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Vishal Lall, HPE | HPE Discover 2022


 

>>the Cube presents H P E discovered 2022. Brought to you by H P E. >>Hi, buddy Dave Balon and Jon Ferrier Wrapping up the cubes. Coverage of day two, hp Discover 2022. We're live from Las Vegas. Vishal Lall is here. He's the senior vice president and general manager for HP ES Green Lake Cloud Services Solutions. Michelle, good to see you again. >>Likewise. David, good to see you. It was about a year ago that we met here. Or maybe nine months >>ago. That's right. Uh, September of last year. A new role >>for you. Is that right? I was starting that new role when I last met you. Yeah, but it's been nine months. Three quarters? What have you learned so far? I mean, it's been quite a right, right? I mean, when I was starting off, I had, you know, about three priorities we've executed on on all of them. So, I mean, if you remember back then they we talked about, you know, improving a cloud experience. We talked about data and analytics being a focus area and then building on the marketplace. I think you heard a lot of that over the last couple of days here. Right? So we've enhanced our cloud experience. We added a private cloud, which was the big announcement yesterday or day before yesterday that Antonio made so that's been I mean, we've been testing that with customers. Great feedback so far. Right? And we're super excited about that. And, uh, you know, uh, down there, the test drive section people are testing that. So we're getting really, really good feedback. Really good acceptance from customers on the data and Analytics side. We you know, we launched the S three connector. We also had the analytics platform. And then we launched data fabric as a service a couple of days ago, right, which is kind of like back into that hybrid world. And then on the marketplace side, we've added a tonne of partners going deep with them about 80 plus partners now different SVS. So again, I think, uh, great. I think we've accomplished a lot over the last three quarters or so lot more to be done. Though >>the marketplace is really interesting to us because it's a hallmark of cloud. You've got to have a market price. Talk about how that's evolving and what your vision is for market. Yes, >>you're exactly right. I mean, having a broad marketplace provides a full for the platform, right? It's a chicken and egg. You need both. You need a good platform on which a good marketplace can set, but the vice versa as well. And what we're doing two things there, Right? One Is we expanding coverage of the marketplace. So we're adding more SVS into the marketplace. But at the same time, we're adding more capabilities into the marketplace. So, for example, we just demoed earlier today quickly deploy capabilities, right? So we have an I S p in the marketplace, they're tested. They are, uh, the work with the solution. But now you can you can collect to deploy directly on our infrastructure over time, the lad, commerce capabilities, licencing capabilities, etcetera. But again, we are super excited about that capability because I think it's important from a customer perspective. >>I want to ask you about that, because that's again the marketplace will be the ultimate arbiter of value creation, ecosystem and marketplace. Go hand in hand. What's your vision for what a successful ecosystem looks like? What's your expectation now that Green Lake is up and running. I stay up and running, but like we've been following the announcement, it just gets better. It's up to the right. So we're anticipating an ecosystem surge. Yeah. What are you expecting? And what's your vision for? How the ecosystem is going to develop out? Yeah. I >>mean, I've been meeting with a lot of our partners over the last couple of days, and you're right, right? I mean, I think of them in three or four buckets right there. I s V s and the I S P is coming to two forms right there. Bigger solutions, right? I think of being Nutanix, right, Home wall, big, bigger solutions. And then they are smaller software packages. I think Mom would think about open source, right? So again, one of them is targeted to developers, the other to the I t. Tops. But that's kind of one bucket, right? I s P s, uh, the second is around the channel partners who take this to market and they're asking us, Hey, this is fantastic. Help us understand how we can help you take this to market. And I think the other bucket system indicators right. I met with a few today and they're all excited about. They're like, Hey, we have some tooling. We have the manage services capabilities. How can we take your cloud? Because they build great practise around extent around. Sorry. Aws around? Uh, sure. So they're like, how can we build a similar practise around Green Lake? So again, those are the big buckets. I would say. Yeah, >>that's a great answer. Great commentary. I want to just follow up on that real quick. You don't mind? So a couple things we're seeing observing I want to get your reaction to is with a i machine learning. And the promise of that vertical specialisation is creating unique opportunities on with these platforms. And the other one is the rise of the managed service provider because expertise are hard to come by. You want kubernetes? Good luck finding talent. So managed services seem to be exploding. How does that fit into the buckets? Or is it all three buckets or you guys enable that? How do you see that coming? And then the vertical piece? >>A really good question. What we're doing is through our software, we're trying to abstract a lot of the complexity of take communities, right? So we are actually off. We have actually automated a whole bunch of communities functionality in our software, and then we provide managed services around it with very little. I would say human labour associated with it is is software manage? But at the same time we are. What we are trying to do is make sure that we enable that same functionality to our partners. So a lot of it is software automation, but then they can wrap their services around it, and that way we can scale the business right. So again, our first principle is automated as much as we can to software right abstract complexity and then as needed, uh, at the Manus Services. >>So you get some functionality for HP to have it and then encourage the ecosystem to fill it in or replicated >>or replicated, right? I mean, I don't think it's either or it should be both right. We can provide many services or we should have our our partners provide manage services. That's how we scale the business. We are the end of the day. We are product and product company, right, and it can manifest itself and services. That discussion was consumed, but it's still I p based. So >>let's quantify, you know, some of that momentum. I think the last time you call your over $800 million now in a are are you gotta You're growing at triple digits. Uh, you got a big backlog. Forget the exact number. Uh, give us a I >>mean, the momentum is fantastic Day. Right. So we have about $7 billion in total contract value, Right? Significant. We have 1600 customers now. Unique customers are running Green Lake. We have, um, your triple dip growth year over year. So the last quarter, we had 100% growth year over year. So again, fantastic momentum. I mean, the other couple, like one other metric I would like to talk about is the, um the stickiness factor associated tension in our retention, right? As renewal's is running in, like, high nineties, right? So if you think about it, that's a reflection of the value proposition of, like, >>that's that's kind of on a unit basis, if you will. That's the number >>on the revenue basis on >>revenue basis. Okay? >>And the 1600 customers. He's talking about the size and actually big numbers. Must be large companies that are. They're >>both right. So I'll give you some examples, right? So I mean, there are large companies. They come from different industries. Different geography is we're seeing, like, the momentum across every single geo, every single industry. I mean, just to take some examples. BMW, for example. Uh, I mean, they're running the entire electrical electric car fleet data collection on data fabric on Green Lake, right? Texas Children's Health on the on the healthcare side. Right On the public sector side, I was with with Carl Hunt yesterday. He's the CEO of County of Essex, New Jersey. So they are running the entire operations on Green Lake. So just if you look at it, Barclays the financial sector, right? I mean, they're running 100,000 workloads of three legs. So if you just look at the scale large companies, small companies, public sector in India, we have Steel Authority of India, which is the largest steel producer there. So, you know, we're seeing it across multiple industries. Multiple geography is great. Great uptake. >>Yeah. We were talking yesterday on our wrap up kind of dissecting through the news. I want to ask you the question that we were riffing on and see if we can get some clarity on it. If I'm a customer, CI or C so or buyer HP have been working with you or your team for for years. What's the value proposition? Finish this sentence. I work with HPV because blank because green like, brings new value proposition. What is that? Fill in that blank for >>me. So I mean, as we, uh, talked with us speaking with customers, customers are looking at alternatives at all times, right? Sometimes there's other providers on premises, sometimes as public cloud. And, uh, as we look at it, uh, I mean, we have value propositions across both. Right. So from a public cloud perspective, some of the challenges that our customers cr around latency around, uh, post predictability, right? That variability cost is really kind of like a challenge. It's around compliance, right? Uh, things of that nature is not open systems, right? I mean, sometimes, you know, they feel locked into a cloud provider, especially when they're using proprietary services. So those are some of the things that we have solved for them as compared to kind of like, you know, the other on premises vendors. I would say the marketplace that we spoke about earlier is huge differentiator. We have this huge marketplace. Now that's developing. Uh, we have high levels of automation that we have built, right, which is, uh, you know, which tells you about the TCO that we can drive for the customers. What? The other thing that is really cool that be introduced in the public in the private cloud is fungible itty across infrastructure. Right? So basically on the same infrastructure you can run. Um, virtual machines, containers, bare metals, any application he wants, you can decommission and commission the infrastructure on the fly. So what it does, is it no matter where it is? Uh, on premises, right? Yeah, earlier. I mean, if you think about it, the infrastructure was dedicated for a certain application. Now we're basically we have basically made it compose herbal, right? And that way, what? Really? Uh, that doesnt increases utilisation so you can get increased utilisation. High automation. What drives lower tco. So you've got a >>horizontal basically platform now that handle a variety of work and >>and these were close. Can sit anywhere to your point, right? I mean, we could have a four node workload out in a manufacturing setting multiple racks in a data centre, and it's all run by the same cloud prints, same software train. So it's really extensive. >>And you can call on the resources that you need for that particular workload. >>Exactly what you need them exactly. Right. >>Excellent. Give you the last word kind of takeaways from Discover. And where when we talk, when we sit down and talk next year, it's about where do you want to be? >>I mean, you know, I think, as you probably saw from discovered, this is, like, very different. Antonio did a live demo of our product, right? Uh, visual school, right? I mean, we haven't done that in a while, so I mean, you started. It >>didn't die like Bill Gates and demos. No, >>no, no, no. I think, uh, so I think you'll see more of that from us. I mean, I'm focused on three things, right? I'm focused on the cloud experience we spoke about. So what we are doing now is making sure that we increase the time for that, uh, make it very, you know, um, attractive to different industries to certifications like HIPAA, etcetera. So that's kind of one focus. So I just drive harder at that adoption of that of the private out, right across different industries and different customer segments. The second is more on the data and analytics I spoke about. You will have more and more analytic capabilities that you'll see, um, building upon data fabric as a service. And this is a marketplace. So that's like it's very specific is the three focus areas were driving hard. All right, we'll be watching >>number two. Instrumentation is really keen >>in the marketplace to I mean, you mentioned Mongo. Some other data platforms that we're going to see here. That's going to be, I think. Critical for Monetisation on the on on Green Lake. Absolutely. Uh, Michelle, thanks so much for coming back in the Cube. >>Thank you. Thanks for coming. All >>right, keep it right. There will be John, and I'll be back up to wrap up the day with a couple of heavies from I d. C. You're watching the cube. Mhm. Mm mm. Mhm.

Published Date : Jun 30 2022

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by H P E. Michelle, good to see you again. David, good to see you. Uh, September of last year. I mean, when I was starting off, I had, you know, about three priorities we've executed on the marketplace is really interesting to us because it's a hallmark of cloud. I mean, having a broad marketplace provides a full for the platform, I want to ask you about that, because that's again the marketplace will be the ultimate arbiter of I s V s and the I S P is coming And the other one is the rise of the managed service provider because expertise are hard to come by. So again, our first principle is automated as much as we can to software right abstract complexity I mean, I don't think it's either or it should be both right. I think the last time you call your over $800 million now So the last quarter, we had 100% growth year over year. that's that's kind of on a unit basis, if you will. And the 1600 customers. So just if you look at it, Barclays the financial sector, right? I want to ask you the question that we were riffing So basically on the same infrastructure you can run. I mean, we could have a four node workload Exactly what you need them exactly. And where when we talk, when we sit down and talk next year, it's about where do you want to be? I mean, you know, I think, as you probably saw from discovered, this is, like, very different. I'm focused on the cloud experience we spoke about. Instrumentation is really keen in the marketplace to I mean, you mentioned Mongo. Thanks for coming. right, keep it right.

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Rebecca Weekly, Intel Corporation | AWS re:Invent 2020


 

>>from around the globe. It's the Cube with digital coverage of AWS reinvent 2020 sponsored by Intel, AWS and our community partners. Welcome back to the Cubes Coverage of 80 Bus Reinvent 2020. This is the Cube virtual. I'm your host, John Ferrier normally were there in person, a lot of great face to face, but not this year with the pandemic. We're doing a lot of remote, and he's got a great great content guest here. Rebecca Weekly, who's the senior director and senior principal engineer at for Intel's hyper scale strategy and execution. Rebecca. Thanks for coming on. A lot of great news going on around Intel on AWS. Thanks for coming on. >>Thanks for having me done. >>So Tell us first, what's your role in Intel? Because obviously compute being reimagined. It's going to the next level, and we're seeing the sea change that with Cove in 19, it's putting a lot of pressure on faster, smaller, cheaper. This is the cadence of Moore's law. This is kind of what we need. More horsepower. This is big theme of the event. What's what's your role in intel? >>Oh, well, my team looks after a joint development for product and service offerings with Intel and A W s. So we've been working with AWS for more than 14 years. Um, various projects collaborations that deliver a steady beat of infrastructure service offerings for cloud applications. So Data Analytics, ai ml high performance computing, Internet of things, you name it. We've had a project or partnership, several in those the main faces on thanks to that relationship. You know, today, customers Committee choose from over 220 different instance types on AWS global footprint. So those feature Intel processors S, P. J s ai accelerators and more, and it's been incredibly rewarding an incredibly rewarding partnership. >>You know, we've been covering Intel since silicon angle in the Cube was formed 10 years ago, and this is what we've been to every reinvent since the first one was kind of a smaller one. Intel's always had a big presence. You've always been a big partner, and we really appreciate the contribution of the industry. Um, you've been there with with Amazon. From the beginning, you've seen it grow. You've seen Amazon Web services become, ah, big important player in the enterprise. What's different this year from your perspective. >>Well, 2020 has been a challenging here for sure. I was deeply moved by the kinds of partnership that we were able to join forces on within telling a W s, uh, to really help those communities across the globe and to address all the different crisis is because it it hasn't just been one. This has been, ah, year of of multiple. Um, sometimes it feels like rolling crisis is So When the pandemic broke out in India in March of this year, there were schools that were forced to close, obviously to slow the spread of the disease. And with very little warning, a bunch of students had to find themselves in remote school out of school. Uh, so the Department of Education in India engaged career launcher, which is a partner program that we also sponsor and partner with, and it really they had to come up with a distance learning solutions very quickly, uh, that, you know, really would provide Children access to quality education while they were remote. For a long as they needed to be so Korean launcher turned to intel and to a W s. We helped design infrastructure solution to meet this challenge and really, you know, within the first, the first week, more than 100 teachers were instructing classes using that online portal, and today it serves more than 165,000 students, and it's going to accommodate more than a million over the fear. Um, to me, that's just a perfect example of how Cove it comes together with technology, Thio rapidly address a major shift in how we're approaching education in the times of the pandemic. Um, we also, you know, saw kind of a climate change set of challenges with the wildfires that occurred this year in 2020. So we worked with a partner, Roman, as well as a partner who is a partner with AWS end until and used the EEC Thio C five instances that have the second Gen Beyond available processors. And we use them to be able to help the Australian researchers who were dealing with that wildfire increase over 60 fold the number of parallel wildfire simulations that they could perform so they could do better forecasting of who needed to leave their homes how they could manage those scenarios. Um, and we also were able toe work with them on a project to actually thwart the extinction of the Tasmanian Devils. Uh, in also in Australia. So again, that was, you know, an HPC application. And basically, by moving that to the AWS cloud and leveraging those e c two instances, we were able to take their analysis time from 10 days to six hours. And that's the kind of thing that makes the cloud amazing, right? We work on technology. We hope that we get thio, empower people through that technology. But when you can deploy that technology a cloud scale and watch the world's solve problems faster, that has made, I would say 2020 unique in the positivity, right? >>Yeah. You don't wanna wish this on anyone, but that's a real upside for societal change. I mean, I love your passion on that. I think this is a super important worth calling out that the cloud and the cloud scale With that kind of compute power and differentiation, you gets faster speed to value not just horsepower, but speed to value. This is really important. And it saved lives that changes lives. You know, this is classic change. The world kind of stuff, and it really is on center stage on full display with Cove. I really appreciate, uh, you making that point? It's awesome. Now with that, I gotta ask you, as the strategist for hyper scale intel, um, this is your wheelhouse. You get the fashion for the cloud. What kind of investments are you making at Intel To make more advancements in the clock? You take a minute, Thio, share your vision and what intel is working on? >>Sure. I mean, obviously were known more for our semiconductor set of investments. But there's so much that we actually do kind of across the cloud innovation landscape, both in standards, open standards and bodies to enable people to work together across solutions across the world. But really, I mean, even with what we do with Intel Capital, right, we're investing. We've invested in a bunch of born in the cloud start up, many of whom are on top of AWS infrastructure. Uh, and I have found that to be a great source of insights, partnerships, you know, again how we can move the needle together, Thio go forward. So, in the space of autonomous learning and adopt is one of the start ups we invested in. And they've really worked to use methodologies to improve European Health Co network monitoring. So they were actually getting a ton of false positive running in their previous infrastructure, and they were able to take it down from 50 k False positive the day to 50 using again a I on top of AWS in the public cloud. Um, using obviously and a dog, you know, technology in the space of a I, um we've also seen Capsule eight, which is an amazing company that's enabling enterprisers enterprises to modernize and migrate their workloads without compromising security again, Fully born in the cloud able to run on AWS and help those customers migrate to the public cloud with security, we have found them to be an incredible partner. Um, using simple voice commands on your on your smartphone hypersonic is another one of the companies that we've invested in that lets business decision makers quickly visualized insects insight from their disparate data sources. So really large unstructured data, which is the vast majority of data stored in the world that is exploding. Being able to quickly discern what should we do with this. How should we change something about our company using the power of the public cloud? I'm one of the last ones that I absolutely love to cover kind of the wide scope of the waves. That cloud is changing the innovation landscape, Um, Model mine, which is basically a company that allows people thio take decades of insights out of the mainframe data and do something with it. They actually use Amazon's cloud Service, the cloud storage service. So they were able Teoh Teik again. Mainframe data used that and be able to use Amazon's capabilities. Thio actually create, you know, meaningful insights for business users. So all of those again are really exciting. There's a bunch of information on the Intel sponsor channel with demos and videos with those customer stories and many, many, many more. Using Amazon instances built on Intel technology, >>you know that Amazon has always been in about startup born in the cloud. You mentioned that Intel has always been investing with Intel Capital, um, generations of great investments. Great call out there. Can you tell us more about what, uh, Amazon technology about the new offerings and Amazon has that's built on Intel because, as you mentioned at the top of the interview, there's been a long, long standing partnership since inception, and it continues. Can you take a minute to explain some of the offerings built on the Intel technology that Amazon's offering? >>Well, I've always happened to talk about Amazon offerings on Intel products. That's my day job. You know, really, we've spent a lot of time this year listening to our customer feedback and working with Amazon to make sure that we are delivering instances that are optimized for fastest compute, uh, better virtual memory, greater storage access, and that's really being driven by a couple of very specific workloads. So one of the first that we are introducing here it reinvents is the n five the n instant, and that's really ah, high frequency, high speed, low Leighton see network variants of what was, you know, the traditional Amazon E. C two and five. Um, it's powered by a second Gen Intel scalable processors, The Cascade late processors and really these have the highest all court turbo CPU performance from the on scalable processors in the club, with a frequency up to 4.5 gigahertz. That is really exciting for HPC work clothes, uh, for gaining for financial applications. Simulation modeling applications thes are ones where you know, automation, Um, in the automotive space in the aerospace industries, energy, Telkom, all of them can really benefit from that super low late and see high frequency. So that's really what the M five man is all about, um, on the br to others that we've introduced here today and that they are five beats and that is that can utilize up thio 60 gigabits per second of Amazon elastic block storage and really again that bandwidth and the 260 I ops that it can deliver is great for large relational databases. So the database file systems kind of workload. This is really where we are super excited. And again, this is built on Cascade Lake. The 2nd 10. Yeah, and it takes It takes advantage of many different aspects of how we're optimizing in that processor. So we were excited to partner with customers again using E. B s as well as various other solutions to ensure that data ingestion times for applications are reduced and they can see the delivery to what you were mentioning before right time to results. It's all about time to results on the last one is t three e. N. 33 e n is really the new D three instant. It's again on the Alexa Cascade Lake. We offer those for high density with high density local hard drive storage so very cost optimized but really allowing you to have significantly higher network speed and disk throughput. So very cost optimized for storage applications that seven x more storage capacity, 80% lower costs given terabytes of storage compared to the previous B two instances. So we will really find that that would be ideal for workloads in distributed and clustered file system, Big data and analytics. Of course, you need a lot of capacity on high capacity data lakes. You know, normally you want to optimize a day late for performance, but if you need tons of capacity, you need to walk that line. And I think the three and really will help you do that. And and of course, I would be absolutely remiss to not mention that last month we announced the Amazon Web Services Partnership with us on an Intel select solution, which is the first, you know, cloud Service provider to really launching until select solution there. Um, and it's an HPC space, So this is really about in high performance computing. Developers can spend weeks for months researching, you know, to manage compute storage network software configuration options. It's not a field that has gone fully cloud native by default, and those recipes air still coming together. So this is where the AWS parallel cluster solution using. It's an Intel Select solution for simulation and modeling on top of AWS. We're really excited about how it's going to make it easier for scientists and researchers like the ones I mentioned before, but also I t administrators to deploy and manage and just automatically scale those high performance computing clusters in Aws Cloud. >>Wow, that's a lot. A lot of purpose built e mean, no, you guys were really nailing. I mean, low late and see you got stories, you got density. I mean, these air use cases where there's riel workloads that require that kind of specialty and or e means beyond general purpose. Now, you're kind of the general purpose of the of the use case. This is what cloud does this is amazing. Um, final comments this year. I want to get your thoughts because you mentioned Cloud Service provider. You meant to the select program, which is an elite thing, right? Okay, we're anticipating Mawr Cloud service providers. We're expecting Mawr innovation around chips and silicon and software. This is just getting going. It feels like to me, it's just the pulse is different this year. It's faster. The cadence has changed. As a strategist, What's your final comments? Where is this all going? Because this is pretty different. Its's not what it was pre code, but I feel like this is going to continue transforming and being faster. What's your thoughts? >>Absolutely. I mean, the cloud has been one of the biggest winners in a time of, you know, incredible crisis for our world. I don't think anybody has come out of this time without understanding remote work, you know, uh, remote retail, and certainly a business transformation is inevitable and required thio deliver in a disaster recovery kind of business continuity environment. So the cloud will absolutely continue on continue to grow as we enable more and more people to come to it. Um, I personally, I couldn't be more excited than to be able Thio leverage a long term partnership, incredible strength of that insulin AWS partnership and these partnerships with key customers across the ecosystem. We do so much with SVS Os Vives s eyes MSP, you know, name your favorite flavor of acronym, uh, to help end users experience that digital transformation effectively, whatever it might be. And as we learn, we try and take those learnings into any environment. We don't care where workloads run. We care that they run best on our architecture. Er and that's really what we're designing. Thio. And when we partner between the software, the algorithm on the hardware, that's really where we enable the best and user demand and the end use their time to incite and use your time to market >>best. >>Um, so that's really what I'm most excited about. That's obviously what my team does every day. So that's of course, what I'm gonna be most excited about. Um, but that's certainly that's that's the future that you see. And I think it is a bright and rosy one. Um, you know, I I won't say things I'm not supposed to say, but certainly do be sure to tune into the Cube interview with It's on. And you know, also Chatan, who's the CEO of Havana and obviously shaken, is here at A W s, a Z. They talk about some exciting new projects in the AI face because I think that is when we talk about the software, the algorithms and the hardware coming together, the specialization of compute where it needs to go to help us move forward. But also, the complexity of managing that heterogeneity at scale on what that will take and how much more we need to do is an industry and as partners to make that happen. Um, that is the next five years of managing. You know how we are exploding and specialized hardware. I'm excited about that, >>Rebecca. Thank you for your great insight there and thanks for mentioning the Cube interviews. And we've got some great news coming. We'll be breaking that as it gets announced. The chips in the Havana labs will be great stuff. I wouldn't be remiss if I didn't call out the intel. Um, work hard, play hard philosophy. Amazon has a similar approach. You guys do sponsor the party every year replay party, which is not gonna be this year. So we're gonna miss that. I think they gonna have some goodies, as Andy Jassy says, Plan. But, um, you guys have done a great job with the chips and the performance in the cloud. And and I know you guys have a great partner. Concerts provide a customer in Amazon. It's great showcase. Congratulations. >>Thank you so much. I hope you all enjoy olive reinvents even as you adapt to New time. >>Rebecca Weekly here, senior director and senior principal engineer. Intel's hyper scale strategy and execution here in the queue breaking down the Intel partnership with a W s. Ah, lot of good stuff happening under the covers and compute. I'm John for your host of the Cube. We are the Cube. Virtual Thanks for watching

Published Date : Dec 10 2020

SUMMARY :

It's the Cube with digital coverage It's going to the next level, and we're seeing the sea change that with Cove in 19, ai ml high performance computing, Internet of things, you name it. and this is what we've been to every reinvent since the first one was kind of a smaller one. by the kinds of partnership that we were able to join forces on within telling a W I really appreciate, uh, you making that point? I'm one of the last ones that I absolutely love to cover kind of the wide scope of the waves. about the new offerings and Amazon has that's built on Intel because, as you mentioned at the top of the interview, and researchers like the ones I mentioned before, but also I t administrators to deploy it's just the pulse is different this year. I mean, the cloud has been one of the biggest winners in a time of, that's the future that you see. And and I know you guys have a great partner. I hope you all enjoy olive reinvents even as you adapt to in the queue breaking down the Intel partnership with a W s. Ah, lot of good stuff happening under the

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Power Panel with Tim Crawford & Sarbjeet Johal | AWS re:Invent 2020


 

>>from around the globe. It's the Cube with digital coverage of AWS reinvent 2020 sponsored by Intel, AWS and our community partners. >>Hello and welcome back to the cubes Virtual coverage of AWS reinvent 2020. Um, John for your host with a cube virtual were not there in person, but we're gonna do it our job with the best remote we possibly can. Where? Wall to wall coverage on the AWS reinvent site as well as on demand on the Cube. Three new 3 65 platform. We got some great power panel analysts here to dig in and discuss Partner Day for a W S what it means for the customer. What it means for the enterprise, the buyer, the people trying to figure out who to buy from and possibly new partners. How can they re engineer and reinvent their company to partner better with Amazon, take advantage of the benefits, but ultimately get more sales? We got Tim Crawford, star Beat Joel and Day Volonte, Friends of the Cube. We all know him on Twitter, You guys, the posse, the Cube policy. Thanks for coming on. I'm sure it's good guys entertaining and we're >>hanging out drinking beer. Oh, my God. That'd be awesome. You guys. >>Great to have you on. I wanted to bring you on because it's unique. Cross section of perspectives. And this isn't This is from the end user perspective. And, Tim, you've been talking about the c x o s for years. You expert in this? Sorry. You're taking more from a cloud perspective. You've seen the under the hood. What's happening? Let's all put it together. If your partner Okay, first question to the group. I'm a partner. Do I win with Amazon, or do I lose with Amazon? First question. >>Yeah, I'll jump in. I'll say, you know, regardless you win, you win with Amazon. I think there's a lot of opportunity for partners with Amazon. Um, you have to pick your battles, though. You have to find the right places where you can carve out a space that isn't too congested but also isn't really kind of fettered with a number of incumbents. And so if you're looking at the enterprise space, I think that there is a ton of potential because, let's face it, >>Amazon >>doesn't have all of the services packaged in a way that the enterprise can consume. And I think that leaves a lot of fertile ground for s eyes and I SVS to jump in and be able to connect those dots so I'd say it's win, win >>start be if you're like a so cohesively onstage. Jackson's coming out talking about China, the chips and data. If you're like a vendor and I s V you're a startup or your company trying to reinvent How do you see Amazon as a partner? >>Yeah, I see Amazon as a big market for me. You know, it increased my sort of tam, if you will. Uh, the one big sort off trend is that the lines between technology providers and service providers are blurred. Actually, it's flipping. I believe it will flip at some time. We will put consume technology from service providers, and they are becoming technology providers. Actually, they're not just being pipe and power kind of cloud. They are purely software, very high sort of highly constructed machinery, if you will. Behind the scenes with software. >>That's >>what Amazon is, uh, big machine. If you are, and you can leverage that and then you can help your customers achieve their business called as a partner. I think's the women and the roll off. Actually, Assize is changing, I believe a size. Well, I thought they were getting slow, sidetracked by the service providers. But now they have to actually change their old the way they they used to get these, you know, shrink wrap software, and then install and configure and all that stuff. Now it's in a cloud >>on >>they have to focus a little more on services, and and some of the s eyes are building tools for multi cloud consumption and all that. So things are changing under under this whole big shift to go out. >>I mean, I think if you're in S I and you're lifting and shifting, you make a few bucks and helping people do that deal with the tech. But I think we're the rial. Money is the business transformation, and you find the technology is there, it's it's another tool in the bag. But if you can change your operating model, that's gonna drive telephone numbers to the bottom line. That's a boardroom discussion, and that's where the real dollars are for s eyes. That's like that's why guys like Accent you're leading leading into the cloud Big time >>e think I think you're absolutely right, David. I think that's that's one aspect that we have to kind of call out is you can be one of those partners that is focused on the transaction and you'll be successful doing that. But you're absolutely right. If you focus on the long game. I think that is just like I said, completely fertile ground. And there are a lot of opportunities because historically Amazon was ah was a Lego parts, uh, type of cloud provider, right? They provided you with the basic building blocks, which is great for Web scale and startups not so good for enterprise. And so now Amazon is starting to put together in package part, so it's more consumable by enterprises. But you still need that help. And as Sarpy just mentioned, you also have to consider that Amazon is not the only aspect that you're gonna be using. You're gonna be using other providers to. And so I think this again is where partners they pick a primary, and then they also bring in the others where appropriate. >>All right, I want to get into this whole riff. I have a cherry chin on day one. Hey, came on the special fireside chat with me and we talked about, um, cloud errors before cloud Amazon. And now I'll call postcode because we're seeing this kind of whole new, you know, in the cloud kind of generation. And so he said, OK, this pre cloud you had Amazon generation, whereas lift and shift. Ah, lot of hybrid And you have everything is in the cloud like a snowflake kind of thing. And he kind of call it the reptiles versus the amphibians you're on. See your inland, your hybrid, and then you're you're in the water. I mean, so So he kind of went on, Took that another level, meaning that. Okay, this is always gonna be hybrid. But there's a unique differentiation for being all in the cloud. You're seeing different patterns. Amazon certainly has an advantage. See, Dev Ops guru, that's just mining the data of their entire platform and saying Okay, Yeah, do this. There's advantages for being in the cloud that aren't available. Hybrid. So amphibian on land and sea hybrid. And then in the cloud. How do you guys see that if you're a partner. You wanna be on the new generation. What's the opportunity to capture value? He has hybrid certainly coexist. But in the new era, >>remember Scott McNealy used to talk about car makers and car dealers. And of course, Sun's gone. But he used to say, We want to be a carmaker. Car dealers. They got big houses and big boats, but we're gonna be a carmaker. Oh, I think it's some similarities here. I mean, there's a lot of money to be made as a as a car dealer. But you see, companies like Dell, H P E. You know, they want to be carmakers. Obviously Google Microsoft. But there are gonna be a lot of successful really big carmakers in this game. >>Yeah, I believe I believe I always call it Amazon Is the makers cloud right, So they are very developer friendly. They were very developer friendly for startups. Uh, a stem said earlier, but now they are very developer, friendly and operations friendly. Now, actually, in a way for enterprises, I believe, and that the that well, the jerry tend to sort of Are you all all in cloud are sitting just in the dry land. Right now, I think every sort off organization is in a different sort off mature, at different maturity level. But I think we're going all going towards a technology consumption as a service. Mostly, I think it will be off Prem. It can be on Prem in future because off age and all that. And on that note, I think EJ will be dominated by Tier one cloud providers like crazy people who think edge will be nominally but telcos and all that. I think they're just, uh, if >>I made Thio, if I may interject for a second for the folks watching, that might not be old enough to know who Scott McNealy is. He's the founder of Sun Microsystems, which was bought by Oracle years ago. Yeah, basically, because many computer, there's a lot of young kids out there that even though Scott McNealy's But remember, >>do your homework, Scott, you have to know who Scott Scott McNealy >>also said, because Bill Gates was dominant. Microsoft owns the tires and the gas to, and they want to own the road. So remember Microsoft was dominating at that time. So, Tim Gas data is that I mean, Amazon might have everything there. >>I was gonna go back to the to the comment. You know, McNeely came out with some really, really good analogies over his tenure. Um, it's son and you know, son had some great successes. But unfortunately, Cloud is not as simplistic as buying a car and having the dealership and the ecosystem of gas and tires. And the rest you have to think about the toll journey. And that journey is incredibly complicated, especially for the enterprise that's coming from legacy footprints, monolithic application stacks and trying to understand how to make that transition. It's almost it's almost, in a way mawr analogous to your used to riding a bike, and now you're gonna operate a semi. And so how do you start to put all of the pieces into place to be able to make that transition? And it's not trivial. You have to figure out how your culture changes, how your processes changes. There are a lot of connected parts. It's not a simple as the ecosystem of tires and gas. We have to think about how that data stream fits in with other data streams where analytics are gonna be done. What about tying back to that system of record that is going to stay on the legacy platform. Oh, and by the way, some of that has to still stay on Prem. It can't move to the cloud yet. So we have this really complicated, diverse environment that we have to manage, and it's only getting more complicated. And I think that's where the opportunity comes in for the size and s visas. Step into that. Understand that journey, understand the transitions. I don't believe that enterprises, at least in the near term, let alone short term, will be all in cloud. I think that that's more of a fantasy than reality. There is a hybrid state that that is going to be transitory for some period of time, and that's where the big opportunity is. >>I think you're right on time. I think just to double down on that point, just to bring that to another level is Dave. Remember back in the days when PCs where the boom many computers with most clients there was just getting started? There was a whole hype cycle on hard drives, right? Hard drives were the thing. Now, if you look out today, there's more. Observe, ability, startups and I could count, right? So to Tim's point, this monolithic breakdown and component izing decomposing, monolithic APs or environments with micro services is complex. So, to me, the thing that I see is that that I could relate to is when I was breaking in in the eighties, you had the mainframes. Is being the youngun I'm like, Okay, mainframes, old monolithic client server is a different paradigm thing. You had, uh, PCs and Internet working. I think all that change is happening so fast right now. It's not like over 10 years to Tim's points, like mainframes to iPhones. It's happening in like three years. Imagine crunching all that complexity and change down to a short window. I think Amazon has kind of brought that. I'm just riffing on that, But >>yeah, you're absolutely right, John. But I think there's another piece and we can use a very specific example to show this. But another piece that we have to look at is we're trying to simplify that environment, and so a good place to simplify that is when we look at server lis and specifically around databases, you know, historically, I had to pick the database architecture that the applications would ride on. Then I have to have the infrastructure underneath and manage that appropriately so that I have both the performance a swell, a security as well as architecture. Er and I have to scale that as needed. Today, you can get databases of service and not have to worry about the underpinnings. You just worry about the applications and how those data streams connect to other data streams. And so that's the direction that I think things were going is, and we see this across the enterprise we're looking for. Those packaged package might be a generalized term, but we're looking for um, or packaged scenario and opportunity for enterprises rather than just the most basic building blocks. We have to start putting together the preformed applications and then use those as larger chunks. And >>this is the opportunity for a size I was talking before about business transformation. If you take, take Tim's database example, you don't need somebody anymore. Toe, you know, set up your database to tune it. I mean, that's becoming autonomous. But if you think about the way data pipelines work in the way organizations are structured where everything because it goes into this monolithic data lake or and and And it's like generic content coming in generic data where the business owner has to get in line and beg a data scientist or quality engineered or thio ingest a new data source. And it's just like the old data warehouse days where I think there's tremendous opportunities for s eyes to go in a completely re architect. The data model. Sergeant, This is something you and I were talking about on Twitter. It's That's why I like what snowflakes doing. It's kind of a AWS is trying to do with lasted glue views, but there's a whole business transformation opportunity for s eyes, which I just think is huge. Number l >>e all talk. Go ahead. Sorry. Yeah, >>I think we >>all talk, but we know we all agree on one thing that the future is hybrid for at least for next. You know, 10 years, if not more. Uh, hybrid is hard. The data proximity is, uh, very important. That means Leighton see between different workloads, right? That's super important. And I talk about this all the time and almost in every conversation I have about about. It's just scenario, is that there three types of applications every every enterprise systems or fractured systems, systems of engagement and the systems of innovation and my theory of cloud consumption tells me that sooner or later, systems off record. We'll move into SAS SAS world. That's that's how I see it. There's no other way around, I believe, and the systems off engagement or systems off differentiation something and call it. They will leverage a lot off platforms, the service and in that context context, I have said it many times the to be a best of the breed platform. As a service, you have to be best off the breed, um, infrastructure as a service provider. And that's Amazon. And that is that's also a zero to a certain extent, and then and and Google is trying to do that, too. So the feature sort off gap between number one cloud and two and three is pretty huge. I believe I think Amazon is doing great data democratization through several less. I just love serving less for that Several things over. Unless there is >>a winning formula is no doubt about several times I totally agree. But I think one of the things that I miss it has done is they've taken server lists. They brought their putting all the I as and the chips, and they're moving all the value up to the service layer, which gives them the advantage over others. Because everyone else is trying to compete down here. They're gonna be purpose built. If you look what Apple is doing with the chips and what the Amazon is doing, they're gonna kind of have this chip to chip scenario and then the middle. Where in between is the container ization, the micro services and Lambda? So if you're a developer, you approach is it's programmable at that point that could that could be a lock spec. I think for Amazon, >>it absolutely could be John. But I think there's another aspect here that we have to touch on, especially as we think about partners and where the opportunities come in. And that is that We often talk about non cloud to cloud right, how to get from on Prem to cloud. But the piece that you also have thio bring into the conversation is Theo edge to cloud continuum and So I think if you start to look at some of the announcements this week from AWS, you start looking at some of the new instance types uh, that are very ai focused. You look at the two new form factors for outposts, which allows you to bring cloud to a smaller footprint within an on premise premises, situation, uh, different local zones. And then Thea other piece that I think is really interesting is is their announcements around PCs and eks anywhere being able to take cloud in kubernetes, you know, across the board. And so the challenge here is, as I mentioned earlier, complexity is paramount. It's concern for enterprises just moving to cloud. You start layering in the edge to cloud continuum, and it just it gets exponentially more complicated. And so Amazon is not going to be the one to help you go through that. Not because they can't, but frankly, just the scale of help that is going to be needed amongst enterprises is just not there. And so this is really where I think the opportunity lies for the s eyes and I SVS and partners. You >>heard how Jassy defined hybrid John in the article that you wrote when you did your one on one with him, Tim and the in the analyst call, you answered my question and then I want to bring in Antonio near his comment. But Jassy basically said, Look, we see the cloud bring We're gonna bring a W s to the edge and we see data centers. This is another edge node and San Antonio Neary after HP is pretty good quarter uh came out and said, Well, we heard the public cloud provider talking about hybrid welcome, you know? >>Yeah, they were going and then getting here jumped on that big time. But we'll be looking hybrid. Tim nailed The complexity is the is the evil is friction is a friction area. If the complexity could be mastered by the edge provider closest to the customer, that's gonna be valuable, um, for partners. And then we can do that. Amazon's gonna have to continue to remove the friction and putting that together, which is why I'm nervous about their channel partners. Because if I'm a partner, I asked myself, How do I make money with Amazon? Right? At the end of the day, it's money making right. So how can I be successful? Um, not gonna sell more in the marketplace. Will the customer consumer through there? Is it friction or is a complex So this notion of complexity and friction becomes a double edged sword Tim on both sides. So we have five minutes left. Let's talk about the bottom side Complexity, >>friction. So you're absolutely right, John. And you know, the other thing that that I would say is for the partner, you have to look beyond what Amazon is selling today. Look at where the customers are going. And you know, David, I think you and I were both in an analyst session with Andy Jassy several years ago where one of the analysts asked the question. So you know, what's your perspective on Hybrid Cloud? In his response, candidly was, while we have this particular service and really, what he was talking to is a service that helps you on board to Amazon's public cloud. There was there was not an acknowledgment of hybrid cloud at the time, But look at how things have changed just in a short few years, and I understand where Jassy is coming from, but this is just exemplifies the fact that if you're a partner, you have to look beyond what Amazon is saying and think toe how the customer is evolving, how the enterprise is evolving and get yourself ahead of them. That will position you best for both today. And as you're building for the future. >>That's a great point, Dave. Complexity on buying. I'm a customer. You can throw me a marketplace all you want, but if I'm not gonna be tied into my procurement, how I'm consuming technology. Tim's point. Amazon isn't the only game in town. I got other suppliers. >>Yeah, well, certainly for some technology suppliers, they're basically could bring their on prem estate if it's big enough into the cloud. Uh, you know what is big enough? That's the big question here. You know, our guys like your red hats big enough. Okay, we know that Nutanix pure. They're sort of the next layer down. Can they do? They have enough of a customer base that they could bring into the cloud, create that abstraction layer, and then you got the born in the cloud guy Snowflake, Colombia or two good examples. Eso They've got the technology partners and then they're the size and consultants. And again, I see that is the really big opportunity is 10 points out? Amazon is acknowledging that hybrid Israel in in a newly defined way, they're going out to the edge, find you wanna call data center the edge. How are they going to support those installations? How are they gonna make sure that they're running properly? That they're connected to the business process? Those air That's s I whitespace. Huge. >>Guys, we have to wrap it up right now. But I just end on, you know, we'll get everyone go A little lightning around quick soundbite on the phrase with him, which stands for what's in it from me. So if I'm a partner, I'm a customer. I look at Amazon, I think. What's in it for me? Yeah. What a za customer like what do I get out of this? >>Yeah, having done, like more than 100 data center audits, and I'm seeing what mess up messes out there and having done quite a few migrations to cloud migrations of the messy messages piece, right? And it doesn't matter if you're migrating 10% or 20 or 30 it doesn't matter that how much you're migrating? It's a messy piece, and you cannot do with our partners that work. Actually, you need that. Know how you need to infuse that that education into into your organization, how to consume cloud, how toe make sense of it, how you change your processes and how you train your people. So it touches all the products, people and processes. So on three years, you gotta have partners on your side to make it >>so Hey, I'll go quick. And, Tim, you give you the last word. Complexity is cash. Chaos is cash. Follow the complexity. You'll make cash. >>Yeah, you said it, David. I think anyway, that you can help an enterprise simplify. And if you're the enterprise, if you're the customer, look for those partners. They're gonna help you simplify the journey over time. That's where the opportunity really lies. >>Okay, guys, Expert power panel here on Cuba live program, part of AWS reinvent virtual coverage, bringing you all the analysis from the experts. Digital transformations here. What's in it for me is a partner and customer. Help me make some money, master complexity and serve my customer. Mister Cube. Thanks for watching >>que Yeah, from around the globe. It's the cute

Published Date : Dec 3 2020

SUMMARY :

It's the Cube with digital coverage of You guys, the posse, the Cube policy. You guys. Great to have you on. You have to find the right places where you can carve out And I think that leaves a lot of fertile ground for s eyes and I SVS to the chips and data. Behind the scenes with software. and then you can help your customers achieve their business called they have to focus a little more on services, and and some of the s eyes are building tools for multi cloud But if you can change your operating model, that's gonna drive telephone numbers to the bottom line. And as Sarpy just mentioned, you also have to consider that Amazon is not What's the opportunity to capture value? I mean, there's a lot of money to be made as a as a car dealer. the jerry tend to sort of Are you all all in cloud are sitting I made Thio, if I may interject for a second for the folks watching, Microsoft owns the tires and the gas And the rest you have to think about the toll journey. Remember back in the days when PCs where the boom many computers with most clients there was just getting And so that's the direction that I think things were going is, And it's just like the old data warehouse e all talk. As a service, you have to be Where in between is the container ization, the micro services and Lambda? But the piece that you also have thio bring into the conversation is Theo edge to cloud continuum heard how Jassy defined hybrid John in the article that you wrote when you did your one on one If the complexity could be mastered by the edge provider closest to the customer, is for the partner, you have to look beyond what Amazon is selling today. You can throw me a marketplace all you want, but if I'm not gonna be tied into my procurement, I see that is the really big opportunity is 10 points out? But I just end on, you know, we'll get everyone go A So on three years, you gotta have partners on your side to Follow the complexity. I think anyway, that you can help an enterprise simplify. part of AWS reinvent virtual coverage, bringing you all the analysis from It's the cute

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