connection manifest the things that we have to do as a product company to best support them over a long period of time. I mean, look at some of these deals we've been announcing. These are 10-year, five-year, multi-year strategic partnerships that go across the canvas of all of Google. And those are the really exciting scaled partnerships. But to your point, you can't just take SRE from Google and apply it to company X, but you can things like error budgets or how we think about the principles of SRE, and you can apply them over the course of developing technology, collaborating, innovating together. >> Yeah, and I think cloud-native is going to be a key thing. It's just my opinion, but I think one of those situations where the better mouse trap will win. If you're cloud-native and you have APIs and you have the kind of services, people will beat it to your doorstep. So I got to ask you, with Thomas Kurian on board, obviously, we've been following his career as well at Oracle. He knows what he's doing. Comes into Google, it's being built out. It's like a rocket ship at this point. What bet is he making and what bet are you guys making on behalf of your customers? If you had to boil it down to Google Cloud's big bet, what is the bet on the technology side? And what's the bet on the business side? >> Sure. Well, I've already mentioned... I've already hinted at the big strategy that Thomas has brought in. And that's, again, those three pillars. Making sure that we show up and that we're present by having a scaled customer facing organization. Again, making sure that we transition from a typical support mindset into more of a customer experience mindset and then making sure that those solutions are tailored and available for our priority industries. If I was to add more color to that, I think one of the most important changes that Thomas has personally been driving is he's been converting us to a partner-led business and a partner-led organization. And this means a lot of investments in large global systems integrators like Accenture and Deloitte. But this also means that... Like the Splunk announcement from yesterday, that isn't just a sell to. This is a partnership that goes deep across go-to market product and sell to. And then we also bring in very specific partners like Temenos in Europe for financial services or a CETA or a Rackspace for migrations. And as a result, already, we're seeing really incredible lifts. So for example, nearly 200% year over year increase in partner influenced revenue in Google Cloud and almost like a 13X year over year increase in new customers won by partners. That's the kind of engine that builds a real hyper-scale business. >> Interesting you mentioned Splunk. I want to get to that in a second, but I also noticed there was a deal with TELUS Group on eSIM subscriptions, which kind of leads me into the edge piece. There's a real edge component here with Google Cloud, and I think I had a conversation with Jennifer Lynn a few years ago, really digging into the built-in security and the value of the Google network. I mean, a lot of the scuttlebutt around the Valley and the industry is Google's got an amazing network. Software-defined networking is going to be a hot programmable area. So you got programmable networking and you got edge and edge security. These are killer areas that need innovation. Could you comment on what you guys are doing there and do you agree? Obviously, you have a killer network and you're leveraging it. Can you just give some insight into what's going on in those two areas? Network and then the edge. >> Yeah, I think what you're seeing is the manifestation of the progression of cloud generally. And what do I mean by that? It started out as like get everything to the data center. We kind of had this thought that maybe we could take all the workloads and we could get them to these centralized hubs and that we could redistribute out the results and drive the latency down over time so we can expand the portfolio of applications and services that would become relevant over time. And what we've seen over the last decade really in cloud is an evolution to more of a layered architecture. And that layered architecture includes kind of core data centers. It includes CDN capacity, points of presence, it includes edge. And just in that list of customers over the last year I mentioned, there were at least three or four telcos in there. And you've also probably heard and seen quite a bit of telco momentum coming from us in recent announcements. I think that's an indication that a lot of us are thinking about, how can we take technology like Anthos, for example, and how could we orchestrate workloads, create a common control plane, manage services across those three shells, if you will, of the architecture? And that's a very strategic and important area for us. And I think generally for the cloud industry, is expanding beyond the data center as the place where everything happens. And you can look at Google Fi, you can look at Stadia. You can look at examples within Google that go well beyond cloud as to how we think about new ways to leverage that kind of criteria. >> All right, so we saw some earnings come out on Amazon side as Google, both groups and Microsoft as well, all three clouds are crushing it on the cloud side. That's a tailwind, I get that. But as it continues, we're expecting post-COVID some redistribution of development dollars in projects. Whether it's IT going cloud-native or whatever new workloads. We are predicting a Cambrian explosion of new things from core to edge. And this is going to create some lifts. So I want to get your thoughts on you guys' strategy with go-to market, as well as your customers as they now have the ability to build workloads and apps with AI and data. There seems to be a trend towards the verticalization of whether it's sales and go-to market and/or specialism because you have horizontal scalability with cloud and you now have data that has distinct (chuckles) value in these verticals. So it's really seems to be... I won't say ratification, but in a way, that seems to be the norm. Whether you come into a market and you have specialization, but the data is there so apps can be more agile. Are you guys seeing that? And is that something that you guys are considering from an organization standpoint? And how do customers think about targeting vertical industries and their customers? >> Yeah, I bring this to... And where you started going there at the end of the question is exactly the way that we think about it as well. Which is we've moved from, "Here are storage offers for everybody, "and here's basic infrastructure for everybody." And now we've said, "How can we make sure "that we have solutions that are tailored "to the very specific problems that customers "are trying to solve?" And we're getting to the point now where performance and variety of technologies are available to be able to impose very specific solutions. And if you think about the substrate that has to be there, we mentioned you have to have some really great partners, and you have to have a roadmap that is focused on priority solution. So for example, at Google Cloud, we're very focused on six priority vertical areas. So retail, financial services, healthcare, manufacturing and industrials, healthcare life sciences, public sector. And as a result of being very focused in those areas, we can make more targeted investments and also align our entire go-to market system and our entire partner ecosystem... Excuse me, ecosystem around those bare specific priority areas. So for example, we work with CETA and HDA Healthcare very recently to develop and maintain a national response portal for COVID-19. And that's to help better inform communities and hospitals. We can use Looker to help with like a Commonwealth Care Alliance nonprofit and that helps monitor patient symptoms and risk factors. So we're using a very specific focus in healthcare and a partner ecosystem to develop very tailored solutions. You can also look at... I mentioned Shopify earlier. That's another great example of how in retail, they can use something like Google Meet, inherent reliability, scalability, security, to connect their employees during these interesting times. But then they can also use GCP, Google Cloud Platform to scale out. And as they come up with new apps and experiences for their shoppers, for their shops, they can rapidly deploy, to your point. And those solutions and how the database performs and how those tiers perform, that's a very tight-knit feedback loop with our engineering teams. >> Yeah, one of the things I'm seeing obviously with the virtualization of the COVID is that when the world gets back to normal, it'll be a hybrid. And it'll be a hybrid between reality, not physical and a hundred percent virtual, hybrid. And that's going to impact events too, media, to everything. Every vertical will be impacted. And I want to point out the Splunk deal and bring that back in because I want you to comment on the relevance of the Splunk deal in context to Splunk has a cloud. And they've got a great slogan, "Data for everywhere." "Data to everywhere," I think it is. But theCUBE, we have a cloud. Every company will have a cloud scale. At some level, we'll progress to having some sort of cloud because they have data. How are you guys powering those clouds? Because I think the Splunk deal is interesting. Their partner, their stock price was up out on the news of the deal. Nice bump there for Splunk, shout out to those guys. But they're a data company and now they're cross-platform. But they're not Google, but they have a cloud. So you know what I'm saying? So they need to play in all the clouds, but they need infrastructure (laughs), they need support. So how do you guys talk to that customer that says, "Hey, the next pandemic that comes, "the next crisis that's going to cause some "either social disruption or workflow disruption "or supply chain disruption. "I need to be agile. "I need to have full cloud scale. "And so I need to talk to Google." What do you say to them? What's the pitch? And does the Splunk deal mirror some of those capabilities? Or tie that together for us, the Splunk deal and how it relates to how to proof themselves for the future. Sorry. >> For example, with the Splunk cloud deal, if you take a look at what Google is already really good at, data processing at scale, log analytics, and you take a look at what Splunk is doing with their events and security incident monitoring and the rest, it's a really great mashup because they see by platforming on Google Cloud, not only do they get highly performing infrastructure. But they also get the opportunity to leverage data tools, data analytics tools, machine learning and AI that can help them provide enhanced services. So not just about capacity going up and down through periods of demand, but also enhancing services and continuing to offer more value to their customers. And we see that as a really big trend. And this gets at something, John, a little bit bigger, which is kind of the two views of the world. And we talked about very tailored, focused solutions. Splunk is an example of taking a very methodical approach to a partnership, building a solution specifically with partners. And in this case, Splunk on the security event management side. But we're always going to provide our data processing platform, our infrastructure for companies across many different industries. And I think that addresses one part of the topic, which is, how do we make sure that in periods of demand rapidly changing, and this goes back to the foundational elements of infrastructure as a service and elasticity. We're going to provide a platform and infrastructure that can help companies move through periods of... It's hard to forecast, and/or demand may rise and fall in very interesting ways. But then there's going to be times where we... Because we're not necessarily a focused use case where it may just be generalized platform versus a focused solution. So for example, in the oil and gas industry, we don't develop custom AI, ML solutions that facilitate upstream extraction, for example. But what we do do is work with renewable energy companies to figure out how they might be able to leverage some of our AI machine learning algorithms from our own data centers to make their operations more efficient and to help those renewable energy companies learn from what we've learned building out what I consider to be a world leading renewable energy strategy and infrastructure. >> It's a classic enablement model where you're enabling your platform for your customers. Okay, so I've got to ask the question. I asked this to the Microsoft guys as well because Amazon has their own SaaS stuff. But really more of end to end. The better product's usually on the ecosystem side. You guys have some killer SaaS. G Suite, we're a customer. We use the G Suite really deeply. We also use some Bigtable as well. I want to build a cloud, we have a cloud, CUBE cloud. But you guys have Meet. So I want to build my product on Google Cloud. How do I know you're not going to compete with me? Do you guys have those conversations around the trade-off between the pure Google services, which provide great value for the areas where the ecosystem needs to develop those new areas that are going to be great markets, potentially huge markets that are out there. >> Well, this is the power of partnership. I mentioned earlier that one of the really big moves that Thomas has made has been developing a sense of partners. And it kind of blurs the line between traditional, what you would call a customer and what you would call a partner. And so having a really strong sense of which industries we're in, which we prioritize, plus having a really strong sense of where we want to add value and where our customers and partners want to add that value. That's the foundational, that's the beginning of that conversation that you just mentioned. And it's important that we have an ability to engage not just in a, "Here's the cloud infrastructure piece of the puzzle." But one of the things Thomas has also done and a key strategy of his has been to make sure that the Google Cloud relationship is also a way to access all amazing innovation happening across all of Google. And also help bring a strategic conversation in that includes multiple properties from across Google so that an HSBC and Google and have a conversation about how to move forward together that is comprehensive rather than having to wonder and have that uncertainty sit behind the projects that we're trying to get out and have high velocity on because they offer so much to retail bank, for example. >> Well, I've got a couple more questions and then I'll let you go. I know you got some other things going on. I really appreciate you taking the time, sharing this great insight and updates. As a builder, you've been on the other side of the table. Now you're at Google heading up the CTO. Also working with Thomas, understanding the go-to market across the board and the product mix. As you talk to customers and they're thinking... The good customers are thinking, "Hey, "I want to come out of this COVID on an upward trajectory "and I want to use this opportunity "to reset and realign for the future." What advice do you have for those enterprises? They could be small, medium-sized enterprises to the full large big guys. And obviously, cloud-native, we've talked some of that already, but what advice would you have for them as they start to really prioritize, as some things are now exposed? The collaboration, the tooling, the scale, all these things are out there. What have you seen and what advice would you give a CXO or CSO or a leader in the industry to think about and how they should come out of this thing, how they should plan, execute, and move forward? >> Well, I appreciate the question because this is the crux of most of my day job, which is interacting with the C-suite and boards of companies and partners around the world. And they're obviously very interested to learn or get a data point from someone at Google. And the advice generally goes in a couple of different directions. One, collaboration is part of the secret sauce that makes Google what it is. And I think you're seeing this right now across every industry, and whether you're a small, medium-sized business or you're a large company, the ability to connect people with each other to collaborate in very meaningful ways, to share information rapidly, to do it securely with high reliability, that's the foundation that enables all of the projects that you might choose to... Applications to build, services to enable, to actually succeed in production and over the long haul. Is that culture of innovation and collaboration. So absolutely number one is having a really strong sense of what they want to achieve from a cultural perspective and collaboration perspective and the people because that's the thing that fuels everything else. Second piece of advice, especially in these times where there's so much uncertainty, is where can you buy down uncertainty with...? You can learn without a high penalty. This is why cloud I think is really, really finding super scale. It was already on the rise, but what you're seeing now as you've laid back to me during this conversation, we're seeing the same thing, which is a high increase in demand of, "Let's get this implemented now. "How can we do this more? "This is clearly one way to move through uncertainty." And so look for those opportunities. I'll give you a really good example. Mainframes, (chuckles) one of the classic workloads of the on-premise enterprise. There are all sorts of potential magic solves for getting mainframes to the cloud and getting out of mainframes. But a practical consideration might be maybe you just front-end it with some Java. Or maybe you just get closer to other data centers within a certain amount of milliseconds that's required to have a performant workload. Maybe you start chunking at art and treat the workload a little bit differently rather than just one thing. But there are a lot of years and investments in our workload that might run on a mainframe. And that's a perfect example of how biting off too much might be a little bit dangerous, but there is a path to... So for example, we brought in a company called Cornerstone to help with those migrations. But we also have partnerships with data center providers and others globally plus our own built infrastructure to allow even a smaller step per se for more close proximity location of the workload. >> It's great. Everything kind of has a technical metaphor connection these days when you have a internet, digitally connected world. We're living in the notion of a digital business, was a research buzzword that's been kicked around for years. But I think now COVID-19, you're seeing the virtual or digital, it's really digital, but virtual reality, augmented reality is going to come fast too. Really get people to go, "Wow. "Virtualization of my business." So we've been kind of kicking around this term business virtualization just almost as a joke, but it's really more about, okay, this is about a new world, new opportunity to think about when we come out of this, we're going to still go back to our physical world. Now, the hybrid now kicks in. This kind of connects all aspects of business in every vertical. It's not like, "Hey, I'm targeting this industry." So there might be unique solutions in those industries, but now the world is virtualized. It's connected, it's a digital environment. These are huge concepts that I think has kind of been a lunatic fringe idea, but now it's brought mainstream. This is going to be a huge tailwind for you guys as well as developers and entrepreneurs and application software. This is going to be, we think, a big thing. What's your reaction to that? Based on your experience, what do you see happening? Do you agree with it? And do you have anything you might want to add to that? >> Maybe one kind of philosophical statement and then one more... I bruised my shins a lot in this world and maybe share some of the black and blue coloration. First from a philosophical standpoint, the greater the crisis, the more open-minded people become and the more creative people get. And so I'm really excited about the creativity that I'm seeing with all of the customers that I work with directly, plus our partners, Googlers. Everybody is rallying together to think about this world differently. So to your point, a shift in mindset, there are very few moments where you get this pronounced change and everyone is going through it all at the same time. So that creates an opportunity, a scenario where you're bold thinking new strategies, creativity. Bringing people in in new ways, collaborating in new ways and offer a lot of benefits. More practically speaking and from my experience, building technology for a couple decades, it has an interesting parallel to building tightly coupled, really large maybe monoliths versus microservices and the debate around, "Do we build small things "that can be reconfigured and built out by others "or built upon by others more easily? "Or do we create a golden path and a more understood development environment?" And I'm not here to answer the question of which one's better because that's still a raging debate. But I can tell you that the process of going through and taking a service or an application or a thing that we want to deliver to a customer, that one of our customers wants to deliver to their customer. And thinking about it so comprehensively that you're able to think about it in, what are its core functions? And then thinking methodically about how to enable those core functions. That's a real opportunity, and I think technology to your point is getting to the place where if you want to run across multiple clouds, this is the Anthos conversation were recently GA'ed. Global scale platform, multicloud platform, that's a pretty big moment in technology. And that opens up the aperture to think differently about architectures and that process of taking an application service and making it real. >> Well, I think you're right on the money. I think philosophically, it's a flashpoints opportunity. I think that's going to prove to be accelerating and to see people win faster and lose faster. You're going to to see that quickly happen. But to your point about the monolith versus service or decoupled based systems, I think we now live in a world where it's a systems view now. You can have a monolith combined with decoupled systems. That's distributed computing. I think this is the trend, it's a system. It's not one thing or the other. So I think the debate will continue just like VI versus Emacs (chuckles). We don't know, right? People are going to have the debate, but if you think about it as a system, the use case defines your architecture. That's the beautiful thing about the cloud. So great insight, I really appreciate it. And how's everything going over there at Google Cloud? You've got Meet that's available. How's your staff? What's it like inside the Googleplex and the Google Cloud team? Tell us what's going on over there. People still working, working remote? How's everyone doing? >> Well, as you can tell from my scenario here, my backdrop, yes, still part at work. And we take this as a huge responsibility. These moments as a huge responsibility because there are educators, loved ones, medical professionals, critical life services that run on services that Google provides. And so I can tell you we're humbled by the opportunity to provide the backbone and the platform and the people and the curiosity and the sincere desire to help. And I mentioned a couple of ways already just in this conversation where we've been able to leverage some of our investments technology to help form people that really gets at the root of who we are. So while we just like any other humans are going through a process of understanding our new reality, what really fires us up and what really charges us up is because this is a moment where what we do really well is very, very important for the world in every geo, in every vertical, in every use case, in every solution type. We're taking that responsibility very seriously. And at the same time, we're trying to make sure that all of our teams as well as all of the teams that we work with and our customers and partners are making it through the human moment, not just the technology moment. >> Well, congratulations and thanks for spending the time. Great insight, Will. Appreciate, Will Grannis, managing director, head of technology office of the CTO at Google Cloud. This certainly brings to the mainstream what we've been in the industry been into for a long time, which is DevOps, large scale, role of data and technology. Now we think it's going to be even more acute around societal benefits. And thank God we have all those services for the frontline workers. So thank you so much for all that effort and thanks for spending the time here in theCUBE Conversation. Appreciate it. >> Thanks for having me, John. >> Okay, I'm John Furrier here in Palo Alto studios for remote CUBE Conversation with Google Cloud, getting the update. Really looking at the future as it unfolds. We are going to see this moment in time as an opportunity to move to the next level, cloud-native and change not only the tech industry but society. I'm John Furrier, thanks for watching. (upbeat music)

Published Date : May 7 2020

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Rick Villars v1


 

from the cube studios in Palo Alto in Boston connecting with thought leaders all around the world this is a cube conversation hi I'm Stu man a man and welcome to this special cube conversation over helping cover the second generation of the VMware cloud on Dell EMC happy to welcome to the program Rick fillers who's the vice president of data center and cloud with IDC not too far from me physically even though of course in today's day and age we're all practicing social distance so Rick great to see you thanks so much we've done it well thanks Stu pleasure to be here looking forward to a great conversation all right so Rick you know usually this time of year you and I see other more than we their families because we are traveling a circuit going to the analyst invent like and one of the topics we spent a lot of time talking about over the years is of course cloud you know VMware's partnership with Amazon is of course one that the entire industry but notice of and the relationship of Amazon VMware and Dell is an interesting one what we're talking about today though is the VMware cloud or in the shorthand VM see on LEM see and it's the second generation of this product help us understand kind of where this fits in the categorization and the research that you and an IDC look at yes - it's an interesting question it's one that we've actually been thinking about for several years now and it had to do with some early conversations we were having back then with companies about their private cloud environment they'd been deploying those for the last four or five years we were seeing them up on a sort of refresh cycle and when he started asking about how satisfied they'd been with those and where they wanted to use them and we got back some very consistent feedback saying that they'd had some problems with their first generation of their private cloud environment and nothing needed to address those and one of them was a consistency problem is that you know every private cloud they built whether they build it themselves or they looked at a hosted private cloud provider even in their own company we're different different technologies different and figure different sets of tools and that was a big problem for them the second big problem they'd run into was basically every time there's a new technology or an upgrade or fix we basically can't adopt it quickly we can't use it till the next refresh cycle so we're always behind we're playing catch-up and and neither one of those things really aligned with what they felt cloud should be and what they've been seeing in their public cloud environment and so when we looked at that and we started looking at the feedback about was combiner we realized that we were about to see a new generation of private cloud environment but we said but this will be different not just because of new technology but it'll be actually different use cases and a different approach and the first thing is we said it's first of all these are it's not so much a private cloud is that they dedicated cloud it's it's I have resources that are dedicated to a business or a service an application I want to get done and and I want to basically operate that just like all those other cloud and then the second thing is is they said and by the way this is less and less about a general-purpose new data center and we just run my data center same way it's I want this to be a platform for creating new services that I want to deliver in a location a factory a hospital you know a city block whatever that is and and so we brought those together and we started looking at those and saying well this is really going to lead to the emergence of a whole new product class which we've started calling local cloud as a service because it reflected both of those things is like it is no longer assembling piece parts but it was consuming these resources and as a service method with all the benefits of agility and responsiveness and and continued enhancement that come with that but it was also about I need to be able to put these in new location not just in my corporate data center but out where I'm trying to do new businesses and services in and that's what led us to start talking about this in this new product category called local cloud as a service and then we started seeing solutions that came out on the market that fit very much with this idea okay yeah Rick really interesting because you're right you know private cloud is a conversation we've been having in the industry for about a dozen years and one of the biggest challenges is you talk to 100 customers and you get a hundred and fifty definitions of what a private cloud is so if I hear you right local cloud is in some ways it's an extension of what we see in the public cloud so you know I think back it used to be hey can I get this same stack in both place we saw companies like you know IBM and Oracle and even VMware dang you know how can I match what you have in your data center there as opposed to you know as your stack AWS outposts we're saying hey we're actually gonna give you the you know the same you know same hardware you know same software and as a service as you said yeah you talked about also some of those new locations so you know without getting into too much depth so it sounds like and I looked a little bit of research there there is the data center piece and then really emerging there's the potential for edge use cases do I see that right is just just like you know we've got kind of the hyper scalars we've the data center edge is pulling on everything so you're saying edge doesn't kill the cloud and everything before it it's gonna just be another op in oh absolutely I mean trust this is it's more of an extension of the cloud environment and by that we also said one of the other critical things in this is it's it changes you if you think about new applications that you're trying to create whether it's in the public cloud or whether one of these local cloud environments they're being built on a cloud native architecture and that's one of the other key elements of this solution is these become the platforms that allow enterprises to bring things like containers and service designs and this sort of you know DevOps driven application development model into both the corporate data centers which absolutely this these solutions like but also again to extend it out to places where in the past you didn't have a lot of IT didn't have a lot of compute and storage but now if you're trying to do things like real-time monitoring for you know in the world we're living in today Oh an airport you know can I use machine vision to track the health of the going through the airport I need to deliver a cloud service essentially at that Airport I have latency issues I have availability issues I can't do it from a data center you know sitting out halfway across the country it has to be at the airport but I need to be able to basically have a reliable consistent cloud environment but now I can put in ten airports or a hundred so it's that combination of location but consistency everywhere I put it that's part of what this this new stories about and and I think that's the other big part of the messenger excellent Rick so one of the things I for we get into the numbers and talk specifically about the VMware solution how do customers get from where they are who these type of solutions you know one of the discussions around private cloud is could I upgrade what I have moved to these environment I think about many of the solutions that are extending public clouds it it doesn't necessarily mesh into what I have today so it did how do we get from you know the environments that I have today you know and how do these local cloud as a services fit in yeah so this is this is actually one of the interesting use cases for this is one way you can use this is to deploy this in your corporate data set where you but yet it's creating that public cloud environment you can do a lift and shift and leverage this as a way to MA I guess you would say now it's shift and lift because now you can bring it into this local fly as a service platform and still run it locally get those kind of things tested and by weight and as you decide which functions you may want to move offload to a public cloud or add dr you can use this platform to do that but I think there's there's more to it than that the the other part of of what we talk about here is is and I think it's something that that needs to be addressed as something that helps people do this faster is these new systems while very modern very consistent there is a great value they like many of the more modern merged systems that are coming on the market have very different power profiles very different network requirements then what's in a lot of corporate data centers and that's one thing we've seen again and again when we've talked to people about deploying these is the technology's great the solutions great but you know I have to make sure I've got the right power and I've opened up the firewalls and all those things one thing that I found interesting is we're starting to see companies say one way to remove that friction is you know there if there's a colocation facility near the customer site that has great power has great network connectivity you know I can use that place to now deliver this service in days instead of weeks because it's concentrated there you know it's a pure environment yeah and I think that's one thing that's also helping with this shift is people can leverage those facilities in that activity to basically make this migration a lot easier for companies when they want to when they want to transform their environment yeah really important points there Rick absolutely we you know we've been telling companies for years you need to understand what you're good at and what you're not and you know pouring concrete and managing power and bullying there's a handful of companies that are excellent at that most of the rest of you companies you suck at it so therefore if you can leverage other people that you can do that so when you say local it does not need to mean a piece of real estate that I own it could be you know that that spectrum of boosting or the environment yeah all right let's get to the numbers Rick so we're gonna pull up a light here with some of your research you know for years we've been talking about you know the private cloud category is huge compared to a public cloud because well public cloud is growing huge numbers compared to traditional IT it is small so let's take a look at the slides and talk us through what we're looking at here yeah so this is the thing part of it when we were talking about this forecast and we again we're looking at product like you know the VMware cloud on Dell you see and the alternative solutions out there is is for part of the use case which we've talked about whereas this is a the next-generation of the corporation private cloud with better connectivity and better consistency in some ways that's the easy activity but what you're doing is as we've said is I'm translate I'm transferring from a upfront capital expenditure to a 3-4 year subscription and so when we look at this and we started thinking about the forecast and what we're saying is what I've done is I've moved from you know an upfront spend in one year to spreading it out over three years and from a forecast standpoint that means in the early years while you may be deploying and lot of companies are gonna be leveraging these in their in their private cloud and their data centers the revenue stream to the provider in this case VMware and WMC or the group we're talking about today streams over three years so the forecasts can look really big or grows very fast but that's because that subscription revenue keeps growing and growing so today when we looked at you know comment some of the solutions that have been out there you brought up earlier you know the Rackspace and others as early versions of this but you know it's still relatively new these types of solutions of only on the market after six months seven month so 2020 even without Cove it wasn't going to be some huge year one thing we see actually is that these types of solutions are even more attractive in the world we're living in because they give you that promise of rapid deployment in scale but absolutely by 2022 you know that accumulated revenue stream that subscription scream both for enterprise and for a growing number of edge use cases we're talking you know revenues up and around the five seven billion dollar range and that only accelerates one thing that's not really showing in here yet but it's also part of this local conversation is is the 5g build-out and the extension and use of these local clouds in connection with the 5g environment and that's part of this edge use case too so so absolutely if you want to see you know total revenue streams here over you know in 2022 as we talked about here just under five billion dollars going from you know a half a billion dollars this year but even the biggest growth and the biggest expansion is after that and why we think this is is the value why why people are willing to pay for this is because of that value of consistency continuous enhancements and a platform for innovation that's what makes this all come together and why we think this is gonna be such a big and important market in the coming years yeah absolutely and you know has an impact on your job rake instead of counting on is in the growth there you're now talking to Wall Street about you know oh well Dell might have shipped X number of boxes but they can't recognize it over this period of time so let's talk about the customers though how it is a solution like this you know what do you see it affecting their adoption of what they're doing with their overall you know I mean this is the case specifically for VMware cloud on Delhi see is you know without a doubt as we all know that VMware and and is is a critical part of most corporations IT environments today many of their applications are there they've invested great amounts of resources and expertise and understanding how to operate and drive those environments and and one thing this does is again it gives them that ability to leverage those investments and the things they've done there for application design and that's the recovery and and and sort of the app mule management of their IT environment but now again use it in this as a service way so it's definitely one of the big benefits we see is it helps people make that transition removing the friction of that modernization for a lot of companies if they want to move to a cloud environment that's step one I think that's value one I would say and point out you know VMware also now is being very you know focused on making sure that it's also a strong platform for these next-generation cloud native development environment and that's been added to these platforms and we'll absolutely expect to see this and all the VMware cloud solution so that's another great part of this is there again preserving that ability for their customers who both do better with their existing environment and also have a platform for going forward with these new systems you know for us the big thing is is a continual focus by VMware and Dell as partners to make sure that it can scale its ability to operate these environment one of the things they're making a commitment to to their customers we are going to make these continuously available available on very good short notice and that they continually improve and that's gonna take a lot of back-end investment because really VMware has to now centrally manage not one hundred or a thousand potentially tens of thousands of system for many customers around the world that's the real next big step here we see is when you can add that fleet management ability so the company has the ability to say I can now deploy some great new service in one place a hundred places a thousand places while still being secure while still offering my end users you know the availability and the latency that they want that's a very powerful thing that companies are gonna be able to offer in the coming years all right well Rick fillers really important items they're really glad you brought up you know about the modern application about their data of course you know the immersed partner Dell has a strong legacy in data you know something shiny sees track you know the explosive growth of that or you know more than a decade now so thanks a lot and I think you capture that perfectly the data control part of this is is critical all right lots more from the VMware cloud on Dell EMC I'm Stu minimun and thank you for watch the queue [Music]

Published Date : Apr 29 2020

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Christie Lenneville, GitLab | GitLab Commit 2020


 

>>From San Francisco. It's the cube covering get lab commit 2020 Rocky you buy get lab. >>Hi, I'm Stu Miniman and this is the cubes coverage of get lab commit 2020 here in San Francisco. Kicking off our coverage of 2020 a great developers show talking about the, the platform they get. Lab is building and have one of the keynote presenters from this morning. Christy Lineville who is the user experience director at get lab. Thanks so much for joining us. My pleasure. All right, so th one of the things that uh, you know you and was talking, talking in the keynote this morning was we have the scroll of tools and of course one of the challenges people know is if you're talking different tools in different environments, the user interface is going to be different. And therefore the stat I heard in the keynote was over 50% of dev ops time is wasted on logistics and repetitive tasks and all these environments. Before we dig into it. Christie, I'd love just a little bit about your background because you hinted at it a little bit in your keynote that some past experiences you've had. So what, what led you to this role at get lab? >>Yeah, so I've been in tech for about 20 years. Um, didn't go to school thinking that I would be a UX or one day because 20 years ago, frankly it wasn't even a thing. Um, but over the years I've gotten to work at Dell and general motors, Rackspace and then a regional company that's still huge called HEB. So lots of enterprise, lots of tech, um, which is areas that I'm just really passionate about. UX and, >>yeah, well we, we, we talk so much about Keck. Um, I love, one of the things I've looked at my career is there's the cool tech button, you know, what is, how does design fit into these, you know, there's of course the easy examples of Apple, but you know, so many of the products, when you talk about the difference between it being a utility, and I love this thing often is the design. And that, that, that user experience piece of it, um, in the dev ops software world, give us a little bit of your world challenges that you're seeing. What differentiates a, you know, an okay product versus something that customers are going to be like, you know, I love this. I want everybody to use it and, you know, want to spread, spread the gospel. >>Yeah. Um, so building the types of tools that we are building at get lab isn't sexy or like working at Apple. Um, but I'll tell you this, the designers who work on these types of tools are really deeply passionate about creating great experiences for people to do their jobs every day. Um, which is actually really exciting work. So what's interesting though is oftentimes people are coming from using these very outdated legacy tools. Oftentimes their internal tools, uh, they just don't have a great experience. So we get really excited about being able to take the type of tool that someone is kind of like, these folks don't have a choice. They're not getting to decide which tool they get to use to do their job. They have to use it. And we're really respectful of that. Just because they have to use it doesn't mean that we want to take advantage of that. Uh, we want it to be a really excellent experience. >>All right, so Christie, I had heard before when you talk about get lab there, there's dev, there's sec, there's ops in the keynote, you talked, even groups like finance and marketing need to get involved. There's very different expectations and skill set when you talk about those roles. So it helped me understand a little bit, are there different interfaces based on my roles? Is it just so simple that anybody should be able to understand it? Help us understand. >>Yeah. So that's the goal. I'm not going to tell you that they're there yet today, but that's the idea. So yeah, having worked in tech for such a long time, um, it's, I've got a lot of, uh, experience with watching different roles, try to interact with these technical teams that need the tech teams for them. This is, this is bread and butter stuff. They know exactly what's going on. And, uh, other roles really try to kind of bring themselves to the developers and that's what we're trying to make easy. So things like taxonomy play a huge role in that. The way that, uh, deeply technical people talk about the work that they do is very different from how people in other roles do. And we're starting to think about how we can converge those two things just to make it easy for everyone. >>No, I love that because a few years ago there was Oh, developers and the new kingmakers and they're going to do off their thing, but it kind of seemed like the developers were off on the side and they were going to choose their tools and figure things out and then somebody eventually needed to pay for something and figure out how it works in the environment. The story I'm hearing and the maturation of that is developers are closer to the business and these roles need to talk and communicate and fit together. Is that what you're seeing? >>Yeah, that's absolutely right. >>All right, so get lab also your, your product line spans of just a broad spectrum. There's, yeah, I don't have memorize the 10 categories that you need to fit. Um, I believe there was a couple of acquisitions, uh, that helped grow here. But you start with SCM and CII. Those alone, making sure that those work together is a certain bit of work. But how do you, how do you span the gamut and make sure that all these various pieces, uh, I'm going to have some kind of coherent experience. >>Yeah. So we're also thinking about project planning that happens before SCM NCI ever starts. Um, and so we're thinking about how do we make it easy to take something from an idea, an issue directly into that build process. Um, and then after that it's like, okay, so then what happens next? Keeping it secure, um, and then watching it to see what's going on it and then just getting it out onto infrastructure through our ops features. Okay. >>Talk a little bit about how you interact with the ecosystem in the community. Also, it's everything is open to, you know, understand, you know, I want them to see the meeting minutes. I can dive right in and do it. And we heard lots of examples in the presentations about, Oh, some change has been made or you know, your CEO joke to somebody corrects my grammar. And that not necessarily, Oh, maybe it is someone inside the company, but uh, you know, that dynamic is to make sure you have something that is coherent when you have so many different internal and external constituencies that will be opinionated as how things should go. >>Yeah. Um, so let's see here. Um, ask me again. Sorry. >>Yeah. So you get all these other constituents that, that want to kind of have a stake and probably have an opinion as to how things should go. How do you make sure it works, not just forget lab but all of your customers and the partner ecosystem that you're building around it. >>Thank you. And so we do take the comments that come in on issues very seriously. Uh, my team is looking at that. Our product managers are certainly looking at that. Um, and we look at that as directional information. Where my team really takes that though is then we dive in and we do UX research. Um, so we are very mindful of the fact that the comments that are coming in, um, we don't take them literally, uh, we take them as kind of advice about where do you dig in next? And so what my team is doing is figuring out, uh, what roles are really interested in this future going out and either doing surveys or talking directly to customers doing qualitative interviews, or we're sitting down and saying, okay, so we get it. You have some feedback here and that's wonderful, but what were you trying to do? How did you even get here? Where did you want to go next? What things are working well for you? What things aren't working as well? And then that's a lot of what we do. >>Um, you've got a global environment that this is going into. What, what challenges does that put on what you're doing? >>Yeah, it brings a lot of challenges. Uh, one of the bigger challenges that it brings is in our UI copy, right? Um, so field labels, things like that. We really try to be mindful about that. Uh, so in a couple of different ways. So, um, the way that people talk about things a is different throughout the world. We try to be mindful about not using things like jargon. Um, so that everything is clear and easy to understand no matter where you are. We also think about things though like length of text, which can have a really big impact. So we know German tends to have some long words. We have to be mindful of that as we're writing UX copy. Cause in the end we want this to be as easy for everyone to understand as possible the moment that they look at it. All right. >>Uh, how about announcements? Uh, we, I understand the 22nd of every month is when a code drops. So just bring us up to speed as to what people should know about boat get lab product today. >>Yeah. So we, we released features at an industry changing velocity. I have never seen anything like it. Um, and from a, I'm always gonna think from a UX perspective, UX is deeply involved in that. So there is not a release that goes by where you as a customer or a user can't actually see the impact of the release. Yeah. Things are happening behind the scenes and we're shoring things up and strengthening the backend, but we're doing things on the front end constantly. Um, and my designers and researchers know that that's like they're on the hook for that. And so they're always thinking about like, what's that next thing that we can deliver? >>All right, so Kristi, dark mode for everything. >>dark mode has definitely been something that we have heard from our user base that they really want. Um, something that we're working on is a good design system so that we have single source of truth components we'll make that'll make it much easier for us to do the dark mode that we know is a legitimate ask from our user base. >>Yeah, absolutely. Anything else? Uh, just trends or things that you're looking at for 2020 >>trends that we're looking at? No, it's interesting. I'll be honest, I don't think that we think a lot about trends. What we're really doing is we're looking at the feedback that's coming in directly from our user base and then we're trying to make decisions based on that. Um, so actually I don't, I couldn't say that we have any trends. >>Well, you know, mobile drove a lot of the last decade or so. Are any of the voice or interactive, you know, type of platforms have any impact on what you're doing yet? >>Yeah, so we, uh, we are thinking about mobile. We're not thinking about in the term about it in terms of, uh, native mobile apps. We're really trying to think about it in terms of just making a really good responsive experience. Uh, we're trying to get a better sense of which jobs, um, are most commonly done on mobile devices so that we can focus first on making those better. Um, but that's also something we're trying to think about with every design. So I see my designers doing a really good job these days. So they, you know, they put together a design, they're thinking about it in terms of desktop, and then I see them pivot and think, okay, so what does this now look like on a mobile device? So we have a lot of work to do in this area. I'm not going to tell you that we don't, but I see us getting better and better all the time. >>All right, Christie, thanks so much for giving us all the updates. Really great to dig into it. It's been my pleasure. Alright, I'm Stu Miniman and thank you for watching the cube.

Published Date : Jan 14 2020

SUMMARY :

commit 2020 Rocky you buy get lab. All right, so th one of the things that Um, but over the years I've gotten to work at Dell and general motors, customers are going to be like, you know, I love this. Um, but I'll tell you this, the designers who work on these types of tools are really deeply passionate All right, so Christie, I had heard before when you talk about get lab there, I'm not going to tell you that they're there yet today, developers and the new kingmakers and they're going to do off their thing, but it kind of seemed like the developers were There's, yeah, I don't have memorize the 10 categories that you need to fit. Um, and so we're thinking about how do we make it easy to take something you know, that dynamic is to make sure you have something that is coherent when you have so Um, How do you make sure it works, that the comments that are coming in, um, we don't take them literally, Um, you've got a global environment that this is going into. and easy to understand no matter where you are. So just bring us up to speed as to what people should know about boat get lab product So there is not a release that goes by where you Um, something that we're working on is a good design system so that we have single source of truth components Uh, just trends or things that you're looking at for 2020 Um, so actually I don't, I couldn't say that we have any trends. or interactive, you know, type of platforms have any impact on what you're doing I'm not going to tell you that we don't, Alright, I'm Stu Miniman and thank you for watching the cube.

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David McCann, AWS | AWS re:Invent 2019


 

>>LA Las Vegas. It's the cube hovering AWS reinvent 2019 brought to you by Amazon web services and along with its ecosystem partners. >>Hey, welcome back everyone. This is the cubes live covers Las Vegas anus. Re-invent. I'm John furrier with Dave Alante extracting the signal from the noise sponsored by Intel and AWS. They put the stage together, two big stages. Day two, we're here day Jew, I rapid fire a devil's execs coming on. Dave McCann, cube alumni, VP of ADAS migration marketplace and control services known most for the marketplace and a lot of stuff going on. That's exciting in the marketplace. It's where all the ecosystem actions happening. Congratulations on you six. I know you're busy, you've got new stuff, but the marketplace seems to be changing the procurement and the consumption of software and solutions, whether it's SAS or images and technology, your demand on the marketplace. So great to be back, Kimberly. It's another reinvent. This is my sixth. Um, so lots going on. Marketplace has got a lot bigger in the last year. >>We're up to 260,000 customers, so not substantial growth from last year. And we're adding thousands of customers every month. Um, big headline I have to start with is marketplace has been a marketplace for software for the last seven years. And two weeks ago we launched a marketplace for data and it's a new service that we call AWS data exchange. And instead of allowing you to point, click subscribe to software, and if you're a data consumer and a bank and you're an analyst or you're a researcher and a pharma company, you actually buy data from hundreds of companies, you know, you can go into the new console, find the product and market, please go over to this console called data exchange. And you can go buy research data or you can buy healthcare data from change healthcare. You can buy news data from Thomson Reuters, you can buy consumer data from Experian. >>And we've launched 1400 products from 19 data providers and we've made it available globally. So it's a whole new class of intellectual property data sources in there as well. There's some open source public sources as well. And we're adding literally dozens of products every day. So really easy API. And the cool thing is that after you subscribe, you copy it right into your S three bucket, moves into your VPC and then you move it into your project and you can actually create a Lambda function with the next version of the data. The next day gets updated and know the data just gets updated. And the use case here is like, if I'm a retail outlet, I could buy or go and get weather data and do some things. Is that kind of the model? Exactly. Right. I mean companies all over the world by $150 billion worth of data, but it's all delivered thousands of different EPA. >>Dave, we got cube data, we put all of our advanced data out there, which might be an opportunity. But seriously, Q three 65 is our new listing on the market place. So we have a Q cloud service, little plug for the cube cube three 65 on the marketplace and we're, we're happy. But I want to ask you because one of the things that's coming up is, um, from your team in the marketplace, the industry is this notion of buying through the marketplace. The trend is increasing private offers is a hot feature that you guys have put in place. And there's some news there. Could you explain how private offers is changing the game in the marketplace? I'd love to show you, if you think about it, a lot of our customers are developers and builders and they're working on something on test and it's a pilot and you use it for a few hours or a week. >>But once a company contracts for software and if you're contracting for a lot of software, procurement, one's best price, legal one's best terms, and there's going to be in negotiation and we call that negotiation of private offer. And so that involves salespeople. And so our top software vendors like a Splunk and new Relic of trend micro, uh, Palo Alto, their sales guys, or negotiate our sales ladies and negotiating with the customer for a couple hundred thousand dollars and there's a price and terms. When are you going to pay? What clauses do you agree? How many of you buying? Where are you going to deploy? All of that's negotiated and no, we have a portal for the sailor. We've had it for a year, we've made some really good changes and the central, they arose the seller to automate that price court rate into your account and then the buyer subscribes, and this is allowing our sailors to do quotations in the hundreds of thousands, the millions and sometimes in the tens of millions on a contract rate through marketplace, you're doing millions of dollars of business with with private offers today we've seen vendors write contracts for over $10 million, Peter over three years SAS contracts. >>So we've had that program available for the last year and we'd be working on a lot of features with the help of people at Splunk and new Relic today, we've made it available for all ISBNs and marketplace. You say all the iterations get to take place in the market place, so it's all those informations. I should just speak, just make sure I get it right before private offers were invite only kind of thing. Now you're making it available to all ASVs. Correct. We've got one. As of today, we've over 1,500 ASVs in the marketplace. You're one of them. And with those 1500 vendors within our go into marketplace, there's a new button and the seller portal and it says create Piper offer and any over ISV can note create a private. So I'm going to put my little seller hat on. I have a SAS application. Look at, I don't have a big Salesforce. >>How can you guys help me? How do I, how do I get more sales? Is there a, there's the money just following my bank account. Oh, are you overstaffed to do marketing? You have to do some discussions. You know, we had a company in the UK called Matilda MAF last year on, on the cube. Medallian Staffan was 17 engineers and new salespeople and now they're like 300 people, two runs of venture and everything's through marketplace. Big booth here. Well, congratulations to those guys. We love them. And to come Mytilene again, they engage rafted with you guys. It is all the sales and go to market through AWS complete everything goes through marketplace. Okay. We've made it available to 1,500 vendors today. Okay. So changing procurement. I love that trend. You kind of modernizing the procurement process with the marketplace. What about um, resellers? What's the update there? >>So the big update there is, you know, for the first six years of marketplace we couldn't handle the resaler. We didn't conceive of the VAR or the consulting partner and we got a lot of feedback that we had to do work. And so we've taken private offers and we've designed consulting partner, private offers and no, we've saved up over a hundred top consulting partner resellers, the likes of an OCT of an Ashi, a Rackspace in Europe computer center and Softcat and they were working with all of the world's top resellers and know if you are a Splunk or trend micro, you can authorize computer center to offer private prices to their customers and you can actually authorize a wholesale price from Splunk directly to computer and get paid for. Well, they could actually set the price. Mark it up. I got to ask you, Dave, what's your vision for marketplace? >>Because you're doing a great job. It seems like you're paddling as fast as you can constantly improving the service. I know you've got a big to do list, you want to make it easy or make it faster, all that good stuff, but what's the vision? Where do you see marketplace evolving? You know, Jeff Bezos says it's only day one. We're seven years old. We've barely scratched the surface. Global software is 450 billion growing 8% data is 150 billion growing at 3% you've got a $600 billion industry. Marketplace has not touched a tiny percentage. We want all of our customers to be able to find, discover, provision, and run all of their software and their data out of marketplace and it's gonna take us another 10 years and you get a lot of teen. How big is the team? We never publish JFK K but just let's say the Andy Jassy continues to invest in the business and as we add engineers and we add business people and development people, you know we work well with our partners. >>We cool market. Yeah, we grew up well, as Andy always says, you know, and you always say this, the customer needs come first. That's kind of a vetting process. Then working backwards documents, we know all about that history. What is the number one customer need that you're hearing, that you're addressing, that you see coming up around the corner, you're constantly working on and new potentially new requests that are coming in that are relevant to your business. There's two or three big customer needs. The number one is governance. So while engineers are going fast, innovating, legal, finance and procurement need to be confident that the contracts are being written well and is the spend under control. And so we're doing a lot of work around tagging or the resources so that it's tagged to the right project. Did you overspend on the project? And then on the contracting inside we launched this thing called enterprise contract and we're continuing to work with customers. >>We just integrated into the leading procurement system called ACP a Reebok and we launched that last week. And so we know have a procurement workflow that says procurement's happy it finances happy legal needs to be happy because the engineers want to go quick, but we can't leave the it finance legal professionals behind because they protect the risks for the kinda, the contracts too are all there. So you're modernizing procurement. We are transforming the supply chain for data and for software, you know big. You know I'm a big fan of what you do and I know you got a lot of hard work, a lot of demand, there's a lot of money to be made there, water customers to make happy and you know we've got great customers that BP or shell or Coca Cola, Coke industries that are using marketplace on a regular basis and we have customers now with over a foes and subscriptions from over 50 vendors and that's a single customer. >>Dave, thank you so much for coming on. I know you're super busy and making the time for wrestling the cube means a lot. You've been with us the entire journey for the Ravens, our seventh reinvent. You've been a great one. I missed one but usually patients man it's just you. You saw it working backwards and it's happening. It's working well and you know we learn from our customers and I'm having a dinner tonight with 40 more and I'm sure they'll hit us with more requirements. I'll check my email for the invite. I'm sure it's in there somewhere. Dave McKenna inside the cube. Good friend of the cube, hardworking, billable in the next generation, the next gen marketplace. Check it out. Of course, the cube three 65 our new offering is up there as of Monday. It's kind of a soft launch, but we're telling you now, I'm John Freud. Dave Volante. Thanks for watching back with more. Thanks and have a short break.

Published Date : Dec 4 2019

SUMMARY :

AWS reinvent 2019 brought to you by Amazon web services This is the cubes live covers Las Vegas anus. And instead of allowing you to point, And the cool thing is that after you subscribe, you copy it right into your S But I want to ask you because one of the things that's coming up the central, they arose the seller to automate that price court rate into your account and then You say all the iterations get to take place in the market place, so it's all those informations. And to come Mytilene again, they engage rafted with you guys. So the big update there is, you know, for the first six years of marketplace we couldn't handle the resaler. JFK K but just let's say the Andy Jassy continues to invest in the business and the resources so that it's tagged to the right project. the supply chain for data and for software, you know big. It's kind of a soft launch, but we're telling you now,

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Steve Wood, Boomi | Boomi World 2019


 

>>live from Washington D. C. It's the Cube covering Bumi World 19 to Bide Movie. >>Hey, welcome back to the Cubes Coverage of Bumi World 19 from Washington D. C. I'm Lisa Martin with John Ferrier and John and I have a Cube alumni sitting with us. We have the chief product officer off. Del blew me. Steve would Steve, Welcome back. >>Thank you. It's great to be back. I could see again. John. Great must meet you >>back. Wise Enjoyed your keynote this morning, Man. There were so many nuggets and there I couldn't type faster. But one of my favorite things that you said is that no one is asking for less data. Slower? >>Yes, OK did I like kind of like saying because it frames things very clearly. It's just because it's clearly a prole. Every relates to him in the audience, but it was kind of amusing, so they've really got it immediately as I get that, that's a fair statement, so >>so like, and then you kind of took us the audience back. Thio 11 months ago at Bumi World 18. Some of the things that you guys said this is what we're going to be really focused on redefining the eye and I pass to be intelligent. Give her audience who wasn't able to see your keynote A little bit of that historical from 11 months ago. So what you guys are delivering today what the Bumi platform looks like today? >>Yeah, sure. So I mean, a lot of showed last Army, we kind of owe. Then we feel like we is like craters. The industry have to kind of try lead it. Where? Where is it going next? That's our big kind of duty, I guess. And so it's been taken over when we had the founder of booming attend, which was nice, but yes, so the big thing we should Last year was kind of the next generation, which is really a unified look and feel super easy to build applications that spend all of the portfolio and art in our that we offer our customers. We wanted to make it very collaborative, so users of business or business analysts or quick technical people can work together and use. Our platform is a collaboration space of the right controls in place. Eso stuff like that was really good to show that our new solutions. Overview. We've been definitely encouraging partners to put Maur intellectual property into our platform to excel, help accelerate their customers. Helping our customers just get people on board as quickly as possible. In fact, actually owned boarding employees on boarding was the solution we showed last year. >>That was fantastic. I couldn't believe how complex that was at Bumi. And when you guys said, We've got to change this huge improvements. >>Yeah, well, it was sort of a discovery that came up from one of our cells. Engineers got Andy Tiller did a fantastic job. He didn't enjoy his, um, his own boarding experience abuse me and then sort of building a solution. And we're like, we like we can actually do this way better on the platform. But what was amazing was that even for a company the size of Bumi, which is about 1000 people, we have, like, nearly 100 integration points and systems had to be coordinated to on board a single employee 100. Yeah, it's a lot, you know. So it became a really connectivity problem, actually, on >>boarding >>bits relatively easy. It's just, like connected all these systems. That's the hard bit. So yeah, we're excited to show that I think we got a kick out of seeing you together than we give progress on how we're moving that forward with various demos >>you don't want to ask you. Last year we asked the chief operating officer and the CEO Bumi what their investment priorities were going into the next year. And they said Number one was product. So that was a key thing. First and foremost go to market and then customer equation. But a product has been a big focus. That continues to be. What >>is >>the problem? Does it mean product when your chief product officer, what do you overseeing? Talk about What is the product? What is the platform And is there a difference? >>Yeah, I mean, so we we talk about the problem because we're in the product group, but we definitely see it as a platform. The investment in product is great. It means I get to spend lots of money like about my new converse. I won't try to show them, but way, but yeah, I mean, the investment partners being that we know that as we get Maur is this is this economy keeps building of integration and connective iti wanna continue to hold our leadership. We need to invest in product to make it easier. The expectations of our users is that they get a really premium experience when they're on board it onto the platform. We have to make sure we keep up to date with all of that effort. So a lot of what we talked about, it's how one is that we break our product up into discreet service is to allow us to move faster from an engineering perspective. And there's a lot of stuff that goes on there to think about ourselves as a platform to make sure we're fully extensible on. Then providing Maura Maura service is that people can build on our platform. So a lot of that investment just driving those >>activity. Rick was on yesterday talking about the big bets they made early on that are paying off. One of them was Aussie Cloud. On seeing that as you look at the architecture of this kind of new era of clobbering cloud to point, are we calling it? There's new requirements. It's the glue layers being built out. You need data to be accessible on addressable and available in real time, and you have multiple systems to talk to hence the integration you guys are doing. But this new mega trends happening is event driven architectures, which you guys talk about. There's a P I's just going from rest ful to state. And so you have micro service is here. So these air new dynamics Can >>you take >>a minute displaying like what all this means And what is event driven infrastructure? >>Yeah, a venture of architecture. But yeah, that's well, that's what we've been calling it. But yeah, I mean, it's basically that we're going to models where we're responding in real time to things that are happening out there on that revolt that involves a whole new level of scale. But, you know, we're also getting to things like streaming soas. Data come comes in, it's coming in, not in these packets, but it's constantly being fed to you, sir, constantly having to process it. You know, before in the integration space, it was like what? You'd set up a schedule you'd say, move that data at midnight from there to there and then it got faster and booming, provided real time, which was a request response that you send it personally, require a response back. But now it's like we're not going to just send it to you as a discreet thing. We're going to send it to you constantly, so event driven architectures. But how do you handle this continuous influx of data? And it's not getting any less. So how do you kind of manage this? We're being pulled in. Both ends were being pulled. There's never been more data that you never wanted to have faster. So it's like, How do you manage that? So for Bhumi, you know, that's why we're investing so heavily. >>Used to be in the old days when things were slower, events were like a trigger in a network management software alarm notification. Now they're happening. All the time is more and more events and paying attention to what events becomes a non human thing. Yeah, it's a software thing. Is that kind of where this is going? >>Yeah, well, I >>mean, we've been thinking >>a lot about that, like we sort of feel it. One is that we're gonna grow up from being on iPods to more of a data management vendor. We think that, like where the data manager in the future will come from an I pass, that we will be managing your data across like all of these systems from the catalogue and preparation to the, you know, actually integration and surfacing it up in real time and all that kind of streaming side. So I know it's Ah yeah, it's an evolving field for sure. >>One final point on this topic of product AP eyes have been great. They really made the market. Going back to the original Web service is in early two thousands to cloud. Where does a P I go? A A p I to dot or whatever you call it. What's the next Gen Place for AP? Eyes? >>Well, so it's interesting course. So we >>have >>a slightly different view of a pie management. That may be the typical AP management space, which is one thing to declare openly. But I think I >>want to >>go with that. Were right in the sense that cause I would think that because I'm a product, >>it's a good thing for a product. I don't think so Go >>and we're more than a little opinionated. So >>it is here, >>but yeah. Is that like sure. I mean, with a p I You need a gateway you need for the proxy ap eyes. Wherever they may be, wherever they may be developed. Other you build him and Bumi or you code them yourself when you told him, Manage those and throttle and scale and add policies and, you know, have developers registered to use them and monitor their usage and cut them off and have quotas. All that kind of that is old, fantastically good stuff. You know, there's lots of understeer doing a lot of that. We're adding Maur Mork capabilities there. But for us, a p I is really about AP enabling absolutely everything like we're in this world where you got refrigerators, two autonomous vehicles to cloud infrastructure to pivotal to all these different environments. And you have to have a tool that how do you How do you manage a P I across this incredibly disparate landscape of tools, technologies, things, infrastructure and it's one thing to say. OK, we could manage a P eyes and you install our software. Well, that's not good enough because, you know, with our customer like Jack in the box. They have 2200 plus retail locations. Nice have joked in my keynote that it's like painting Golden Gate Bridge. If you had to upgrade your gateway every time there was enough grade needed. It's like pain the Golden Gate Bridge to get to the end and you start all over again. That's 2200 plus retail locations. You know, I work for Dow. Ultimately is the holy owner of our business. He put five billion P seas on the planet. What if you had a gateway on five billion peces like, How do you manage that from a single control plane in the cloud? And that's what we're after. How do you do that huge scale AP enabling literally everything. >>And this was kind of under the concept of run anywhere that waas Yes, >>yes, yeah, and that was because we wanted to emphasize that it was about running Ap eyes and a pen, enabling things wherever they may be. That's why we put it under the run anywhere Banner. >>What's the biggest thing that you guys have done this year from last movie world that you're proud of? In terms of product or technology or something that could be of some obscure something prominent. What do you do? You proud of? What's the big thing? >>Yeah, well, for a point of perspective, it would be the AP I side for sure, because that was that was a big lift. There was a lot of work involved. We kind of moved ourselves forward very, very quickly in our capabilities on a p I with Gateway portal proxy, you know, literally within the span of just over a year. So that was Ah, big left. But I would, you know, because I also run engineering. So I feel like I need to, like, geek out a little bit. I mean, one of my proud things is, actually, we started wrestling and wrangling that 30 terabytes plus of metadata and starting to see what's in there. And like, anything in data science, you know, you're kind of like looking at weaken start. We started seeing all sorts of cool new things. Now I'm not gonna talk about it the inside side, But you start to see new things. We start to see ways that that meditated can be applied. So we built the infrastructure It's huge scale, massive scale they might have meditated, were ingesting and then analyzing eyes helping us, you know, improve productivity across the platforms. We talk a lot about being more efficient, more effective, so you'll see more of that in the pub. >>Can you clear up the just the commentary around the definition around single tenant instance? And when customers do multi tenant, because the benefit of the single tenants what the main core value proposition with the data, the unification of data? That's awesome. But there's also potential opportunities with customs. Might want have a roll run through things. So you have flexibility. Is that true? Is that the definite Take us through what the difference when, when multi tenant kicks in and what's >>well, so on our platform multi tendencies s. So if you think about the build experience when you're your dragon dropping, pointing, clicking, building your work flows or your processes for managing your data, you do that in the cloud, and then you can decide where you wanna put that. So where is that actually gonna be executed? And you can put it in our cloud, which is our multi tenant cloud, and then you. Could we manage it all for you? And that's fantastic. You can point or manage. Cloud service is if you have very specific requirements, usually around security, Sometimes around hyper scale. Well may put you in a manage cloud service environment. But then, if you have very sensitive data, you may want to run that workload and then stole our little run time. Adam, you know behind your firewall so we never see the data. So it's super sensitive. We don't see it. We >>see how >>it's running and we manage it. We have grade that that infrastructure for you, but we never see your data, so it kind of gives you the best of both worlds. You could be a cloud first, cloud only vendor, and you can be a traditional on perimeter. You could be a hybrid of both >>is not a requirement. The product. It's a customer choice. >>It's a total customer choice. I think that's pretty cool. Yeah, and I think actually we're one of the few that does it the way we've been doing for a long time. And it's hard, by the way, because it's like maintaining that compatibility For 10 plus years, is quite difficult to make sure everything works every time. We have, like 9000 >>customers and 80 plus countries. But on the the 30 plus terabytes of anonymous metadata, you are very clear this morning and saying that it's just the metadata that's not the actual have any any, you know, private information from any of our customers. But in terms of leveraging that data for those insights where some of the things that from last spoon me world to this one, that that access to all that data has what some are. Some of the announcements, maybe that came out today that you guys looked at saying, It's these are some of the nuggets that were able to pull out because we have the access to this musing. Maybe it's a I or what not gonna give you >>some examples in one was the the suggested filters. And it was a simple thing. I did sort of like that joke of It's one small step for Bhumi customers, but a giant leap for booming engineering. But because we rebuild a whole bunch of infrastructure to dio but suggested filters just making it easier to query information of various systems. And it is cool because it literally is looking your system, comparing it with other customers systems based on how you've configured in this case Attilio environment and then working out actually, based on what people are doing. This is kind of what the filter might look like for you, which is very, very personalized to the user. Based on intelligence. We have more That's on the bill tight. We have more on the deployment side because you can show you, actually hey, few of built in a p. I do want to deploy it out, too. A raspberry pie will. Actually, you probably want to configure the AP. I like this where you may find you see some issues here, and that's not static information that's evolving from the metadata. We can see the performance of your systems against the Oxy. All right, In that environment, I do it a bit like this. Or if you deploy to say, I Jules, we might make recommendations based on that process of that, a p I or that data quality hub that you wantto excess just make your systems run like this. So it's kind of predicting how you deployed >>I was about to say, Are you helping customers get predicted with us? >>Yes. And there's lots we can do there. I mean, like, so we'll do Maura. Maura. But we can automatically optimize your deployment. So if it's in our cloud, that that'll happens automatically. So helps us, too. But for customers, it's also making just go. Okay, we'll deploy it. And then the leverage that community to so see what works best. The most successful deployment, the most successful architecture and the way you've deployed it is was what you'll be matched with. And then the same with the run time. With monitoring, we can start to look at things and see will. Well, not slowing down a little bit. Actually, it's Linden the string error. A little bit, actually, based on what we've seen before, that system may be about to fall over, so you might want to get all not before completely does what it's gonna do. >>Well, we got you here. I want to get your definition of cloud two point. Oh, on We've been riffing on this. Been more of a takeoff on Web two point. Oh, because cloud one daughter was anything Amazon you know storage. Compute some networking, but it's Amazon that working. But you scale up start ups will go there. It's beautiful thing, but now it's enterprise. Start to embrace cloud with hybrid on premises and deal with all these hard problems and challenges. Crazy opportunity. An operating model for on premises Cloud Club one Dato Amazon. Really easy to work with. Scales are beautiful. Cloud to point is different. I got things to deal with. Observe, abilities, a hot thing you got kubernetes containers you got. How would you define what cloud? Two pointers for Enterprise? >>We'll think because we're all about the data cloud 2.0, is really like for us. Ah, data problem. I mean, it's just like E think before I mean, I was part of cells force for a while. Is this whole idea of like earlier data in the cloud will manageable for you. But when you're getting into the kind of environments were seeing, say, there's just too much data like you, it's not feasible. I mean, give you an example. Bumi itself. We moved our infrastructure customers was transplanted customers from Rackspace to eight of us Last year it was a big engineering lift to do. You can imagine moving 9000 plus customers over on our cloud Ah, design surface that but so we did that, but actually to move the data, it was so much it was actually faster to put the disk drives in the back of a van. No mobile moving over snowball using the wheel network, you know, the engine motor e one and then put the hard drives in. And then we did our sink to bring them back up so that we have the same data in both locations. And that's just an example of the kind of customer data that customers are routinely struggling with. And cloud wasn't set up for that. But that's becoming day to day now, so you need a highly distributed architecture. It was probably why we announced the Adam Fabric, which is really a fabric of connectivity, as much as is a fabric of data, so we don't need to move your data around. You can leave it where it is. We can do some analysis on it as part of an end to end >>Program Cube alumni that I was on the cube a couple weeks ago, he said. Data is the new software, data and software. What's your reaction to that when you hear that? >>To some extent, >>I think that's a CZ, A bit of a business process geek. I think you know this process around data for sure. But But I do think I've heard similar things with, like, actually, applications come and go. Business processes come and go, but the data remains so I think maybe in some respects, your date is the new software Could be a term I I could buy into a Well, >>Steve, it's been great having you on the Cube with John and me sharing all of the things that you guys have done in the last 11 months. I can't wait to see how everything becomes a P. I enabled. Still, next Bumi World, you gotta come back. Yeah, All right. Our pleasure for John Ferrier. I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching the Cube from Bhumi World 19. Thanks for watching

Published Date : Oct 3 2019

SUMMARY :

Bumi World 19 to Bide Movie. We have the chief product officer off. Great must meet you But one of my favorite things that you said is that no one Every relates to him in the audience, but it was kind of amusing, Some of the things that you guys said this is what we're going to be really focused on redefining So I mean, a lot of showed last Army, we kind of owe. And when you guys said, Yeah, it's a lot, you know. So yeah, we're excited to show that I think we got a kick out of seeing you together than we give progress on how you don't want to ask you. We have to make sure we keep up And so you have micro service is We're going to send it to you constantly, Used to be in the old days when things were slower, events were like a trigger in a network management software alarm to the, you know, actually integration and surfacing it up in real time and all that kind A A p I to dot or whatever you call it. So we But I think I Were right in the sense that cause I would think that because I'm a product, I don't think so Go So It's like pain the Golden Gate Bridge to get to the end and you start all enabling things wherever they may be. What's the biggest thing that you guys have done this year from last movie world that you're proud of? But I would, you know, So you have flexibility. But then, if you have very sensitive data, you may want to run that workload and then stole our little run time. so it kind of gives you the best of both worlds. It's a customer choice. And it's hard, by the way, because it's like maintaining Some of the announcements, maybe that came out today that you guys looked at saying, We have more on the deployment side because you can show you, actually hey, few of built in a p. so you might want to get all not before completely does what it's gonna do. Well, we got you here. day to day now, so you need a highly distributed architecture. Program Cube alumni that I was on the cube a couple weeks ago, he said. I think you know this process around Steve, it's been great having you on the Cube with John and me sharing all of the things that you guys have done in the last 11

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