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Ricky Cooper, VMware & Rocco Lavista, HPE | HPE Discover 2022


 

>>The cube presents HPE discover 2022 brought to you by HPE, >>Where back you watching the Cube's coverage. HPE discover 2022. This is day three, Dave Valante with John furrier. Ricky Cooper is here. He is the vice president slash newly minted SP we're gonna talk about that of global and transformational partners at VMware and rock LA Vista. Who's the vice president of worldwide GreenLake cloud services at the transformation, the transformational partner of Hewlett Packard enterprise guys. Welcome to the program. Thanks for coming >>On. Thank you. Thank you very much. Thank >>You. So really interesting title and you've got a new role. Yeah. Right. Explain that. >>Well, I'm the interim SVP for the channel and for the commercial business at VMware, I also have the global, my existing role is global and transformational partners. So that's our, you know, our largest OEMs and also the transformational partners, which is more the, you know, the, the reseller stroke, um, services element of our business. >>I remember in, uh, John and I started the cube in 2010. Yeah. And the second show we did, third show actually was wasm world 2010. >>And Ritz was the CEO at the time, huge >>Booth. It was amazing. And, and HP at the time was all over, you know, of, of the cube and of course, world, and you guys have been partners for a long, long time Roco. So maybe give us a little bit >>Of the history AB absolutely. So for 20 years, H P H P has been partnered with VMware in delivering virtualization technology and solutions to our customer base. And while that partnership is strong, and I remember some of the market share numbers were like 45% of VMware software stack is running on HPE servers and technology. I think about how that's evolved, right? Like strong history, strong partnership. And when I say strong, I'm not talking about marketing fluff, I'm not talking about slideware. I'm talking about at a ground level that the account teams get together and talk about what those customers that they're working with. They get together and figure out what outcome they're trying to solve for. And we bring that technology together. Now, layering GreenLake GreenLake is taking at the heart of what VMware does with their software stack, combining it with our infrastructure solutions and providing IAS, PAs and CAS capabilities to our customers at the edge in their core, whether it's a data center or, um, colo, as well as providing the common operating model into public cloud. And so we embrace, and the partnership is only getting stronger because of what VMware does with us now with GreenLake, which is everything, what HPE is >>About that is well, well said, I gotta say, I gotta say that was purposely. That was really crisp and, and not to kind of go back and look at the history of the cube, but we've been covering both of you guys. Mm-hmm, <affirmative> deeply been watching the transformation of both companies. It's so clear that VMware is so deep in the operational side of it. Yeah. It's been one of the hallmarks of VMware mm-hmm <affirmative>, uh, vSphere, um, all that technology. You guys have been powering with the hardware now, GreenLake, we had a demo yesterday with the storage team, they're provisioning, storage, Amazon storage, and on premise and edge. So we see VMware as a massive service layer in this new model. Very key. How deep, uh, is it going now with the GreenLake? Can you share what's different with the relationship, I get the account deep account partner sharing, but now that green Lake's out there, you have an ecosystem. VMware has an ecosystem. Absolutely. A big one. Yeah. You know, so take >>This and is really where we're looking to improve things. So let me, let me start by saying, we've just been voted the 20, 20, uh, partner of the year, uh, here with HPE this week. And that news is out there and, uh, was issued a couple of days ago, which is fantastic for the two companies and shows the direction where we are now and where we're looking to go forward. I think there's a lot of work to be done behind the scenes. As we emerge as an independent company, there's a lot of work to be done behind the scenes on how we look at our broader ecosystem and certainly our largest OEMs of which, you know, HPE, as Roco said, 20 years of great partnership there, the next stage is how do we really get the teams equipped and plug into GreenLake? Um, you know, we've had a relationship very well known with Dell for the last, you know, for the last five years, we've grown that business at an amazing rate. We've got a whole bunch of personnel still working on, on those areas. We're in a position now where we can sort of redeploy some of those, um, over some of the headcount to really drive our mission here with our other partners. And certainly with HPE, >>Well, the integration piece that you guys have co co-engineering on that's well documented. Yeah. But with the ecosystem specifically, this is a net new thing for GreenLake and frankly, us analysts. And we had IDC on yesterday. We're looking at that as a benchmark, we're gonna be measuring GreenLake success by how well the ecosystem is so correct. Welcome to the party, VMware and HPE. That is it. You didn't have to have that big ecosystem cuz you had the channel, your HP had a strong channel mm-hmm <affirmative> but now it's an ecosystem game. Talk about that. >>Customers have that expectation, right? And if you think about what we've built, we've got an ecosystem we re we, um, announced Mar the marketplace for GreenLake right now, VMware has their own marketplace, but by standardizing on their technology in our private cloud enterprise, which was also announced here at discover, which is deeply rooted with VMware technology in it, we now are able to take advantage of their marketplace. Plus all the others that we're bringing into GreenLake and effectively solve for the customer's most complex business problems. Because if you want to be successful, you have to think that the world is open and hybrid. And that means partnerships with everybody mm-hmm <affirmative> you can't think I won't partner because they're a competitor or they may have a product that competes with me. It starts and ends with what the customer wants and needs and solving for that business objective. That means partnering well. >>Well you guys have, you know, they're they own the operator it ops. Yeah. I would say ops op side, clearly mm-hmm <affirmative>. And with the cloud native momentum that VMware has and what you guys have been doing, I just see a nice fit there. What are some of the customers say? I mean, what's some of the, what's the, what's the market telling you with GreenLake and VMware? What's the number one thing people love? Well, >>Just, just look at GreenLake at its core. And the very simplistic pays your grow model, right? The hardware doesn't grow without software. You don't scale the hardware or scale it back without software. And so what are we doing in within GreenLake? We're taking the VMware stack and we're scaling it with the hardware up and down for customers. They no longer have to worry about the balancing act between how much infrastructure I have to buy. How much software do I have to marry up to it? Are they outta sync? Right? We're solving that together for our customers. That's what they want at, at a very simplistic view, right? Then they say, Hey, give me the life cycle management of this platform, right? I don't wanna have to spend it cost operations, have employees dealing with very rudimentary life cycle management and the toil that it comes with. That's a big cost element when customers are creating snowflakes, mm-hmm <affirmative> in their it operations, they're adding cost. And what we're doing through this partnership, what we're doing with private cloud enterprise is eliminating that toil and, and helping optimize that operating mind >>You're simplifying. Oh, absolutely. >>So I wanna standardizing there a little bit as well. Right? So that, that's a, a great point and BRCA has made several there, but the next stage for us and what we've been talking about a lot this week is how do we sort of standardize what are the three or four things that customers are gonna recognize this partnership for? You know, be that, um, anywhere workspace be that multi-cloud, what are the three or four things that we can say, Hey, these two companies together are fantastic. And how do you then security get up and yeah. Security, security. Yeah. How do you then get that up and running in a green lake environment, but also on the back end, ensure that your operations are seamless and it's a great customer experience. >>So Ricky, that and Roco, I want to, uh, rewind two clicks back in the context of standards in the partner conversation, the ecosystem conversation, are you at a point where you can cuz you're basically saying you can cross pollinate the ecosystems and the partnerships. Yeah. But you got different, you know, business practices, different legal contracts and so forth. Are you able to create standardization at that layer within the partners beyond just YouTube within your respective ecosystems? Is that it sounds like that's a really difficult challenge, but it could deliver customer benefit in terms of reducing >>Friction. Absolutely. It does. And that's what we've gotta work towards. So right now operation wise, contract wise, that's exactly what we're here working through. It's not easy, but the teams are all fully behind it and that's the Nirvana for us is to be in that >>Position. Well, and, and what I really like where we are in this partnership at, in a point in time, VMware is spun off from Dell. If there's any confusion by our customer base, that VMware is going to not only work with us as they've done traditionally, but maybe get closer and not worry about this standardization, this approach, this ecosystem of players. I mean, you know, Ricky and I talked about this, like this only gets better. Yeah. Because of that. >>Yeah. The market dynamics are your friend right now. I think, yeah. That's definitely the case and the history is key, but the technical trends that we had an earlier panel on here, uh, with the technologists coming together, mm-hmm, <affirmative>, there's big changes happening. The edge is exploding rapidly accelerating with machine learning. You're seeing it ops turn into ML ops mm-hmm <affirmative>, you're starting to see the edged industrial edge explode, um, even into space. So like you have technology shifts. Yeah. And IDC pointed out that the B2B growth trends, even it spend, you want even call it, it spend or cloud spend or cloud ops is still up to the right. Yeah. Even during recession. >>And that is where all the opportunity is. So, you know, not just focusing on what we do today, let's think outside the box, we're doing some great things together, you know, in the, in the AI space and we've Invidia and between the two teams, some amazing things are happening and we've just gotta continue that. But focus is gonna be essential in the early stages to make sure you've got two or three things built out very well. And then the rest of the business that's already happening out there between the two companies is a bit more programmatic. >>Yeah. It's interesting. The V the VMware relationship with the hyperscale. I know we've covered, uh, the AWS announcement like six years ago. I forget what it was, Dave, four 60 years. Ragoo was there with Andy Ja, pat Gelsinger and, and, uh, all the top dogs there, but that's just Amazon. It's still the VMware instances on the cloud there. Yeah. The customers we're hearing here at GreenLake is that they want the single pain in cloud hate. They use that term. It's kind of an old term. That's kind of what we're seeing. They >>Still want it because nobody's giving it to 'em. >>So this, and then outpost, which is launched four years ago, kind of not working well for Amazon because EKS and open standards and, and other hardware platforms, which is essentially hardware mm-hmm <affirmative>, which is not Amazon's game. And they're, although they do great hardware in the cloud, but they're not, they're not hardware people >>Wait. So you're talking about like the public cloud guys trying to get into the edge, but look, the world is hybrid in no point, in instance, in time, do I ever believe that Azure will be able to control AWS nor GCP versus place versa? Right? And then this idea that you can go from the outside in is interesting, but where data's created, where the applications are, where the digital and the analog world meet as at the edge and for our customers, they're creating transactions and data at the edge. Mm-hmm, <affirmative>, that's where the control plane should start not in the public. And so, given that, and working with VMware, we're able to say where the data lives, where the application is sitting, where the digital transformation is happening. It's from the inside out that you provide a standard operating model across all your clouds, right? They're never gonna be able to give that to you unless you're a hundred percent in their cloud, including what they do at the edge. What we're doing with GreenLake is saying, we're giving you that edge to colo, to core data center, to public cloud operating model, that you're not having multiple snowflakes of an operating model for each one of those clouds. And VMware is at the core of that. >>And it's a global model. And Ricky, I'm guessing from your, what I would call an accent that you weren't born in America. Correct. I know where this Yankee fan was. >>Yeah. >>That's a >>Don't pin Yankee fan on the >>That's fan. Yeah. Okay. So despite 1986 we'll >>So >>I wanted to ask if, how you're able to take these standards overseas. Um, and because of course, you know, you know, well, John, as do I, different countries of different, different projects, governance issues, are you able to take this to make this a global? >>Absolutely. And, and the work I was talking about within Nvidia and HP is a great example because we've gone the other way. It's coming from Asia, where we've set up some best practice in the work that they're doing there, and it's coming across into Europe and coming across into the us. So it's all about finding, you know, finding the right solutions that we were talking about earlier. What's going to work, building out, investing that's something. I think that we we've missed a trick on, you know, through, through the past sort of four or five years, VMware really leaning in and really holding a hand here of HPE. The team were a huge team, turned up to the, to, to this event from all over the world. They're here demonstrating exactly what you're talking about, the standards with Nvidia, that message. And then you take that and make sure that it's not a snowflake just happening in Asia. You're bringing it across the world and, and you're getting the, you know, the impetus and the, uh, push behind that. >>You say, snowflake, I think of snowflake. We just covered their event too. Yeah. Yeah. Not snowflake and snowflake. Um, um, but final question as we wrap up, um, we got world converted to now called VMware Explorer. Yeah. So we're gonna be there again on the floor, two sets with the cube, um, that's changing. What can we expect to see from the relationship? What's the scorecard gonna look like? What, what's the metrics you guys are measuring yourselves on and what can customers expect from the HPE, um, VMware next level relationship partnership? >>Uh, for me, it's very simple. We measure our success based on the customer response. Are we solving for what they want us to be solving for? And that will prove itself out in how we're solutioning for them, the feedback that they give us and this discover event in terms of what we've released, the announcements between private cloud enterprise, the marketplace, um, what we're doing with this relationship since the Dell spinoff, the feedback has been amazing. Amazing, great. And I am thankful, thankful for the partnership. >>Awesome. Wrap way to bring us home Rocko. Thank you for that. And thank you, Ricky, for coming on the great, great >>Job you guys been great. Thank you. Thank you. >>Thanks very much. All right. And thank you for watching this, Dave Valante for John furrier day three of HPE, discover 2022. You're watching the cube, the leader in live enterprise and emerging tech coverage. We'll be right back.

Published Date : Jun 30 2022

SUMMARY :

He is the vice president slash newly Thank you very much. Yeah. So that's our, you know, our largest OEMs and also the transformational partners, And the second show we did, you know, of, of the cube and of course, world, and you guys have been partners the heart of what VMware does with their software stack, combining it with but now that green Lake's out there, you have an ecosystem. with Dell for the last, you know, for the last five years, we've grown that business at an amazing rate. Well, the integration piece that you guys have co co-engineering on that's well documented. And if you think about what we've built, we've got an what you guys have been doing, I just see a nice fit there. We're taking the VMware stack and we're scaling it with the hardware up and down for customers. You're simplifying. And how do you then security get the partner conversation, the ecosystem conversation, are you at a point where you can cuz you're basically And that's what we've gotta work towards. I mean, you know, that the B2B growth trends, even it spend, you want even call it, it spend or cloud spend let's think outside the box, we're doing some great things together, you know, in the, in the AI space and we've Invidia The V the VMware relationship with the hyperscale. And they're, although they do great hardware in the cloud, but they're not, they're not hardware people It's from the inside out that you provide a standard operating model across you weren't born in America. and because of course, you know, you know, well, John, as do I, different countries of different, I think that we we've missed a trick on, you know, So we're gonna be there again on the floor, two sets with the cube, the marketplace, um, what we're doing with this relationship since the Dell spinoff, Thank you for that. Job you guys been great. And thank you for watching this, Dave Valante for John furrier day three of HPE,

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Anette Mullaney | KubeCon + CloudNative Con NA 2021


 

>>And welcome back to the cubes coverage of coop con cloud native con 2021. We're in person physical venom, John free hosted a Q a Dave Nicholson, my CO's and Emma Laney, who is our not so roving reporter unemployed, software engineer, unemployed comedian. Great to have you on the cube. >>Thank you for that list of credentials. >>You're doing great. I saw you're having some fun down there. We've got this new show or testing out called the grill. Here it is. Okay. Um, what's the focus, what's the story behind everything. >>Uh, the focus of the show is trying to have some fun with tech. You know, tech has a lot of self seriousness. Uh, there's a lot that's ripe to make fun of. We're also having fun. We're not trying to grill people in. We're not trying to roast them. Right? We're having people come through. They're sharing funny stories. We're having a contest to find the best man split nation of Kubernetes. Right now, I got to say, a woman is in the lead. Oh, she killed that contest, like called me, sweetie. And everything. It just proves that it's not about the man. You identify as it's about the condensation in your heart when it comes to mansplaining. >>Um, what is the best criteria that you, when you get a candidate for the mansplaining competition, what is the criteria? >>I mean, number one, we're looking for condensation. You get extra points for you, the phrase, well, actually we want a supercilious attitude. Uh, if you are partially into explaining it and then you stop yourself because you think you've used too technical of a term and then step it down, all of those gets you extra points in the mansplaining. >>Can I ask you, what's your biggest observation as you kind of look at this ecosystem? I mean, it's a big event, but it's, COVID postpone even in COVID people are wearing masks, not wearing masks. >>I mean, people are wearing masks for the most part. Uh, you know, I did love this, uh, red light, yellow light green light system. They came up with green, meaning please touch me. I've been inside for too long red meaning I still care about COVID yellow. You know, ask me, we'll figure it >>Out. All right. What's the funniest thing you've heard so far. >>The funniest thing I have to say, I asked someone what their favorite tech joke is. And he said it worked on my computer That really stirred up some memories. >>Oh man, we're in LA though. This is a great area. It's literally with the best comedians you could think of or work their way through the system. But with techno and everything is tech with gadgets and with like Kubernetes, I mean, it's, it's the material writes itself. I mean, >>Surely >>You must be having, >>Oh, I'm definitely having a ton of fun. Uh, I wouldn't say the material writes itself. I would say hire me to write material, but it is quite a fertile. >>Okay. What would you write for, uh, looking at the keynote today? Looking at the vibe here, obviously a lot of people show because they're remote, but visually it's a packed house here, but what's your first comedic view of the, as the fog lifts in this community? >>I have to say the thing that really stuck out to me from the keynote addresses was that people have not yet adjusted to being in person. There were some very, very delayed applause breaks where people realize they were not muted watching on a screen and you'd still go, oh, that's right. We should interact. Like God bless those speakers. It's uh, people have been inside for a long time. >>Um, part-time comedian too. I mean, co-hosting queue. Um, I don't, I, >>I don't find anything funny with technology. And I'm curious when you use the word supercilious, is that a, is that a comedic term? I, I, yes. >>I heard that before. It's the Latin form of super silly. Yeah. Which is my brand of comedy. >>So the mansplaining, I don't know if you need to like, woman's plane, some of this stuff to me, but I'll English >>Major Splain. Okay. Okay. Super silliest. >>It sounds super silly. So is it, is it, is it okay to have a ringer come in and attempt make an attempt at the mansplaining or >>Okay. A hundred >>Percent come in wearing it. >>I'm trying to make this a safe space for women at the conference. I'm the only woman you should be mansplaining to. I'm a martyr falling on the sword of mansplaining for all the great technical women at this conference. You slip that in >>And translate that. >>Of course, John, I don't know how to explain that to them more detailed. Um, what I love about the vibe is that this technical people they're snarky. If you get at their core, I mean, we were at the bar. Everyone was like totally leaning into like comedy and more fun because it's almost like they're bust out, come out of the closet and beat comedian. >>Oh, there is a broiling anger in the soul of every developer and every person who's worked on technology. And the question is going to be, can we get it on camera when they are not drunk, we're doing our >>Best to drink. These developers don't >>Think, oh, they do desperately. >>We saw a few partaking in the bar at the GTA merit and a lot going on. You had the, you know, they had warriors game going on. You have a lot of Dodgers were playing the giants. So pretty active bar scene for this crowd. >>Yeah, no, it was, uh, it was very fun. I personally was disappointed that the warriors are not actually staying in our hotel. You know, if this software thing doesn't work out, NBA wife is a possible second. >>And the Ritz Carlton was right behind us. You could be right there too. All right. So the grill is, uh, an experiment. We're having some fun with it, but the purpose is to just chill a bit. What's the, what would you say the goal of the show is for you? >>I'd say the goal is to get people to come out of their shells a little bit, to have some fun, to poke fun at some of the tendencies that we see in tech that we often don't bring up. You know, like I'm having so much fun with the man's pollination. Uh, I've lived it a bit. And my favorite is, uh, as I asked men to mansplain it to me, the panic in their eyes, that's my ultimate goal is just to make men afraid. >>And the panic is because they don't know if they're mansplaining all the time or actually purposely mansplaining is hard enough, but they do it naturally. Sorry. >>I have three daughters and I can't wait for them to see this stuff. I cannot >>Wait. That's going to be >>Great. Well, we have cooler gen Z. >>Well, we have t-shirts right. Let me see the t-shirts give everyone a quick, if you come on, this is day one of coupons. So if you do come on the show with the grill, I'm the t-shirt ferry. The grill is real. It's like the V the cubes version of the view, but >>Wow, just because I'm a woman, the, uh, the t-shirt is a big incentive. I'm sure a lot of people go to tech conferences don't get any free. T-shirts good. >>I got grilled by a net. Lilium, the cube at cube con con not cube >>Con. It's a medium rare grilling. >>I couldn't resist the view jokes. I know I'm in color. We'll keep our day jobs here in the comedian angle. We got to >>Believe that's true. Yes. When I look at the wavelengths of >>Light on that, I'm super stoked to have you try that. I think it's a great program, Greg. God. So you guys doing a great job, loved the vibe, love the energy, love the creativity, having some fun. See the poster one last time. And the idea is to have some fun, right? It's a tough time. We're all coming back from the pandemic, welcoming back from the pandemic. And this is just a fun way to kind of let the air out and have some fun. So thanks for everyone. Thank you so much for doing that. Thank you. All right. Cute coverage here. Coop gone. Cloud native con I'm John Perry, David Nicholson. Be back with more day, one coverage of three days after the short break.

Published Date : Oct 13 2021

SUMMARY :

Great to have you on the cube. I saw you're having some fun down there. Uh, the focus of the show is trying to have some fun with tech. the phrase, well, actually we want a supercilious attitude. Can I ask you, what's your biggest observation as you kind of look at this ecosystem? I mean, people are wearing masks for the most part. What's the funniest thing you've heard so far. The funniest thing I have to say, I asked someone what their favorite tech joke is. I mean, I would say hire me to write material, but it is quite a fertile. Looking at the vibe here, I have to say the thing that really stuck out to me from the keynote addresses was that people I mean, co-hosting queue. I don't find anything funny with technology. It's the Latin form of super silly. So is it, is it, is it okay to have a ringer come in and attempt I'm the only woman you should Of course, John, I don't know how to explain that to them more detailed. And the question is going to be, can we get it on camera when they are Best to drink. We saw a few partaking in the bar at the GTA merit and a lot going on. I personally was disappointed that the warriors are not actually staying And the Ritz Carlton was right behind us. I'd say the goal is to get people to come out of their shells a little bit, to have some fun, And the panic is because they don't know if they're mansplaining all the time or actually purposely mansplaining is hard enough, I have three daughters and I can't wait for them to see this stuff. Well, we have cooler gen Z. Let me see the t-shirts give everyone a quick, if you come on, I'm sure a lot of people go to tech conferences don't get any free. Lilium, the cube at cube con con not cube I couldn't resist the view jokes. Believe that's true. And the idea is to have some fun, right?

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Kit Colbert & Krish Prasad, VMware | VMworld 2019


 

>> live from San Francisco, celebrating 10 years of high tech coverage. It's the Cube covering Veum, World 2019 brought to you by the M Wear and its ecosystem partners. >> Hello, Welcome back, everyone to the Cubes Live coverage of the Emerald 2019. I'm John Career with Lycos Day, Volante Dave. 10 years covering the Q Weird Mosconi and 2010 boy Lots changed, but >> it's still the >> platform that Palmer Ritz laid out. But the stuff filling in 10 years later. >> Okay, you call that software mainframe and Robin came in so I can't call Mainframe Way >> Have leaders from PM Wears Largest business unit. The Cloud Platform Business Kid Colbert to CTO and Christmas R S v P and General Manager Guys, Thanks for coming on The key. Appreciate. >> Yeah, that's for having us. The >> world's your business units smoking hot. It's very popular, like you run around doing meetings. Cloud platform is the software model that's 10 years later actually happening at scale. Congratulations. What's the What's the big news? What's the big conversation for you guys? >> Yeah, the biggest news this week is the announcement of project specific, and, um, it's about taking the platform a Jess, um, hundreds of thousands of customers on it and bringing together communities were just now very popular with the developers and that black form together so that operators, on the one hand, can just deal with the platform they love. And the developers can deal with the kubernetes layer that they love. >> It's interesting to watch because, you know, the whole end user computing stack that was laid out 10 years ago is actually happening now, Assassin see, sass business models. We all see the and half of them is on the success of Cloud. But interesting to see kubernetes, which we've been following since the report started. Open stack days. You saw that emerging. Everyone kind of saw that. And it really became a nice layer. And the industry just create as a de facto. Yeah, you guys were actually driving that more forward. So congratulations on that. >> That's sitting it >> natively in V sphere is interesting because you guys spend a ton of time. This is a core product for you guys. So you're bringing something native into V sphere? I'm sure there's a lot of debates internally how to do that, kid. What's that? What is the relevance workers. You guys have a lot of efficiencies and be severe, but bring in kubernetes is gonna give you some new things. What, >> So the thinking is really you know, it's Christmas mentioning. How do we take this proven platform? Move it forward. Customers have moved millions of work clothes on top of the sphere, operate them in production, the Prussian great capabilities, and so they'd be able to be very successful in that. And so the question is, how do we help them move forward in the kubernetes? You know, you mentioned Crew readies is still fairly young, the ecosystem around. It's still somewhat immature, still growing right, and it's a very different environment than what folks are used to who used the sphere. So there's a big challenge that customers have around managing multiple environments. All the training that's different, all the tools that are different so we can actually take their investments. They've already made into V sphere leverage and extend those into the kubernetes world that's really powerful. We'll help our customers take all these millions of workloads and move them forward. It's >> interesting because we were always speculating about being where I started Jerry Chan when he was on yesterday. He's been of'em where since early days, you know, but looking at VM where when they went to their you guys went back to your core When we be cloud air kind of win its way and then you deal them is on since the stock price has been going great, So great chair older takeover value there. But you got clarity around what cloud was. And as you look at the operator target audience, you guys have the operators and the devil and ops is critical. So you guys have been operating a lot of work, Liz and I think this is fascinating. So the role of containers is super relevant because you got V EMS and containers. So again, the debate continues. >> Well, I think >> Tainer is wrong. Where Bond, It's interesting conversation because kubernetes is orchestrating all that >> while the snarky treat tweet Oh day and you guys feel free to come. It was Oh, I thought we started launch pivotal. So we didn't have to run containers on virtual machines. Yeah, we know that people run containers on bare metal. They run containers and virtual machines, but >> yeah, It's a debate that that we hear pop up on the on the snarky Twitter feeds and so forth. We'll talk to customers about it. You know, this whole VM versus container debate, I think, really misses the point because it's not really about that. What it's about is how do I actually operate? These were close in production, right? This kind of this three pillows we talk about build, run, manage. Custer's want to accelerate that They won't do that with enterprise, great capabilities with security. And so that's where it really gets challenging. And I think you know, we've built this amazing ecosystem around desire to achieve that. And so that's what we're taking forward here. And, yes, the fact that we're using fertilization of the covers, that's an implementation detail. Almost. What's more, valuables? All the stuff above that the manageability, the operational capabilities. That's a real problem. It seems to >> me, to the business impact because, okay, people going to go to the cloud, they're gonna build cloud native acts. But you've got all these incumbent companies trying not to get disrupted to trying to find new opportunities, playing offense and defense at the same time, they need tooling to be able to do that. They don't want to take their e r p ap and stick it in the cloud, right? They want to modernize it. And you know you're not gonna build that overnight in the cloud anyway, so they need help. >> That's the the key move that we made here. If you if you think about it, customers don't have kubernetes experts right today and most of them in their journey to the mortar naps. They're saying, Hey, we need to set up two stacks. At least we are if we immerse stack that we love. And now communities are developers laws. So we have to stand up and they don't have any in house experts to do that right? And with this one move, we have actually collapsed it back to one stack. >> Yeah, I think it's a brilliant move. Actually, it's brilliant because the Dev ops ethos has proven everyone wants to be there, all right. And the question is, who's leading? Who is lagging? So ops has traditionally lagged. If you look at it from the developer standpoint, you guys have not been lagging on the we certainly have tons of'em virtualization been standardized. Its unifying. Yeah, the two worlds together, and it really as we've been calling it cloud two point. Oh, because if you look at what hybrid really is, it's cloud two point. Oh, yeah. Cloud one data was Dev Ops Storage and compute Amazon. You're born in the cloud. We we have no I t department 50 people. Why would we ever and developers are the operators? Yeah, so we shall. Enterprise scale. It's not that easy. So I love to get your thoughts on how you guys would frame the cloud two point. Oh, Visa vi. If cloud one does storage and compute and Amazon like scale, what is cloud to point out to you? >> Yeah, well, I think so. Let's talk about the cloud journey. I think that's what you're getting at here. So here's how it discuss it with customers. You are where you are today. You have your existing apse. A lot of them are monolithic. You're slow to update. Um, you know, so forthright. And then you have some of the cloud NATO nirvana over here. We're like everything's re architected. It's Micro Service's got all these containers off, so >> it doesn't run my business >> well, yeah, well, that's what I want to get to. I think the challenge, the challenge is it's a huge amount of effort to get there, right, All the training we're talking about, all the tooling and the all the changes there, and people tend to look at. This is a very binary thing, right that you're there. Here where you are, you're in the club, New Nirvana. People don't often talk about what's in the middle and the fact that it's a spectrum. And I think what we used to get a V M, where is like, let's meet customers where they are, You know, I think one of the big realizations we had, it's not. Everyone needs to get every single application on this far side over here. Some halfs, your pieces, whatever you know, it's fine to get them a little bit of the way there, and so one of the things that we saw with the M A coordinated us, for example, was that people there was a pent up demand to move to the public cloud. But it was challenging because to go from a visa environment on Prem to an eight of US native environment to change a bunch of things that tooling changes like the environment a little bit different, but with a mark, our native us, there's no modifications at all. You just little evey motion it. And some people have you motioning things like insanely fast now, without modifying the half you can't get you know something you have to suddenly better scalable. But you get other cloud benefits. You get things like, Oh, my infrastructure is dynamic. I can add host dynamically only pay for what I need. Aiken consume this as a service. And so we help moving. We have to move there. There were clothes a little bit in the middle of the spectrum there, and I think what we're doing with Project Pacific and could realise is the same thing. They start taking advantage of these great kubernetes capabilities for their existing APs without modification. So again, kind of moving them further in that middle spectrum and then, you know, for the absolute really make a difference to their business. They can put in the effort to get all the way over there, >> and we saw that some of the evidence of some challenges of that shiny new trend within the dupe ecosystem. Big data objects to army. Who doesn't love that concept, right? Yeah, map produced. But what happened was is that the infrastructure costs on the personnel human capital cost was so massive that and then cloud cloud came along and >> just go out. There is also the other point about just just just a bespoke tooling that >> technology, right, Then the disruptions to create, you know to that, then the investments that it takes. Two >> you had a skill and you had a skills gap in terms of people have been. So that brings us back to So how do you address that problem? Because most of the audience out here, not developers. Yeah. Yeah. Total has the developers connection. So >> this is one of the really cool things about Pacific that what we've done with Pacific when you look at it from an I T. Operations, one of you that person sees v sphere the tool they already know and use understand it. Well, when a developer looks at it, they see kubernetes. And so this is two different viewpoints. Got like, you know, the blind men around the elephant. But, um but the thing is is actually a singular thing in the back end, right? You know, they have these two different views. And so the cool thing about us, we can actually bring items and developers together that they can use their own language tools process. But there's a common thing that they're talking about. They have common visibility into that, and that's super, super powerful. And when you look at, it also is happening on the kubernetes side is fully visible in the V's here side. So all these tools that already work against the sphere suddenly light up and support kubernetes automatically. So again, without any work, we suddenly get so much more benefit. >> And the category Buster's, they're going on to that. You're changing your taking software approach that your guys No, you're taking it to the software developer world. It's kind of changing the game. One of things. I want to get your thoughts on Cloud to point out because, you know, if computing storage was cloud one dato, we're seeing networking and security and data becoming critical ingredients that are problems statement areas people are working on. Certainly networking you guys are in that. So as cloud chip one is gonna take into the fact that messy middle between, you know, I'm on here and then I want the Nirvana, as always, the origination story and the outcomes and stories. Always great. But the missing messy middle. As you were pointing out, it's hard. How do you guys? >> And if you look at the moves that we made in the Do You know about the big fusion acquisition that remained right, which happened, like a month ago, and it was about preparing the platform, our foray I animal or clothes? So really, what we're trying to do is really make sure that the history of platform is ready for the modern applications, right? I am along one side communities applications, you know, service oriented applications. All of them can land on the same platform and more and more. Whether it's the I am l or other application, they're being written on top of communities that structures code. Yeah, nothing like Jenna's well, so enable incriminating will help us land all the modern applications on top of the same platform that our customers are used to. So it's a huge kind of a inflection point in the industry from my >> wealthy earlier point, every CEO I talked to said, I want to get from point A to point B and I wanna spend a billion dollars to get there. I don't wanna have to hire some systems integrator and outsource to get any there. Show me how I get without, you know, destroying my >> business. How did we meet the customers where they're at, right? Like what? The problem with this, the kind of either or model you're here you're there is that there's a huge opportunity costs. And again, Well, if you will just need a little bit of goodness, they don't need the full crazy nirvana Goodness right? And so we enable them to get that very easily in automated way, right? If you'd just been any time re factoring or thinking through this app that takes months or even a year or more, and so you know that this the speed that we can unleash her The velocity for these customers is >> the benefit of that. Nirvana is always taken out of context because people look at the outcome over over generations and saying, Well, I want to be there but it all starts with a very variable basis in shadow. I used to call it, but don't go in the cloud and do something really small, simple. And then why? This is much more official. I like this stack or this approach. That's ultimately how it gets there. So I got to get I got to get that point for infrastructures code because this is what you're enabling. Envies, fearful when I see I want to get your reaction. This because the world used to be. And I ask Elsa on this years ago, and he kind of validated it. But because he's old school, Intel infrastructure dictated to the applications what it could do based on what it could do. Now it's flipped upside down with cloud platform platform and implies enabling something enabling platform. Whatever you call the APs are dictating for the infrastructure. I need this. That's infrastructure is code. That's kind of what you're saying is that >> I mean, look kubernetes broader pattern time. It said, Hey, I can declare what I want, right, and then the system will take care of it and made in that state. I decided state execution is what it brought to the table, and the container based abs, um, have already been working that way. What this announcement does with Project Pacific is that the BM applications that our customers built in the past they are going to be able to take advantage of the same pattern, just the infrastructure escort declarative and decide state execution That that's going to happen even for the old workload, said our customer service >> and they still do viens. I mean, they're scaled 1000 the way >> they operate the same pattern. I >> mean, Paul Morris doesn't get enough credit for the comedy made in 2010. He called it the hardened top. Do you really care what's underneath if it's working effectively? >> Well, I mean, I think you know the reality today is that even though containers that get all get a lot of coverage and attention, most were close to being provisioned. New workloads even are being provisioning v EMS, right? If you look at AWS, the public clouds, I mean, is the E c to our ah go compute engine. Those service's those VM so once they're getting heavily used. And so the way we look at it, if we want to support everything. And it's just going to give customers a bunch of tools in their tool box. And let's put on used the right tool for the right job. Right? That's what the mentality >> that's really clouds. You know, Chris, I want to get your you know, I want to nail you down on the definition of two point. Uh, what is your version? Come on. We keep dodging around, get it out. Come on. >> I think we touched on all aspects of it. Which one is the interesting, less court allowing the consumer of the cloud to be able to dictate the environment in which the applications will operate and the consumer is defining it or the developers to defining it. In this case, that, to me, is the biggest shift that we have gone through in the Colorado. Yeah, and we're just making our platform come to life to support >> that. We're taking the cube serving. We'll put all together, and we want the community to define it, not us. What does it explain? The honest what it means to be a project and has a project Get into it. An offering? >> I mean, so Project Pacific is vey sphere, right? I mean, this is a massive, rethinking re architecture of Easter. Like pretty much every major subsystem component within Visa has been updated with this effort. Um, what we're doing here is what we've technically announced is actually what we call a technical preview. So saying, Hey, this is technology we're working on. We think it's really interesting We want to share with the public, get the public's feedback, you know, figure out a way on the right direction or not. We're not making any commitment, releasing it or any time frames yet. Um, but so part of that needed a name, right? And so because it is easier, but it's a specific thing. We're doing the feast here, so that's where the project comes from. I think it also gives that, you know, this thing has been a huge effort internally, right? There's a lot of work that's gone into it. So you know, it has some heft and deserves a name Min itself. >> It's Dev Ops to pointed. Your reds bring in. You making your infrastructure truly enable program out from amble for perhaps a tsunami. >> The one thing I would say is we wouldn't announce it as a project if it was not coming soon. I mean, we still are in the process. Getting feedback will turn it on or not. But it it's not something that is way out. Then it's It is going to come. >> It's a clear direction. It's a statement of putting investment into his code and going on to course correct. Get some feedback at exactly. But it's pretty obvious you can go a lot of pain. Oh, yeah, isn't easy button for combat. He's >> easy on the >> future. I think it's a great move. Congratulations. We're big fans of kubernetes. So the guys last night having a little meeting Marriott thinking up the next battle plans for game plan for you guys. So, yeah, I >> thought this is just the tip of the iceberg. We had a lot of really, really cool stuff we're doing. >> We're gonna be following the cloud platform. Your progress? Certainly. Recovering. Cloud two point. Oh, looking at these new categories that are emerging again. The end state is Dev Ops Program ability. Apple cases, the Cube coverage, 10th year covering VM world. We're in the lobby of Mosconi in San Francisco. I'm John Favorite Day Volonte. Thanks for watching

Published Date : Aug 28 2019

SUMMARY :

brought to you by the M Wear and its ecosystem partners. Hello, Welcome back, everyone to the Cubes Live coverage of the Emerald 2019. But the stuff filling in 10 years later. The Cloud Platform Business Kid Colbert to CTO Yeah, that's for having us. What's the big conversation for you guys? And the developers can deal with the kubernetes layer that they love. It's interesting to watch because, you know, the whole end user computing stack that was laid out 10 years ago is actually You guys have a lot of efficiencies and be severe, but bring in kubernetes is gonna give you some new things. So the thinking is really you know, it's Christmas mentioning. So the role of containers is super relevant because you got V EMS and containers. Where Bond, It's interesting conversation because kubernetes is orchestrating all that while the snarky treat tweet Oh day and you guys feel free to come. And I think you know, And you know you're not gonna build that overnight That's the the key move that we made here. And the question is, who's leading? And then you have some of the cloud NATO nirvana over here. of the way there, and so one of the things that we saw with the M A coordinated us, and we saw that some of the evidence of some challenges of that shiny new trend within the dupe ecosystem. There is also the other point about just just just a bespoke tooling that technology, right, Then the disruptions to create, you know to that, then the investments that it Because most of the audience out here, not developers. this is one of the really cool things about Pacific that what we've done with Pacific when you look at it from into the fact that messy middle between, you know, I'm on here and then I want the Nirvana, So it's a huge kind of a inflection point in the industry without, you know, destroying my and so you know that this the speed that we can unleash her The velocity for these customers is So I got to get I got to get that point for infrastructures code because this is what you're enabling. the old workload, said our customer service I mean, they're scaled 1000 the way I He called it the hardened top. And so the way we look at it, if we want to support everything. You know, Chris, I want to get your you know, I want to nail you down on the definition of two point. less court allowing the consumer of the cloud to be able to dictate We're taking the cube serving. get the public's feedback, you know, figure out a way on the right direction or not. It's Dev Ops to pointed. I mean, we still are in the process. But it's pretty obvious you can go a lot of pain. So the guys last night having a little meeting Marriott thinking up the next battle plans for We had a lot of really, really cool stuff we're doing. We're in the lobby of Mosconi in San Francisco.

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Karl Fosburg, Hughes | ScienceLogic Symposium 2019


 

(upbeat music) >> From Washington, D.C., it's theCUBE, covering ScienceLogic Symposium 2019. Brought to you by ScienceLogic. >> Hi, I'm Stu Miniman, and you're watching theCUBE's exclusive coverage of ScienceLogic Symposium 2019 here at the Ritz Carlton in Washington, D.C. Happy to welcome to the program first-time guest but a long-time customer of ScienceLogic, Karl Fosburg, who's the senior director of systems integration at Hughes. Thanks so much for joining us. >> Thanks for having me. >> Alright, so we're here in D.C., and that's important 'cause first of all, you're based down here, and ScienceLogic is based down here. >> Yup. Bring us back a little bit. You said you'd been a customer a long time as to... maybe give us a little bit of the before picture, if you could. >> Sure, so yeah, we've been a customer for 12 years now, and we picked ScienceLogic for a big list of reasons, actually wrote the RFI itself, and probably 20 pages long. Lots of people came back and gave us responses. ScienceLogic was one of the short-listed candidates that we picked out. We did a bake-off with a couple other vendors, and ScienceLogic was the clear winner. >> All right. So Karl, lets zoom out for a second here >> Okay. and just give us a level set on Hughes, what Hughes is today. You know, I'm familiar with what Hughes was back in the day and there's certain pieces that are no longer there so give us a level set on the company in the business. >> Yeah, sure. So, Hughes is formally known as Hughes Network Systems, were owned by EchoStar Corporation and we're a managed service provider. We have a consumer business where we provide broadband internet to folks that live really out in the countryside and can't get cable, or DSL, or FIOS, things like that. We have about 1.4 million subscribers in our consumer business. We've also launched consumer services in South America, Brazil, Ecuador, Columbia, places like that. Really serving under-served areas for giving them broadband. We also have an enterprise business where we sell to credit card processing, gas and oil, pipelines, fast foods, places like that. >> Okay. So Karl, is it safe to say you use satellites but no longer put them into space? >> We use satellites, that's correct. We contract that out now. Yeah, we are the last remaining Hughes company. >> Yeah. So, service providers are always fascinating to me because we talk about enterprise IT and how fast things are changing. At least for my entire career, when I talk to service providers, change and growth is really just baked into the DNA. >> Yep. I need to move fast. When you talk about scale, it means something very different and living in that complex world, and just give us a little bit about what things are like in 2019 for you. >> Sure, yeah. The scale is always our challenge. Like I like to say, we have sales people too and they're out there selling new products and services constantly. So we needed to be able to grow with those sales. We started out with a couple thousand devices that needed monitor in applications. Now we're up to almost 30 thousand Nox systems that we monitor. Also, we're keeping track of nearly 2 million terminals and the status of them and things like that. So, yeah, scale is super important to us. >> Okay. So, bring us inside, where ScienceLogic fits into your equation. >> Sure. So when we put out our FI to industry years ago, we were trying to replace a whole bunch of different tools. We had other vendor products and things like that. We really wanted to consolidate tools as much as possible into a single platform. Traditional ICNP, SNMP monitoring is how we originally started. Now we have lots and lots of integration with other tools, APM products, different streaming media products. We're integrating more and more with streaming services now in terms of getting data into the platform. So, yeah ... >> Yeah. Karl, I'd love to get your viewpoint. Something that came through to me in the keynote is on the one hand the years like, oh, well AIOps is going to replace things like some of the traditional players here, but then you see onto the stage it's like, oh okay, we're actually going to have integrations with a number of these tools. So yes, there's overlap but it needs to be integrated. How do you look at that as, is this the primary product? Is this a piece of the product? How do data collection between all these various tools go together? Well, that's a great question 'cause that's exactly what we and lots of other folks are grappling with right now. We've got data producers all over the place now, and we're really focused on the data production and high quality data back at the source into a real pub-sub type of architecture of which we believe that ScienceLogic will be both a producer and consumer of that pub-sub architecture, and whether it's the one tool to rule them all or not? Probably not, no ones going to be that, and we've got lots of vendors that purport to be the one tool to rule them all. But really, we're focused on ScienceLogic at this point to be really the focus, especially for our operations folks. We've got 24/7 staff. They use ScienceLogic as their main tool that they go to. So that's really where we want the data to end. That's where we want as much intelligence to end as possible. >> So, I'd be curious... You've been using the tool for a dozen years now. 12 years ago the discussion of data wasn't no where near what it was today. >> Correct. Can you bring us through a little bit of that journey, and you mentioned data a bunch, but how important is that? Where are you in your journey for... There was that maturity model that was put up there, the role of data today, and where do you see it going? >> Well, data is everything today. 12 years ago we were grappling with things like naming conventions and simple firewall rules and whatnot. Those days are long, long past. Now, the data quality and the pipeline is what we're focused on right now 'cause like Dave said in the keynote, "Garbage in, garbage out". We're really really focused on trying to get good quality data by focusing on the source of the data. As opposed to fixing it after it's been moved into whatever platform it ends up in. So we're using proper scheme of management and trying to bake-day the governance into the actual engineered products, and if it's not governed data then you don't get to look at it. And that's really our focus. We're an engineering company at heart so we actually write most of our own software. So we're kind of in control of our own destiny there, and we're really focused on pushing that back because we think the benefits in the long run are going to be worth that investment to get clean data all the way back to the source. >> Yeah. So Karl, one of the big shifts I've seen in the last few years... When you talked about managing and monitoring, I used to as the administrator or controller, used to be able to go and touch all of those pieces. Today, there's more and more some of those pieces I need to manage not just the stuff that's in my environment or my hosted environment, but outside of my environment and doing public clouds. >> Yep. >> Bring us up to speed as to where does Cloud fit? What's your Cloud strategy? >> Sure. We're actually launching some of our first applications in GCP right now. So we're working with our Google partners in this particular case to integrate the data that they can collect natively in their systems, bring it back in as actionable events into ScienceLogic platform, while keeping the vast majority of the data native to their platform. No need to bring back application specific data unless we're actually going to do something with it, or if we need to cross-correlate it with other information. The data sources live in our data centers, not in GCP. So we need to combine it with information we know about, our on-prem equipment, plus the applications running there. So that's the data we'll bring back to cross correlate. >> How do you decide what lives where, and where does ScienceLogic fit in the whole discussion? >> Yeah, that's a good question. What lives where... We kind of go back to license models and cost models. We're pretty good sticklers about focus on doing proper upfront analysis to make sure we don't end up with some six or seven figure bill at the end of the year from a Cloud provider. We also tend to do a lot of stuff on-prem because a lot of our systems have to run in one of our data centers. If you've ever driven past our building you'll see these large large dish's antennas outside. A lot of our equipment has to be within milliseconds or microseconds even of those dishes. So we actually have a large data center presence kind of scattered around the country and around the world. So, we have the compute resources to do it ourselves. >> Yeah, and even I would think edge computing something that plays into what you're doing. What do you see as some of the main challenges as the kind of footprint for what you're doing and things to spread out more? >> Yeah. Keeping, let's say pet projects, and shadow IP projects, keeping them in check is a really big focus right now, and also with DevOps sort of the "I'll do everything, I'm going to be my own IP department" philosophy is a new challenge that we're facing. So integrating with what the DevOps guys are building into our overall monitoring strategy, that's when a new challenge has really creeped up or it last, lets say six months or a year. >> Okay. Is there an intersection between your use of the ScienceLogic in the DevOps team yet? >> Not a big one yet. I think we're still learning DevOps at this point. I consider it a lifestyle change, not really a thing that you go get. So, I think we're still kind of early adoption for DevOps, and really only greenfield projects at this point in time. >> Okay. How about the term of the show is AIOps, so what's your act in the AIOps? Where do things like machine learning and automation fit into your environment? >> Yeah. We actually have quite a few used cases where we really think that machine learning is going to help us a lot. Cross-correlation is a big area for us. We have lots of information, but figuring it out, feeding like the APMs and Cisco ACI software defined networking, and those bits of information all into one product, we've been challenging ScienceLogic on this for quite a while. It's like, okay, you guys know about everything now. Tell us something that we didn't know before, and that's kind of where we're at, and seeing the announcements from this morning was really encouraging that we're finally see the horizon at this point. >> Yeah. If you can, (mumble), but how has ScienceLogic been doing on the roadmap? What helps between ScienceLogic and your vendor ecosystem out there? What more could they be doing to make your life easier? >> Yeah, that's a good question. So, if you would ask me that a year ago I probably wouldn't have been as encouraged as I am today. It was a challenge and they're engineering company, we're an engineering company. Sometimes you have to focus on foundation, and it's not cool, it's not sexy, it's not shiny, but you have to do it. And I think they've been focused a lot on their foundational aspects of the product which will actually enable doing things like machine learning. There's no point in doing machine learning if you have bad data or if you have a platform that doesn't support very very fast queries, and the graph QL database. We think that we're going to use that extensively and through the API, not even through the UIs. So, I think foundation is important. I think they focused on it for the last couple of years. I think we're finally going to start to see the benefits of it. Both single factor sort of machine learning, anomaly detection, but we really want to see it on a cross domain. I want to be able to see in ScienceLogic impacted by in our full stack environment. >> Yeah. I'd expect you probably had some visibility into what was coming up in the Big Ben release. Is there anything that jumped out at you, or that you're ready to use day one? >> The automations, for sure. We'll use that definitely day one. The way they've gone through and really made it a lot easier to use. You don't have to be a python developer anymore to actually get a lot of benefits out of the product. So I can turn that over to some of our junior engineers to actually handle those things, and we get a lot more sophisticated with them now. Primarily we used to focus on, "oh, let's send an email" type of thing. Now we can actually execute back-end actions without having to have a programmer to do it. So that right away we're going to use out of box. >> Okay. And in that forward looking piece, without breaking any visibility you have into their roadmap, what would you like to see more? >> I'd like to see more getting performance data into their real scalable, laterally scalable back end. And that's certainly an area that I'd love to see as much progress as fast as possible on. Also the Pub-Sub subscribing to streams coming out of our Kafka cluster. We want that to be in the product as soon as possible 'cause we really believe that that's where the majority of our data of the future is going to come from. Also, new applications, they come and go. Docker containers spin up, spin down. So the state of something is no longer fixed and we need to be able to integrate with Kubernetes and our open shift platform to be able to know, "Well what should be running right now?" So, those are the things that are on our roadmap that we need out of the product as soon as possible. >> Yeah. So it definitely came to me that ScienceLogic's listening. Are they moving fast enough for you? >> No. No ones ever moved fast enough. So, yeah, they're moving so that's good, but yeah, I could use it today if they had it. >> All right. Karl, last thing, you've been to a few of the ScienceLogic events in the past. You've been to other industry shows, what's special about the show? What brings you and your team to ScienceLogic symposiums? >> One of the things that ScienceLogic does a really good job is they bring a lot of resources here, and actual resources that actually know stuff. It's not just telling me, "Oh, that shiny new object is going to be in the platform at some indeterminate time in the future." It's the actual engineers, people writing code, product managers, things like that. So having access directly to the people who actually do the platform updates and changes is super valuable. The new sensor where we can touch and feel, take attires on new things has been excellent this year. So I think that's probably the thing, just quick access to all the resources. We have a bit of an advantage, we're only 45 minutes up the road. We can come down here as need be to visit their headquarters but having everyone here at one time is great. >> All right. Well Karl Forsberb, really appreciate you sharing your history and experience in future direction as to where things are going on your end. >> All right. >> I'm Stu Miniman. We'll be back with lots more coverage here from ScienceLogic 2019. Thanks for watching theCube. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Apr 30 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by ScienceLogic. and you're watching theCUBE's exclusive coverage and ScienceLogic is based down here. of the before picture, if you could. and we picked ScienceLogic for a big list of reasons, So Karl, lets zoom out for a second here and there's certain pieces that are no longer there so and we're a managed service provider. So Karl, is it safe to say you use satellites We contract that out now. So, service providers are always fascinating to me and just give us a little bit about and the status of them and things like that. where ScienceLogic fits into your equation. Now we have lots and lots of integration with other tools, and lots of other folks are grappling with right now. So, I'd be curious... the role of data today, and where do you see it going? and we're really focused on pushing that back because I need to manage not just the stuff that's in my environment of the data native to their platform. We kind of go back to license models and cost models. and things to spread out more? and also with DevOps sort of the "I'll do everything, ScienceLogic in the DevOps team yet? and really only greenfield projects at this point in time. How about the term of the show is AIOps, think that machine learning is going to help us a lot. What more could they be doing to make your life easier? and the graph QL database. I'd expect you probably had some visibility into what was and really made it a lot easier to use. what would you like to see more? of our data of the future is going to come from. So it definitely came to me that ScienceLogic's listening. So, yeah, they're moving so that's good, events in the past. So having access directly to the people who actually history and experience in future direction as to where We'll be back with lots more coverage

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Leslie Minnix-Wolfe & Russ Elsner, ScienceLogic | ScienceLogic Symposium 2019


 

(energetic music) >> From Washington D.C., It's theCUBE! Covering ScienceLogic Symposium 2019. Brought to you by ScienceLogic. >> Welcome back to TheCUBE's coverage of ScienceLogic Symposium 2019, I'm Stu Miniman, and we're here at the Ritz-Carlton in Washington, D.C. Happy to welcome to the program two first-time guests from ScienceLogic, to my left is Leslie Minnix-Wolfe, who is the Senior Director of Product Marketing. And to her left, is Russ Elsner, who's the Senior Director of Product Strategy. Thank you so much for joining us. >> Thank you sir. >> Good, good to be here. >> All right, so Leslie let's start with you. Talk a lot about the product, a whole lot of announcements, Big Ben on the keynote this morning. Everybody's in, getting a little bit more of injection in the keynote today. Tell us a little bit about your roll, what you work on inside of ScienceLogic. >> Okay, so I am basically responsible for enterprise product marketing. So my job is to spin the story and help our sales guys successfully sell the product. >> All right, and Russ. >> I'm part of the product strategy team. So, I have product management responsibilities. I work a lot with the analytics and applications. And I spend a lot of time in the field with our customers. >> All right so, Leslie let's start with enterprise, the keynote this morning. The themes that I hear at many of the shows, you know we talk about things like digital transformation. But, we know the only constant in our environment is change. You know, it's good. I've actually talked to a couple of your customers and one of them this morning he's like "Look, most people don't like change. "I do, I'm embracing it I'm digging in, It's good." But, you know, we have arguments sometimes in analyst circles. And it's like are customers moving any faster. My peers that have been in the industry longer, they're like, Hogwash Stu. They never move faster they don't want change, we can't get them to move anything. I'm like, come on, if they don't the alternative is often, You're going to be... You know, you're competitors are going to take advantage of data and do things better. So, bring us a little bit of insight as what you're hearing from your customers both here and in your day to day. >> Sure, yeah, change is constant now and so one of the big challenges that our customers are facing is how do I keep up with it. The traditional manual processes that they've had in place for years are just not sufficient anymore. So they're looking for ways to move faster, to automate some of the processes that they've been doing manually. To find ways to free up resources to focus on things that do require a human to be involved. But they really need to have more automation in their day to day operations. >> All right, so Russ when I look at this space you know, tooling, monitoring has been something that in my career, has been a little bit messy. (laughter) Guess a little bit of an understatement even. It's an interesting... When I look at, kind of, that balance between what's happening in the infrastructure space and the application space. I went through, one of your partners over here is like "from legacy to server lists and how many weeks." (laughter) And I'm like okay that sounds good on a slide but, these things take awhile. >> Absolutely. Bring us inside a little bit, kind of the the application space an how that marries with the underlying pieces and monitoring. >> Yeah, you have a lot of transformations happening. There's a lot of new technologies and trends happening. You hear about server lists or containers or microservices. And that does represent a part of the application world. There are applications being written with those technologies. But, one of the things is that those applications don't live in isolation. It's that there part of broader business services and we're not rewriting everything and so the new shiny application and the new framework has to work with the old legacy application. So, a big piece of what we see is how do we collapse those different silos of information? How do we merge that data into something meaningful? You can have the greatest Kubernetes based microservice application but, if it requires a SAP instance it's on PRIM it's on Bare Metal. Those things need to work together. So, how do you work with an environment that's like that? Enterprise, just by it's nature is incredibly heterogeneous, lot's of different technologies and that's not going to change. >> Yeah. It's going to be that way. >> You're preaching to the choir, here. You know, IT it always seems additive the answer is always and. And, unfortunately, nothing ever dies. By the way you want to run that wonderful Kubernetes Docker stuff and everything. I could do it on a mainframe with Z Linux. So, from that environment to the latest greatest hypercloud environment >> Right. Talk a little bit about your customers. Most of them probably have hundreds of applications. They're working through that portfolio. What goes where, how do I manage all of those various pieces, and not kill my staff? (laughter) One of the things we're spending a lot of time with this, is that obviously, we come from a background of infrastructure management. So, we understand the different technologies different layers and the heterogeneous nature and on top of that runs application. So they have their own data and there's APM space. So we're seeing a lot of interest in the work we're doing with taking our view of the infrastructure and marrying it to the application view that we're getting from tools like Appdynamics or Dynatrace or New Relic. And so, we're able to take that data and leverage it on top of the infrastructure to give you a single view which aids in root cause analysis, capacity planning and all the different things that people want to do. Which lead us to automation. So, this idea of merging data from lots of sources is a big theme for us. >> All right so, Leslie who are some of the key constituents that you're talking to, to messaging to. In the industry we talked about silos for so many time. And now it's like oh, we're going to get architects and generalists. And you know cloud changes everything, yes and no. (laughter) We understand where budgets sit for most CIO's today. So, bring us inside what you're seeing. >> Sure. Yeah, we're seeing a tremendous change. Where before we use to talk more to the infrastructure team, to the folks managing the servers, the storage the network. We're really seeing a broader audience. And a multiple constituent. We're looking at directors, VP's, CIO's, CEO's, architects. We're starting to see more people that are tools managers, folks that are involved in the application side of the house. So, it's really diverged. So, you're not going in and talking to one person you're talking to lots of different teams, lots of different organizations that need to work together. To Russ's point in about being able to bring all this data together. As you bring it together, those different stakeholders have more visibility into each others areas. And they also have a better understanding of what the impact is when something goes down in the infrastructure, how it effects the app and vice versa. >> Leslie, the other thing I'm wondering if you can help me squint through, when I looked at the landscape, it's, you know, my ITSM's I've got my logging, I've got all my various tools and silos. When I hear something like, actually, your CEO Dave just said "Oh, we just had a customer that replaced 50 tools." with there it's like, How do you target that? How does a customer know that they have a solution that they have a challenge that you fit, Because, you understand, you can't be all things to all people. You've got certain partners that might claim that kind of thing. >> Right But, where you fit in the marketplace how do you balance that? >> Well, so I think what we're seeing now is that there have been some big players for a long time. What we refer to fondly as the Big Four. And those companies really haven't evolved to the extent that they can support the latest technology. Certainly at the speed with which organizations are adopting them. So, they might be able to support some of the legacy but they've really become so cumbersome, so complicated and difficult to maintain people are wanting to move away from them. I would say five years ago, most organizations weren't willing to move down that path. But with some of the recent acquisitions, The Broadcom acquisition, Microfocus acquisition. You're seeing that more organizations are looking to replace those tools in their entirety. And as a result of that they're looking at how can I minimize my tool set. I'm not going to get rid of everything and only have one vendor. But, how do I pick the right tools and bring them together. And this is one of the areas where we do extremely well in that we can bring in data, we can integrate in other tools, we can give you the full picture. But, we're kind of that hub, that central. And I think we heard that earlier today from Bailey at Cisco, where he talked about ScienceLogic is really the core to their monitoring and management environment, because we're bringing the data and we're feeding the data in to other systems as well as managing it within ScienceLogic. >> Russ, I actually heard, data was emphasized more that I expect. I know enough about the management and monitoring space. We understand data was important to that, I'm a networking guy by background, we've been talking about leveraging the data for network and using some automation and things like that but it's a little bit different. Can you talk some about those relationships to data? We understand data's going to be everywhere and customers actually wrapping my arms around it make sure I can manage it, compliance and to hopefully get value out of that is one of the most important things in today. >> Absolutely, so one of the things we stress a lot when we talk about data, it use to be that data was hard to come by. We were data poor and so how do we get... We don't have a probe there so how do we get this data, Do we need agent? That's different now, data is... We are drowning in data, we have so much data. So, really the key is to give that data context. And so for us that means a lot of structure, and topology and dependencies across the layers of abstraction, across the application. And we think that's really the key to taking this, just vast unstructured mess of data that isn't useful to the business and actually be able to take... Apply analytics, and actually take action, and ultimately drive automation by learning and maintaining that structure in real time automatically, because that's something a human can't do. So, you need machine help, you need to automate that. >> So, Leslie, there was in the keynote this morning that to start discussion of the AI Ops maturity model >> Right >> And one of the things struck me is there was not a single person in the poll that said, yes I've gone fully automated. And first, there's the maturity of the technology, the term and where we are. But, there's also that, let's put it on the table. That fear sometimes, is to "Oh my gosh, the machines are taking our jobs" (laughter) You know, we laugh, but it is something that needs to be addressed. How are you addressing that, Where are your customers with at least that willingness, because I use to run operations for a number of years, and I told my team, look you're going to have more work next year, and you're going to have more things change, so if you can't simplify, automate. Get rid of things, I've got to have somebody helping me, and boy those robots would be a good help there. >> What we're seeing is, I mean let's be real, people don't like to do the mundane tasks, right. So you think about, When you report an issue to the service desk. Do you really want to open that ticket? Do you want to enter in all that information yourself? Do you want to provide all the details that they need in order to help you? No. People don't do it they put in the bare minimum and then what ends up happening is there's this back and forth, as they try collect more information. It's things like that, that you want to automate. You want to be able to take that burden off of the individuals And do the things, or at least allow them to do the things that they really need to do. The things that require their intelligence. So, we can do things like clean up storage disk space when your starting to run out of disk space. Or we can restart a service, or we might apply a configuration change that we know that is inconsistent in environment. So, there's lots of things like that that you can automate without actually replacing the individual. You're just freeing them up to do more high level thinking. >> Russ, anything else along the automation line. Great customer examples or any successes that you've seen that are worth sharing? >> Yeah, automation also comes in the form of connecting the breadcrumbs. So, we have a great example. A customer we worked with, they had an EPM tool, one of the great ones, you know, top of the magic quadrant kind of thing, and it kept on reporting code problems. The applications going down, affecting revenue, huge visibility. And it's saying code problem, code problem ,code problem. But the problem is jumping around. Sometimes it's here, sometimes it's there. So, it seemed like a ghost. So, when we connected that data, the APN data with the V center data and the network data what it turned out was, there was a packet loss in the hypervisor. So, it was actually network outage that was manifesting itself as a code problem, and as soon as they saw that, they said what's causing that network problem? They immediately found a big spike of traffic and were able to solve it. They always had the data. They had the network data, they had the VMware data they had the JVM data. They didn't know to connect the dots. And so, by us putting it right next to each other we connected the dots, and it was a human ultimately that said I know what's wrong, I can fix that. But it took them 30 seconds to solve a problem that they had been chasing after for months. That's a form of automation too is get the information to the human, so that they can make a smart decision. That's automation just as much as rebooting a >> Exactly server or cleaning a disk >> Well right, It's The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy. Sometimes, the answers are easy if I know what question to ask. >> Exactly, yes. (laughter) >> And that's something we've seen from data scientists too. That's what their expertise is, is to help find that. All right, Leslie give us a little view forward. We heard a little bit, so many integrations, the AI ops journey. What should customers be looking for forward? What are they asking you, to help bring them along that journey? >> Oh gosh. They're asking us to make it easier on all counts. Whether it's easier to collect the data, easier to add the context to the data, easier to analyze the data. So, we're putting more and more analytics into our platform. So that their not having to do a lot of the analysis themselves. There's, as you said earlier, there's the folks that are afraid they're going to lose their job because the robots or the machines are taking over. That's not really where I see it. It's just that we're bringing the automation in ways and the analytics in ways that they don't want to have to do, so that they can look at it and solve the really gnarly problems and start focusing on areas that are not necessarily going to be automatable or predictable. It's the things that are unusual that their going to have to get involved in as opposed to the things that are traditional and constant. So, Russ, I'd love for you to comment on the same question. And just a little bit of feedback I got talking to some of the customers is they like directionally where it's going, but the term they through out was dynamic. Because, if you talk about cloud you talk about containers. Down the road things like serverless. It's if it pulls every five minutes it's probably out of date. >> oh, Absolutely. I remember back when we talked big data, real time was one of those misnomers that got thrown out there. Really, what we always said is what real time needs to mean is the data in the right place to the right people to solve the issue >> Absolutely. >> Exactly. So, where do you guys see this directionally, and how do you get more dynamic? >> Well see, dynamic exists in a bunch of different ways. How immediate is the data? How accurate is the dependency map, and that's changing and shifting all the time. So, we have to keep that up to date automatically in our product. It's also the analytics that get applied the recommendations you make. And one of the things you can talk to data scientists and they can build a model, train a model, test a model and find something. But if they find something that was true three weeks ago it's irrelevant. So, we need to build systems that can do this in real time. That they can in real time, meaning, gather data in real time, understand the context in real time, recognize the behavior and make a recommendation or take an action. There's a lot of stuff that we have to do to get there. We have a lot of the pieces in place, it's a really cool time in the industry right now because, we have the tools we have the technology. And it's a need that needs to be filled. That's really where we're spending our energy is completing that loop. Closed loop system that can help humans do their jobs better and in a more automated way. >> Awesome. Well, Leslie and Russ, thanks so much for sharing your visibility into what customers are doing and the progress with your platforms. >> All right, thank you Stu. >> And we'll be back with more coverage here from ScienceLogic Symposium 2019. I'm Stu Miniman, and thank you for watching theCUBE. (energetic music)

Published Date : Apr 25 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by ScienceLogic. And to her left, is Russ Elsner, of injection in the keynote today. and help our sales guys successfully sell the product. I'm part of the product strategy team. My peers that have been in the industry longer, and so one of the big challenges that our customers and the application space. the application space an how that marries and the new framework has to work It's going to be that way. So, from that environment to the latest greatest and marrying it to the application view that we're In the industry we talked about silos for so many time. lots of different organizations that need to work together. that they have a challenge that you fit, ScienceLogic is really the core to their is one of the most important things in today. So, really the key is to give that data context. And one of the things struck me is that they really need to do. Russ, anything else along the automation line. is get the information to the human, Well right, It's The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy. (laughter) so many integrations, the AI ops journey. So that their not having to do the data in the right place to the and how do you get more dynamic? And one of the things you can talk to data scientists and the progress with your platforms. I'm Stu Miniman, and thank you for watching theCUBE.

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Dave Link, ScienceLogic | ScienceLogic Symposium 2019


 

>> From Washington DC, it's theCUBE. Covering ScienceLogic Symposium 2019. Brought to you by ScienceLogic. >> I'm Stu Miniman and this is theCUBE's coverage of ScienceLogic Symposium 2019 here at The Ritz-Carlton in Washington DC. Really excited to welcome back to the program. It's the co-founder CEO and the Headmaster of Wizarding school, >> Wizarding school, yes. >> Dave Link, thank you so much for joining us. Great to be here Steve. >> All right, so Dave first of all congratulations, really been enjoying the event you know you you kicked it off in the keynote this morning great energy, really I think capturing you know where we are in you know IT in business today. We understand how things are changing so much and it's a complex world and ScienceLogic is trying to do Its part to help simplify and make it easier for IT to you know run at the speed of business and machines. >> That's exactly right. What's happening in the world right now is you've got a confluence of cloud apps, traditional legacy apps and they're colliding together and as they collide together you need new tools to manage that in a way that's different than what we've seen in the past. You're looking at lots of sources coming together to contextualize, not just seeing what's happening, understanding how systems relate to one another but acting upon them. Machine at machine speed means that automation is king and the wizard hat actually relates to a storyline we had earlier today when we think about how to educate the marketplace and the customers we realized that we needed a very new way of communicating. So videos E-Learning The Wizard of learning has been a theme of the show to help our customers to get up to speed and actually take full advantage of the application that we provide to help them deliver great service quality. >> Yeah well and we appreciate you bringing theCUBE to help with that video education of the community overall. >> That's right >> Yeah so you know look Dave you know wanted... let's step back for a second and you know we want to going to get to the business update but first you know the company is founded in 2003. You know cloud wasn't a term, some of the underlying foundations of what became cloud, you know existed back there. Those of us in the industry understand some of the waves that have happened there but you know to talk about cloud and micro services and all of these changes that have... So give us a little bit about that evolution about the original premise of the company, as we move now to you know the world of today and how you manage to keep the company moving and relevant >> I love telling this story Stu because it never gets old >> Yeah >> A lot of the original feces that we had about where service business service analysis was going, the application analysis connected to the infrastructure. Our belief was we were going to move to a world where it wasn't based on devices or nodes or systems. It was really based on this service and what we're seeing with cloud has accentuated that tenfold because services now are made up of compound things, technologies, service delivery mechanisms as a service platforms and they all have to work with one another The platform we built had an architecture that was very open that could take data streams from lots of different sources, create a common information model contextualize that and then act upon it. So now more than ever before, we really built the right platform with multi-tenancy, with role based access control with all the things that were really hard problems to solve code day one and now the thesis that we had that it was more about the service view is as important as it as it's ever been with ephemeral systems that are coming and going, with really containerized systems on top of virtual machines on top of their metal. All these abstraction layers require a different mindset but an open architecture is really at the heart of pulling lots of data streams together contextualizing it and then acting upon it >> Yeah, so I'm a sucker for Venn diagrams. so you heard that the analyst in the keynote this morning talked about AI ops and he said to the inner structure intersection of IT operations data science and machine learning >> Yes >> Data at the center of everything, it's something we've had a couple of waves of trying on intelligence and automation, are things we've been talking about for decades in IT. Give us a little bit as why some of those waves are coming together so that now and what you're doing is the right moment to really help accelerate. You've been having great growth for a number of years and project out some really strong growth for the next few. >> We have over the last five years the company has grown over five hundred and forty percent from a revenue perspective and I think that's the underpinnings of that relates to do we have the right market fit. Are we solving a problem that's material to customers that it's hard for them to solve without our product. But I really envision a future we've been working on this for a couple decades, right? The future is one I hope where from a artificial intelligence at machine speed where we're getting so predictive and understanding, through really smart scalable algorithms the future faults that may occur for you know we've both been at this for a long time. we've been talking about event correlation for many years. I envision a world where you're not doing event correlation when you've had an event, it's actually too late. Usually that's caused by a system telling you that there is a problem. So what we're really working on what we've talked a lot about here at the show is not just predictive analytics but really understanding what's abnormal and getting in front of a problem before there is a problem with the system with really super smart algorithms that help customers understand, many different data sets converge together and what they really mean so that you can get ahead of a service outage rather than have the fault that you're then working on correlating to infrastructure to application layers. >> You know the other thing that's been interesting for me to watch is, the core of where you started was really working with the service Fighters. I've had a chance to talk to a number of your service fighters >> Yes and Hughes has been with you since the early days up to you know one that just bought a couple of weeks ago and you know they're happy very. Talked about kind of the compare/contrast of the service riders and the enterprise because you know cloud is impacting you know the big hybrid hyper scale clouds are impacting both of those and the rate of change is affecting both of those in a lot of ways. So I'm curious as you see you know what what what's similar and what's different between going into those markets. >> When we thought about the problem for service providers there were two axes that we were looking at. Number one was from one instance of our platform you had to serve many customers that all had their own tenancy. But on top of that, you had to layer in a role based access control who could see what the customer had their view, the internal ops teams had their view. So building out a really complicated foundational model and an architecture that would support tenancy on steroids with one instance of our product was a really important linchpin of what's now, incredibly important to enterprises, because enterprises are getting into a moment where they're having to really act as service bureau's, service brokers and that means that all the different teams that support different technology silos, really have to work together as one and... but yet they still need their own views.So a lot of the foundational highly differentiated capabilities we built for service providers, for large scale globally distributed enterprises, actually meets a need profile that is very hard to find solutions that fit that profile and can give them that consolidated view but yet the deep dive view for the practitioner and we're finding that more and more enterprises, have follow-the-sun operations, follow-the-sun architecture teams, follow-the-sun engineering teams that need different views that is really hard to get most products that were built in this space were built for a single tenant enterprise view and that never gives you the granularity for each consumer and each persona to get the view that they need. So it's interesting that although we kind of over engineered those capabilities for the service provider needs it's becoming involved with the enterprises as they're looking at how do they need to do things as really a converged team, working as one team across many silo disciplines and that requires a very different way of thinking, a different tool space a different solution to the problem that we built kind of from the ground up. It's now really appropriate for the DevOps teams the teams that are really having to break down the silos and work as one team. >> Yeah the, the the the term that often gets misused and misunderstood is scale. But if you truly can build something that's distributed architecture for scale, It really opens up a lot of opportunities. One of the things you highlight it also is that, ScienceLogic puts a lot of investment into you know R&D and keep working on things big announcement of Big Ben, seemed I've had a chance to hear what everybody likes and the best. Talk a little bit about you know how you keep the development efforts going how you put that strong and effort on it and you know boy you know you said you worked on the UI for three years and now it sounds you know it's a bold statement to be like okay and everybody you're using this, you know you can't have the safety blanket of old away in new way for a while, >> You're constantly reinventing and refactoring code base to get to new outcomes for customers. we're spending between 35 and 40 percent of revenues on R&D. That's generally almost twice as much as many of our competitors and we're doing that because there is so much still to do. At times we have really thought carefully, could we scale back should we scale back our R&D spend but fortunately we've had a very supportive board of directors that believes in our vision. Believes in the vision that this is a unique moment in time the whole market is transitioning to a new tool set, because of all of the crosswinds of public cloud refactoring of applications containerization abstraction of the network, a storage, compute. All of these things combining together require a very different way of solving this problem We've, we've actually seen this play out in the past which again is why we're over investing in engineering. When you look at the mainframes and the compute architecture of mainframes and then we went to client-server, the tools that managed the mainframe really didn't manage the client-server. we've now gone from client-server to cloud the same things happening again. Because the needs are so different and we're going to see a very different generation of tools rule this next gen of requirements the customers have when they have a multitude of clouds that all work together to deliver an outcome to an application that you as a user are benefiting from. >> Alright so talked about the growth, talked about the investment, it's a strong industry validation today also. Gartner up on stage talked about the definition of AI ops they might not be fully in sync as to how mature the market is but it's still important that they are you know this is a trend and something to watch and it's on their hype cycle and Forrester released the wave which had congratulations ScienceLogic as the the top scorer up in the leaders category. So congratulations on that and what does that mean. >> Well we're thrilled about that because that external validation is what customers look at. It helps them with their analysis and that the talk tracks that everybody's on in our industry sometimes it's hard to discern who does what and how well each company does it to some degree from a marketing perspective many people use the same words so the good words are already used up. So sometimes it's hard to understand how each product is differentiated in the marketplace the Forrester wave report was so thorough so comprehensive, put us through over 30 use case scenarios where we had to demonstrate to get the qualifications for that ranking. So it wasn't just us responding in writing and waving our arms and throwing out a few powerpoints to get to that result we had to prove it and it feels the satisfaction of actually proving it for our team for our engineering team for everybody here at the company I'm so proud of everybody because that's really from a product perspective. We love those product recognition awards are actually sometimes more enjoyable than the growth recognition awards because that means you're really delivering a value to the customer where they're going to when they deploy the product they're going to have a good outcome. So that's what we're focused on and having Forrester put us at the top of the wave report is a special moment in the history of the company. >> Alright so Dave this is your user conference, so what I want to end on... Let's talk about the customers and here's here's my observation as you know, my first time coming to your event and I've talked to a number of seen some of the interactions there. There are certain products that customers love the relationship is an interesting and I would say a really good one the customers are really engaged and enjoying and liking it and it's almost like that friend that you can be like I really like you and your friends in their car I can be like this is how I want you to get better in ScienceLogic this is what you've done and I'm excited once on the roadmap and this is where I want you to go even more. So it's it's like you know that that friend that you can kind of hang out with and joke with and I've seen some of those relationships it's a good robust relationship and strong partnerships. It seems that you build with your customers am I getting the right vibe how do you look at your relationships with your customers. >> From a simple business perspective, I look at a couple things this is just as a run the business metric. On average our customers buy about twenty four, twenty five percent more capacity each year. On average our customers stay with us for 7-10 years. On average our customers pay us within 59 days. So I look at are we getting paid on time, do our customers buy more capacity each and every year and do we retain our customers. We retain about ninety five percent of our customers. So those metrics are really best-in-class, net subscription retention, DSO. All of those things are really good foundational indicators of we're doing a great job for our customers but what I love is this interaction that we have with them where they're they're never ending pressure on us to do better to strive for something that makes a day in their life a better day. I love that pressure it's uncomfortable many days of the week as I mentioned in my opening presentation but it makes us a better company and everybody in the company embodies this sense of how do we capture that synthesize it and then deliver against their needs and wants as quick as we can. So our innovation rates now are as high as they've ever been the throughput our of our development team this last quarter was the best we've ever seen in the history of the company, not just because we have more people but we're getting more done in the same amount of time. So all the KPIs that I look at are pointing in a really positive direction of great momentum for the business and really good alignment with customer needs and wants. We have probably the best market fit I've ever seen with the needs and wants of a net new customer and how our product fits against that. The Forrester wave report was yet another independent validation of how good our market fit in our strategy is right now to solve real problems that are very painful for customers to solve without our product >> Alright, Dave I can't let the head wizard gone without looking a little bit into the future. So as you look down the road what should we be looking as industry watchers to seem from ScienceLogic, seen from the industry you know I asked customers if they had a magic wand you know what would they do to make things better. You had a magic wand up on stage what will you be doing to make the industry better for all of us. >> There's so many things that when we think about making the industry better, it's a community and that means that among the key things that everybody's focused on right now for AI OPS is automation. So sharing those lessons learned cauterizing, validating the automation opportunities whether it's with provisioning systems, with end devices for capacity planning. All the things that we're doing we're starting to work with our customers to publish that broadly so that they can benefit from one another as quick as possible to take those best practices and throughout our community put them into production. If we do that each and every day and really focus on delivering that value across the customer base even for competitive customers. They compete with one another what we've seen is the spirit of cooperation and that to me is among the most satisfying parts of our customer and user community that it's a community that wants to help each other get better every day of the week and that's really hard mission as well. So from a trend line for the entire industry, I think we're all moving towards a moment in time where we have this autonomic capability where we know the applications are infrastructure, we're the tools that help us keep those applications running are getting smarter and smarter by the day and basically move us away from a fault and event correlation storyline to a predictive automation storyline >> Alright well Dave actually I said it on theCUBE a couple of years ago data holds the potential be that flywheel of growth for many years to come. Really appreciate you sharing the story and thanks again for having theCUBE at the event. >> Thanks too great to be here with you. Alright we'll be back with more coverage here from ScienceLogic Symposium 2019, I'm Stu Miniman and thank you for watching theCUBE.

Published Date : Apr 25 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by ScienceLogic. It's the co-founder CEO and the Headmaster Dave Link, thank you so much for joining us. the event you know you you kicked it off in of the show to help our customers to get up to speed to help with that video education of the community overall. to you know the world of today and how you manage and now the thesis that we had that it was more about and he said to the inner structure intersection is the right moment to really help accelerate. of a service outage rather than have the fault the core of where you started was really working with the service riders and the enterprise because you know cloud and that means that all the different teams One of the things you highlight it also is that, because of all of the crosswinds of public cloud refactoring but it's still important that they are you know and it feels the satisfaction of actually proving it the right vibe how do you look of great momentum for the business seen from the industry you know I asked customers and that means that among the key things Really appreciate you sharing the story I'm Stu Miniman and thank you for watching theCUBE.

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Erik Rudin, ScienceLogic | ScienceLogic Symposium 2019


 

>> from Washington, D. C. It's the queue covering science logic. Symposium twenty nineteen. Brought to you by Science Logic. >> Hi, I'm student men and this is the Cubes coverage of Science Logic. Symposium twenty nineteen here at the Ritz Carlton in Washington, D. C. Been four hundred sixty. People here just finished the afternoon Kino, and they've actually gone off to the evening event. It's thie yet to be finished. Spy Museum. They get a good three sixty view of Washington D. C. So the hallways are a little echoing in quiet but really excited to have on the final guest of the day. Eric Gordon, who's the vice president of business development and alliances as science logic. Erik, thanks so much for joining me, >> thanks to you. Great to be here. >> All right, so busy. Dev and Alliances. I've talked to a number of your partner's. I've gone through a lot of things, but you wear, I think, just like your CEO. A few different hats. Ah, and your old let's let's get into what your role is that the company? >> Yeah, it's actually changed over time, but for the most part I've to court responsibilities. One is I'm looking after our ecosystem of technology partners. And so we have from key strategic CE that we work with in the marketplace, in the cloud space on the data center, all across the ecosystem, a lot of different technologies. But we also have products that we resell input on our priceless that combined to create a solution for our customers in the second half of what my responsible is really focused on. What is our product strategy around integration? Automation? Because those Air Corps components to our platform and I look after that with several different teams. >> So let's talk about that the ecosystem pit person, the alliances. Because I got a lot of shows. I talked to a lot of companies, and it's all too easy for companies to be like, Oh, we're we're the best and we do so many different things. And when I first heard about the space in a ops, it's like, Oh, well, I I Ops is replacing a lot of waves and, you know, your average customer replaces fourteen tools. I heard there's one customer who replaces fifty tools, but at the same time, there was a strong focus about integrations in deeper even some of the products that you say, Yeah, there's overlap in that competitive, you know, you're working with those environments, so give us a little bit of the philosophy, how you balance that, you know, we want to do it all and help our customers to do lots of different things. And especially when you get to big customers and service providers, we understand that it's a big world and there never is that, you know, mythical single pane of glass. >> Yeah, no, totally agree. And we hear this a lot. You know, I've got a tool for this. I got a tool for that and or I had to Vendor come in and say that they could do it all. And you know, really, At the end of the day, if there's there's no one vendor on DH, you know the Venn diagrams of functionalities, air overlapping. That's the nature of the industry. And when we saw this on the early days of it with the big monopolies. But I think right now it's it's around. How do we saw the customer problem? Mohr effectively, From our perspective, we look at the combination of things. First is is what solutions out there give us good data data that we can use data that we can enrich, how we can leverage that to help drive better insights from other types of data that we collect so that theirs is where integration is a keep part of this on DH. What we know is that ultimately in our space, we're doing about monitoring a core collection. We're goingto have to click with everybody, so we're gonna have to integrate with any partner that might have some form of I. P are connected through an I p address to some sort of a p I. We need that data. So we have partnerships on that side. I think really, what's interesting is when we think about things like workflow or orchestration or types of mediation, we might integrate with other technologies to enrich that data further. So we look for partners that ultimately our customers air using things that we can do consolidation and drive better outcome with that enrich date experience. >> Yes, so let's drill down one little bit if you talk about like, you know a PM and SM tools out there some recent announcements and and you digging deeper on there. What what are some of the highlights? So one >> thing is, if you already have, like, agents are often come up, Our customs says, Well, I've got an A P M. Agent that's already doing some things. Well, that's great. We can leverage that, that there's some good insight that we can gather from either to apologies or other metrics or like in user experience. But we also go deeper on other aspects, like on the network side or on the infrastructure side, or on the the cloud service aside. So, you know, ultimately, it's a conversation of say, what? What can we leverage? What, what's accurate, what's in real time? And if there's things that we can, you know, gather, then that's our primary strategy. So I you know, I do think the ecosystem plays a key role in a i ops, but really, to do that, it's run automation because anything that we do, we have to do with scale and we have to do with security. We have to do it with the intent of driving some form of outcome. And so, you know, those are the key principles behind selecting technology partners. >> Okay, Let's talk some about that automation. It was a big discussion in the keynote this morning. Really talking about the maturity model. One of the analysts up there says you really want to make sure you separate things like, you know, the machine learning piece of it with the automation. The observation I've made a couple of times is, you know, yes. We all know you can automate a really bad process. And so I need toe, you know, make sure, you know, do I have good data And, you know, how am I making automation make me better Not just, you know, to change things. >> Yeah, well, I think it's Science Lodge that we look at. Automation is in every part of what we do within the product. From the from the collection of how we automate it scale how we consolidate that data. And then we're doing a lot of the data preparation using automation technologies. And then when we start to analyze and enrich that data, we're also using it Other algorithmic approaches, for example, topology and context. So if we know that some things connected weaken Dr An automation to make an inference and that data then feeds into the final step, which is around how we action on that. So we drive automation in the classic sense to say trigger workflow or, let's say, update another system of record or system of truth like a C M G B or a notification. And so one of things that we did hear from Garden this morning is engaging in an SM process. Is a core part of AI ai ops as muchas data collection and driving other forms of automation. >> All right, Do you have some examples of you know how automation you're helping your customers love any customer stories you've got along that line? >> Well, >> really. You know, there's so many stories we're hearing the halls of Symposium, and so it's it's it's hard to pick one, but, you know, I think all ten times what we say is, what what's driving your service desk time like you've got people you know, looking at all of these different dispirit systems, and we can look at it. Let's say a top end of your most sort of frequented events or alerts, or even look at your top service desk incidents and say, How could we automate that, you know. And some of that automation could be at the technology level, you know, simplest as restarting a service or prove you re provisioning of'Em. Or it could be clearing a log or even maybe shutting down an event because it's irrelevant. So there's There's several different examples in the cloud as well. Terms of how things air provisioning attached. And if we see something out of a policy, we can alarm that say, hey, maybe my storage costs are going to accelerate because someone made a bad change. So there's different ways that we can apply automation during the life cycle. But I think enhancing the service management component perhaps is one of the most impactful ones, >> you know. So, Eric, we azan industry automation been something we've been talking about for quite a while now, and they're they're sometimes pushback of, you know, from the end, users especially, you know, some of the practitioners out there as you know. Well, I could do it better. You know, the fear that you're going to lose your job. How are you seeing that progressing and you know, how were things different today? Both from a technology standpoint, as well as from your customers. Can't wait. >> I think if you asked any enterprise CIA already service provider, service delivery manager, they'd always say, I'd love to operate as much as I can when you get down on the practitioner level. You know, obviously I think there's some sort. Like I I do my job, Thank you very much. I have my favorite wit, my process. So I think there's a conversation depending on. You know, if we're saying hey from the practitioner side, is there set of data that you need or set of scripts? Or are things that you're doing manually that we can put into a workflow? And at the at the business layer, it's like, Do you feel like you're getting the value from some of the investments you've made? And is, how is automation? Help you realize that an example there is. We see oftentimes is around the quality of data that's going into the C, M. D. B and from AA AA. Lot of times we see that their investment in technology is like service now, and other platforms is fairly high expense, and they want to optimize that, and they want to realize the power of automation at the at the service level. So if we can, if we can convince, if you will, through a set of really concrete use cases that the data coming from science logic at the speed and the quality can actually improve the seemed to be to >> the level of >> really efficient automation. All of a sudden, people start to see that as a change as an opportunity. And that's where I think a I Ops is helping change the narrative, to say how automation Khun B really, really applied rather than just being this mystical concept that is hard to do. And, you know, people don't liketo think that a robot's taking their job. I think what's gonna happen is that machine learning algorithms are going to make jobs easier and, you know, ultimately were far, far from the point where a ized doing something and some sort of, you know, crazy automata way. But I think it's the deep learning, moving a machine learning to you. No good quality data sets that dr meaningful insights that's giving us a lot better view until where automation could play in the >> future. Yeah, absolutely. It's our belief that you know, automation. There's certain things that you probably don't want to do because repetitive, it's boring or mistake prone on DH. Therefore, you know automation can really help those environments move forward. You could move up the stack. You can manage those environment. There's definitely some retraining that that needs to happen often. But you know that the danger is if you're if you're doing now what you were doing five years ago, chances are your competition is moving along and, you know, finding a better way to do it. >> You know, just a point on this soup is really around the velocity of data that's coming in. So we're seeing, you know, we talked about the three bees. You know, the volume of data. You have to use automation to be able to manage that huge amount of different data sources, the variety. There's no human that can process the amount of machine information from the amount of technologies that you have on DH that you know. Obviously it's speed, right. The velocity and that is that is clearly not going to be something that any human could be capable of doing. And so there's a relationship here between technology and human processes and science logics and a really interesting position right now to really kind of help with that process. But more importantly, accelerate the value by being all to process it and make it intelligent. >> Wait, Erica, you're saying I'm not neo from the Matrix and I can't, you know, read through everything and be able to move faster than physics allows. Give >> yourself maybe fifteen, twenty years. We might be. You know that that you know, I don't think that that many people can really predict the impact of the you know, we'LL say machinery, evolving toe, artificial intelligence and there's it's going to be very used, case specific. But we do know one thing is that algorithms? Air helping. But algorithms are dependent on that clean data stack, right? And And if you can't handle the scale, then obviously there's going. It's going to be minimized in terms. Is total utility >> alright? Well, Eric, I get the good to let you give us that the final word from science logic from Symposium twenty nineteen on the Cube. >> So you know, the first thing is is this is there's two things that we learned from this event. The first thing is, is how our customers you're evolving in this dynamic space. And what we know is that if if you don't change, it's going to be a problem. Because the only consistent thing is change and change is happening faster on it. And we call that disruption. And so what we want to do is we want to understand how science AJ is a technology company. I can really help that customer go through that transition with confidence. And then, more importantly, is what could we do? Delivering better, more enrich solutions to our customers that actually are changing the way the game is played. And so we feel like we're a disrupter in the A ops market. We are. Certainly Forrester has helped us recognize that. But But we're not done work. We're continuing on this journey. >> All right, Well, Eric, routine. Thank you so much for sharing your insights and the journey towards Aye, Aye, Ops. Thanks so much to. All right. Well, that comes to an end of what we're doing here at science Logic. Symposium twenty nineteen. I know. I learned a lot. I hope you did too. I'm stew Minutemen. Thanks so much from our whole crew. Here it's Silicon Angle Media's The Cube. Check out the cube dot net for all the videos from this show, as well as where we'LL be in the future. Reach out if you have any questions and once again, thanks for joining us.

Published Date : Apr 25 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by Science Logic. afternoon Kino, and they've actually gone off to the evening event. thanks to you. I've gone through a lot of things, but you wear, I think, just like your CEO. And so we have from key strategic of the products that you say, Yeah, there's overlap in that competitive, you know, you're working with those environments, And you know, really, At the end of the day, if there's there's no one vendor Yes, so let's drill down one little bit if you talk about like, you know a PM and SM And if there's things that we can, you know, gather, then that's our primary strategy. And so I need toe, you know, make sure, you know, do I have good data And, And so one of things that we did hear from and so it's it's it's hard to pick one, but, you know, I think all ten times what we say is, you know, from the end, users especially, you know, some of the practitioners out there as you So if we can, if we can convince, if you will, through a set of really And, you know, people don't liketo think that a robot's taking their job. It's our belief that you know, automation. So we're seeing, you know, we talked about the three bees. and be able to move faster than physics allows. people can really predict the impact of the you know, we'LL say machinery, Well, Eric, I get the good to let you give us that the final word from science logic from So you know, the first thing is is this is there's two things that we learned from this event. I hope you did too.

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Rob Gruener, Telstra & Raj Patnam, ScienceLogic | ScienceLogic Symposium 2019


 

>> from Washington, D. C. It's the queue covering science logic. Symposium twenty nineteen. Brought to you by Science Logic >> Hi, I'm student men and this is the Cubes coverage of Science Logic. Symposium twenty nineteen here at the Ritz Carlton in Washington, D. C. First of all, want Welcome back to the program. Roger Putnam, Who's the vice president of Global Solutions? That science logic Thanks for coming back and what with programme A first time Rob Gruner listed is this loosened architect from Telstra. But >> Rob, I actually had >> a chance to talk to some of your co ords there, they said. Arav robs a wizard. He's an engineer that does everything. So you know, solutions. Architect. Of course, we know that they're out there. They do a lot of different things and asleep, leased. Your peers say you're somebody that does quite a lot of different >> things. Did Jack of All trades master of none unfortunate >> way? It's all right, don't you know it is in vogue now to be, you know, a generalist. It's, you know, we've gone from specialties to well, oh no, it's it's platforms and everything's going to be everything, so I have plenty of background with Telstra, but maybe talk a little bit about you know, your role in the organization and what what kind of things you're involved in. Since you know some of those trades that you >> are jack of all, >> probably our spies have come into Telstra's an acquisition. So, you know, working for small company, you tend to do everything on. For some reason, I've been allowed to continue to do that on developing expertise around science logic. And that means I've been involved across a lot of areas of the business as we've been adopting science logic more widely, and it's been quite interesting. Process means eye contact, that expertise and then see how it's applied across the organization. So it's been quite interesting, >> awesome. One of things that's been interested in me and in talking to service Friday is talking to the enterprise customers is two. You know how many tools they had, how many they replaced with science logic, but also what things it's integrating with and working with. It was a big focus on the keynote this morning is, you know, integrations with Sam and you know all these various pieces, so maybe give us a little bit of kind of the scope. You know how long's tells me you've been using science logic, How broads the deployment and you know what? What? What does it do in? What does it tie into >> a tte? The mammoth is more enterprise focused. So on. That's the area. Tell Stur I come from so it's really around delivering services to her customers. Quite recently, we've seen then looking in deploying science logic across their carriage spokes and managing services there. That's quite a large deployment. You know, we're quite happy with that in terms of what is going to be doing for the business on the integrations, their endless. So Telstra, like a lot of large organizations, has a lot of different systems to talk to. A lot of different service dis, depending on the operational areas. So in service now is one of those. But it's a hollow of other stuff on, so that's a very challenging process. And sounds objects being pretty good at, you know, spreading itself around. Those >> give us a little insight as to you know, how fast things are changing. You know, hear Kafka and Streams and, you know, constantly moving I've been looking at the, you know, communities and container stuff that's happening, which is which is fast moving. So >> are definitely say it. And Telstra's trying as hard as akin to move as quickly as the market can allowed. So definitely it's virtual izing. ITT's automating II ops is a big component of what we're doing. It is extremely important for the business. >> Okay, so Alps is something you're doing have to We're not as mature as we'd like to video. I'm not sure if you saw the keynote this morning, but they put out a maturity models So would love for you to, you know, where are you when you look at that? They kind of had the three criterias there is. There's kind of the the machine learning, there's the automation and I'm trying to remember the third piece that was there, but you know where where are you today? You know, how'd you get there? And you know what? What's what's a little bit of the road map going forward? >> I think it might be probably our ambitions to be in that the upper end of the spectrum and into remediation, But that's an ambition and I think we've got a while to go with that. So, uh, more than that, I can't coming off >> its interests. So they have that The keynote tomorrow they're going. Jean Kim speaking on the deaf ops. And, you know, I'm a big fan of the Phoenix project and they talked about, you know, the jack of all trades that does it all. He could sometimes be the bottleneck in the system. Absolutely. Because you can't be up. I need something fixed. Well, we'LL go to Rob Rob all fix it. That's great. That fire floating mode. I know I've done that in my career, and it's one of those things. Oh, jeez, you're never going to move at this job because you're replaceable. It's like that's a dangerous place to be. >> It is s >> o. You know, we talk a little bit about, you know, you said, you know, science logic. You know that they position themselves as this is going to help you move that, you know, machine speed and keep up with that. Give us a little bit the reality of what you're seeing. How what does that impact your job? Your organization? >> Look, I think sounds logic has done a wonderful job within the organization. It's it's the legacy infrastructure within any organization, particularly tells her scale. That's really holding you back on. There's a lot of Well, I think people level with Intel Street. Move as quickly as we can, but we have such a large number of legacy systems to deal with. You know, we're looking at one deployment of Sands object. We were looking at IDing systems to kill, So it's a big task >> the wonderful technical death that we've all inherited. So So you know, Roger, you know, this something we hear from all customers. It'd be lovely if I had the mythical, you know, unicorn that, you know, start from the ground up and you know, he can start afresh. But we always have to have that mix and give it a little bit about what you're seeing. You know, about the Telstra in a little bit broader, You know, >> I think what tell us she has done really well with taking advantage of our technology was they didn't come in with this attitude of would rip out everything that we have and just have a magic easy bun. Software doesn't work that way. I think we've all learned the lessons of tough deployments when you try to stay out of fix everything. So they came in with a really gradual, phased approach of Get a couple pieces done where they had gaps. You start to fill those gaps. What's happening during the last few years as we've seen the shift greater change and they've taken advantage of the platforms, nationalities a hole as they go through their digitization efforts. And so as they digitize, they taking this step by step by step approach to you know what you were saying earlier with Rob does. He doesn't answer the question of being the one man band, but they did was they build it all process wise, using software to drive the automation. So once it's done one time, you're not stuck on the person anymore. And so I think when we look at our most successful customers like Telstra, it's because they've had this gradual, phased approach where they're using software rather than single person bottlenecks. And rather than having these tiger teams to try to solve problems and moving towards a better process to take advantage of the world, we're in today. So how >> do you measure success? You know, what are some of the business outcomes or, you know, k p I's that you understand how you're moving from kind of where you were to where you want to be. >> Uh, that's a difficult one to answer because particularly sounds, logic was used in so many different context. So for a certain part of the business, we might say, Are we monitoring the full stack? I were giving customers real value invisibility through the whole dynamic of the business. And then, in another context, we using sound subject. We were just saying, We just need to deploy its scale. We need two one board as quickly as possible. We need to keep the cost down to a minimum. We need to keep events that's allow as possible. Okay, so it's more about the efficiency argument, so it's really depends and way we're trying to use it and how we're deploying it. So >> how do you have visibility across how everybody is doing and getting trained on the latest things and keeping up to date and sharing best practices? How do you manage that internally, and how do you how do you do you network with your peers on some of that? >> Well, we've tried Teo really within. Tell us we have a concept of centre of excellence. So it's really about, you know, being recognizes the business experts in particular area and allowing the business to understand. That's that. That's where the expertise sits on a certain we've done a very good job with that and then allowing and communicating that after the business as well. So it's a very tough asked. It's a big business. We have thirty thousand people so often one person doesn't know about another person, another floor on the buildings, you know, to try and spread it across the biz, since we have fifty officers worldwide. So it's a process, you >> know? I mean, Roger just want one of things that here is, you know, science logic. It's not a widget, and it's, you know, can fit in a lot of different environments and a lot of different uses. You know, I heard of, you know, strong emphasis in into training had your CEO on where in his wizard tat for for for the that the learning knowledge that was gonna happen. So you know you talk a little bit about how science logic is looking to address this, especially for some you know, large customers like Telstra. >> You know, I think there's a general skills gap in is a whole beyond our technology beyond what's taking place in the world today. And you know, I've been in the business for quite a while, and we've long focused on training the operator on how to utilize the technology to solve their specific problems. And while that those aspects really powerful, some of the things we've done recently to go a step further is when we hear similar questions. We started record all of those so our customers could watch videos of how to solve problems instead of just going onto some form and let me type some question and hope somebody responds to in the future. You have read it for that. So we've got a look at a better mechanism and video based training handheld handling the customers we can build out these use cases drives the platform value, and what Telstra does it's really unique is they use the platform less so from a perspective of can I manage X y Z technology. But what can I build on top of it? How can I break the platform to some extend? And Rob is a mad scientist for us here. I mean, could jump into this more. But they've broken the platform to solve those business needs by addressing them individually. And what we've done is we've taken his best practices, and we rolled them back out to the rest of our customers. So with Robin, tell Hsia and a couple of other really great customers were driving a better community and sense of community so less question, answer form, less traditional support, more video, more community, more share ability. And that's where you're going to get additional quality. Coming out from the products are being delivered. Makes sense to you, Robert. Absolutely. >> Yeah, Rob. I mean, I love any commentary on that. You know, the network effect of software especially would talk about Sasser as a service type things, you know, that's what sales force really came out. It was like a weight one customer. Ask for something and wake everybody. You can take advantage of that or something similar. So are you seeing that kind of dynamics today with science logic and with others >> well, perfectly within the Telstra business. Absolutely so by building a capital into one area, you can share it across. And we found that we've been able to then sell the system internally, your internal stakeholders, so they appreciate the value of it and we can build on that. And then our customers, whilst we don't necessarily lady with the product they can. They see what's going on, and they basically then take it on as a service as well. So it's very, very interesting process. >> So one thing we haven't talked about yet, but you talk about data, you know, what's the role of data in your environment is something that you know key to the platform from science logic. How you leveraging it? How's that changing in your environment? One of the opportunities there. >> It's interesting questions. So as the telco, we collect a lot of data on DA. Obviously we have federal agencies who make that a requirement as well. So we have an existing data like initiative on that's very full of moment, and science logic is where we're looking at how we can add to that the value, valuable information and provides, but like everyone else, is a lot of data to collect, and it's an interesting process to try and make sense out of it and react accordingly. I mean, as a business, we were responding to millions and millions events of a day. So it's, you know, it's a difficult thing. >> Yeah, one of things. When we look at things like you know, anything that requires training like machine learning or the like, There's the balance between I want to learn from everybody. But you know, you're in a competitive marketplace. I don't want my competitors necessarily to get things. So you know the software products usually Well, I can isolate, and it doesn't have specific information. But how do you look at that dynamic of making sure that you gain from what the industry is doing, but that, you know, you could still stay competitive in ahead of your competition? >> Uh, >> no. I don't have a necessary can answer that. I suppose my head's tied into really what I could do with a platform and how I can then bring new technologies into the company's. So that's really are spies remind spaces on, Really, it's what I'm focused on. So you know what we do with the daughter probably is. He's not necessarily big concerns. How >> about that? There was quite a lot of announcements this week. The number of integrations as well as you know, update to the product. Anything specifically that you've been waiting for or that has caught your eye, >> the service now integration. I think it is far more advanced than has been in the past. On we have aspect of the business used thinks over quite heavily. So the fact that that's now matured and much more robust and you know which sort of offering that'LL have a lot of impact on the business. So I definitely mean the machine learning is another great thing on the question of then how that develops over time. So we'LL see how that goes. You >> know, Roger loves you know what? When I've been digging into some is the feedback you've been getting from customers and what's been leading toe, you know, some of the enhancement. So I would love, love your take on what you're saying. >> You know, I think one of the things that tell Sharpe pushed us towards a few years back was we're going to build. We already have a data like we don't need you to function. Is there Data Lake? So its multiple different Veda lakes And this concept of how do I move later From one day to lake to a different data Lake lakes within lakes ponds. Whatever the terminology is today the data ocean, our family perfect. And I'm getting to that data ocean from our lake. We have to go get streaming data. So now I'm going to extremes against really geographic here. But, you know, Rob really pushed us to make sure we could go right to Kaka buses and pushed data out. So what do you do with the data? And so tell Strip has been a, you know, an early adopter of a lot of our technology. And by being an early adopter, they've pushed us in a number of directions. So I think when you see a lot of the functionality that we've released this week and we've announced, it's been because of our customer base because of our partners like Telstra, that need to drive the business for further and forward, especially the industry like Telco World, where everything is mobile everything's moving so fast and aggressively. They're really like a good sounding board for where we need to go and how do we get there and and that drive And that partnership is What I think I'm most excited about working with tell sure is they demand from us to be excellent, and that gets great product coming out. And we see the results this week with all of our customers excitingly looking at stream treating capability that Rob was pushing us for well in advance of anyone else. >> Yeah, Robin, I want to give you the final word. You know, I can't help but notice you actually co branded shirts you've got tell star on your arm wither with science logic there. So, obviously, more than just a vendor relationship there, maybe close us out with you know how important science logic is. Two to your business >> job, Critical part of the business. I mean, particularly where we're looking at the commodity aspect of many services, you know, we can't survive unless we can provide quality, invaluable information where customers and really sounds. Logic has been the key platform for that. So in some respects, we're resting, you know, an aspect of the business entirely and Scientology's hands and we're hoping they'LL deliver >> well, Robin Raj, Thank you so much for joining us. Just sharing all the progress that you've made in. You know where things were going? Thanks so much, thanks to all right. And I'm student men. This is the Cube at Science Logic Symposium twenty nineteen. Thanks for watching.

Published Date : Apr 25 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by Science Logic Who's the vice president of Global Solutions? So you know, solutions. with Telstra, but maybe talk a little bit about you know, your role in the organization and you know, working for small company, you tend to do everything on. How broads the deployment and you know what? And sounds objects being pretty good at, you know, spreading itself around. give us a little insight as to you know, how fast things are changing. It is extremely important for the business. you know, where are you when you look at that? I think it might be probably our ambitions to be in that the upper end of the spectrum And, you know, I'm a big fan of the Phoenix project and they talked about, You know that they position themselves as this is going to help you move that, you know, machine speed and keep That's really holding you back on. you know, unicorn that, you know, start from the ground up and you know, he can start afresh. And so as they digitize, they taking this step by step by step approach to you know what You know, what are some of the business outcomes or, you know, k p I's that you understand So for a certain part of the business, we might say, So it's really about, you know, being recognizes the business experts in particular area and allowing You know, I heard of, you know, strong emphasis in into training had your CEO on where in his wizard tat for And you know, I've been in the business for quite a while, and we've long focused on training So are you seeing that kind of dynamics today with science logic and with others you can share it across. So one thing we haven't talked about yet, but you talk about data, you know, what's the role of data in your environment So it's, you know, it's a difficult thing. but that, you know, you could still stay competitive in ahead of your competition? So you know what we do with the daughter probably is. The number of integrations as well as you know, So the fact that that's now matured and much more robust and you know and what's been leading toe, you know, some of the enhancement. So I think when you see a lot of the functionality that we've released this week and we've announced, more than just a vendor relationship there, maybe close us out with you know how important science we're resting, you know, an aspect of the business entirely and Scientology's hands and we're hoping they'LL deliver well, Robin Raj, Thank you so much for joining us.

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Maheswaran Surendra, IBM GTS & Dave Link, ScienceLogic | ScienceLogic Symposium 2019


 

>> From Washington D.C. it's theCUBE covering ScienceLogic Symposium 2019. Brought to you by ScienceLogic. >> Hi, I'm Stu Miniman and this is theCUBE's coverage of ScienceLogic Symposium 2019 here at The Ritz-Carlton in Washington D.C. About 460 people here, the events' grown about 50%, been digging in with a lot of the practitioners, the technical people as well as some of the partners. And for this session I'm happy to welcome to the program for the first time guest, Surendra who is the vice president and CTO for automation in IBM's global technology services. And joining us also is Dave Link who is the co-founder and CEO of ScienceLogic. Gentlemen, thank you so much for joining us. >> Thank you for having us. >> Thanks for having us. >> Alright, so Surendra let's start with you. Anybody that knows IBM services at the core of your business, primary driver, large number of the presented to the employees at IBM are there. You've got automation in your title so, let's flush out a little bit for us, your part of the organization and your role there. >> Alright, so as you pointed out, IBM, a big part of IBM is services; it's a large component. And that two major parts of that and though we come together as one in terms of IBM services, one is much more focused on infrastructure services and the other one on business services. So, the automation I'm dealing with primarily is in the infrastructure services area which means all the way from resources you have in a persons data center going into now much more of course in a hybrid environment, hybrid multi-cloud, with different clouds out there including our own and providing the automation around that. And when we mean automation we mean the things that we have to do to keep our clients' environments healthy from a availability and performance standpoint; making sure that our environment then we respond to the changes that they need to the environment because it obviously evolves over time, we do that effectively and correctly and certainly another very important part is to make sure that they're secure and compliant. So, if you think of Maslow's hierarchy of the things that IT operations has to do that in a nutshell sums it up. That's what we do for our clients. >> Yeah, so Dave luckily we've got a one on one with you today to dig out lots of nuggets from the kino and talk a bit about the company but, you talk about IT operations and one of the pieces I've got infrastructure, I've got applications, ScienceLogic sits at an interesting place in this heterogeneous ever-changing world that we live in today. >> It does and the world's changing quickly because the clouds transforming the way people build applications. And that is causing a lot of applications to be refactored to take advantage of some of these technologies. The especially focused global scale we've seen them, we've used them, applications that we use on our phone. They require a different footprint and that requires then a different set of tools to manage an application that lives in the cloud and it also might live in a multi-cloud environment with some data coming from private clouds that populate information on public clouds. What we found is the tools industry is at a bit of a crossroads because the applications now need to be infrastructure aware, but the infrastructure could be served from a lot of different places, meaning they've got lots of data sources to sort together and contextualize to understand how they relate to one another real time. And that's the challenge that we've been focused on solving for our customers. >> Alright, Surendra I want to know if we can get a little bit more to automation and we talk automation, >> There's also IBM use for a number of years, the cognitive and there was the analyst that spoke in the kino this morning. He put cognitive as this overarching umbrella and underneath that you had the AI and underneath that you had that machine learning and deep learning pieces there. Can you help tease out a little bit for IBM global services in your customers? How do they think of the relationship between the MLAI cognitive piece in automation? >> So I think the way you laid it out, the way it was talked about this morning absolutely makes sense, so cognitive is a broad definition and then within that of course AI and the different techniques within AI, machine learning being one, natural language processing, national languages understanding which not as much statistically driven as being another type of AI. And we use all of these techniques to make our automation smarter. So, often times when we're trying to automate something, there can be very prescriptive type of automation, say a particular event comes in and then you take a response to it. But then often times you have situations where you have events especially what Dave was talking about; when an application is distributed not just a classic of distributed application, but now distributed of infrastructure you may have. Some of it may be running on the main frame, some of it actually running in different clouds. And all of this comes together, you have events and signals coming from all of this and trying to reason over where a problem may be originating from because now you have a slow performance. What's the reason for the slow performance? Trying to do some degree of root cause determination, problem determination; that's where some of the smarts comes in in terms of how we actually want to be able to diagnose a problem and then actually kick off maybe more diagnostics and eventually kick off actions to automatically fix that or give the practitioner the ability to fix that in a effective fashion. So that's one place. The other areas that one type of machine learning I shouldn't say one type, but deadly machine learning techniques lend themselves to that. There's another arena of causes a lot of knowledge and information buried in tickets and knowledge documents and things like that. And to be able to extract from that, the things that are most meaningful and that's where the natural language understanding comes in and now you marry that with the information that's coming from machines, which is far more contextualized. And to be able to reason over these two together and be able to make decisions, so that's where the automation. >> Wonder if we can actually, let's some of those terms I want to up level a little bit. I hear knowledge I hear information; the core of everything that people are doing these today, it's data. And what I heard, and was really illuminated to me listening to what I've seen of ScienceLogic is that data collection and leveraging and unlocking value of data is such an important piece of what they're doing. From an IBM standpoint and your customers, where does data fit into that whole discussion? How do things like ScienceLogic fit in the overall portfolio of solutions that you're helping customers through either manager, deploying and services? >> So definitely in the IT Ops arena, a big part of IT Ops, at the heart of it really is monitoring and keeping track of systems. So, all sets of systems throw off a lot of data whether it's log data, real time performance data, events that are happening, monitoring of the performance of the application and that's tons and tons of data. And that's where a platform like ScienceLogic comes in, as a monitoring system with capabilities to do what we call also event management. And in the old days, actually probably would have thought about monitoring event management and logs as somewhat different things; these worlds are collapsing together a bit more. And so this is where ScienceLogic has a platform that lends itself to a marriage of these faces in that sense. And then that would feed a downstream automation system of informing it what actions to take. Dave, thoughts on that? >> Dave, if you want to comment on that I've got some follow ups too, but. >> Yeah, there's many areas of automation. There's layers of automation and I think Surendra's worked with customers over a story career to help them through the different layered cakes of automation. You have automation related to provisioning systems, the provision and in some case provision based on capacity analytics. There's automation based on analysis of a root cause and then once you know it, conducting other layers of automation to augment the root cause with other insights so that when you send up a case or a ticket, it's not just the event but other information that somebody would have to go and do, after they get the event to figure out what's going on. So you do that at time of event that's another automation layer and then the final automation layer, is if you know predictively about how to solve the problem just going ahead if you have 99% confidence that you can solve it based on these use case conditions just solve it. So when you look at the different layers of automation, ScienceLogic is in some cases a data engine, to get accurate clean data to make the right decisions. In other cases, we'll kick off automations in other tools. In some cases we'll automate into ecosystem platforms whether it's a ticketing system, a service desk system, a notifications systems, that augment our platform. So, all those layers really have to work together real time to create service assurance that IBM's customers expect. They expect perfection they expect that excellence the brand that IBM presents means it just works. And so you got to have the right tooling in place and the right automation layers to deliver that kind of service quality. >> Yeah, Dave I actually been, one of the things that really impressed me is that the balance between on the one hand, we've talked to customers that take many many tools and replace it with ScienceLogic. But, we understand that there is no one single pane of glass or one tool to rule them all, the theme of the shows; you get the superheros together because it takes a team. You give a little bit of a history lesson which resonated me. I remember SNMP was going to solve everything for us, right? But, the lot of focus on all the integrations that works, so if you've got your APM tools, your ITSM tools or things you're doing in the cloud. It's the API economy today, so balancing that you want to provide the solutions for your customers, but you're going to work with many of the things that they have; it's been an interesting balance to watch. >> Yeah, I think that's the one thing we've realized over the years; you can't rip and replace years and years of work that's been done for good reason. I did hear today that one of our new customers is replacing a record 51 tools with our product. But a lot of these might be shadow IT tools that they've built on top of special instrumentation they might have for a specific use cases or applications or a reason that a subject matter expert would apply another tool, another automation. So, the thing that we've realized is that you've got to pull data from so many sources today to get machine learning, artificial intelligence is only as good as the data that it's making those decisions upon. >> Absolutely. >> So you've got to pull data from many different sources, understand how they relate to one another and then make the right recommendations so that you get that smooth service assurance that everybody's shooting for. And in a time where systems are ephemeral where they're coming and going and moving around a lot, that's compounding the challenge that operations has not just in all the different technologies that make up the service; where those technologies are being delivered from, but the data sources that need to be mashed together in a common format to make intelligent decisions and that's really the problem we've been tackling. >> Alright, Surendra I wonder if you can bring us inside your, you talked to a lot of enterprise customers and it helped share their voices to in this space, not sure if they're probably not calling it AI ops there, but some of the big challenges that they're facing where you're helping them to meet those challenges and where ScienceLogic fits in. >> So certainly the, yes, they probably don't want to talk about it that. They want to make sure that their applications are always up and performing the way they expect them to be and at the same time, being responsive to changes because they need to respond to their business demands where the applications and what they have out there continually has to evolve, but at the same time be very available. So, all the way from even if you think about something that is traditional and is batch jobs which they have large processing of batch jobs; sometimes those things slow down and because now they're running through multiple systems and trying to understand the precedence and actions you take when a batch job is not running properly; as just one example, right? Then what actions we want, first diagnosing why it's not working well. Is it because some upstream system is not providing it the data it needs? Is it clogged up because it's waiting on instructions from some downstream system? And then how do you recover from this? Do you stop the thing? Just kill it or do you have to then understand what downstream further subsequent batch jobs needs to or other jobs will be impacted because you killed this one? And all of that planning needs to be done in some fashion and the actions taken such that if we have to take an action because something has failed, we take the right kind of action. So that's one type of thing where it matters for clients. Certainly, performance is one that matters a lot and even on the most modern of applications because it may be an application that's entirely sitting on the cloud, but it's using five or 10 different SAS providers. Understanding which of those interactions may be causing a performance issue is a challenge because you need to be able to diagnose that and take some actions against that. Maybe it's a log in or the IDN management service that you getting from somewhere else and understanding if they have any issues and whether that provider is providing the right kind of monitoring or information about their system such that you can reason over it and understand; okay my service which is dependent on this other service is actually being impacted. And all these kind of things, it's a lot of data and these need to come together. That's where the platform something like ScienceLogic would come into play. And then taking actions on top of that is now where a platform also starts to matter because you start to develop different types of what we call content. So we distinguish the space between an automation platform or a framework plus and the content you need to have that. And ScienceLogic they talk about power packs and these things you need to have that essentially call out the work flows of the kind of actions you need to take when you have the falling signature of a certain bundle of events that have come together. Can you reason over it to say okay, this is what I need to do? And that's where a lot of our focus is to make sure that we have the right content to make sure that our clients applications stay healthy. Did that get to, I think build on what you were talking about a bit? >> Absolutely. Yes, you've got, it's this confluence of a know how an intelligence from working with customers, solving problems for them and being proactive against the applications that really run their business; and that means you're constantly adjusting. These networks I think Surendra's said it before, they're like living organisms. Based on load, based on so many factors; they're not stagnant, they're changing all the time, unless you need the right tools to understand not just anomaly's what's different, but the new technologies that come in to augmenting solutions and enhancing them and how that effects the whole service delivery cadence. >> Mr. Surendra, I want to give you the final word. One of the things I found heartening when I look at this big wave of AI that's been coming is, there's been good focus on what kind of business outcomes customers are having. >> Okay. >> Because back in the big data wave I remember we did the survey's and it was like what was the most common use case? And it was custom. And what you don't want to have is a science project, right? >> Right. >> Yes. >> You actually want to get things done. So any kinds you can give as to, I know you understand we're still early in a lot of these deployments and rollouts but what do you seeing out there? What are some of the lighthouse use cases? >> So, certainly for us, right? We've been at using data for a while now to improve the service assurance for our clients and I'll be talking about this tomorrow, but one of the things we have done is we found that now in terms of the events and incidents that we deal with, we can automatically respond with essentially no human interference or involvement I should say about 55% of them. And a lot of this is because we have an engine behind it where we get data from multiple different sources. So, monitoring event data, configuration data of the systems that matter, tickets; not just incident tickets but change tickets and all of these things and a lot of that's unstructured information and you essentially make decisions over this and say okay, I know I have seen this kind of event before in these other situations and I can identify an automation whether it's a power pack, an automotor, an Ansible module, playbook. that has worked in the situation before in another client and these two situations are similar enough such that I can now say with these kind of events coming in, or group events I can respond to it in this particular fashion; that's how we keep pushing the envelope in terms of driving more and more automation and automated response such that the I would say certainly the easy or the trivial kinds of I shouldn't say trivial, but the easy kinds of events and monitoring things we see in monitoring are being taken care of even the more somewhat moderate ones where file systems are filling out for some unknown reasons we know how to act on them. Some services are going down in some strange ways we know how to act on them to getting to even more complex things like the batch job type of thing. Example I gave you because those can be some really pernicious things can be happening in a broad network and we have to be able to diagnose that problem, hopefully with smarts to be able to fix that. And into this we bring in lots of different techniques. When you have the incident tickets, change tickets and all of that, that's unstructured information; we need to reason over that using natural language understanding to pick out the right I'm getting a bit technical here, verp no pas that matter that say okay this probably led to these kind of incidents downstream from typical changes. In another client in a similar environment. Can we see that? And can we then do something proactively in this case. So those are all the different places that we're bringing in AI, call it whatever you want, AIML into a very practical environment of improving certainly how we respond to the incidents that we have in our clients environments. Understanding when I talked about the next level changes when people are making changes to systems, understanding the risks associated with that change; based on all the learning that we have because we are very large service provider with essentially, approximately 1,000 clients. We get learning over a very diverse and heterogeneous experience and we reason over that to understand okay, how risky is this change? And all the way into the compliance arena, understanding how much risk there is in the environment that our clients facing because they're not keeping up with patches or configurations for security parameters that are not as optimal as they could be. >> Alright, well Surendra we really appreciate you sharing a glimpse into some of your customers and the opportunities that they're facing. >> Thank you. >> Thanks so much for joining us. Alright and Dave, we'll be talking to you a little bit more later. >> Great, thanks for having me. >> All right. >> Thank you. >> And thank you as always for watching. I'm Stu Miniman and thanks for watching theCUBE. >> Thank you Dave. >> Thank you. (upbeat techno music)

Published Date : Apr 25 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by ScienceLogic. And for this session I'm happy to welcome to the program of the presented to the employees at IBM are there. And that two major parts of that and though we come together Yeah, so Dave luckily we've got a one on one with you And that's the challenge that we've been focused on solving that you had the AI and underneath that you had that machine give the practitioner the ability to fix that in a effective the core of everything And in the old days, actually probably would have thought Dave, if you want to comment on that I've got some And so you got to have the right tooling in place and the It's the API economy today, so balancing that you want to the years; you can't rip and replace but the data sources that need to be mashed together in but some of the big challenges that they're facing where flows of the kind of actions you need to take when you have different, but the new technologies that come in to One of the things I found heartening when I look at this big Because back in the big data wave I remember we did the but what do you seeing out there? found that now in terms of the events and incidents that we Alright, well Surendra we really appreciate you sharing to you a little bit more later. And thank you as always for watching. Thank you.

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Bailey Szeto, Cisco | ScienceLogic Symposium 2019


 

(upbeat music) >> From Washington D.C. it's theCUBE. Covering ScienceLogic Symposium 2019. Brought to you by ScienceLogic. >> I'm Stu Miniman and you're watching theCUBE's exclusive coverage of ScienceLogic Symposium 2019 here at the Ritz-Carlton in Washington D.C. Happy to welcome to the program a first time guest off the keynote stage this morning Bailey Szeto who is the Vice President of Customer and Seller Experience IT at Cisco. Thanks for coming and joining us. >> My pleasure. >> All right so Bailey, I've actually, you know I've watched, and partnered, and worked with Cisco my entire career but you actually changed my view of something about Cisco in your keynote this morning. And that's, you know, you said that 99% of Cisco's 50 billion dollars plus is transacted online so I should be thinking of you more as like Amazon.com you know, than as, you know the networking giant I've know my entire career. >> Well You know it's certainly true that most of our revenue comes through our online presence but it's perhaps in a different manner than what you're thinking right? So obviously we do do some business direct and we might have some stragglers selling, buying something with a credit card, but that's not the bulk of our business. The bulk of our business is through primarily partners, resellers and when I say online I meant B to B transactions. >> No no. I totally understand Bailey and what I love is you're in Cisco IT. >> That's right. >> And therefore we're not going to talk about a lot of the networking pieces. We're going to talk about what runs Cisco's business and you have the pieces and you know client success and support and all those run, and even, I didn't even realize the employee engagement all runs through you know Cisco.com >> That's right. >> And I love you did a nice little video. Gave all of those that have been in the industry. You kind of go through and look at the history of like oh okay there's the HTML stuff I used to code. >> That's right, that's right. >> Back in the 90s through all of the updates and yeah we definitely-- >> I was just expecting the little triangle with the guy like shoveling dirt under construction. You know the shovel right? >> Yeah the 404 not found. >> That's right, that's right. >> I know if I go to Cisco.com/go/product name that usually was a short cut to get me to some of the things I care about but for those people who weren't here for the key note or who might not know as much give us a little bit about you know your purview and kind of the scale and scope of what you do. >> Yeah so at Cisco I'm in Cisco IT. But I'm responsible for supporting all of the revenue generation portions of the company. So that's specifically marketing and what they do, sales and what sales does. Cisco services is a very big part of our company so I support the services organization. And most recently Cisco's been on a journey to really kind of move from a once and done hardware sales motion to a full reoccurring revenue type of stream. So we've stood up the whole customer success motion. And so I run the IT portions of that as well. And last but not least you heard me mention that 85% of our revenue actually comes through our partners. So I support all the systems that are partners interact with as well. >> Yeah it's interesting so we've done theCUBE at Cisco Live the last two years. >> Sure. >> And there's a observation I made a year ago when I started going to that show. And it was you know, if I'm a networking person but this applies to you know most people in IT, I used to manage stuff I could touch and go, I understand where it is and how I touch it and everything. Now a lot of what I have to deal with is outside of my purview and therefore I need to get into that environment kind of pair that with you know companies like yourself that are inquisitive. And so you have lots of change going on and lots of things that are in your environment there so we know change is the only constant in our industry. >> Without a doubt. >> So maybe give us a little bit of those dynamics and how that impact what's happening in your world. >> Yeah so I mean we talked a bit about my responsibilities and one of this is Cisco.com It's probably one of the more important platforms that I'm responsible for from an IT perspective. But I also mentioned that Cisco's a very, we grow through acquisitions a lot. It's one of our basic business strategies. And so every time we buy a company it's a big rush to kind of take that acquired company and integrate their online presence into Cisco.com right? So once a company is acquired we don't want people to think of it as a separate company both from a kind of marketing perspective but more importantly we're actually integrating that product into our Cisco ecosystem as well. So just having to move all that technology into Cisco.com is certainly a big job. But I think you are maybe asking this from a different perspective as well which is to say okay you know new technology is being introduced all the time and while it makes sense from a company portfolio perspective I think as a former IT person you're going to agree with me it makes our jobs a little bit more difficult. It's both a blessing and a curse right? From the perspective it's a blessing in that we get this great new technology to incorporate and use in our running of the business but it also adds a lot of complexity and so it's pretty important that we have both the systems and processes to be able to manage all that complexity in our infrastructure really. >> All right so infrastructure monitoring. >> Yes. >> Something you spent a lot of time talking about. I guess I'll set it up when I talked to my friends in the networking space these days or a lot of it, the joke is if you say single pane of glass they are going to spell it P-A-I-N because we understand that there's not one tool to rule them all. >> Right. >> Yes that I might have a primary piece but in the virtualization world I had to plug in to V Center and you know Cisco has you know you laid out a broad portfolio of various tools up and down and across the stack from you know security down to physical and upper layer and plus all the acquisitions. So can you lay out a little bit as to you know where ScienceLogic fits and there's a number of Cisco's tooling that that integrates in with. >> Yeah so when I talked about our journey with ScienceLogic you know Cisco of course has a number of tool and capabilities to take care of the pieces that we are known for. For example Application Dynamics is a great company that we bought and provides great insight into application health. But obviously in a network perspective right we have Cloud Management software, security software that type of thing and so I think what we realized in Cisco IT what my team realized is that it really isn't about a single system to rule them all it's about trying to find multiple platforms that can work together and really share data so as to drive richer insights. And so I think maybe the industry has been on a bit of a wrong path think it's you know it's not Lord of The Rings, one ring to rule them all or whatever right? It's about being able to use multiple applications but having the right data insides move around as needed so that depending on your lens or your role in IT whether you're a network guy or an application guy that you're going to use the tool that's more most natural to yourself but pulling in the right amount of data from those other parts to be able to get the right insight. >> Yeah I saw your closing slide mirrored the theme we've seen at the show of superheroes. So the super power everybody needs in IT today is how do I leverage my data and we understand that it probably takes more like the Avengers to be able to put those together because data is everywhere. >> Yeah the funny thing is that that wasn't actually a set theme. I think we must all have Avengers on our mind because everyone independently came up with the super hero concept. >> Yeah no spoilers on End Game either way though. >> That's right, that's right. >> Excellent so you know can you just bring us inside of some of that ScienceLogic journey? My understanding you're probably the largest enterprised employment of it so you know we always love to talk about scale and what that means and how it's been in your viewpoint. >> Yeah you know we actually before ScienceLogic we actually had our own system that Cisco IT wrote right and so you know as IT professionals we always think we can do it better than anyone else but we've reached a point where just so much technology and so much complexity came to the market that we really wanted to find a solution that would really kind of enable us to grow into the future with all the things that are happening right whether you're talking about Virtualization with Containers or you know Cloud native applications or Multicloud, these are all technology trends that have made our jobs in IT incredibly complex. And so we started to look for what could we replace our home grown monitoring platform with and ultimately we decided that ScienceLogic was the best fit for us. And since we've deployed it we as with most things we tend to stretch the scale especially with our vendors and so I think we are the largest ScienceLogic enterprise customer at this point. But we are seeing incredible benefits in terms of being able to connect ScienceLogic's Infrastructure Monitoring with our own Application Dynamics and really marry the two for those insightful bits that we get from both. >> All right so one of the big themed discussion here is that journey toward AI Ops. >> Yes. >> While we speak actually I've got a team in Mountainview that is at the DevNet Create Show which Cisco helped organize. >> Sure. >> We're doing two days of interviews there and DevSecOps is probably one of the key topics their going to be talking about. In your keynote this morning I heard IT Ops in a discussion there so bring us inside a little bit organizationally you know what you're seeing you know your viewpoint on these various trends that are you know helping to modernize you know transform operations. >> Yeah I think from a operations organization standpoint you're going to see the applications team and the infrastructure team work even closer together. Maybe one of the things that didn't really make super clear in my keynote this morning is I actually work on kind of the app side of the house right? I'm the direct interface to the business. And as such I actually don't interface with ScienceLogic directly but I'm a strong partner with my infrastructure team who are I think they are all sitting over there that do run ScienceLogic right and so in today's world you really can't just say oh this is infa problem they are going to deal with it. Because of that really big mix of well is it an infrastructure problem, is it an application health problem? And a lot of times it's both. And so organizationally it might be two separate organizations but the need to work together is you know even greater today than ever before. >> You're preaching to the choir. I mean when we launched Virtualization and then later when Containers came around there was the nirvana that oh I'm going to have some unit of infrastructure where the application people just don't need to worry about it. >> Right. >> You know serverless from it's name seems to imply that but we understand that eventually you know there's networking, there's storage, there's compute all underneath these kind of things. >> That's right. >> It's just repackaging so you know the applications important you know I'm long time infrastructure guy. >> That's right >> But, the number one rule is the reason we are here is to run that application and make sure your data you know gets where it needs to be otherwise you know we're not here just to power things. >> That's right. And I just realized I probably would get in trouble if I said it's actually the application, infrastructure, and of course the network all has to work together. >> Yeah well that's a given. Can you just we talked a little bit about App Dynamics you know when I think about Cisco you know broad portfolio, you know the SD-WAN, the ACI how do some of those fit into this discussion are there tie ins with what ScienceLogic is doing? >> It absolutely does. So as I talked about it when we talked about that collection of super heroes it's not a single super hero it's not a duo either it's really a big team. It's The Avengers right? And so when you think about Cisco's portfolio we have a lot of additional components needed to provide that modern operating IT operating platform right? So we talked about a lot about Application Dynamics we talked about ScienceLogic but what Cisco brings to the mix is things like ACI, Tetration, Policy Enforcement, Multicloud Management. So all those things again have to work together like The Avengers do to provide that modern platform. >> Yeah you mentioned multicloud and I know in your keynote you talked about AWS and GCP. >> That's right. >> How's Cloud changing things in your world? >> It absolutely is again it's I'll go back to the it's both a blessing and a curse right? The blessing is enormous capability that we get from the Cloud, enormous flexibility. As and example using Cisco.com as an example we host a lot of you know a lot of public information about our products and websites and data sheets and that type of thing on Cisco.com. And then a couple years ago we decided we're going to refresh the engagement of Cisco.com We wanted to make it much more personalized. We wanted to incorporate video. Those are all great things but the moment you try to throw video and guess what? Native video whether it be in English or French or Chinese or Japanese depending on where you are well that put an enormous strain on our infrastructure and if you had to travel if the packets had to travel from Japan to the United States to our data center that would slow things down. So we took advantage of Public Cloud to really kind of push out the content to the edges so that we could get localized content as close to the customer as possible. That's the great thing about it. But again the management of that increasing complexity right so both a blessing and a curse. AWS, GCP, we are using for doing a lot of video streaming work. And so again great capabilities from that platform as well. >> All right so we saw this week a lot of announcements of some of the integrations Service Now and App Dynamics were two of the ones that highlighted that I think impacted you. Anything from the announcements that is particularly excited you and I guess final on that is there anything roadmap wise that you know you'd be looking directionally for this phase to evolve towards? >> Yeah I think I was excited to see in fact that's one of the main reasons why we chose ScienceLogic in the first place was the quality and the amount of integrations that they have right? And so we're also a big Service Now customer and we see the benefits of automatically open cases in Service Now when ScienceLogic detects an issue as an example right? And I would say going forward we'll be looking to either have out of the box or if needed you know Cisco IT will build something even more integrations with the Cisco products. We already have App Dynamics but as I mentioned we have a lot of other components that are critical to the network and so we'll be looking for tighter integration and all this to drive really drive data together so that we can get to what I think what most people at this conference are hoping to achieve which is really driving towards automation and AI Ops right? So that's really the desire for I think for everyone attending this conference. It's certainly our desire in Cisco IT. And you know I'm looking forward to working with ScienceLogic to building out that roadmap. >> You know so I guess final question for you you talked about that automation, where are you when it comes to we look at you know things like machine learning and automation which if you listen to the analyst that spoke this morning is like you want to make sure you separate those things. >> That's right. >> We understand you know any of us that have done process and operations is you know you can automate a really bad process and it's not a good thing. >> That's right, that's right. >> So where are you on that journey? What do you see? You know what are the barriers that keep us from kind of the nirvana where you know oh geez I can actually just seal off the data center and let everything run? >> Right I think it's funny you mentioned Cisco Live so actually I present on a topic of AI at Cisco Live as well. So what this other speaker talked about really hit home with me understanding what is AI really. Because I think there's a general perception in the press that it's like this magical fairy dust you can just sprinkle on everything and it like makes everything perfect right? AI is really good at pattern recognition but you still need to put some check points and really have human beings kind of check the work of AI right? And so you know we actually have seen data center outages not Cisco but in the press when AI runs amok right? And so I think the first step of automation that's a given. We want to do that but that involves a lot of human beings kind of looking at the data and deciding okay these sequence of events can be cured by this set of automation. AI Ops is a something that's a whole different thing if you followed the definition of AI to say okay let the computer do it all on its own. I don't think we're there yet. I think we have a ways to go. And I certainly wouldn't trust want to trust our you know multi billion dollar business to AI Ops at this point in time. >> Well Bailey there's an event we did a couple years ago with a couple professors from MIT that are really forward looking on this and they say it's racing with the machines because people plus machines will always do better >> Yes. >> Than people alone or machines alone and hopefully that keeps some of us that are a little bit worried about the Skynets of the world taking over from getting a little bit too paranoid all of a sudden. >> I totally agree with that statement. In fact the quote that jumps in my head is "Better together". And I'll close with ScienceLogic App Dynamics better together. People AI better together. >> All right well Bailey since you ended on a perfect quote there thank you so much for joining and I hope to see you at Cisco Live San Diego. >> Fantastic, my pleasure. >> All right and thank you so much for watching theCUBE as always, I'm Stu Miniman here at ScienceLogic 2019 in Washington D.C. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Apr 24 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by ScienceLogic. off the keynote stage this morning Bailey Szeto All right so Bailey, I've actually, you know but that's not the bulk of our business. I totally understand Bailey and what I love is employee engagement all runs through you know Cisco.com And I love you did a nice little video. You know the shovel right? and kind of the scale and scope of what you do. And so I run the IT portions of that as well. at Cisco Live the last two years. kind of pair that with you know of those dynamics and how that impact a lot of complexity and so it's pretty important that we the joke is if you say single pane of glass and you know Cisco has you know ScienceLogic you know Cisco of course has a number of probably takes more like the Avengers to be able to I think we must all have Avengers on our mind because employment of it so you know we always right and so you know as IT professionals All right so one of the big themed discussion here Mountainview that is at the DevNet Create Show helping to modernize you know transform operations. is you know even greater today than ever before. You're preaching to the choir. you know there's networking, there's storage, the applications important you know you know gets where it needs to be the network all has to work together. you know when I think about Cisco you know And so when you think about Cisco's portfolio Yeah you mentioned multicloud and I know in your we host a lot of you know a lot of public information about roadmap wise that you know you'd be looking directionally looking to either have out of the box or if needed you know comes to we look at you know things like machine learning We understand you know any of us that have done And so you know we actually have seen data center outages about the Skynets of the world taking over In fact the quote that jumps to see you at Cisco Live San Diego. All right and thank you so much for watching

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Luc Horré, Realdolmen | ScienceLogic Symposium 2019


 

(upbeat music) >> From Washington, DC, it's theCUBE, covering ScienceLogic Symposium 2019. Brought to you by ScienceLogic. >> I'm Stu Miniman, and this is theCUBE's coverage of ScienceLogic Symposium 2019, here at the Ritz-Carlton, in Washington, DC. Have about 460 people, it's a good mix of enterprise users, of course there's government agencies, as well as a lot of service providers, which is really where ScienceLogic started and has, many of their customers are in that space. And happy to welcome to the program, coming to us from Europe, a first time guest on the program, Luc Horee, who's RCloud and innovation Manager at Realdolmen, who's, as I said, a service provider. Thanks so much for joining me. >> Thank you, no problem. >> So, you're based in Belgium, you're a service provider, tell us a little bit about Realdolmen, a little bit about the size, scope, number of users, and we'll take it from there. >> Realdolmen is an Belgium company, around 1,500 people in an country that is small compared to the U.S. So we have an total of 11 million people. One of the biggest service providers in Belgium, but we also do reselling, and we also do service integration. Our customers it's Belgium, it's what we call SMB market. But we have around, in total, I think three thousand customers in Belgium. Some only are buying products or licenses, others are in fact in full manage service operations. >> Okay great, yeah, the SMB market, as you call it, we understand, especially for service providers, really important market, help them, I don't want to have to manage my IT, I want to be able to go to experts that can do this. >> That's one of the reasons, yeah. >> RCloud and Innovation Manager, it's an interesting title, tell us a little bit about your role inside the company. >> I already worked for more than 36 years in the company, so I had a lot of jobs within the company. In the previous job I was a Operations Manager, and now I am RCloud and Innovation Manager. RCloud is our private cloud that we are using for hosting customers and serving customers. It's and active-active data center where we can do disaster recovery, set up, and so on. So for customers that are no longer interested in building their own data centers, that's what we doing. And it's for some of them also an in between on-premise data center and public clouds. So we have customers moving to Azure and AWS, and sometimes they just stay for specific reasons in our RCloud. Innovation Manger is about how do we set up, how do we improve our tooling, and how do we improve our processes in helping and unburdening our customers. >> You mentioned the public clouds like Azure and AWS, do you have relationships with them, do you have connections into some of those public clouds? >> We are Microsoft partner, so most of our customers are going to Azure, but it's also building up in Amazon, and we did receive some questions also about Google. >> Okay, great. So when we talk about operations, service providers, very rapid change environment, typically you have a lot of customers to be able to deal with, give us a little bit about what's changing in your business, the infrastructure management and the tooling space. >> In the tooling space, IT is moving, IT in motion is what we heard in the keynote this morning. Customers are expecting a lot, about dashboarding, they want to see how their business is behaving not about what is a device doing. We need to monitor more and more applications, and the business lines. So that's why we are implementing ScienceLogic, or had an implementation of ScienceLogic, and now we doing the second phase in building more runbook automations, more dashboarding, more experience levels instead of SLS or XLS. >> Great, I want to get to the automation, but first, you've only been using ScienceLogic for a couple of years now, bring us back to, was it a bunch of in-house tooling that you had created for managing before that drove us there, paint us a picture of kind of the before and how you ended up with ScienceLogic. >> We had Microsoft Systems Center Operations Manager, we had Nagios, we had some plugs-in on this tooling, so it was I think in total six or seven tools, and we did some interfacing about it. But yeah, seven tools interfacing, not easy to run, a lot of management, a lot of people involved, a lot of skills required, so the reason was simplify it. >> So did you completely eliminate those seven previous tools? >> Yup, as of the 1st of April this year they are gone. >> All right, so there was a little bit of a journey, can you walk us through a little bit about there, was it prying it away from certain people, was it maturity from your side or from a product standpoint, what were some of those points that took a little while to get there. >> It took a while just to convince everybody in the company, set up an organization, it's not only the tooling it's also the organization need to be involved, a lot of communication, there's a change process going on, and we implemented, the first customers were in November 2017 on the system, and since then every month we added sometimes two, sometimes five, sometimes seven, sometimes one, as customer, so the people internally and externally need to get used to the product, so that's step-by-step, keep it simple, do it slowly but fast, and with a deadline. >> So, you talk a little bit about your organization operationally, what's the impact then to your ultimate end user, do they see anything, has it changed how, has it improved cost? >> It's changed certainly for the customers, because the old tools, there was no multi tenancy, there was not easy logon, so they had no access to the dashboards, they were just waiting for the monthly reporting and say, okay, it was up, okay we were, now they can have access, we use single sign-on to do that, so the customers are happy that they can see, they can see line of business dashboarding, and so on. And certainly internally it did improve a lot of cost savings, because a lot of the things we are doing now is automation, and we started the integration with our ITSM tool, and that will go live, normally next week. >> Okay, what ITSM tool are you-- >> It's a German tool, it's from a company called OMNINET, and the tool is called OMNITRACKER. >> Great, talk now about that automation, where have you come so far, where do you see it progressing in the future? >> We started first with some task automation, we have an 24/7 operation team, first-line, and they were doing a lot of manual tasks, so where we can, and what we first did was automate some manual tasks. And now we are progressing with ITSM integration, bi-directional integration, and then we will start with removing from old mailboxes, where we can do some restart automatically, so we will take a look at the incidents, see what we can do, see if we can do some automation with that, and we will certainly progress very far, as far as possible to do more and more automation and less manual work. >> Great, tell us, you've attended this event before, what brings you back to the event? >> First of all I want to see a lot of the demos, what's coming, because we are today, 8.12 version was announced, we are on 8.9, we will move next week to 8.10, so what is coming, so I have to talk internally to people, okay, what's coming, I need to convince all program managers, service delivery managers, I can talk to customers what is coming, what they can expect, so that's one of the reasons. The other reason is to talk to other customers of ScienceLogic, what are you doing, what's helping you, what's not, and so on. >> Yeah, I noticed one of the things they talked about is making it easier to upgrade from versions, when you think about the cloud world, as we talk about it, is, if your customers are in Azure, you don't ask them what version of Azure they're running, you're running whatever version Microsoft has it, they patch it, they update it, if security fix happens it goes there, when you talk about moving from 8.9 to 10 to 12, that process of when do I do it, how do I do it, how's ScienceLogic doing it, keeping things easy to upgrade, were there things in the keynote that you were ready to jump on? >> We started with, the first version 8.3 or 4 I think, and we always try to be in good shape in the newer releases. So we already had some experience with upgrading, and it's going smooth. And whatever I heard from the system engineers, it's going better and better and better. So normally we have only a very small outage to do that, in fact it should be minimal, sometimes they switch over or something like that, when a database is changed, but normally operations is always running 24/7, and there is no interruption for operations. >> Has there been anything at the show that you've seen so far, either through the demos, talking to some of the experts, or in the keynote, that you want to highlight? >> One of the things that I have seen is the connection with the application, with the APM tools, that's what our customers also are requesting more and more, the integration of infrastructure and application, and the multi cloud of course. >> Yeah, that's definitely something we've heard. All right Luc, I want to give you the final word, things to take away, for people that haven't come to a ScienceLogic event, what you think that they should take away from an event like this. >> For me the greatest take-away is come here to learn. Come here to see what is possible, what the future is, what AIOps will mean in the future, prepare yourself for the next three to five years, that's the main reason. >> Great, well thank you so much, preparing for the next three to five years, we know the pace of change isn't slowing down at all, so it's great to be able to talk to a practitioner that's helping to manage and deal with so many of those environments, thanks so much for joining me. >> Thank you. >> All right, and we'll be back with more coverage here, be sure to check out thecube.net for all interviews, I'm Stu Miniman, and thanks so much for watching. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Apr 24 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by ScienceLogic. and has, many of their customers are in that space. a little bit about the size, scope, and we also do service integration. we understand, especially for service providers, That's one of the reasons, RCloud and Innovation Manager, it's an interesting title, and how do we improve our processes and we did receive some questions also about Google. to be able to deal with, give us a little bit and now we doing the second phase in building and how you ended up with ScienceLogic. a lot of skills required, so the reason was simplify it. as of the 1st of April this year they are gone. All right, so there was a little bit of a journey, it's also the organization need to be involved, because a lot of the things we are doing now is automation, and the tool is called OMNITRACKER. and we will certainly progress very far, to other customers of ScienceLogic, what are you doing, Yeah, I noticed one of the things they talked about and we always try to be in good shape in the newer releases. and the multi cloud of course. for people that haven't come to a ScienceLogic event, For me the greatest take-away is come here to learn. preparing for the next three to five years, I'm Stu Miniman, and thanks so much for watching.

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Nigel Wilks, Computacenter & Clive Spanswick, ScienceLogic | ScienceLogic Symposium 2019


 

>> From Washington DC, it's theCUBE. Covering the ScienceLogic Symposium 2019. Brought to you by ScienceLogic. >> Hi, I'm Stu Miniman, and this is theCUBE's special coverage of ScienceLogic symposium 2019 here at the Ritz-Carlton, in Washington DC, about 460 people here, I'm told over 50% growth, from last year's event, the first time we've had theCUBE here, really excited to be able to dig in, with a number of the executives, customers and partners, and no better way, to kick off than one of the users, here at the event, actually coming here from across the pond, here to the district, happy to welcome to the program first-time guest, Nigel Wilks who's the Head of Global Tooling at Computacenter, based in the UK, Nigel, thanks so much for joinin' us. >> Hey, a pleasure. >> And joining him from ScienceLogic we have Clive Spanswick, who's the Vice President of Sales from EMEA, Clive thanks so much for joinin' us. >> Pleasure to be here. >> All right, so Nigel, set the stage for us, coming to the event here, tell me what brings you here, and tell us a little bit about Computacenter. >> Yeah sure, so, we're a relatively new customer to ScienceLogic so, I think, what, we signed two, three weeks ago? So, not deployed yet, but got great expectations. So, there's a lot of background research in the sessions. Finding about more what the additional capabilities that we can unlock, which will help drive our business further forward. So, Computacenter is a large IT provider, global. Based in the UK, as headquarters. My area of the business is in the Managed Services sector. So realistically, we're looking to reduce our cost to serve. Be more proactive for our customers, and, we've got great expectations of what ScienceLogic can do around those areas. Unlocking more automation, and eventually leading down the AI path. >> So Nigel, what I heard in the keynote is, some of the same themes I've been hearing around the industry, we are unparalleled as to how fast things are changing in the industry, there's just more complexity, there's more heterogeneous environments, for companies like yours, usually agility is one of those things that's coming to the top of the environment and oh my gosh, when I became an analyst about nine years ago, it was the tooling and management options out there where usually some of the things that customers would say are weak in their environment, and something I think I've heard for my entire career, so, maybe give us a little bit as to some of what you're hearing from the business side and how it makes sure that you can run your services faster and ultimately serve your customers better and how your look at, I don't know whether you call it AI Ops, but this whole space, fits into that environment. >> Sure, so-- >> Yeah. >> We've with probably a lot of organic growth within Computacenter over quite a short period of time. Also through acquisitions, we've got quite a fragmented tooling landscape globally. So, nearly two years ago, we kind of set on the journey to become more of a global entity, and certainly from my perspective a tooling landscape. Looking to consolidate those down, simplify our services, again helping reduce our cost base, and then leverage the automation stuff I talked about earlier. So, just going to ScienceLogic, we're moving away from some of the big names. And consolidating over 50 tools into the one ScienceLogic solution. >> Wow. That's great, let's bring ya into the discussion Clive, yeah, I heard in the keynote this morning, it was, the typical customer, it's at least 14 tools. >> Yes. >> That get consolidated down. I think back about five years ago, frictionless and simplicity were the terms that I heard. I talked to a lot of companies, it's like "Oh okay, yes I've got integrations I need to do "if I'm doing acquisitions, whether I be in, "if I'm in services of course that's there" But, you know, financial industries, and, heck, Cisco IT who I'm going to be talking to later, does an acquisition a month, what are you seeing, give us a little bit of the EMEA flavor and-- >> Sure. >> How what Nigel's saying, how is that resonating with your customer base? >> Yeah, absolutely Stu. So we see this a lot with the leading service providers now that are really being challenged by their customers to really extend their portfolio of services, over an ever more diverse range of technologies, and this is one of the big challenges that has driven tool sprawl over the course of the last seven to ten years, so simplification of the toolset, is really one of the key drivers to really deliver outcomes for efficiency, so a lot of the way we see modern service providers operating today really is all about automation, to get to better automation at a lower cost you have to drive simplification into the tool chain. So, we see this a lot with our customers across the region and indeed worldwide, that taking the tools landscape and really collapsing that into a much more simplified model is an essential ingredient to drive efficiencies that then in turn can be delivered to the customer as lower-cost services, so that's the real driving force that we see for customers today. >> Alright. Nigel, we'd love to hear, I know you've just gone through the process of choosing but, what are you looking for, are there specific business drivers, how will success be measured in your environment? >> Part of the process was, to look at what our business requirements were. And map those on through an RFI process. Of which ScienceLogic were one of the vendors that took part. So I think at the benchmark of everything we did, at the heart of the whole process, was that business requirements. Just making sure that whichever toolsets we selected, would go down that route. We never expected to have a single-vendor solution, which, fortunately we've got ScienceLogic which covers the majority, but with the partner ecosystem, some of those guys are here today. It kind of rounds it up for us. But moving away from our current providers, some of those, they present challenges to us as well. Tryin' to unlock data that's within the platforms, some of those tools are through acquisitions. So as much as you've got a brand name as part of a whole stable of tools, they don't inter-operate very well. And the beauty of going to ScienceLogic was, everything comes in together, even the partner tools, which allows us to really look at what we can do in the future. >> Alright, so, Nigel I've got the tough question for you. When I came into the show, one of the things that really struck me, is how data's at the center of what's important here, you know, when we look at companies, digital transformation often is a buzzword, but, we've really defined the difference between the old way and the modern environment is, how is data something that can actually drive your business, are you data-driven in your decisions, can you monetize data, what I heard in the keynote discussion is, data's such an important, not just the collecting but leveraging, and that's driving the intelligence, the automation. How much did that focus on data play into your decision, and can you give us a little bit of insight as to how your company looks at the role of data in the IT world today? >> Well, it's very important, that's quite a simple solution to that one. So for me, an infrastructure tooling perspective, being able to bring all the data into one place but contextualize it as well, means that we can then do some good stuff. Again, driving us down that automation path but from an end-user point of view we've got end-user analytics, that can open up a lot of different worlds for us, predicting what issues users have, rather than calling a service desk, theoretically, going further down the future, we'll be calling them to say, "I can see you've got a problem, "I can fix it for you remotely." Those kind of decisions that we can make from that data. But in my kind of space, the infrastructure tooling side, we need to go onto that AI Ops journey, and as you heard this morning, now, or at least a few weeks ago, to get there, it's like getting the data into a good shape, knowing what we want to do with the AI Ops moving forward. So, automation's a good candidate, that helps up achieve some of our objectives, reduces customers' downtime as well but, we've also got to be careful that we're not tryin' to automate resolution to poor behavior. >> Yeah >> Yeah, so, rather than fixing the root cause, we need to actually look at things and say, "Is this an incident-worthy event, "is this something that "we need to actually do something with, "or is it just an automation candidate?" And it's going to drive some of those behaviors for us. >> Clive, I'd love to get your viewpoint as to what you're hearing from customers, when I listened to the analyst this morning, he's like "You need to really differentiate "between that machine learning piece, "and the automation." Because any of us that've worked in operations environment, you can automate a bad process. >> Yeah. >> And data doesn't necessarily mean good information, so we need to manage those things a little bit separately, and that maturation of where customers are for both automation and intelligence, is a tough one, when they did a poll when your CEO was up on stage, nobody's fully, turn things over to the computers. >> Yep, yep. >> So, where are your customers, how are they thinking through the AIML, the use of data, and those pieces? >> So see, I think to be fair, a lot of customers today, AI Ops as we know is a relatively new term to the market, so I think a lot of businesses are struggling to recognize their own maturity, and I think, what we learned from this morning from Dave Link, our CEO, about how you characterize yourself on the journey to AI Ops maturity I think is a very valuable thing, and I think as I look at a lot of the customers and we saw from the poll earlier in the main session, that a lot of businesses today are fairly in the middle of maturity, so they're really at about the point of consolidating all the data in one place, the next big step of that of course is to clean that data up and contextualize it, so that you can start to leverage that data for the meaningful outcomes, and that's really where the smarts of machine learning and early-stage AI really start to play. We still, to be fair, still a long way off from the realization of full AI, but there are many pragmatic things that you can do, to get you very well level set, to take full advantage when those opportunities start to present themselves. >> Alright. So, Nigel, you're goin' through this process to really modernize your toolset you said you're replacing a whole bunch of things with the new one, what ultimately will this mean to your end-user customers? >> I think a more proactive service. Just dialing it back down to the simple things. If we simplify our service, we can have, from a business point of view, we can be consistent in how we deliver service globally. But from an end-user point of view. At the end of the day, most of the stuff is event-driven. End users typically find those out before systems do. Just from whole new cycles, reducing false positives and things. But it also means that, again, automation is being at the heart of what we want to try and achieve. We can automatically fix these things, so it's less downtime. And then hopefully we can just kind of prevent. Automation's great, but prevention's better. >> Yeah. How do you see your journey going forward, when you look at that automation, I mean I can't imagine you at a day one, your desk, putting everything in and everything's there, do you have a roadmap out there as to how you look at your deployment and how you're going to change things internally? Yeah. This, realistically, is going to be a catalyst to how we do things. So what starts off as a tooling replacement project, becomes that overall, we can do things global process. Working a little bit smarter than we have been before, doing things on a larger scale, but using common processes. That's quite a big shift in how we work now. But also means from our sales forces perspective, they're selling the same thing, it doesn't matter which country they're in. It becomes more about delivery location, and a language. >> Great. Clive, give us a little bit as to, what are customers like Nigel, what should they expect once they've made the deployment, how long does that transformation take-- >> Sure. >> And what's the day one and then, three months, six months out? >> Sure, great questions. So the whole journey that we're exploring, with all of our customers, is this move to AI Ops and they've done really the support of the resilient digital experience for their customers. The journey itself is continuous. So, one of the big challenges that we know to be true in the space that we operate in, is the demand for constant change. So the idea and the process that we're going on with, with computer sensor is that, we will take you through a series of maturity stages, of crawl, walk and run. And then once we get them to run, it will be a case of continuous improvement and continuous development. We expect to get to the first break of that within the first quarter, we're going to be delivering instant value from the platform pretty much from the word go, but once we get into the process of business as usual, running the operation, it really becomes about the improvement of moving, from really the stages of helping them react better to incidents, and then moving into a much more proactive and predictive state, and then finally, the endgame of this of course, is to really get to the point of, automate to avoid the incidents happening altogether, and that really, I guess, is where we start to step towards the ultimate vision of AI Ops and the things that that can bring to bear. >> Alright, so, Nigel, I want you to take me inside your team, 'cause on the one hand we say, "I have a whole bunch of tools, "I'm going to simplify and I'm going to unify "and that's going to be great." And I'm sure there's many on your team they're like, "Ah, I hate this tool, and this one's a pain "and this and that. "But we kind of know how "to do everything that I'm doing today." So, one, give us a little insight as to, is there some of that clinging to the past, and, on the other hand, are there some things that, like, "Oh my gosh, I'm glad I will never have to do "one two or three ever again, "once I've gone through this process"? >> Great, great question, so, everyone has their favorite tool, or favorite bit of software. I think, internally, we've clearly got that challenge as well. But it's fair to say, the reverse is true, there's a lot of tools out there that the user base are more than happy to get rid of. But ultimately, I think as we've gone through the cycle with ScienceLogic, and certainly we've had some good workshops with the various user base, highlighting what's possible, we've had some really really positive feedback. I still expect challenges, change, change is a big thing, most people don't like change but, I think there's a great opportunity for people to, at the end of the day learn a new tool. Something different, something fresh. And also then, they can think about what the tool can do, how can we exploit it more, so, we're not locked into the model that we were in before, the tools that we'd use for years and we've worked in the same way. We've got an exciting journey to start looking at how we can derive better services, how we can simplify our services. How we can let customers self-serve, to a degree as well. So you know, I think it's an exciting journey that we're on. And I think it'll be good to come back next year and demonstrate where we are. >> I love that, I definitely want to talk about that, Clive, give you the final word on this. What final advice to you give him, he's made the decision, he's goin' onboard. Tell him, I'm sure, unicorns and rainbows and everything's going to be phenomenal, but, what are some of the things you hear from your customers as they roll things out, give him a little bit of the "Yay" and a little bit of the-- >> Sure >> Just "Hey make sure "we've educated everybody on this." >> Yeah, again, great question Stu. So, from working with our customer base, the big thing that we see is that this is a continuous journey. The journey doesn't stop. What we do is we make things progressively easier, and the opportunities to scale and standardize are almost limitless. I guess the one word of counsel I would give is that, one of the big things that we see, with any major transformation, we're talking about the automations we can deliver around monitoring but, with any transformation it is really how you start to shift the culture of the organization to work a way around the new ways of operating, and really winning the hearts and minds of the guys that this stuff is going to make the biggest difference to. So, we're talking in the first instance of course about the operational stakeholders and the key users, having them engaged, and really working that process to get the maximum benefit out of the platform. From there, really is about the improvements that they can achieve in customer experience and of course, as Nigel has already said, a lot of that is really centered around the opportunities it's going to present them to show real innovations, around their service portfolio and my guidance there would be, don't be shy to show the world of the possible, to your enterprise customers, because they are demanding more, and there is so much that they can do with the platform to really unleash super value to their customer base. >> Yeah I love that, the world of the possible, we understand all the stresses and strains put on business and IT today so, Clive, Nigel, thank you so much for joining us, Nigel we look forward to hearin' how things go, catch up with you in a year maybe. >> Pleasure. >> Of course, thank you. >> Alright, so we'll be here all day at the Ritz-Carlton in Washington DC, ScienceLogic Symposium 2019, I'm Stu Miniman and as always, thank you for watchin' theCUBE. (groovy techno music)

Published Date : Apr 24 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by ScienceLogic. really excited to be able to dig in, And joining him from ScienceLogic we have Clive Spanswick, coming to the event here, and eventually leading down the AI path. and how it makes sure that So, just going to ScienceLogic, it was, the typical customer, it's at least 14 tools. I talked to a lot of companies, it's like over the course of the last seven to ten years, but, what are you looking for, And the beauty of going to ScienceLogic was, and that's driving the intelligence, the automation. But in my kind of space, the infrastructure tooling side, And it's going to drive some of those behaviors for us. as to what you're hearing from customers, and that maturation of where customers are on the journey to AI Ops maturity to really modernize your toolset Just dialing it back down to the simple things. is going to be a catalyst to how we do things. how long does that transformation take-- and the things that that can bring to bear. 'cause on the one hand we say, to start looking at how we can derive better services, and everything's going to be phenomenal, but, Just "Hey make sure and the opportunities to scale and standardize Yeah I love that, the world of the possible, and as always, thank you for watchin' theCUBE.

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Joe Damassa, IBM & Murali Nemani, ScienceLogic | IBM Think 2019


 

>> Live from San Francisco. It's theCUBE covering IBM Think 2019 brought to you by IBM. >> Welcome back everyone, this is the CUBE's live coverage in San Francisco at Moscone Center for IBM Think 2019. I'm John Furrier with Dave. Volante Dave it's been in AI, it's been cloud, it's been in data changing the game. We've got two great guests here Murali Nemani, CMO of ScienceLogic, your CEO has been on the CUBE before and Joe Damassa who is the VP of strategy and offerings for hybrid cloud service at IBM. Thanks for joining us. >> Welcome. >> Appreciate it. >> Thank you guys. >> Welcome to CUBE. So day four of four days coverage, yes, you can see the messaging settling the feedback settling, AI clearly front and center, role of data in that and then cloud scale across multiple capabilities. Obviously on premise multi cloud is existing already. Software's changing all this. >> Right. >> And so AI impacting operations is key. So how do you guys work together? What's the relationships in ScienceLogic and IBM? Could you just take a minute to explain that? >> I think I mean, clearly, as you talked about the hybrid nature of what we're dealing with, with the complexity of it, it's all going to be about the data. You know, software is great, but it's about software that collects the data, analyzes the data, and gives you the insights so you can actually automate and create value for our clients. So it's really this marriage, it's a technology but it's a technology that allows us to get access to the data so we can make change, it's all about the data. >> And so a lot of what IBM has been doing is building the analytics engines and Watson it's for them. Our partnership has been really building the data and the data lake and the real time aspects of collecting and preparing that data so that you can really get interesting outcomes out of it. So when you think about predictive models, when you think about the the way that data can be applied to doing things like anomaly detection that ultimately accelerate and automate operations. That's where the relationship really starts taking hold. >> So you guys are specialized in AIops and IT apparatus as that transforms with scale and data which you need machine running, you need a kind of gave it automation. >> Yes. >> And which is the devops use of operations is don't go down, right, up and running, high availability. >> Yeah. >> So on the cloud services side, talk about where the rubber is meeting the road from a customer standpoint, because the cultural shift from IT Service Management, IT operations has been this manual, some software here and there, but it's been a process. Older processes change a little bit, but this is a new game. Talk about how you guys are engaging the customers. >> Well, a part of it I mean, it's interesting when you step back and you stop breathing, you're on exhaust in terms of pushing what you're trying to sell and you listen to your customers what we're hearing is that they all understand the destination. They understand they're moving to the cloud, they understand the value that's going to bring, they're having a hard time getting started. It's how do I start the journey ? I've got all of this estate and traditional IT operations capabilities it's kind of move. How do I modernize it? How do I make it so it's portable across different environments. And so when you step back, you know, we basically said, hey, you need the portability of the platform. So what we're doing with Red Hat, what we're doing with IBM, cloud private, it creates that portable containerizing ability to take our existing workloads and start moving them, right. And then the other thing that the clients need are the services. Who's going to help me advise me on what workloads should move, which one shouldn't, most of the staff fails because you move the wrong things. How do you manage that? How do you build it? And then when you're done, and you've got this hybrid complex environment, how do we actually get insights to it and the data I need to operationalize it? How do I do IT apps, when I don't own everything within the four walls of my data set. >> Now, are you guys going to market together? You guys sell each other products, the relationship with ScienceLogic and IBM is it a partnership, is it a joint development? Can you explain a little bit more on how you guys work together? >> Well, we're one of the largest sort of services provider in the industry. So as we bring, our products, our technologies and our capabilities to market, we bring ScienceLogic into those deals, we use ScienceLogic in our services so that we can actually deliver the value to our clients. So it is sort of a co development, co joint partnership plus also our goal to market. >> So you use that as a tool to do discovery and identify the data that's in and the data that we're talking about is everything I need to know about my IT operations, my applications, the dependencies. Maybe you could describe a little bit more. >> Sure if you think about one of the things that Joe was mentioning is, today, the workloads are shifting, you're going from, let's say management performance monitoring and management platforms that you need to evolve from, to incorporate new technologies like containers and microservices and server-less architectures. That's one area of how did the tool sets fundamentally evolve to support the latest technologies that are being deployed? So think about that. Second is, how do you consolidate those set of tools now you're managing? Because you're adopting cloud based technologies or new capabilities, and so get consolidation there. And the third is, these workloads that are now migrating out of your private cloud or private data center into public clouds, right? And then that workload migration, I think it is Forrester level saying, about 20% of the total workloads are currently in some sort of a public cloud environments. So there's a lot of work to do in terms of getting to that tipping point of where workloads are now truly in a multi cloud hybrid cloud. So as IBM accelerates that transition and their core competencies in helping these large enterprises make that transition, you need a common manageable environment, that the common visibility across those workloads. So that's at the heart of what we're pulling, and then the data sets happened to be data sets that are coming either from the application layer, data coming from the log management systems, it could be data coming from a service desk in terms of the kind of CMDB based data sets, and we're building a data lake that ultimately allows you to see across these heterogeneous system. >> It could be service request to get that really touches the business process so you can now start to sort of map the value and how change is going to affect that value, right? >> Yeah, exactly. >> Yeah. >> I mean, what's interesting about ScienceLogic as a partner, it's the breadth of their platform in terms of the different things they can monitor, the depth, the ability to go into containers, and kind of understand what the applications are doing in them and the scale in terms of the types of devices. So when you think about, the types of devices, we're going to have to manage everything from, sensors in an Internet of Things, environment to routers, to sophisticated servers and applications that can be running anywhere, you need the flexibility of the platform that they have in order to be able to deliver that. >> And I think that's a key point when you talking about containers and Kubernetes, we heard your CEO Jeannie remitting mentioned Kubernetes, onstage like, that's great, good time(mumbles) I know no one like Kubernetes now it's mainstream. >> Yeah. >> So this is showing them what's going on the industry which is the on premise decomposition of on premise with cloud private, you guys have. >> Yes. >> Is giving them the ability to use containers to manage their existing stuff and do that work and then have the extension to cloud, public cloud or whatever public cloud. This gives them more mount modern capabilities. So the question is, this change the game we know that but how has it changed AIOps and what does it mean? So I guess the first question is, what is AIOps? And what is this new on premise with cloud private and full public cloud architecture look like in AIOps 2.0? >> So for me, it's a very simple definition. It's really using algorithmic mechanisms, right? Towards automating operations, right? It's a very simple way, simplistic way of looking at it. But ultimately, the end game is to automate operations because you need to move at the pace of business and machine speed. And if you want to go, move in machine speed, you can have, I mean, you can't throw enough humans at this problems, right? Because of the pace of change, the familiarity of the workloads spinning up and sitting down. We have a bank as a customer who turns up containers for every 90 seconds and then turn them down. Just can't keep that in that real time state of change and being able to understand the topological relationships between the application layer and the underlying infrastructure so that you can truly understand the service health because when an application degrades in performance, the biggest issue is a war room's scenario where everyone's saying, it's not me, it's not me and because everyone's green on their front, but it's now how do you get that connective tissue all the way running-- >> Well it's also not only the change, it's also the velocity of data coming off that exhaust or the changes and services is thrown off tons of data that you need machines now I mean, that's kind of the thing. >> Exactly, yeah. And I would add to that, I think part of the definition of AIOps is evolving. We know where we're coming from is more fit for purpose analytics, right? I have this problem, I'm the collect this data, I'm going to put these automations in place too address it. We need to kind of take it data Model approach that says, how do I ingest all of this data? You know, even at the start, when you're looking at which workloads and you're doing discovery and assessment of workloads, that data should go into a data lake that can be used later when you're actually doing the operations and management of those workloads. So what data do we collect at every stage of the migration and the transformation of it, and including the operational data? And then how do we put a form analytics on it, and then get the true insights? I think we're just scratching the surface of applying to AI, because it's all been very narrow cast, narrow focus, I have this problem, I collect this data, I can automate this server, it needs to move much beyond that to it... >> And services are turning up and on and off so fast as a non deterministic angle here, and you got state, non deterministic, I mean, those are hard technical computer science problems to solve >> Yeah. >> That's you don't just put a processor around say, oh, yeah. >> Well, let's back to the the scalability of the platform, the ability in real time to be monitoring and looking at that data and then doing something right. >> All right now, humans aren't completely removed from the equation, right? And so I'm interested in how the humans are digesting and visualizing all this data, especially at this speed there a visualization component? How does that all evolving? >> Yeah, I think that to me I mean, that's part of the biggest challenges. You humans are a, they have to be the ones that kind of analyze what's coming and say, what does this mean when you haven't already algorithmically built it into your automation technology, right? And then they also don't have to be the one to train, the system is doing to actually do it. So one of the things that were are that struggling with not struggling with, we're experimenting with is, how best to visualize this, right? We do some things now, we've got a hybrid cloud management platform, we're teaming with the product guys, and it's the ability to have four consoles. One from a consumption, how do I consume services from Amazon, IBM Cloud on premise, how do I deploy it? So in a Dev apps model, how do I fulfill that very quickly and operational councils, right, and then cost on asset management so you can actually have at glance say, oh, you know, I've got a big Hadoop cluster which been spun up, I'm paying $100,000 for it and it has zero utilization. So how do you visualize that so you can say oh, I'm need to put a rule in that if somebody's spinning something up on, you know, IBM Cloud and they're not using it, I either shut it down, or I sent messages out, right, for governance in top of it. So it's putting business rules and logic in terms, in addition to visualization to help automate. >> And Jeannie talked about this at our keynote efficiency versus innovation around how to manage and this is where the scale comes in. Because if you know that something's working, you want to to double down on it, you can then, kind of automate that away and then you just move someone, the humans to something else. This is where the AIOps I think it's going to be, I think, going to change the category. I mean, it's a Gartner Magic Quadrant for the IT operations. >> Right. >> AI potentially decimates that, I mean... >> Yeah, there's this argument that you know, you have these nice quadrants or let's say nicely defined market segments. You have the NPMD, the ITSM, the ITOM, you know, you have APM and so what's happening is in this world of AIOps, none of those D marks really fit anymore because you're seeing the convergence of that. And then the other transition that's happening is this movement from, you know, classic ops or Dev and a dev to Ops, Dev Ops and now dev sec Ops, you know, you're trying to get worlds to converge. And so when we talk about the data and being able to build data models, those data models need to converge across those domains. So a lot of the work we do is collect data sets from log management, from service desk and service management, from APM etc, and then build that data model in real time. So you can.... >> It kind of building an Uber or CMDB or I mean, right? (loud laughter) I mean, do most of your clients have a single CMDB? Probably not, right? >> Yeah. So this is sort of a new guidepost, isn't it? >> Yeah, a part of it is. There are these data puddles if you will, all right data exist in a lot of different places How do you bring them together so you can federate different data sources, different catalogs into a common platform because if a user is trying to decide, okay, should I spin this up on, you know, this environment or that one, you want the full catalog of capabilities that are on premise in your CMDB system with the legacy environment out of the catalogs that may exist on Amazon or Azure, etc and you want data across all that. >> It seems that everything's a data problem now. And datas are being embedded into the applications which are then the workflows are defining infrastructure, architecture, or are sole cloud, multi cloud, whatever the resource is, so we had JPMorgan Chase on top data geek on and she was talking about, we have models for the models and IBM has been talking about this concept of reasoning around the data. This is why I always like the cognition kind of angle of cognitive, because that's not just math, math is math, you do math on, you know, supervised machine learning and knowing processes to be efficient, but the cognition and the reasoning really helps get at that data set, right. So can you guys react to that? I mean, is everything a data problem? Is that how you should look at it and how does reasoning fit into all this? >> Well, I mean, that's back to your point about what is the humans role in this, right. So we're moving in a services business from primarily labor base with tools to make them more efficient to the technology doing the work. But the humans have to then say, when the technology get stumped, what does that mean? So should I build a new, how do I train it better? How do I, you know, take my domain expertise? How do I do the deep analytics to tell me all right, how do I solve those problems in the future? So the role changes I think Jenny talks about in terms of new collar workers. I mean, these are data scientists, these are people that understand the dynamics of the inner relationship of the different data, the data models that need to get built and they are guiding in effect the automation. >> I thought your CTO was on theCUBE talking about, Paul was talking about, you know, take the heavy and Rob Thomas was also on, the GM of the data plus AI team. I think he really nailed it. If you guys to take away the heavy lifting of the setup work then the data science who're actually there to do the reasoning or help assist in managing what's going on and putting guard rails around whatever business policy is. >> Today, I mean, we talked to in this about 79 percent I think it's a gardener stat of 79 percent of the data scientists. And these are these PhDs, they're highly valuable, spend their time collecting, preparing, cleansing those data models, right? So, you're now really applying that PhD level knowledge base towards solving a problem, you're just trying to make sense of the data. So one, do you have a holistic and a few? Two, is there a way to automate those things so you can then apply the human aspects towards the things that Joe was talking about. So that's a big part of what we're trying to come together in terms of the market for. >> Well guys thanks for the insight, thanks for coming on, great job. I think we talked for you know, an hour and on cultural shift because you mentioned the sets in here Ops and devs. It's a melting pot and it's a cultural shifts. I think that topic is worth following up on. But I'll let you guys just get a quick plug for you. I know you going to an event coming up and you got some work. You can talk about what you guys are doing. You got an event coming up, what your pitch, give a quick flag. >> Yeah, so we've got our symposium, which is our big user conference. It's in April. It's right in, it's on April 22 to 23rd to the 25th. It's in downtown Washington DC, Cherry Blossom festival season at the Ritz Carlton. And so a lot of that, we'll have theCUBE there as well. >> Yeah of course. >> So, we're looking forward to it. A lot of great energy to be carried over. >> We love going to the District. (laughs loudly) >> What don't we say, you guys are great, great to visit. So give the plugs with a service you're doing. Just give an update on what you guys are up to. >> Yeah, I think I mean, we're also we're investing the technology when we're full on board with the containerization, as we talked about, we're putting together a services portfolio. I think Jenny mentioned that we're taking a whole bunch of capability across IBM Global Technology Services, Global Business Services, and really coalescing into about, you know, 23 offerings to help customers advise on cloud, move to cloud build for cloud and manage on cloud and then you've seen the announcements here about what we're doing around the multi cloud management system. Those four console I talked about how do we help, you know, put a gearbox in place to manage the complexity of the hybrid nature that our customers are dealing with. >> It seems IBM got clear visibility on what's happening with cloud, cloud private, I think a really big announcement. I think it's not talked about in the show and I'll always kind of mentioned the key linchpin but you see cloud, multi cloud, hybrid cloud, you got AI and you got partnerships, ecosystem now its execution time, right? >> Yeah, exactly and, and frankly, that's the challenge, right? So we used to be able to manage it all on the four runs, right? Your SAP instances was in the data center, your servers were in the data center, your middleware is in the data center. Now I got my applications running in Salesforce.com often software as a service. I've got three or four different infrastructures of service providers. But I still have the legacy that I got to deal with. I mean the integration problems are just tremendous. >> Chairman VP of strategy at IBM hybrid cloud and Murali Nemani, CMO ScienceLogic, AI operations, bringing in hybrid clouds to theCUBE bringing all the coverage day four. I'm with Dave Volante, it's all about cloud AI developers all happening here in San Francisco this week. Stay with us from this short break. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Feb 15 2019

SUMMARY :

brought to you by IBM. it's been in data changing the game. the feedback settling, So how do you guys work together? that collects the data, analyzes the data, and the data lake and So you guys are specialized in AIops and running, high availability. So on the cloud services and the data I need to operationalize it? and our capabilities to market, and the data that we're talking about and management platforms that you need flexibility of the platform point when you talking about private, you guys have. So the question is, this and the underlying infrastructure that you need machines now I mean, the surface of applying to AI, That's you don't just put the ability in real time to be monitoring the system is doing to actually do it. the humans to something else. AI potentially the ITOM, you know, you have APM So this is sort of a and you want data across all that. of reasoning around the data. How do I do the deep analytics to tell me GM of the data plus AI team. of the data scientists. I think we talked for you know, an hour season at the Ritz Carlton. A lot of great energy to be carried over. We love going to the District. So give the plugs with of the hybrid nature and you got partnerships, But I still have the legacy bringing all the coverage day four.

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Khalid Al Rumaihi, Bahrain Economic Development Board | AWS Summit Bahrain


 

>> Live from Bahrain, it's theCUBE. Covering AWS Summit Bahrain. Brought to you by Amazon Web Services. >> Hello everyone, welcome to theCUBE's exclusive coverage. We are here in Bahrain in the Middle East for exclusive coverage of AWS's new region in the area. I'm John Furrier, cohost of theCUBE. It's our first time in the Middle East, as we go out into the world and expand theCUBE's mission of bringing you the best content, extracting the signal from the noise, meeting new people, connecting with thought leaders, people creating innovation, creating a new cultural shift with cloud computing. It's a societal global phenomenon, it's a change that's going to impact society, culture, economics, and humans. And this is theCUBE coverage, we're going to continue with that we are excited to have Khalid Al Rumaihi who is the CEO of the Bahrain Economic Development Board. He's the man, and responsible with his team for all the success and vision of bringing an Amazon region into the area. Here in Bahrain, Amazon has announced a region that's going to come in. And we expect to see economic revitalization. We expect to see an amplification of culture. Welcome to theCUBE, thank you for joining me. >> Thanks for having me John. >> Thanks for inviting us, and thanks for having us here. Here in the middle of all the action. Teresa Carlson from Amazon had a vision and you aligned with that vision, you guys are like-minded individuals. You saw something special with digital. >> Right. >> And this is not new. It's not like you woke up one morning and said, hey, let's bring Amazon in. Take us through the history of how we got here with Amazon about to launch a region early 2019 in Bahrain. You guys have had a vision, take us through that. >> You know, I started in my position about three years ago. I remember March 2015, a little more than three years ago. And my first week on the job, was joining his highness the crown prince in a meeting with Teresa. And so, in that meeting, that's what kicked it really off. Teresa heard form his highness, who is the chairman of the Bahrain Economic Development board, the vision for the country. We deregulated our telecom sector about 13, 14 years ago. We were the first country to do that in the Middle East. Which meant that we introduced competition on broadband, on mobile. It dropped prices by about 50%. On connectivity in the country. That attracted Amazon. When they looked at the region, they said, here's a government that's allowing true competition and for a data center obviously broadband communication, and the competitiveness of that price is key. And she was also impressed with his royal highness's vision for the country going forward. We want to become a digital economy, we want to transform this economy from an oil-based economy, to one that is based on information. And so we had a common view. And we determined, at that point, that we were going to do everything in our power to translate the conversation we had there to a reality. And here we are, almost three years later, almost to have a region here. >> And you know, people know my rant and rave, I always talk about, data is the new oil, information is the new oil. In that data and information, digital assets are digital. It a life-blood now of society. Citizen are reacting. Everyone's now connected with mobile devices, you're starting to see autonomous vehicles, you're starting to see a cultural blending between the old world, and then digital. And citizens can get new services, there's more efficiencies but there's actually a better opportunity for the citizens. And also in general. How do you guys look at that when you guys have your meetings, and you're looking at the vision of the future, the citizen benefits. Whether it's an entrepreneur or someone who's just living life. >> Well you know, when we had this discussion with Amazon, we decided to do what we call a cloud first policy. And we decided that we were going to move the government work loads to the cloud. We were going to actually, challenge any government institution, why they're not using the cloud. And it's been phenomenal. Now, it's been phenomenal from a cost saving perspective, which we want to pass on to the citizens. So for the citizens, for be for them to be able to get government services on their mobile phone, to pay their electricity bill to do get their license. And the government, if it reduces its cost can pass that on to that citizen. But more importantly, it's going to allow innovation to take place in the government. We're going to be able to have our education data in the Ministry of Education, communicate with our labor data. We're going to be able to do education in a new way. So it is going to unleash innovation in the government and the way it offers its services. We think it's going to do the same for businesses and for startups. >> We didn't get a chance to film it yesterday, but we were part of with Teresa Carlson's team with you and your startup Bahrain. All the entrepreneurs from the community, very vibrant, talking General Keith Alexander was there, knows a thing or two about cyber and then we had an entrepreneur visionary in John Wood, who's been in the business, but he's also a visionary. He made a comment and you reacted to that around the impact of the AWS region coming here. He was almost like, there's a storm of innovation coming and you align with that. You said, you kind of reacted at dinner last night about it. What is your feeling of what this will bring to the region? 'Cause Amazon has proven that when they put a region out, there's unexpected consequences sometimes like things you might not see. What are you expecting for the impact. For AWS? >> I think it's a game changer. I mean, you said data is the new oil. If we think back to the 30s, this country was the first country to discover oil. When, at that time, Texaco and So Cal started a refinery and started extracting oil, all the industries that developed around it refineries, oilfield engineering, oilfield services. You know, I think we're seeing we're going to see that in the new digital economy with data. Amazon coming here is going to do several things. Number one, it's going to unleash this innovation, it's going to reduce latency for people who are storing data looking to retrieve that. It's going to create new jobs, data scientists. We estimate 10,000 jobs are going to come on the back of this, that is going to be for the entire region. And I get it, I emphasize this is going to be a game changer, not just for the kingdom of Bahrain, but for the entire Middle East. We're already seeing startups who are getting educated about what the cloud can do for them, and the scale, the scale that they can reach by going to the cloud early on, we've seen them in the United States. Why can't this region see a unicorn that is able to be a global leader, just by virtue of, going to the cloud and learning from Amazon. And Amazon, AWS shares our passion for the startup community and what this can do for that. >> I want to get to the what's going to attract business to come into Bahrain. But first about what startup impact Amazon has proven and I heard a comment from one of the startups, Amazon Web Services is for big companies. Whoa, whoa, yeah, big companies are using Amazon now, but they won, they were built on the backs of startups. When Amazon first started and startups still use Amazon. It is a dream for a startup, the cost to get a company up off the ground, the speed of innovation with Amazon has proven startups, this is a big opportunity. And so this is going to impact how you set policy and get out of the way entrepreneurs, do you help them? As you look at policy, is that almost a tough decision on your part? 'Cause you guys are used to helping entrepreneurs, very entrepreneur friendly, but almost do you get out of their way, do you help them? What's the strategy for the startups? How do you look at this, because if the acceleration comes in and the training kicks in, you're going to see a renaissance of entrepreneurs, >> Right? >> What do you do, get out of their way, help them out? What's that? >> You got to balance it. I think, you can't coddle them. You can't do everything for the entrepreneur, there's got to be that grit, the resilience, that hunger at the entrepreneur. I was an entrepreneur before I took this role, and I think you've really got to have that fire in your belly. So what we want to do is we want to create an ecosystem, but we don't want to spoon feed them. So what we've done is for instance, we launched a $100 million venture capital fund of funds. And we said, the government shouldn't invest in startups but let's create a fund of funds that will invite venture capitalists to base themselves here, but we're not going to tell these venture capitalist how to invest. So each startup has to pitch itself to these venture capitalists and make sure that there's justification for it. We're going to create, you know, training, we're going to create elements, the regulation. We introduced a bankruptcy law this year, that is going to allow people to fail and to restructure. So we're going to put the policy in place. We're going to allow capital to be there, we're going to look at our training and education. But again, it really is down to the entrepreneur, to, so you've got to mix you've got to balance it. You've got to say, the burden is also on you to think about what's the market opportunity. Here is what the country will do, but then the rest is up to you. And I think, we're going to see our young youth in the region. We're doing this because this region is transforming. This region needs to create jobs. There's about a 100 million jobs you need to create in the Middle East over the next couple years. You're not going to be able to create that in the normal way. So we want people to become employers become entrepreneurs, rather than just employees and looking for a nine to five job. So it's integral to the vision of the region. >> Entrepreneurship is the engine of innovation. All right, let's talk about the region. You know, we're first out here so I'm kind of new, fresh eyes and you see Dubai out there, you got Asia, China and all these in Hong Kong and Singapore. So you guys have a unique opportunity. Dubai is kind of like a New York, it's hustle bustle is built out. You guys have this feeling like a Silicon Valley vibe. >> Right? >> It feels very open, very friendly, so you don't have to compete with each other. And New York does things, Silicon Valley does things. So you have this entrepreneurial culture. The key is a global co-creation a connection. How are you going to attract businesses? Because there is demand in the US for domiciling in places outside the United States. There's been a lot of competition. >> Sure. >> So are you prepared for companies to come here work with you? I know you guys are doing a lot of work. What do you say to the folks out there saying, I need to have a presence. Can I domicile in Bahrain? What's it like? What's the opportunities for me to connect into a growing ecosystem around Bahrain? >> So I'd say first of all, on the region, I mean, just like in Asia, just like in the US, you can have multiple hubs. So you know Bahrain will be a hub alongside a Dubai or a Riyadh or a Kuwait and so forth or a Abu Dhabi. And our niche is, as a small country, we're going to be very agile. One of the reasons why Amazon chose Bahrain is because we have a team Bahrain approach. And I, you know, I came from the private sector, when you're talking to General Electric, you're not talking to one department in General Electric, especially if you're a large customer. The whole company's going to rally around you and bring a solution to you as a customer. We're going to do that as a country. So with Amazon we got all the various ministries and we took a team Bahrain approach and we said we're going to solve through the economic development board, we're going to solve for your problem. Mondelez, which chose to locate their $100 million facility in Bahrain, built a facility about 30 soccer pitches, and they did it within a year and a half. We reclaimed land and had the land ready for them. They called it 'cause they make Oreos, they call it turning ocean to Oreos. >> Yeah. >> And so it's that agility that is going to differentiate us. In terms of niche, we're very interested in FinTech. We think we're going to take a leadership position not only regionally, but globally in FinTech. We have exciting announcements that we're going to make in FinTech. It's a small country, we can be nimble, agile, startup friendly, and kind of innovate. And so we're determined to carve a niche in open banking, in crypto currency exchanges, interesting innovation areas that we think we can excel at. >> Cloud computing certainly is a driver, artificial intelligence, obviously clearly. The fodder for entrepreneurship because it allows you to do things with data at a scale with a cloud engine, talk about FinTech and banking you can't ignore blockchain and crypto currency, which is bubble-ish right now, and then was kind of cleaning itself out, sorting itself out, but when that starts to settle and it becomes legitimate in the sense of a global access to digital money, or software defined money. >> Right. >> And data, that could be an integral part. How do you guys look at that? I know that's something that everyone's talking about. People are looking to do token kind of business models and there's really hasn't been any leadership globally at all on. >> Right. >> This is a place people can domicile, here Malta, here, there and there. So how do you guys look at that market, are you thinking about it, are you kicking the tires, what's happening? >> We're looking at FinTech and saying, really, beyond all the logos and all that. We're looking to reduce the friction for a customer doing the simple things. Looking at aggregating your accounts, understanding how you're spending money, looking at how to transfer money, looking at how to raise capital. If we can look at reducing the friction for people around these challenges, these day to day challenges and use our country as a pilot for doing that. Then imagine the potential that once you illustrate the potential here, you could go replicate it elsewhere. So we're very interested in blockchain. So you talk about crypto currencies, I think the real interesting element is the blockchain opportunity in FinTech and beyond. How can you allow the distributed ledger to have multiple applications. We're going to introduce issuing car licensing by a blockchain. Land, real estate transactions via blockchain. In addition to that, we're looking at open banking and allowing open banking to be prevalent here and allowing entrepreneurs to plug in and get access to that data and innovate around that. So that's how we're thinking about innovation in FinTech. >> Really, thanks for coming on and spending the time. I know you're super busy, and thanks for hosting us with theCUBE as part of the Amazon contingent. I give you the final word for the folks watching out there. What should they know about Bahrain that they might not know about it? And how do they engage with you guys? What are you guys doing? How should someone contact you? How do we engage? And what's the secret sauce of the Bahrain plan? >> Well, first of all, I'm going to plug my institution. It's simple, look at bahrainedb.com. It's on the internet. It's going to give you everything you need about what Bahrain. And what I'd say is, this is a small, but you know in this, in today's world, a global world and interconnected world, small is beautiful. So we're a small, forward thinking country. We're in a region that is about $1.5 trillion in terms of just the Gulf Cooperation Council. And here is a great gateway for tapping into that opportunity. We're about 30 minutes from the kingdom of Saudi Arabia which is doing wonderful things with Vision 2030, and you can be in Bahrain accessing that opportunity. And so I'd invite you to come, look at our website and the Bahrainedb will help you translate that kind of opportunity to a reality. >> Khalid, Chief Executive of Economic Development Board in Bahrain. Bold move congratulations. Bold moves have bold payoffs. Big bet with Amazon. >> Thanks, for having me John. >> Thanks for coming on. It's theCUBE here, we're live in Bahrain here at the Ritz Carlton for AWS summit 2018 here in the Middle East. I'm John Furrier. We'll be back with more coverage after this short break. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Sep 30 2018

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by Amazon Web Services. Welcome to theCUBE, thank you for joining me. Here in the middle of all the action. It's not like you woke up one morning and said, to translate the conversation we had there to a reality. How do you guys look at that when you guys So for the citizens, for be for them to be able to get to that around the impact of the AWS region coming here. And I get it, I emphasize this is going to be And so this is going to impact how you set policy We're going to create, you know, training, So you guys have a unique opportunity. So you have this entrepreneurial culture. What's the opportunities for me to connect and bring a solution to you as a customer. that is going to differentiate us. to do things with data at a scale with a cloud engine, How do you guys look at that? So how do you guys look at that market, and allowing open banking to be prevalent here And how do they engage with you guys? It's going to give you everything you need about what Bahrain. Big bet with Amazon. for AWS summit 2018 here in the Middle East.

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Tala Fakhro, Bahrain Economic Development Board | AWS Summit Bahrain


 

>> Live from Bahrain, it's theCUBE. Covering AWS Summit Bahrain. Brought to you by Amazon Web Services. >> Hello everyone, welcome back to theCUBE's exclusive coverage live here in Bahrain. This is our exclusive coverage of Amazon's new region we're covering. Part of AWS Summit, first time here in the Middle East for theCUBE. We're excited to be here. Next guest is Tala Fakhro, Executive Director of Market and Strategy Intelligence of Bahrain's Economic Development Board, also known as the EDB. >> That's right! >> Great to see you. Thanks for coming on. >> Thanks for having me. >> I've learned so much and it was great to meet you last night and have a conversation around some of the things you are working on. The Economic Development Board is a big part of this digital first, cloud first strategy. >> That's right. >> And Amazon's at the center of it. They're going to drop a region in here. This is really big news and it's certainly got our attention. And I've learned so much about what's happening in the startup community. >> Yes, we are very-- >> You've got a lot going on. What's the impact of the AWS region mean for Bahrain, the region, and the economic development opportunity? >> We took a look at Bahrain, and we decided we are going to have to transform this economy from an oil dependent one into a digital one. It just, it seemed like the right thing to do. And having Amazon here, attracting Amazon, allows us to plant that flag to say we are serious, we want to do this. And we will do what we need to do. We, we work together as a government. You know Bahrain is unique because we can do we can do things really fast when we want to. We built the Formula One Racetrack in 14 months, which is unheard of. And we did the same for Amazon. We engaged with them at every level. It wasn't just let's talk about this plot of land here, or this fiber optic cable there. We had the government engaged in legislation, and regulation and education. Every part of the government was actively pushing for this transaction. >> And I think that's an important point. I want to just amplify and double down on that and talk about it, because I think culturally, Bahrain, what I learned was this is a culture of fast moving, open, friendly but pragmatic people. >> Absolutely. >> And that's Amazon's ethos. >> Absolutely. >> Scale, move fast, and innovate. >> Absolutely. We, we've been a trading nation all our lives since time immemorial, you know. We're a tiny little country in the middle of the map. We were cross-border trading before we knew what that was called. So this is something not unique to us. It is part of our DNA, and we found a good match with Amazon. They wanted all the same things we wanted and they are genuinely interested in making the ecosystem of the countries in which they install their regions better. And we found that to be very attractive for us. >> So I've got to ask you, as Amazon comes in they're expected to have that, this region up and running in the beginning of 2019. >> That's right. >> Which is just right around the corner, so they're running fast, so congratulations. >> Thank you. >> It's the new Formula One Racetrack for cloud computing. What is driving the demand for cloud computing? Because obviously we've seen the history of what's happened in North America with startups. >> That's right. >> And as Amazon goes around the world, there's a growth engine underneath Amazon. What's driving the demand for cloud computing in the region? >> Well, 96% by some measures of our entire economy are startups or SMEs. So you could imagine that the cost savings that Amazon offers is extremely attractive. In addition, the volatility of oil prices has put a big crunch on the government budget and so they are also attracted to the idea of saving some money on the cloud. And the government is a big employer and a big consumer. So they really drive the economy. >> Yeah. >> So in both, it was a win-win for everybody. We are really interested in making sure that our Startup scene is vibrant and is scalable. And cloud is the way to do that. It allows you to use as much as you need and pay for only what you would consume, so it's great. >> And so, Khalid Al Rumaihi, the CEO of the EDB. >> Yes. >> Who's a very good visionary. He has private sector background, super smart. Really enjoyed that conversation. But one of the things that we talked about was we always say in theCUBE and sometimes debate this, but data is the new oil. >> Absolutely. >> Couldn't be more indicative of an oil region, and you mentioned that in moving off the dependence of oil, or getting into a new market like data, data needs refineries as an economic opportunity. So he mentions, Vintech as a big driver for what could be possible in Bahrain as a core competency. When you do your research and your insight and intelligent analysis of the data of what's going on the macro level, is that consistent of what you are seeing that there's a need for this digital refinery, being a center point of innovation? And if so, what does that mean? What is, how should people understand that Bahrain is a small country in a big region? >> It is a small-- >> How do you differentiate? How do you take a leadership opportunity? >> Well, Bahrain is a small country but it is a small country that's rich in one thing. If it's not rich in oil, it's rich in its people. We are bilingual. Many of us are trilingual. We've always been open and outgoing and we've been willing to make partnerships and friends with other nations and other places. So we think that our human capital is coming together with the hard infrastructure that a region will bring. It makes it a, you know, a real good proposition. And it allows for our students, who are, by the way, already starting to be cloud trained. Over 2500 Bahrainis have signed up for cloud training since the program started six months ago. >> Yeah. >> That's a huge proportion given our population. That's a much faster rate than India or China for example. >> Yeah. >> So this shows you how much, how willing we are. You know coding is the new English. We learned English in the 70's so that we could compete globally. Now we are learning coding to do the same thing. >> And that's super important. Let's talk about the human capital side of it, 'cause I think this is a good point that a lot of people overlook. Everyone's now connected with mobile devices, so connectedness is now common. So coding is the new language. Digital is the new culture. How are you guys looking at transforming some of the day-to-day citizen roles? Because now you have opportunities to serve citizens from a government standpoint and to get enable them to be successful. And one of the things that I noticed at the Startup Bahrain sessions I was attending yesterday was the vibrant entrepreneurs. They're opinionated, which I love. 'Cause that's what entrepreneurs are. They're like, come on, let's move faster. Where's the cash? Where's the capital? So the human capital seems to be a big equation here. What are you guys doing to facilitate that? Where are you guys on the progress bar in your mind? Are people coding at a young age? Has it started? Is it, what's, what's the progress? Can you take us through the plan? >> Well we, as I mentioned, for a cloud computing, specifically we already have programs in place. We also have many other initiatives coming up through Udacity, through Carcera, through others. We are bringing them to Bahrain to have the technical skills added to the human capital skill set that we already have. But I think most importantly, we are making it important. We are making it a forefront of the government agenda. You know, we are making it something that is a requirement. And I think that as we set our national economic strategy for the next four years, human capital is a crucial driver for that and it is going to have it's very own chapter with all the recommendations and all the initiatives that we think need to be done in order to increase, not just our stem cell but also our creativity, our entrepreneurship, >> Yeah. >> And all the things that had made us great in the past. >> You know as I was observing also, talking to your CEO about, I've seen people trying to replicate Silicon Valley trying to manufacture innovation in a way or trying to get a momentum. It's really hard. But what you guys I think have done or have here that's hard to do or hard to replicate or manufacture out of thin air is you guys have actually built a community of people. I see the entrepreneurs. I see the support around them through the EDB. You have money? >> We do. >> And you have growth coming. The other stuff's mechanics. How do you get funded? How to do this? How are you looking at that? When you look at the research and you dig into, and sometimes the best move is just let it develop. Get out of the way and let the entrepreneurs develop. How are you guys letting this develop because I won't say that Bahrain has an identity crisis. I think they have an opportunity to set a new identity. >> Absolutely. >> How do you look at that? And how do you guys see that opportunity? How do you talk about it? >> Well, you can't buy innovation. I think we've proven that enough times, that government is no good at making people innovate. But what we can do is make life easier for those who want to innovate. So what we want to do is pave the way. Allow for the opportunities to be there. And then, you know, then it's every man for himself and the free market will compete. We're a very free market oriented entity and government and so all we're going to do is we're going to get out of the way. But we're going to make sure that the path is as clear as we can make it. We are going to make sure that whatever we can do to help, we will. Whether that's bringing somebody like an Amazon here, to have the people here or the Al Waha Fund which is a venture capital fund to fund, which was just launched and which is already invested in. And three or four independently managed >> Yeah. >> Venture capital funds. We feel like these kinds of things, where we're not directly funding but we are encouraging, motivating, helping, that's the role of the government. >> And I also want to just to say to the folks watching, you guys and give you guys some props, you don't just talk it, you walk it. And I think what I noticed in the sessions yesterday and meeting some of the top policy makers and the entrepreneurs was you guys are actually doing the work. >> Oh, we're trying. >> And Teresa Carlson's success in Washington D.C. with Amazon web services really is a testament that if you do the work, the results will pay off. And when Teresa came to Washington DC, Amazon Cloud Computing was like, whoa it'll never work. It is not secure. You know, now they are winning. They are doing extremely well. I've seen the model. Everyone's emulating and moving towards. You guys are doing the work. I see the check boxes. But there's still some work to do. EKYC, other things. >> Yup. >> So congratulations. >> Thank you very much. >> So the question is, what do you got done and what is to do? And what does that mean for people who want to come either work here or collaborate with Bahrain? 'Cause if you check the boxes you're going to be set up. What's the status? >> Well, the first thing we wanted to do was to make sure that the soft infrastructure was there, so we, as a government passed what we call the digital ecosystem package. So that's data protection. That's electronic transactions laws. There's a new law that's in the process that will allow people who are storing data on Amazon's region in Bahrain to bring their own laws with them. So that there are no issues with conflict of laws. >> On the compliance side? >> Exactly. >> Yeah. >> So you know, it's as if they are storing in Saudi or Kuwait. >> Yeah. >> But they are storing here. So these kinds of things, this was the first step. And we've passed a bunch of those laws and we think that they are very important. In addition, as I mentioned, we have the funding situation. We begin to look at that. We hope that with this-- >> That's a hundred million fund of funds. >> That's a hundred million dollars fund to fund. >> Fund to fund, which means that you are going to enable private sector-- >> Correct. >> And professionals to come in. >> Absolutely. People who know what they're doing, who have done it before, in the region and outside of the region, whether it's Silicon Valley or Dubai. They're going to come here and they're going to look at the Bahraini startups, and that gives us the chance to compete on the world stage and shine. And it also gives us the chance to up our game. Once you see the competition, then you can >> Yeah. >> Fix and adjust and do what you need to do. And that's what we want. We want them. We're not going to help spoonfeed them. >> Yeah. >> We're not going to give them charity. This is, you are going to compete because what we dream is that Bahrain will eventually become a global player, and we think we can do that. That's our vision. That's what we want to do, and that's where we are headed. >> So you guys are competitive? >> We have to be. (John laughing) We're a tie, we are the underdog. >> Yeah. >> But sometimes underdogs win. >> You know as I was saying also observing that, we're our first time here with theCUBE in the region. So I was noticing that, you know, we see a lot of events in Dubai. And Dubai is very blown, built, blown up now and is developed. Bahrain feels like Silicon Valley because New York is different than say, the San Francisco Bay area, Silicon Valley. But they don't have to be each other. New York is New York. Hustle, bustle. Silicon Valley is where innovation is. It feels like you guys have that same kind of-- >> We do. >> Vibe here. >> We do, and a rising tide lifts all ships. Where there's good for the Emirates and Saudi, there's also good for Bahrain. It's a region at the end of the day. We're too small to be a player on our own. But one thing I wanted to touch on, you mentioned, that, you know, with the Silicon Valley. The difference between New York and Silicon Valley is everybody knows everybody in Silicon Valley. So if you are an entrepreneur and you have a good idea, you can easily access the people that you need to access. >> Yeah. >> We think Bahrain has that advantage too. And this is-- >> Yeah. >> Clearly demonstrated in the Amazon transaction because you know at the time when we could, we had everyone from His Royal Highness, the Crown Prince on down. If we needed them, they were a phone call away. >> And people are accessible here. They're open. >> They're open. >> They're very friendly. But it's kind of, I won't say no, it's kind of no nonsense in the sense of people just want, get to the point. Right? But it's not in your face like a East Coast New York kind of thing. >> Well, we're not there yet. (John laughing) Give us time. >> All right, so back to the access to capital concept because I think first of all, we're going to open up our doors >> Yes. >> With theCUBE in Silicon Valley for you guys. So very impressive. Consider that an open invitation. But now you're talking about networks. As you built community outside of Bahrain, what are some of the things that you guys are trying to do? What does the research say to do? Is it, is there regions that you see that you need to connect through? Obviously, you want to build some communications with other groups. What's the data show for you guys? What's the sequence of execution? >> So I think what we need to do is we really need to focus on the partners that we have and enhance that relationship. But also we need to look a little bit deeper. So I think India and China are areas of interest for us as well because they are interested in this part of the world, and we need to improve our relationship with Silicon Valley. Not just giving them money. >> Yeah. >> Because everyone wants to give Silicon valley money. But we want to really learn-- >> Yeah. >> And understand what they have done, why it's worked there, why it doesn't work elsewhere, and apply some of those lessons here. >> And bring some collaborations, certainly. >> Absolutely. >> Well, people are leaving Silicon Valley and I know that most startups and growing companies have engineering teams all over the world so it's a global economy. >> Absolutely. >> Final question for you as we wrap up. What is going to attract, folks you are, or, let me rephrase that. What should companies know about Bahrain if they want to engage with you guys here and work with you, or domicile here and create a group here? >> Well first of all, they should know that they don't need to involve anyone else because they can come in and set up on their own. 100% foreign ownership is something that we have here. Where it's a very liberal economy. It's a great place to live. and that sounds facetious but it's actually really important because talent is the crucial component of every success for these companies. And people like to live here. People enjoy it. I think you'll find a welcoming environment. You'll find an environment where if you have an issue, you can raise it to the highest level very easily. >> Got it. >> And EDB is here to help with that. >> Well Tala, thank you coming on. >> Thank you. >> Tala Fakhro, Executive Director of the Bahrain Economic Development Board, the EDB. They have a website. You can engage them obviously doing great things. This is the calm before the storm. As Amazon Web Services Region gets up and running, we expect to see a lot of growth and unexpected things. >> Yeah. >> Unexpected, unintended consequences. Be careful what you wish for, Right? >> Well. >> I mean, it's coming. >> It's coming and we're waiting. >> Thanks for joining us. >> Thank you so much. >> I'm John Furrier with theCUBE. You can reach me at @furrier on Twitter. Bringing you all the action here in Bahrain for our exclusive coverage of the Amazon's new region in the area here in Bahrain and through the Middle East. Thanks for watching. Stay with us for more live coverage here at the Ritz Carlton for AWS summit in Bahrain 2018. We'll be right back. (bright music)

Published Date : Sep 30 2018

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by Amazon Web Services. also known as the EDB. Great to see you. the things you are working on. And Amazon's at the center of it. What's the impact of the AWS region mean for Bahrain, It just, it seemed like the right thing to do. And I think that's an important point. in making the ecosystem of the countries in the beginning of 2019. around the corner, What is driving the demand for cloud computing? And as Amazon goes around the world, And the government is a big employer and a big consumer. And cloud is the way to do that. But one of the things that we talked about is that consistent of what you are seeing since the program started six months ago. That's a much faster rate than India or China for example. We learned English in the 70's So the human capital seems to be a big equation here. We are making it a forefront of the government agenda. But what you guys I think have done and sometimes the best move is just let it develop. that the path is as clear as we can make it. that's the role of the government. and meeting some of the top policy makers that if you do the work, the results will pay off. So the question is, what do you got done Well, the first thing we wanted to do So you know, it's as if they are storing and we think that they are very important. to come in. in the region and outside of the region, and do what you need to do. This is, you are going to compete We have to be. So I was noticing that, you know, It's a region at the end of the day. And this is-- Clearly demonstrated in the Amazon transaction And people are accessible here. in the sense of people just want, get to the point. Well, we're not there yet. What's the data show for you guys? and we need to improve our relationship with Silicon Valley. But we want to really learn-- and apply some of those lessons here. have engineering teams all over the world What is going to attract, folks you are, or, because talent is the crucial component thank you coming on. This is the calm before the storm. Be careful what you wish for, Right? for our exclusive coverage of the Amazon's new region

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Stephen Hunt, Team Rubicon | Splunk .conf2017


 

>> Announcer: Live from Washington, DC it's theCUBE. Covering .conf2017. Brought to you by Splunk. >> Welcome back here on theCUBE we continue our coverage of .conf2017 here at the Splunk event with about seven thousand plus Splunkers. Along with Dave Vellante, John Walls. I like that Splunkers. >> You a Splunker? >> Not sure I'd be qualified. >> I'm learning how. >> I'm not qualified. >> to be come one. >> I don't think. >> I think we're kind of in the cheap seats of Splukism right now. Certainly there's a definitely vibe and I think that there's this whole feeling of positivity amongst our community right, that is to get a sense of that here. >> Dave: Hot company, data centers booming. >> It's all happenin', so we are in the Walter Washington Convention Center day two of the convention. We're joined now by of Stephen Hunt who is the CIO of an organization called Team Rubicon. Stephen thanks for joining us here on theCUBE. Good to have you Sir. >> Thank you for having me. >> And CTO too correct? >> And CTO. >> So first off let's talk about Team Rubicon. Veterans based organization, you team up with disaster emergency responders, first responders, to come in a crisis management times of disasters I'm sure extremely busy right now. Gave birth to this organization back in 2010 after the Haiti earthquakes. So tell us a little bit more about your mission and what you're doing now I assume you're up to your ears and all kinds of work, unfortunately. >> Yeah so our, just speaking to our mission, our purpose is to leverage the skills a military vets and first responders in disaster. The capacity and skills that vets bring after active duty in the in the services, is remarkable resource that we've learned to tap to help people in need around the world. This is one of our or this is our busiest time right now. You know we're responding in the greater Houston area in Florida, the Florida Keys, British Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, Mexico, Turks and Caicos. And it's just it's incredible what we're able to do and in aiding people from the point of search and rescue to recovery and resilience, there's a broad spectrum of activities that are our people engage in to make that all happen and across a diversity of locations. It's been truly remarkable and challenging in ways that we never imagined right now. >> And I should add that you're a veteran yourself. Paratrooper, 82nd Airborne, a reservist, but also have an engineering background MIT Lincoln Laboratories for 20 some plus years. So you've got this interesting combination of experiences that have brought you into a company that is also a beneficiary of the Splunk for Good Program part of the Splunk pledge Program. So are you bring a pretty interesting portfolio to the job here Stephen. >> It's a bit unusual I do understand how a lot of the world works, not because I'm the smartest person in the room, I have a bit of a head start there's a lot of experience there and so bringing my engineering skills to the field, as well as to the business office and how we operate. And working with companies like Splunk, you know I can see, pretty quickly, what's hard, what's easy. I understand that Splunk needs our requirements in order to deliver product that's meaningful to us and our mission. So tying that all together it is a bit unusual for an NGO to have someone like me around. I got involved simply to help people. When they told me at some point are that we're going to build a business to help people, I said I don't come here to build a business. And it took me a little while to get oriented around the fact that as we expand the brand as we bring it around the globe, it takes a strong business model and a strong technical model in how we project humanitarian aid in austere settings. >> In order to scale right. >> So Tell us more about the organization how large is the organization, you know, where do you get the resources, how is it funded. >> So we're almost a 100% privately funded. So corporations, foundations, individual donors from across the country and across the world. We have about sixty thousand members and these are volunteers in and globally, so how in the world do you do that? Well, it turns out we grew up at about the same time the cloud industry grew up, we've been around seven years. And I would like to say that I'm some kind of genius and I said well we should follow the cloud, it was a judgment call and it was what we could manage. Today we have about thirty five to forty cloud software products that drive everything from donor management, volunteer management, how we deal with our beneficiaries, as well as our employees. And and it's not just about product in mission it's about protection and seeing through what's happening at the company at scale. We have about anywhere from eight hundred to 15 hundred people sign up to join, to become a part of Team Rubicon every week. >> Dave: Every week? >> And we couldn't do that without scale, without cloud technology it's been truly remarkable. >> And the volunteers or or all veterans, is that right? >> About 80, 75 to 80% military vets, first responders and others. >> Okay, so they just they make time to take time off from work, or whatever it is and go volunteer. They'll get permission from whom ever. Their employers, their wives and husbands. >> The payment that we provide is a renewed sense of purpose. When you know you take off the uniform there is a certain part of your identity that goes on the hanger and people don't see in you that's missing and we get that back. Through service and being around like minded individuals it's just amazing when we bring all of our people together and they align to work to this common mission. >> So in the in the take a recent examples in Florida and Houston are they predominantly people that are proximate to those areas? Are you are you having to fly people in, how does that all work? We literally have people coming in from all over the world. Generally, with the way we run operations to keep them cost effective as we look first within 450 miles of an affected area, and and bring in people in close proximity. If there is need greater than that, then we expand the scope of the distance if you will. Logistically, where we bring folks in. we're all the way now to bring in people from Australia, Norway, Canada, as well as the UK and working alongside each other seamlessly and that's really due to our standards and training. You can imagine when we scale it's not just the technology but it's how you use it, in the field, and in the business environment in the office. >> Are they responsible for figuring out where they sleep, where they eat, I mean how does that all work. >> Yeah, we set that up, in the early days we kind of took care of it ourselves, you know we reach into our own pockets and the small groups run around the planet and help people. It was kind of a club, now it's a whole different story. When we're bringing in 500 people a day, we need to know how they're fed, is this safety, security and protection, not just physically, but also emotionally. You want to make sure that we're really looking after people before, during and after they deploy and help people. So we put them up, and typically it's not the Ritz, you know might be a cot in a warehouse somewhere. But I've stayed at hotels with Team Rubicon members and maybe sometimes eight in the room. My old job Wasn't like that, all these guys are fighting to see who's going to sleep on the floor. I mean it's it's a really interesting you know. >> You have very different dynamic I'm sure. So you talk about these global operations expanding what four or five countries you mentioned with thoughts of one larger. I know communications are huge part of that you have a partnership now with a a prominent satellite firm you know in Inmarsat and how is that coming to benefit your operations and does Splunk come in the play with that global communications opportunity? >> Inmarsat and Splunk have been truly remarkable impacting and working toward greater impact in how we deliver aid around the globe. And make a couple of very clear points and deliver a metric here. We're running maybe 15 simultaneous operations distributed across all those areas I just discussed earlier. And historically, in all the time that I've been with Team Rubicon we've always had outages when it comes to communicating with our staff in these austere settings. You know we have to life safety is everything. That's the most important thing on my list, is the welfare of the people I'm looking after, and our employees, volunteers and our beneficiaries. When we can't communicate if something goes wrong it's a problem Inmarsat has set us up with communications gear in such a way that even though running all these operations at our most challenging time, I haven't had one complaint. About not being able to communicate. And what's Splunk is doing, is integrating with the Inmarsat backend to provide us the status of all of that equipment and and so from a perspective where are they all located, what is the status of the you know the data usage to make sure that somebody doesn't get arbitrarily shut off, you know that strategic view of what's happening across the globe. And this was something that we've negotiated or Inmarsat asked us to do, and Splunk is stepping up to take care of that for us so that we can ensure life safety and coordination happen seamlessly. Just one more point about this, if you could communicate with everyone everyday you're planning team isn't sitting idle wondering what it needs to do next. So this tertiary effect, is really driven our planning team to perform in a way that guides material and resources that I didn't really think about, But it's quite remarkable. >> So, you please, I thought you finished, I apologize. >> No, it's OK. >> I'm excited. >> It's fantastic. >> So the tech let's get into the tech side of this. You got SaaS apps, you got logistics, you got comms, you got analytics stuff, you got planning, you got collaboration and probably a hundred other things that I haven't mentioned. Maybe talk about you put your CTO hat on. >> Oh no, absolutely, so one of the things I say to our people, you know the technology is important but people are more important. And and so how we work with technology, its adoption as a CIO is critical. I need to say that when we're provided quality top tier software technologies to support education and training, as I mentioned, volunteer management, information management and security. And they were adopted naturally and they take off like a fire on a dry day, it means Splunk and other companies produced a great product. And we've seen this time and again with our ecosystem. So it's a general statement about the cloud technologies. Many companies have just done an exceptional job at building products that our people can work with. So I don't really complain too much about adoption across the board or struggle with it, I should say. So Google, Microsoft, Splunk, Cornerstone OnDemand, Salamander, Everbridge, Palantir. >> Be careful it's like naming the kids you're going to leave somebody out. So many of these great benefactors. >> Yeah, they're used to it but we work with all and our new COO came in, I apologize, I was CIO/CTO of Team Rubicon USA for about three years and I just moved over to Team Rubicon global to help orchestrate our global footprint. And we've set up licensing and a model for where instances of software are located to meet the legal regulatory framework for doing business internationally. And but the the COO of USA, and I'm so proud of what USA is doing right now, it's just blowing up. I mean what they're accomplishing as the largest Team Rubicon entity. But he looked at me, he said, Steve we got to get rid of some of these software products, and I said well, tell me what you don't want to do and I'll delete it, happy to. And instead the numbers gone up by 10 you know since that conversation. So there's some great challenges with and great opportunities, but as you know when your capacity increases, working with data and information your risk also goes up. So we work hard it impacting the behaviors of all of our people, it doesn't happen in a month or two months it takes years. So that everyone is security minded and making good decisions about how we work with information and data, you know whether it's a collective view provided by a product like Splunk which gives us this global view of information. You know if we have people working in a in a dangerous area and all of a sudden we know where all of our people are we just don't post that up on the open internet right. That's a bad idea just to give you a simple example. Down to the PII of our members and employees. And we're becoming very good at that. And for an NGO that's unusual and we're going to be driving an independent security audit fairly soon, to push it even further with the Board of Directors and executives, and so the business team can make decisions about how what we do technically based on you know liability in business model, right for how we work, but for me, the highest priority's protection of everyone. >> Well, it is a wonderful organization and we sincerely Dave and I both thank you for your service, present and future tense, for your service absolutely. Team Rubicon they will accept contributions, both time and treasure so visit the website Team Rubicon and see what you might be able to do to lend help to the cause, great cause that it is. Thank you Stephen. Back with more from .conf2017 here in DC, right after this.

Published Date : Sep 27 2017

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by Splunk. conf2017 here at the Splunk event that is to get a sense of that here. Good to have you Sir. and what you're doing now I assume in the in the services, is remarkable resource of experiences that have brought you into a company around the fact that as we expand the brand how large is the organization, you know, so how in the world do you do that? And we couldn't do that without scale, About 80, 75 to 80% military vets, to take time off from work, or whatever it is and they align to work to this common mission. and in the business environment in the office. Are they responsible for figuring out where they sleep, and the small groups run around the planet and help people. So you talk about these global operations of the you know the data usage to make sure So the tech let's get into the tech side of this. And and so how we work with technology, Be careful it's like naming the kids and all of a sudden we know where all of our people are and we sincerely Dave and I both thank you

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Alan Nance, Virtual Clarity– DataWorks Summit Europe 2017 #DW17 #theCUBE


 

>> Narrator: At the DataWorks Summit, Europe 2017. Brought to you by Hortonworks. >> Hey, welcome back everyone. We're here live from Munich, Germany at DataWorks 2017, Hadoop Summit formerly, the conference name before it changed to DataWorks. I'm John Furrier with my cohost Dave Vellante. Our next guest, we're excited to have Alan Nance who flew in, just for the CUBE interview today. Executive Vice President with Virtual Clarity. Former star, I call practitioner of the Cloud, knows the Cloud business. Knows the operational aspects of how to use technology. Alan, it's great to see you. Thanks for coming on the CUBE. >> Thank you for having me again. >> Great to see you, you were in the US recently, we had a chance to catch up. And one of the motivations that we talked with you today was, a little bit about some of the things you're looking at, that are transformative. Before we do that, let's talk a little about your history. And what your role is at Virtual Clarity. >> So, as you guys have, basically, followed that career, I started out in the transformation time with ING Bank. And started out, basically, technology upwards. Looking at converged infrastructure, converged infrastructure into VDI. When you've got that, you start to look at Clouds. Then you start to experiment with Clouds. And I moved from ING, from earlier experimentation, into Phillips. So, while Phillips, at that time had both the health care and lighting group. And then you start to look at consumption based Cloud propositions. And you remember the big thing that we were doing at that time, when we identified that 80% of the IT spend was non differentiating. So the thing was, how do we get away from almost a 900 million a year spend on legacy? How do we turn that into something that's productive for the Enterprise? So we spent a lot of time creating the consumption based infrastructure operating platform. A lot of things we had to learn. Because let's be honest, Amazon was still trying to become the behemoth it is now. IBM still didn't get the transition, HP didn't get it. So there was a lot of experimentation on which of the operating model-- >> You're the first mover on the operating model, The Cloud, that has scaled to it. And really differentiated services for your business, for also, cost reductions. >> Cost reductions have been phenomenal. And we're talking about halving the budget over a three year period. We're talking about 500 million a year savings. So these are big, big savings. The thing I feel we still need to tackle, is that when we re-platform your business, it should leave to agile acceleration of your growth path. And I think that's something that we still haven't conquered. So I think we're getting better and better at using platforms to save money, to suppress the expenditure. What we now need to do is to convert that into growth platform business. >> So, how about the data component? Because you were CIO of infrastructure at Phillips. But lately, you've been really spending a lot of time thinking about the data, how data adds value. So talk about your data journey. >> Well if I look at the data journey, the journey started for me, with, basically, a meeting with Tom Ritz in 2013. And he came with a very, very simple proposition. "You guys need to learn how to create "and store, and reason over data, "for the benefit of the Enterprise." And I think, "Well that's cool." Because up until that point, nobody had really been talking about data. Everyone was talking about the underlying technologies of the Cloud, but not really of the data element. And then we had a session with JP Rangaswami, who was at Salesforce, who basically, also said, "Well don't just think "about data lakes, but think also "about data streams and data rivers. "Because the other thing that's "going to happen here is that data's "not going to be stagnant in a company like yours." So we took that, and what happened, I think, in Phillips, which I think you see in a lot of companies, is an explosion across the Enterprise. So you've got people in social doing stuff. You got CDO's appearing. You've got the IOT. You've got the old, legacy systems, the systems of record. And so you end up with this enormous fragmentation of data. And with that you get a Wild West of what I call data stewardship. So you have a CDO who says, "Well I'm in charge of data." And you got a CMO who says, "Well I'm in charge of marketing data." Or you've got a CSO, says, "Yeah, "but I'm the security data guy." And there's no coherence, in terms of moving the Enterprise forward. Because everybody's focused on their own functionality around that data and not connecting it. So where are we now? I think right now we have a huge proliferation of data that's not connected, in many organizations. And I think we're going to hybrid but I don't think that's a future proof thing for most organizations. >> John: What do you mean by that? >> Well, if I look at what a lot of those suppliers are saying, they're really saying, "The solution "that you need, is to have a hybrid solution "between the public Cloud and your own Cloud." I thought, "But that's not the problem "that we need to solve." The problem that we need to solve is first of all, data gravity. So if I look at all the transformations that are running into trouble, what do they forget? When we go out and do IOT, when we go out and do social media analysis, it all has to flow back into those legacy systems. And those legacy systems are all going to be in the old world. And so you get latency issues, you get formatting issues. And so, we have to solve the data gravity issue. And we have to also solve this proliferation of stewardship. Somebody has to be in charge of making this work. And it's not going to be, just putting in a hybrid solution. Because that won't change the operating model. >> So let me ask the question, because on one of the things you're kind of dancing around, Dave brought up the data question. Something that I see as a problem in the industry, that hasn't yet been solved, and I'm just going to throw it out there. The CIO has always been the guy managing IT. And then he would report to the CFO, get the budget, blah, blah, blah. We know that's kind of played out its course. But there's no operational playbook to take the Cloud, mobile data at scale, that's going to drive the transformative impact. And I think there's some people doing stuff here and there, pockets. And maybe there's some organizations that have a cadence of managers, that are doing compliance, security, blah, blah, blah. But you have a vision on this. And some information that you're tracking around. An architecture that would bring it to scale. Could you share your thoughts on this operational model of Cloud, at a management level? >> Well, part of this is also based on your own analyst, Peter Boris. When he says, "The problem with data "is that its value is inverse to its half life." So, what the Enterprise has to do is it has to get to analyzing and making this data valuable, much, much faster then it is right now. And Chris Sellender of Unifi recently said, "You know, the problem's not big data. "The problem's fast data." So, now, who is best positioned in the organization to do this? And I believe it's the COO. >> John: Chief Operating Officer? >> Chief Operating Officer. I don't think it's going to be the CIO. Because I'm trying to figure out who's got the problem. Who's got the problem of connecting the dots to improving the operation of the company? Who is in charge of actually creating an operating platform that the business can feed off of? It's the C Tower. >> John: Why not the CFO? >> No, I think the CFO is going to be a diminishing value, over time. Because a couple of reasons. First of all, we see it in Phillips. There's always going to be a fiduciary role for the CFO. But we're out of the world of capex. We're out of the world of balancing assets. Everything is now virtual. So really, the value of a CFO, as sitting on the tee, if I use the racquetball, the CFO standing on the tee is not going to bring value to the Enterprise. >> And the CIO doesn't have the business juice, is your argument? Is that right? >> It depends on the CIO. There are some CIO's out there-- >> Dave: But in general, we're generalizing. >> Generally not. Because they've come through the ranks of building applications, which now has to be thrown away. They've come through the ranks of technology, which is now less relevant. And they've come through the ranks of having huge budgets and huge people to deploy certain projects. All of that's going away. And so what are you left with? Now you're left with somebody who absolutely has to understand how to communicate with the business. And that's what they haven't done for 30 years. >> John: And stream line business process. >> Well, at least get involved in the conversation. At least get involved in the conversation. Now if I talk to business people today, and you probably do too, most of them will still say there's this huge communication gulf. Between what we're trying to achieve and what the technology people are doing with our goals. I mean, I was talking to somebody the other day. And this lady heads up the sales for a global financial institution. She's sitting on the business side of this. And she's like, "The conversation should be "about, if our company wants to improve "our cost income ratio, and they ask me, "as sales to do it, I have to sell 10 times "more to make a difference. "Then if IT would save money. "So for every Euro they save. "And give me an agile platform, "is straight to the bottom line. "Every time I sell, because of our "cost income ratio, I just can't sell against that. "But I can't find on the IT side, "anybody who, sort of, gets my problem. "And is trying to help me with it." And then you look at her and what? You think a hybrid solution's going to help her? (laughs) I have no idea what you're talking about. >> Right, so the business person here then says, "I don't really care where it runs." But to your point, you care about the operational model? >> Alan: Absolutely. >> And that's really what Cloud should be, right? >> I think everybody who's going to achieve anything from an investment in Cloud, will achieve it in the operating world. They won't just achieve it on the cost savings side. Or on making costs more transparent, or more commoditized. Where it has to happen is in the operating model. In fact, we actually have data of a very large, transportation, logistics company, who moved everything that they had, in an attempt to be in a zero Cloud. And on the benchmark, saved zero. And they saved zero because they weren't changing the operating model. So they were still-- >> They lifted and shifted, but didn't change the operational mindset. >> Not at all. >> But there could have been business value there. Maybe things went faster? >> There could have been. >> Maybe simpler? >> But I'm not seeing it. >> Not game changing. >> Not game changing, certainly yes. >> Not as meaningful, it was a stretch. >> Give an example of a game changing scenario. >> Well for me, and I think this is the next most exciting thing. Is this idea of platforms. There's been an early adoption of this in Telco. Where we've seen people coming in and saying, "If you stock all of this IT, as we've known it, "and you leverage the ideas of Cloud computing, "to have scalable, invisible, infrastructure. "And you put a single platform on top of it "to run your business, you can save money." Now, I've seen business cases where people who are about to embark on this program are taking a billion a year out of their cost base. And in this company, it's 1/7th of their total profit. That's a game changer, for me. But now, who's going to help them do that? Who's going to help them-- >> What's the platform look like? >> And a million's a lot of money. >> Let's go, grab a sheet of paper how we-- >> So not everybody will even have a billion-- >> But that gets the attention of certainly, the CEO, the COO, CFO says, "Tell me more." >> You're alluding to it, Dave. You need to build a layer to punch, to doing that. So you need to fix the data stewardship problem. You have to create the invisible infrastructure that enables that platform. And you have to have a platform player who is prepared to disrupt the industry. And for me-- >> Dave: A Cloud player. >> A Cloud player, I think it's a born in the Cloud player. I think, you know, we've talked about it privately. >> So who are the forces to attract? You got Microsoft, you got AWS, Google, maybe IBM, maybe Oracle. >> See, I think it's Google. >> Dave: Why, why do you think it's Google? >> I think it's because, the platforms that I'm thinking of, and if I look in retail, if I look in financial services, it's all about data. Because that's the battle, right. We all agree, the battle's on data. So it's got to be somebody who understands data at scale, understands search at scale, understands deep learning at scale. And understands technology enough to build that platform and make it available in a consumption model. And for me, Google would be the ideal player, if they would make that step. Amazon's going to have a different problem because their strategy's not going down that route. And I think, for people like IBM or Oracle, it would require cannibalizing too much of their existing business. But they may dally with it. And they may do it in a territory where they have no install base. But they're not going to be disrupting the industry. I just don't think it's going to be possible for them. >> And you think Google has the Enterprise chops to pull it off? >> I think Google has the platform. I would agree with Alan on this. Something, I've been very critical on Google. Dave brings this up because he wants me to say it now, and I will. Google is well positioned to be the platform. I am very bullish on Google Cloud with respect to their ability to moon shot or slingshot to the future faster, than, potentially others. Or as they say in football, move the goal posts and change the game. That being said, where I've been critical of Google, and this is where, I'll be critical, is their dogma is very academic, very, "We're the technology leader, "therefore you should use Google G Suite." I think that they have to change their mindset, to be more Enterprise focused, in the sense of understand not the best product will always win, but the B chip they have to develop, have to think about the Enterprise. And that's a lot of white glove service. That's a lot of listening. That's not being too arrogant. I mean, there's a borderline between confidence and arrogance. And I think Google crosses it a little bit too much, Dave. And I think that's where Google recognizes, some people in Google recognize that they don't have the Enterprise track record, for sure on the sales side. You could add 1,000 sales reps tomorrow but do they have experience? So there's a huge translation issue going on between Google's capability and potential energy. And then the reality of them translating that into an operational footprint. So for them to meet the mark of folks like you, you can't be speaking Russian and English. You got to speak the same language. So, the language barrier, so to speak, the linguistics is different. That's my only point. >> I sense in your statements, there's a frustration here. Because we know that the key to some really innovative, disruption is with Google. And I think what we'd all like to do, even while I was addressing the camera. I'd love to see Diane, who does understand Enterprise, who's built a whole career servicing Enterprises extremely well, I'd like to see a little bit of a glimpse of, "We are up for this." And I understand when you're part of the bigger Google, the numbers are a little bit skewered against you to make a big impact and carry the firm with you. But I do believe there's an enormous opportunity in the Enterprise space. And people are just waiting for this. >> Well Diane Greene knows the Enterprise. So she came in, she's got to change the culture. And I know she's doing it. Because I have folks at Google, that I know that work there, that tell me privately, that it's happening, maybe not fast enough. But here's the thing. If you walked in the front door at Google, Alan Nance, this is my point, and he said, "I have experience and I have a plan "to build a platform, to knock a billion "dollars off seven companies, that I know, personally. "That I can walk in and win. "And move a billion dollars to their "bottom line with your platform." They might not understand what that means. >> I don't know, you know I was at Google Next a few weeks ago, last month. And I thought they were more, to your point, open to listening. Maybe not as arrogant as you might be presenting. And somewhat more humble. Still pretty ballsy. But I think Google recognizes that it needs help in the Enterprise. And here's why. Something that we've talked about in the past, is, you've got top down initiatives. You've got bottom up initiatives. And you've got middle out. What frequently happens, and I'd love for you to describe your experiences. The leaders say, the top CXO's say, "Okay we're going." And they take off and the organization doesn't follow them. If it's bottoms up, you don't have the top down in premature. So how do you address that? What are you seeing and how do you address that problem? >> So I think that's a really, really good observation. I mean, what I see in a lot of the big transformations that I've been involved in, is that speed is of the essence. And I think when CEO's, because usually it's the CEO. CEO comes in and they think they've got more time than they actually have to make the impact in the Enterprise. And it doesn't matter if they're coming in from the outside or they've grown up. They always underestimate their ability to do change, in time. And now what's changed over the past few years, is the average tenure of a CEO is six years. You know, I mean, Jack Welch was 20 years at GE. You can do a lot of damage in 20 years. And he did a lot of great things at GE over a 20 year period. You've only got six years now. And what I see in these big transformation programs is they start with a really good vision. I mean Mackenzie, Bain, Boston. They know the essence of what needs to happen. >> Dave: They can sell the dream. >> They can sell the dream. And the CEO sort of buys into it. And then immediately you get into the first layer, "Okay, okay, so we've got to change the organization." And so you bring in a lot of these companies that will run 13 work streams over three years, with hundreds of people. And at the end of that time, you're almost halfway through your tenure. And all you've got is a new design. Or a new set of job descriptions or strategies. You haven't actually achieved anything. And then the layer down is going to run into real problems. One of the problems that we had at the company I worked at before, was in order to support these platforms you needed really good master data management. And we suddenly realized that. And so we had to really put in an accelerated program to achieve that, with Impatica. We did it, but it cost us a year and 1/2. At a bank I know, they can't move forward because they're looking at 700 million of technology debt, they can't get past. So they end up going down a route of, "Maybe one of these big suppliers "can buy our old stuff. "And we can tag on some transformational "deal at the back end of that." None of those are working. And then what happens is, in my mind, if the CEO, from what I see, has not achieved escape velocity at the end of year three. So he's showing the growth, or she's showing the digital transformation, it's kind of game over. The Enterprise has already figured out they've stalled it long enough, not intentionally. And then we go back into an austerity program. Because you got to justify the millions you've spent in the last three years. And you've got nothing to show for it. >> And you're preparing three envelopes. >> So you got to accelerate those layers. You got to take layers out and you've got to have a really, I would say almost like, 90 day iteration plans that show business outcomes. >> But the technology layer, you can put in an abstraction layer, use APIs and infrastructure as code, all that cool stuff. But you're saying it's the organizational challenges. >> I think that's the real problem. It is the real problem, is the organization. And also, because what you're really doing in terms of the Enterprise, is you're moving from a more traditional supply chain that you own. And you've matriculated with SAP or with Oracle. Now you're talking about creating a digital value chain. A digital value chain that's much more based on a more mobile ecosystem, where you would have thin text in one area or insurance text, that have to now fit into an agile supply chain. It's all about the operating model. If you don't have people who know how to drive that, the technology's not going to help you. So you've got to have people on the business side and the technology side coming together to make this work. >> Alan, I have a question for you. What's you're prediction, okay, knowing what you know. And kind of, obviously, you have some frustrations in platforms with trying to get the big players to listen. And I think they should listen to you. But this is going to happen. So I would believe that what you're saying with the COO, operational things radically changing differently. Obviously, the signs are all there. Data centers are moving into the Cloud. I mean this is radical stuff, in a good way. And so, what's your prediction for how this plays out vis a vis Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud Platform Azure, IBM Cloud SoftLayer. >> Well here's my concern a little bit. I think if Google enters the fray I think everybody will reconfigure. Because if we'd assume that Google plays to its strengths and goes out there and finds the right partners. It's going to reconfigure the industry. If they don't do that, then what the industry's going to do is what it's done. Which means that the platforms are going to be hybrid platforms that are dominated by the traditional players. By the SOPs, by the Oracles, by the IBMs. And what I fear is that there may actually be a disillusionment. Because they will not bring the digital transformation and all the wonderful things that we all know, are out there to be gained. So you may get, "We've invested all this money." You see it a little bit with big data. "I've got this huge layer. "I've got petabytes. "Why am I not smarter? "Why is my business not going so much better? "I've put everything in there." I think we've got to address the operating problem. And we have to find a dialogue at the C Suite. >> Well to your point, and we talked about this. You know, you look at the core of Enterprise apps, the Oracle stuff is not moving in droves, to the Cloud. Oracle's freezing the market right now. Betting that it can get there before the industry gets there. And if it does-- >> Alan: It's not. >> And it might, but if it does, it's not going to be that radical transformation you're prescribing. >> They have too much to lose. Let's be honest, right. So Oracle is a victim of it's own success, pretty much like SAP. It has to go to the Cloud as a defensive play. Because the last thing either of those want is to be disintermediated by Amazon. Which may or may not happen anyway. Because a lot of companies will disintermediate if they can. Because the licensing is such a painful element for most enterprises, when they deal with these companies. So they have to believe that the platform is not going to look like that. >> And they're still trying to figure out the pricing models, and the margin models, and Amazon's clearly-- >> You know what's driving the pricing models is not the growth on the consumer side. >> Right, absolutely. >> That's not what's driving it. So I think we need another player. I really think we need another player. If it's not Google, somebody else. I can't think who would have the scale, the money to-- >> The only guys who have the scale, you got 10 cents, maybe a couple China Clouds, maybe one Japan Cloud and that's it. >> To be honest, you raise a good point. I haven't really looked at the Ali Baba's and the other people like that who may pick up that mantle. I haven't looked at them. Ali Baba's interesting, because just like Amazon, they have their own business that runs on platforms. And a very diverse business, which is growing faster than Amazon and is more profitable than Amazon. So they could be interesting. But I'm still hopeful. We should figure this out. >> Google should figure it out. You're absolutely right. They're investing, and I thought they put forth a pretty good messaging at the Google Next. You covered it remotely but I think they understand the opportunity. And I think they have the stomach for it. >> We had reporters there as well, at the event. We just did, they came to our studio. Google is self aware that they need to work on the Enterprise. I think the bigger thing that you're highlighting is the operational model is shifting to a scale point where it's going to change stewardship and COO meaning to be, I like that. The other thing I want to get your reaction to is something I heard this morning, on the CUBE from Sean Connelly. Which that goes with some of the things that we're seeing where you're seeing Cloud becoming a more centralized view. Where IOT is an Edge case. So you have now, issues around architectural things. Your thoughts and reaction to this balance between Edge and Cloud. >> Well I think this is where you're also going to have your data gravity challenge. So, Dave McCrory has written a lot about the concept of data gravity. And in my mind, too many people in the Enterprise don't understand it. Which is basically, that data attracts more data. And more data you have, it'll attract more. And then you create all these latency issues when you start going out to the Edge. Because when we first went out to the Edge I think, even at Phillips, we didn't realize how much interaction needed to come back. And that's going to vary from company to company. So some company's are going to want to have that data really quickly because they need to react to it immediately. Others may not have that. But what you do have is you have this balancing act. About, "What do I keep central? "And what do I put at the Edge?" I think Edge Technology is amazing. And when we first looked at it, four years ago, I mean, it's come such a long way. And what I am encouraged by is that, that data layer, so the layer that Sean talks about, there's a lot of exciting things happening. But again, my problem is what's the Enterprise going to do with that? Because it requires a different operating model. If I take an example of a manufacturing company, I know a manufacturing company right now that does work in China. And it takes all the data back to its central mainframes for processing. Well if you've got the Edge, you want to be changing the way you process. Which means that the decision makers on the business need to be insitu. They need to be in China. And we need to be bringing, systems of record data and combining it with local social data and age data, so we get better decisions. So we can drive growth in those areas. If I just enable it with technology but don't change the business model the business is not going to grow. >> So Alan, we always loved having you on. Great practitioner, but now you've kind of gone over to the dark side. We've heard of a company called Virtual Clarity. Tell us about what you're doing there. >> So what we're vested in, what I am very much vested in, with my team at Virtual Clarity, is creating this concept of precision guided transformation. Where you work on the business, on what are the outcomes we really need to get from this? And then we've combined, I would say it's like a data nerve center. So we can quickly analyze, within a matter of weeks, where we are with the company, and what routes to value we can create. And then we'll go and do it. So we do it in 90 day increments. So the business now starts to believe that something's really going to happen. None of these big, insert miracle here after three year programs. But actually going out and doing it. The second thing that I think that we're doing that I'm excited about is bringing in enlightened people who represent the Enterprise. So, one of my colleagues, former COO of Unilever, we just brought on a very smart lady, Dessa Grassa, who was the CDO at JP Morgan Chase. And the idea is to combine the insights that we have on the demand side, the buy side, with the insights that we have on the technology side to create better operating models. So that combination of creating a new view that is acceptable to the C Suite. Because these people understand how you talk to them. But at the same time, runs on this concept of doing everything quickly. That's what we're about right now. >> That's awesome, we should get you hooked up with our new analyst we just hired, James Corbelius, from IBM. Was focusing on exactly that. The intersections of developers, Cloud, AI machine learning and data, all coming together. And IOT is going to be a key application that we're going to see coming out of that. So, congratulations. Alan thank you for spending the time to come in. >> Thanks for allowing me. >> To see us in the CUBE. It's the CUBE, bringing you more action. Here from DataWorks 2017. I'm John Furrier with my cohost Dave Vallante, here on the CUBE, SiliconANGLE Media's flagship program. Where we've got the events, straight from SiliconANGLE. Stay with us for more great coverage. Day one of two days of coverage at DataWorks 2017. We'll be right back.

Published Date : Apr 5 2017

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by Hortonworks. Thanks for coming on the CUBE. And one of the motivations that So the thing was, how do we get away from that has scaled to it. And I think that's something that we So, how about the data component? of moving the Enterprise forward. And it's not going to be, just So let me ask the question, because on And I believe it's the COO. I don't think it's going to be the CIO. So really, the value of a CFO, as sitting It depends on the CIO. Dave: But in general, And so what are you left with? "But I can't find on the IT side, Right, so the business And on the benchmark, saved zero. change the operational mindset. But there could have Give an example of a And in this company, it's But that gets the And you have to have a platform player a born in the Cloud player. You got Microsoft, you got AWS, Google, So it's got to be somebody who understands So, the language barrier, so to speak, And I think what we'd all like to do, But here's the thing. The leaders say, the top CXO's say, is that speed is of the essence. And at the end of that time, you're almost You got to take layers But the technology It is the real problem, And I think they should listen to you. the industry's going to in droves, to the Cloud. it's not going to be that radical So they have to believe that the platform is not the growth on the consumer side. the scale, the money to-- you got 10 cents, maybe I haven't really looked at the Ali Baba's And I think they have the stomach for it. is the operational model is shifting the business is not going to grow. kind of gone over to the dark side. And the idea is to combine the insights the time to come in. It's the CUBE, bringing you more action.

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Terry Wise, AWS - VMware & AWS Announcement - #theCUBE


 

the queue presents on the ground here's your host John furrier hi everyone I'm John furrow it still can angle the cube we're here in San Francisco the ritz-carlton for the exclusive coverage of Amazon Web Services AWS is big announcement with VMware CEO Pat Cal singer with the CEO of Amazon Web Start sandy chasse a year on the big announcement of VMware managing a cloud on Amazon a lot of good stuff and our next guest is Terry wise who's the vice president of global alliances great to see you good to see you John thanks for having us so you're the man I'm at bout town and he came on stage we delivered a great performance kind of humbly like he always is but this is a really big deal and you guys obviously get learning on the public cloud but this is like you know almost sweeping the double header you know game one you win the public cloud game to enterprise cloud is pretty much in your back pocket with the size of VMware you got to be happy with this deal yeah we're very pleased with it I mean if you look at it we don't look at it in the terms you just articulated it certainly entertaining but we really look at it is how we're gonna best serve customers and at the beginning at the end of the day this all came about you know really by customer demand you heard both Andy and Pat talk about it enterprise customers have been talking to us for years hey we want to run these workloads across multiple environments help make us help make that happen and now is the right time in place and the right marketing conditions to make that yeah yeah tongue-in-cheek side nice nice political answer on the Amazon front but but in reality we've been covering both Amazon and VMware both in a very deep way over the past years and I was questioning myself why is Andy Jesse coming to San Francisco to announce a deal with VMware it seems like VMware is groping a lot of criticism on the false starts of the cloud I obviously knew something big was going on so I felt that but this my question but you're innovating so much at Amazon I slowed down to go work with VMware obviously it's the customers talk about the customer impact because this is important it's not that you guys are straying from the vision of AWS which is in the cloud a lot of innovation sets the services is this just another service for AWS well it's another service but it's a very different service you know to your point this is really gonna accelerate customer adoption then we're gonna make it easier for enterprise customers to move to the public cloud environment because they can leverage the same software licenses skill sets and tools that they've used to virtualize and build private clouds so now naturally extends in the V AWS environment and it should help everybody move faster and get all the goodness and the benefits of the cloud much quicker so you have two customers on there on the stage one was Western Digital they got a huge integration it's interesting the use case for him was analytics yes so that's an Amazon benefit tutor so it's not just VMware so the deal is VMware customers get to run the VMware stuff on to Amazon so you give them a lifeline for their business models Raghu was alluding to ours being more specific this allows them to preserve their licenses as well as give their customers a bridge to the future but the reality is there's a ton of services on the Amazon side that they're going to take advantage of it's not just they're gonna get Amazon they're naturally gonna use what services do you guys see the VMware customers using the most oh that's a great question and I think I mean it really runs the gamut if you look at you know analytics for sure I mean that's a no-brainer if you look at more of the innovation use cases that are happening around IOT the things that you know don't fit night they use cases that don't fit nicely into kind of your private data center because of the constraints that you have their Big Data obviously the variable kinds of workloads massive amounts of storage all that data that's coming off these IOT centers has to go somewhere that's three redshift I mean all of these things are just natural extension so you have to be completely candid I have a hard time thinking of any that would not you know be an extension to the because Dave Olave says there's a lot of cloud native agility and innovation coming on Amazon how is that going to connect into the VMware so the customers just say hey I'm a VMware customer I'm now gonna use vCenter and I got all my comfortable dashboarding and tooling and stacks technology of VMware mm-hmm now I go to Amazon I just plug into Amazon services directly yes I'll have an AWS account that's gonna spin up the AWS native services will run those alongside the VMware offering and through V Center and the management tools you leverage our API is into cloud wash logs and all of our different management functionality so to get a single view across that integrated landscape so the number one question I had coming into today was why it's Andy Jesse coming to San Francisco so in your own words how would you describe the magnitude of this deal for both AWS and for VMware but certainly you know perhaps the most unique deal we've done we've done a lot of strategic alliances we announced one last year at this time with Accenture that's one step shy of a joint venture that's been a big deal you know we've got a number of others we just announced one with sa P a few weeks ago here in San Francisco around the BW for Hana launch but in comparison in Mississippi you know obviously a big deal and the enterprise adoption has been up - can you comment on any color around uptake with the enterprises you know prior and visa V this announcement I'm sure it's gonna be a lot more this is an on-ramp of three million customers but in general Amazon was already winning in the enterprise correct yeah I mean the fastest-growing segments for us clearly are the enterprise and public sector I want to make sure we conclude public sector in there it's probably the first time in a series of Carlton great great doing a great job they're probably the first time in history of the IT world that the public sector in many cases is moving faster than the private sector it's one of my favorite stories to tell and yeah I noticed on the on the on the region map you had a gov cloud on there that is the public sector cloud so VMware customers in public sector can tap into that is that similar before it is on the roadmap to support our Dell cloud initiative you know I think that'll come in a kind of phase two but absolutely and we're finding - is most of the government's we're working with now government agencies don't require gov cloud they want you want to run in our public cloud because it's equally secure more secure more capacity more flexibility more choice Terry thanks so much for coming on sharing your thoughts here at the exclusive announcement in a nutshell what's the big takeaway for AWS folks customers and VMware customers what's the key message that you'd like this decision here yeah I think you know today we're you know even more relevant than we were yesterday in terms of the ability to actually serve at enterprise customers full suite of workloads faster more innovative and cost-effective awesome great thanks so much appreciate your time John Ferrier here in San Francisco the risk call for the exclusive Amazon Web Services in VMware big partnership thanks for watching [Music]

Published Date : Oct 15 2016

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Raghu Raghuram, VMware - VMware & AWS Announcement - #theCUBE


 

>>The cute presents on the ground. Here's your host, John furrier. >>Hello, I'm John foray with Silicon angle media, the cube, and we are here for an Inn at the Ritz Carlton in San Francisco for the special exclusive press event with Andy Jassy. And the special announcement was Pat Gelsinger, CEO of VMware announcing what, in my opinion is probably the biggest, most historic announcement in the industry. And certainly for VMware as the future migration to the cloud migration of the next generation infrastructure continues. Uh, and so big, significant as exclusive. I'm having a one-on-one interview with Andy and Pat shortly, but I had a chance to grab the chief architect of this deal. One of the many that the lead EVP and general manager. So I don't think it's an, a Ragu Ragu Ragu around welcome, uh, to see, great to see you. Thanks for spending the time to see you. Thanks. So Ragu you're, you're an old timer VMware, but now you're also architecting. What looks to be the bridge to the future for VMware? Um, this relationship with AWS, Amazon web services puts VMware in the cloud the best, the best, most functional best, biggest public cloud, and most robust capabilities immediately in Amazon available mid 2017. But this is a path instantly for all of the and where customers, um, what's when did this all start and what motivated you to architect this? >>Yeah, I mean, um, as you recall, the past VMware, we announced our cross-cloud architecture and the idea that customers, enterprise customers want choice with control, right? The legwork for that was done, um, over a year ago, right? When we internally, we finalized our strategy to enable our platform to run in multiple different, uh, clouds, such as our weekend partner network and IBM and now AWS. So that's when we all started around this. But the key idea here is for customers that are increasingly putting a variety of workloads from the, in their private cloud, in their public cloud, you want to have a consistent way of running and managing and securing and operating these applications. And as you just pointed out, one of the biggest cloud providers for our customer is AWS. And so this was a natural partnership from that point of view. >>So one of my favorite tweets out there for us from, you know, obviously Dave Alante co-host of the cube, he said, um, please allow me to translate. He was translating from a customer, went help our customer impact one. You've squeezed the blood from the data center stone with virtualization. You've done all you can. This is my customer translation, too. You have, um, a legacy amount of VMware processes and procedures and software, AKA VMware, three year Jones, and for the agility and innovation of AWS, come on in the water's nice and warm. So essentially it's kind of tongue in cheek, but you know, the data center is, has been maxed out. So data center consolidation, certainly people don't want to be in the data center business, but they want the benefits of a data center with the cloud. You guys are not providing that. What is the impact to customers because they are jonesing for innovation that Jones and from microservices, they're jonesing for cloud native, that Jones and for the, some of the goodness that Amazon has shown works, but yet it's a huge migration nightmare and they want a SAS business model. They want a SAS company. This is the digital transformation. What is the impact of customers? >>Yeah, I mean, it's ultimately comes down to simplicity and agility, right? And the, there is two big transformations going on. One is there's a huge data center transformation going on, driven by simplicity, driven by software. And that is the whole software defined data center while you're absolutely right. Many of our customers have maxed out the server virtualization, but their network is inefficient and the storage is efficient, et cetera, et cetera. So the software defined data centers, one of the moves they're making now at the same time, like you said, they're jonesing for all these advanced services, uh, for their new applications. Uh, they want some way to bridge both environments. And that's where this service, uh, hits the sweet spot. If you will, right now, without replatforming, without changing your operational models, like your quote that you, the tweet that you quoted without changing any of our operational models, you can have an agile on demand of VMware data center. And what's running in that VMware data center is the full software defined data center stack, all of the great security and manageability capabilities of networking, of NSX, of virtual San, of vSphere at the same time, connecting to all these great services that AWS provides. It's really a best of both worlds story. >>So look from a customer standpoint, if I get this right, there's a big breathing out. Oh, finally, he got there, right? It's I don't have to do all this heavy lifting to move my VMware to the cloud. One, two in the demo that we show in V center. So specifically under the hood, what is running in the full stack? I mentioned V motion. I heard V motion mentioned. Is it all, all of the entire VMware stack running on the cloud? >>Yes. So the stack that's powering that, that you saw in the demo is a virtual sun watch lies in the storage underneath, um, NSX, providing the network virtualization. And of course, vSphere that's the core infrastructure stack. And in order to manage an ESX nodes for the hypervisor in order to manage ESX and control these resource pools and so on, you have the vSphere functionality built into V-Center. And that was a key requirement. Design requirement for this service is customers are very, very familiar with V-Center. They've been operating it for 15 years and have that as a huge ecosystem of tools, operational tools, backup dual security tools, you name it built around V-Center and all of that had to work seamlessly in the cloud. And that's why we sent her is so important. >>And certainly got a lot helps with the storage side of it. You mentioned networking, how does the Amazon relationship and the co-located if you want cold locating, but running managed in AWS help on the networking because in the demo, it was very cool besides the pay by credit card and pay by VMware account was the fact that you can pick a global footprint instantly, which means from what I took away, was it, I can be up and running in a geography with networking in the cloud, but not just Amazon's networking, you're networking. Absolutely. That's that accurate? You got it. Right. >>So, um, Amazon obviously has got a global network fabric that powers their services. And so you can stand up these clusters of the STDC hardware, if you will, on any one of their data centers in the fullness of time, maybe not on day one. And NSX already has the capability to connect across STDC clusters across different data centers. So now we can stretch a logical network, um, and have literally applications in the Portland data center of AWS and, uh, applications at the Virginia data center of AWS and applications in their London data center, all tied together, biological network. >>All right. So I'm going to ask some hard questions down so densely, by the way. So here's the hard question. So here's the hard question. So Paul Moritz and Joe Tucci no longer involved Maritz, retired, Tucci, retired, he wanted to own the enterprise. The private cloud was the original thing. Amazon was just kind of getting strong lift at that time. The world has gone all hybrids. There's a lot of hybrid cloud going around. So the world is different from them. So I want to get your comments on where the private cloud has came from to this reality and to comment to the naysayers out that I've heard some tweets like, Oh, rip VM-ware, they rang the bell, they tapped out, they capitulated talk about those two dynamics, private cloud, that vision, uh, from Mauritson Gelsey, uh, to cheek. And how do you answer the critics to say, Oh, they capitulated VMware's toast. >>Yeah. So, um, what the, uh, I would say are significantly incorrect views of how you look at this. The private cloud is still very strong, right? And you've got customers deploying the private cloud, literally every large enterprise that we talked to and we've got the leading share when it comes to private cloud deployments. And along with pivotal cloud Foundry, we can offer not just the infrastructure services of a private cloud, but also the application platform services of the private cloud or the private cloud exists for lots of different reasons can be regular. >>It's not done. The cloud is not going away anytime soon. What >>This allows customers to do is really get a hybrid that combines the best of a VMware environment or the best of an AWS. And that's really, what's unique. And what is in the service is the full VMware stack. And you've got to remember that 95% of our customers are still largely on vSphere. They've just started deploying and adopting NSX and virtual sand by adopting this service, they automatically get upgraded to the full power of network virtualization and storage virtualization. >>Of course. So you see this as an expansion of the business model, not anything I see complete expansion of the business model, that's going to come from SAS apps or, yep. >>So the whole service is a mad at service. So customers are not have to learn how to sort of rearchitect their data center. They can just get a rearchitected data center on demand wherever they want, or they can build the rearchitecture data center by themselves and connect it all up. Right. >>Okay. Final question. I'll see. Um, I'd love to chat more about what it's like cut this deal with Amazon fan of both of you guys. Um, actually we use Amazon work customer. Um, talk about your relationship with other clauses comes up with the press. People who are, you know, not as deep on, on the, on the industry they talk about IBM, Oh, it was IBM and Azure Azure. We can see that as competitive thing. I don't want to want to go there because we're going to do a whole blog post on the impact of Microsoft, which I think is the big competitor for us, for customers. But you guys have an open cloud strategy. And I think the IBM thing is let them compete. Now they have soft layer. Now some would argue Amazon, Andy talked about the relationship with them, the soft layer and how they compete. But ultimately IBM is deep with you guys. They're adding 20,000 developers. I think million people, which 4 million people trained highly integrated with VMware. So your strategy with them is the same, right? But primarily as a service operating on Amazon, are you guys going to be operating on soft layer and blue mix as well in a similar fashion? >>So, um, the service that we announced, uh, last month with IBM is a service that IBM is managing and operating, right? And we have worked very closely with them, the VMware cloud foundation, >>Just their business model. They're going to operate that you guys will operate the AWS cloud. >>We operate the VMware and IBM operates that service, but we go to market together with IBM on their service, right. And we work very closely with them. >>So this is a choice thing for you guys, as nothing to do with picking a better part, I'll even use the word primary. Okay. >>I mean, like Pat talked about, uh, the QA session, we've had lots of customers that are customers of AWS and for them, the first choice might be the VMware cloud on AWS. We equally got a lot of customers that are customers of IBM and for them and software and for them, uh, the choice would be running their on the IBM cloud with the cloud. >>Thanks for taking the time to speak with us. I'll give you the final word, not on the business side, cause it's pretty obvious. It's a good win-win on the business side. What is the coolest technical under the hood thing about this deal that people should know about? >>I think what AWS has engineered to build a service and how we are taking advantage of it for Delaware and elastic data centers across the globe is going to be very, very cool. Once you can talk more about it in a public domain >>Raku he's he had a, vice-president great to see you, a chief architect of this deal among many other things at VM-ware well-known within the industry legend in the, uh, VMware community. Thanks for joining us here on the non live Q, but we're here in San Francisco for the exclusive announcement of the AWS VMware relationship partnership integration. A lot of glad of goodness there. I'm John Ferrari. Thanks for watching.

Published Date : Oct 14 2016

SUMMARY :

The cute presents on the ground. And the special announcement was Pat Gelsinger, CEO of VMware announcing what, architecture and the idea that customers, enterprise customers want choice with control, What is the impact to customers And that is the whole software defined data center while you're absolutely right. Is it all, all of the entire VMware stack running on the cloud? And in order to manage an ESX nodes for the hypervisor in order to manage the co-located if you want cold locating, but running managed in AWS help on the networking because And NSX already has the capability to connect So here's the hard question. of the private cloud or the private cloud exists for lots of different reasons can be regular. The cloud is not going away anytime soon. of a VMware environment or the best of an AWS. of the business model, that's going to come from SAS apps or, yep. So the whole service is a mad at service. the soft layer and how they compete. They're going to operate that you guys will operate the AWS cloud. We operate the VMware and IBM So this is a choice thing for you guys, as nothing to do with picking a better part, I'll even use the word primary. the IBM cloud with the cloud. Thanks for taking the time to speak with us. the globe is going to be very, very cool. A lot of glad of goodness there.

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R "Ray" Wang, Constellation Research - IBM Information on Demand 2013 - #IBMIOD #theCUBE


 

okay we're back here live ending up day one of IBM's information on demand exclusive coverage for SiliconANGLE and Wikibon and constellation research breaking down the day one analysis I'm John furrier and join my co-host E on the cube Dave vellante of course as usual and for this closing wrap up segment of day one we have analyst and founder of constellation research ray Wang former analyst big data guru software heading up the partner pavilion kicking off all the flying around the world your own event this month past month things going great how are you how are you doing we're going to great man there's a lot of energy in q3 q4 we've been watching people look at trying to spend down their budgets and I think people are just like worried that there's going to be nothing in 2014 right so they're just bending down we're seeing these big orders like tonight I've got to fly out to New York to close out a deal and help someone else that's basically it was a big day to deal that's going down this is how crazy it's going on and so it's been like this pretty much like for the last four or five weeks so flows budget flush I just wash this budget lunchtime what are you seeing for the deals out there give us some of the examples of some of the sizes and magnitude is it you know you know how are you up and run to get get some cash into secure what size scopes are you seeing up yeah i mean what we're seeing I mean it's anything from a quarter million into like five million dollar deals some of our platform we sing at all levels the one that's really hot we were talking about this that the tableau conference was the date of is right dative is is still really really hot but on the back end we're saying data quality pop-up we're seeing the integration piece play a role we also saw a little bit of content management but not the traditional content management that's coming in more about the text mining text analytics to kind of drive that I mean I'm not sure what are you guys seeing alone yeah so what we're seeing a lot of energy I've seen the budget flush we're not involved in the deals like you are Dave is but for me what I'm seeing is IT the cloud is being accepted I'll you know those has not talked about publicly is kind of a public secret is amazon is just destroying the value proposition of many folks out there with cloud they're just winning the developers hand over fist and you know i'm not sure pivotal with cloud family even catch up even OpenStack has really got some consume energy around we're following that so it opens stack yet amazon on the public cloud winning everything no money's pouring into the enterprise saying hey we got to build the infrastructure under the hood so you can't have the application edge if you don't have the engine so the 100 x price advantage and that's really a scary thing but I think softlayer gives IBM a shot here yeah we were talking about self leyva so you are seeing more I'm seeing it aight aight figure deals and big data right and it's starting to get up there so softly I'd love to get your take on soft layers we've been having a debate all day Oh softlayer jaws mckenna what do you what's your take you're saying it's a hosting I've been a look at first of all yeah I love putting a huge gap 9 million dollars per lock event data center hosting now if that's a footprint they can shave that and kind of give their customers some comfort I think that's the way i see it i mean just I haven't gone inside the numbers to see where it's going to be where this energy is but like we're software virtualization is going on where everyone's going on with virtualization the data center I'll give them a cloud play I just don't see ya didn't have one before I mean happy cloud I mean whistling private club Wow is their software involved I think it provides them with an option to actually deliver cloud services with a compression ratio on storage and a speed that they need to do to deliver mobile mobile data analytics right there's things that are there that are required so it gives them an option to be playing the cloud well I just saw I mean in the news coverage and the small inspection that we did I did was I just didn't reek of software innovation it's simply a data center large hosting big on you agree they didn't really have a northern wobblin driving him before this was brilliant on your Sun setting their previous all these chairs deal kind of musical chairs me for the music stops get something it was that kind of the deal no I think they are feel more like customers asking for something and they wanted IBM to have it yeah IBM works it's an irr play for IBM they're gonna make money on this team not a tuck under deal 900 million no I know but they'll make money on it that's IBM almost always does with it I'll leave it up to you guys to rip on I was your conference oh thanks hey constellation connecting enterprise was awesome we were at the half moon bay Ritz we had 220 folks that were there senior level individuals one of the shocking things for me was the fact that when we pulled the audience on day one two things happen that I would never imagine first thing as ninety percent of the folks downloaded our mobile app which was like awesome right so the network was with them the knowledge is with them when they leave the event and all the relationships the second thing that really shocked me we knew we had really good ratios but it was seventy-five percent of the audience that was line of business execs and twenty-five percent IT it was like we were we didn't have to preach to the choir it was amazing and the IT folks that were they were very very innovative on that end so it was awesome in that way so a lot like the mix the mix here is much more line of business execs the last week at hadoop world loose you know the t-shirt crowd right a lot of practitioners you know scoop I've flume hey we got the earth animals ever right oh but no this event is actually interesting IBM iod for me is like I didn't realize this when I didn't I looked at numbers when we're doing a partner event yesterday and there are thirteen thousand attendees here that actually makes that the biggest big data and analytics conference bigger than strata bigger than a whole bunch of other ones and so I mean this is pretty much the Nexus of what about open world big data over there but this is a big opera you see world any world cloud big data yeah hey the between no but so IBM's done a fantastic job of really transitioning this conference from sort of an eclectic swix db2 informix right I'm management routine fest right yeah and now it's like what are the business things I mean what are we trying to save around the world are they telling the story effectively it's a hard story to tell you got big data analytics cloud mobile in the middle and you got social business but then you got all this use case they have success stories if customers that creating business outcomes they telling the story effectively is it not enough speeds and fees is it too what's your take the stories are there we've seen like 122 case studies from the business partner side we just haven't seen them percolate out and I think they've got to do a better job evangelizing stories but what's interesting is like there's that remember we talked about this data to decision level there's that data level that was IBM right here's the database here's the structure here's the content management here's the unstructured stuff this is where it sets then there was that information management level which that they started to do which is really about cleaning the data connecting that data connecting to upstream and downstream systems getting into CRM and payroll and then they got to this level about insights which was all the Cognos stuff right so they've been building up the stat from data decisions so they got data information information to insight and then we're getting to this decision-making level which they haven't made a lot of the assets or acquisitions there but that's the predictive analytics that's the cognitive computing you can see how they're wrapping around there I mean there's a lot of vendors to buy there's a lot of opportunity out there's a lot to connect and they've been working on it for a while but I guess I got to ask you how they doing what's your report card from last year this year better better storytelling better messaging I think the stories are getting better but we're seeing them in more deals now right before we'd see a lot more SI p traditional SI p oracle you know kind of competes and a little bit of IBM Cognos now we're seeing them in a lot of end-to-end deals and what we're talking about it's not like I T deals these are line of business folks that say look I really need to change my shopping experience what do you guys have we see other things like you know the fraud examples that any was talking about those are hilarious I mean those are real I see em in every place right I mean even with Obamacare right there's gonna be massive amounts of fraud there any places that people going to want to go in and figure out how to connect or correct those kind of things yeah so so seeing the use cases emerge yeah and in particular me last week in a dupe world it was financial services you're talking risk you talk a marketing you're talking fraud protection to forecasting yep the big three and then underneath that is predicted predictive analytics so you know that's all sort of interesting what's your take on on Amazon these days you know they are crushing it on so many different unbelievable right on more billion this year maybe it's when you build a whole company which is basically on the premise of hey let's get people to offset our cost structure from November 15th to january first I mean it's pretty amazing what you can do it's like everyone's covering for it and even more funny it's like they're doing in the physical world with distribution centers I know if we talked about this before but what's really interesting is they've got last mile delivery UPS FedEx DHL can't cat can't handle their capacity so now the ability from digital to physical goods they've got that and beezus goes out and buys the post so he can make the post for example a national paper overnight again he can do home delivery things that they couldn't do before they can take digital ads bring that back in and so basically what they're doing on the cloud side they're also doing on the physical distribution side amazing isn't it they're almost the pushing towards sunday delivery right US Postal Service go into five day deliveries sort of the different directions amazon I'm Amazon's going to be the postal service by the time they're done we're all going to subsidize it so so I gotta get you take on the the Oracle early statement Larry Ellison said were the iphone for the data center that's his metaphor a couple of couple or global enrolls ago now you got open stack and though we kind of laugh at that but but amazon is like the iPhone you know it's disruptive its new its emerging like Apple was reading out of the ashes with Steve Jobs Oracle I think trying to shoehorn in an iphone positioning but if OpenStack if everyone's open and you got amazon here there is a plausible strategy scenario that says hey these guys can continue to to put the naysayers at the side of the road as they march forward to the enterprise and be the iphone they've turned the data center into an API so so we got the date as their lock in right so this sim lock in Apple has lock in so is that lock in what's your take of that scenario you think it's video in the open ecosystem world they're all false open because a walk-in also applies but but you've been even to this for a long time right and probably one of the things that you're seeing is that it's not about open versus closed it's about ubiquity right Microsoft was a closed evil empire back ten years ago now it's like oh the standard right it's like ok they're harmless Google was like open and now they're the evil empire right it just depends on the perception and the really is ubiquity Amazon's got ubiquity on it so i did is pushing their winning the developers the winning the developers they got the ecosystem they got ubiquity they've got a cost structure I mean I don't know what else could go wrong I think they could get s la's maybe and once that had I don't know what is Amazon's blind spot I mean s la's I think well a lumpy performance no one wants lumpy right they want the big Dayton who's got ever who's got better public as public cloud SL is denied well I think about what he just said us everybody no but here's think that's a public road statement not an amazon said let's crunch big data computation December fifteenth you tell me what this is all I want to know well I think I think an easy move is I mean this day you've got to do that on premise I just I just don't I just don't think that people are forecasting amazon the enterprise properly and you just set out the Washington Post that is a left-field move we can now look back and say okay I said makes sense amazon can continue to commoditize and disrupt and be innovative then shift and having some sort of on prem playing oh then it's over right then and then gets the stir days surrounded the castle but they really don't have a great arm tremblay have no on print but they could they could get one good I think they want to see well think they want to but I think with them what they figured out was let's go build some cool public service get everyone else to subsidize our main offerings right it's basically ultimate shared service everyone's subsidizing Amazon's destruction of their business right so if you're Macy is why the heck are you on amazon right you know if you're competing with them why the heck are you on Amazon you're basically digging your own grave I'm paying them to do it it's amazing I mean that's that's the brilliance of this goes invade they brag about it yeah digging your own brave like it's a you know put the compute power is great okay great but you're subsidizing Amazon's for the you know compute power so r a great shot great to have you here congratulations on your event constellation research awesome successful venues ahead last month top folks in you're doing a great job with your company and the end the day out today in the last word tell the folks what's happening with IBM what do you expect to hear from them tomorrow I know you're going to be another thing you had to fly to but what does IBM what's a trajectory coming out of the show for IBM what's your analysis I think the executives have figured out that the important audience here is really the line of business leaders and to figure out how to do couple things one democratize decision-making the second thing figure out how they can actually make it easy to consume IBM at different entry points and I think the third thing is really how can we focus on improving data visualization graphics I think you'll see something about that ray Wang on the cube cube alumni tech athlete entrepreneur new for his new firm not new anymore it's a couple years on his belt doing a great job but three years old congratulations we'll be back day two tomorrow stay with us here exclusive coverage of IBM information I'm John prairie with Dave vellante this is the cube will see you tomorrow the queue

Published Date : Nov 5 2013

**Summary and Sentiment Analysis are not been shown because of improper transcript**

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