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Brad Smith, AMD & Rahul Subramaniam, Aurea CloudFix | AWS re:Invent 2022


 

(calming music) >> Hello and welcome back to fabulous Las Vegas, Nevada. We're here at AWS re:Invent day three of our scintillating coverage here on theCUBE. I'm Savannah Peterson, joined by John Furrier. John Day three energy's high. How you feeling? >> I dunno, it's day two, day three, day four. It feels like day four, but again, we're back. >> Who's counting? >> Three pandemic levels in terms of 50,000 plus people? Hallways are packed. I got pictures. People don't believe it. It's actually happening. Then people are back. So, you know, and then the economy is a big question too and it's still, people are here, they're still building on the cloud and cost is a big thing. This next segment's going to be really important. I'm looking forward to this next segment. >> Yeah, me too. Without further ado let's welcome our guests for this segment. We have Brad from AMD and we have Rahul from you are, well you do a variety of different things. We'll start with CloudFix for this segment, but we could we could talk about your multiple hats all day long. Welcome to the show, gentlemen. How you doing? Brad how does it feel? We love seeing your logo above our stage here. >> Oh look, we love this. And talking about re:Invent last year, the energy this year compared to last year is so much bigger. We love it. We're excited to be here. >> Yeah, that's awesome. Rahul, how are you feeling? >> Excellent, I mean, I think this is my eighth or ninth re:Invent at this point and it's been fabulous. I think the, the crowd, the engagement, it's awesome. >> You wouldn't know there's a looming recession if you look at the activity but yet still the reality is here we had an analyst on yesterday, we were talking about spend more in the cloud, save more. So that you can still use the cloud and there's a lot of right sizing, I call you got to turn the lights off before you go to bed. Kind of be more efficient with your infrastructure as a theme. This re:Invent is a lot more about that now. Before it's about the glory days. Oh yeah, keep building, now with a little bit of pressure. This is the conversation. >> Exactly and I think most companies are looking to figure out how to innovate their way out of this uncertainty that's kind of on everyone's head. And the only way to do it is to be able to be more efficient with whatever your existing spend is, take those savings and then apply them to innovating on new stuff. And that's the way to go about it at this point. >> I think it's such a hot topic, for everyone that we're talking about. I mean, total cost optimization figuring out ways to be more efficient. I know that that's a big part of your mission at CloudFix. So just in case the audience isn't versed, give us the pitch. >> Okay, so a little bit of background on this. So the other hat I wear is CTO of ESW Capital. We have over 150 enterprise software companies within the portfolio. And one of my jobs is also to manage and run about 40 to 45,000 AWS accounts of our own. >> Casual number, just a few, just a couple pocket change, no big deal. >> And like everyone else here in the audience, yeah we had a problem with our costs, just going out of control and as we were looking at a lot of the tools to help us kind of get more efficient one of the biggest issues was that while people give you a lot of recommendations recommendations are way too far from realized savings. And we were running through the challenge of how do you take recommendation and turn them into real savings and multiple different hurdles. The short story being, we had to create CloudFix to actually realize those savings. So we took AWS recommendations around cost, filtered them down to the ones that are completely non-disruptive in nature, implemented those as simple automations that everyone could just run and realize those savings right away. We then took those savings and then started applying them to innovating and doing new interesting things with that money. >> Is there a best practice in your mind that you see merging in this time? People start more focused on it. Is there a method or a purpose kind of best practice of how to approach cost optimization? >> I think one of the things that most people don't realize is that cost optimization is not a one and done thing. It is literally nonstop. Which means that, on one hand AWS is constantly creating new services. There are over a hundred thousand API at this point of time How to use them right, how to use them efficiently You also have a problem of choice. Developers are constantly discovering new services discovering new ways to utilize them. And they are behaving in ways that you had not anticipated before. So you have to stay on top of things all the time. And really the only way to kind of stay on top is to have automation that helps you stay on top of all of these things. So yeah, finding efficiencies, standardizing your practices about how you leverage these AWS services and then automating the governance and hygiene around how you utilize them is really the key >> Brad tell me what this means for AMD and what working with CloudFix and Rahul does for your customers. >> Well, the idea of efficiency and cost optimization is near and dear to our heart. We have the leading. >> It's near and dear to everyone's heart, right now. (group laughs) >> But we are the leaders in x86 price performance and density and power efficiency. So this is something that's actually part of our core culture. We've been doing this a long time and what's interesting is most companies don't understand how much more efficiency they can get out of their applications aside from just the choices they make in cloud. but that's the one thing, the message we're giving to everybody is choice matters very much when it comes to your cloud solutions and just deciding what type of instance types you choose can have a massive impact on your bottom line. And so we are excited to partner with CloudFix, they've got a great model for this and they make it very easier for our customers to help identify those areas. And then AMD can come in as well and then help provide additional insight into those applications what else they can squeeze out of it. So it's a great relationship. >> If I hear you correctly, then there's more choice for the customers, faster selection, so no bad choices means bad performance if they have a workload or an app that needs to run, is that where you you kind of get into the, is that where it is or more? >> Well, I mean from the AMD side right now, one of the things they do very quickly is they identify where the low hanging fruit is. So it's the thing about x86 compatibility, you can shift instance types instantly in most cases without any change to your environment at all. And CloudFix has an automated tool to do that. And that's one thing you can immediately have an impact on your cost without having to do any work at all. And customers love that. >> What's the alternative if this doesn't exist they have to go manually figure it out or it gets them in the face or they see the numbers don't work or what's the, if you don't have the tool to automate what's the customer's experience >> The alternative is that you actually have people look at every single instance of usage of resources and try and figure out how to do this. At cloud scale, that just doesn't make sense. You just can't. >> It's too many different options. >> Correct The reality is that your resources your human resources are literally your most expensive part of your budget. You want to leverage all the amazing people you have to do the amazing work. This is not amazing work. This is mundane. >> So you free up all the people time. >> Correct, you free up wasting their time and resources on doing something that's mundane, simple and should be automated, because that's the only way you scale. >> I think of you is like a little helper in the background helping me save money while I'm not thinking about it. It's like a good financial planner making you money since we're talking about the economy >> Pretty much, the other analogy that I give to all the technologists is this is like garbage collection. Like for most languages when you are coding, you have these new languages that do garbage collection for you. You don't do memory management and stuff where developers back in the day used to do that. Why do that when you can have technology do that in an automated manner for you in an optimal way. So just kind of freeing up your developer's time from doing this stuff that's mundane and it's a standard best practice. One of the things that we leverage AMD for, is they've helped us define the process of seamlessly migrating folks over to AMD based instances without any major disruptions or trying to minimize every aspect of disruption. So all the best practices are kind of borrowed from them, borrowed from AWS in most other cases. And we basically put them in the automation so that you don't ever have to worry about that stuff. >> Well you're getting so much data you have the opportunity to really streamline, I mean I love this, because you can look across industry, across verticals and behavior of what other folks are doing. Learn from that and apply that in the background to all your different customers. >> So how big is the company? How big is the team? >> So we have people in about 130 different countries. So we've completely been remote and global and actually the cloud has been one of the big enablers of that. >> That's awesome, 130 countries. >> And that's the best part of it. I was just telling Brad a short while ago that's allowed us to hire the best talent from across the world and they spend their time building new amazing products and new solutions instead of doing all this other mundane stuff. So we are big believers in automation not only for our world. And once our customers started asking us about or telling us about the same problem that they were having that's when we actually took what we had internally for our own purpose. We packaged it up as CloudFix and launched it last year at re:Invent. >> If the customers aren't thinking about automation then they're going to probably have struggle. They're going to probably struggle. I mean with more data coming in you see the data story here more data's coming in, more automation. And this year Brad price performance, I've heard the word price performance more this year at re:Invent than any other year I've heard it before, but this year, price performance not performance, price performance. So you're starting to hear that dialogue of squeeze, understand the use cases use the right specialized processor instance starting to see that evolve. >> Yeah and and there's so much to it. I mean, AMD right out of the box is any instance is 10% less expensive than the equivalent in the market right now on AWS. They do a great job of maximizing those products. We've got our Zen four core general processor family just released in November and it's going to be a beast. Yeah, we're very excited about it and AWS announced support for it so we're excited to see what they deliver there too. But price performance is so critical and again it's going back to the complexity of these environments. Giving some of these enterprises some help, to help them understand where they can get additional value. It goes well beyond the retail price. There's a lot more money to be shaved off the top just by spending time thinking about those applications. >> Yeah, absolutely. I love that you talked about collaboration we've been talking about community. I want to acknowledge the AWS super fans here, standing behind the stage. Rahul, I know that you are an AWS super fan. Can you tell us about that community and the program? >> Yeah, so I have been involved with AWS and building products with AWS since 2007. So it's kind of 15 years back when literally there were just a handful of API for launching EC2 instances and S3. >> Not the a hundred thousand that you mentioned earlier, my goodness, the scale. >> So I think I feel very privileged and honored that I have been part of that journey and have had to learn or have had the opportunity to learn both from successes and failures. And it's just my way of contributing back to that community. So we are part of the FinOps foundation as well, contributing through that. I run a podcast called AWS Insiders and a livestream called AWS Made Easy. So we are trying to make sure that people out there are able to understand how to leverage AWS in the best possible way. And yeah, we are there to help and hold their hand through it. >> Talk about the community, take a minute to explain to the audience watching the community around this cost optimization area. It's evolving, you mentioned FinOps. There's a whole large community developing, of practitioners and technologists coming together to look at this. What does this all mean? Talk about this community. >> So cost management within organizations is has evolved so drastically that organizations haven't really coped with it. Historically, you've had finance teams basically buy a lot of infrastructure, which is CapEx and the engineering teams had kind of an upper bound on what they would spend and where they would spend. Suddenly with cloud, that's kind of enabled so much innovation all of a sudden, everyone's realized it, five years was spent figuring out whether people should be on the cloud or not. That's no longer a question, right. Everyone needs to be in the cloud and I think that's a no-brainer. The problem there is that suddenly your operating model has moved from CapEx to OpEx. And organizations haven't really figured out how to deal with it. Finance now no longer has the controls to control and manage and forecast costs. Engineering has never had to deal with it in the past and suddenly now they have to figure out how to do all this finance stuff. And procurement finds itself in a very awkward way position because they are no longer doing these negotiations like they were doing in the past where it was okay right up front before you engage, you do these negotiations. Now it's kind of an ongoing thing and it's constantly changing. Like every day is different. >> And you got marketplace >> And you got marketplace. So it's a very complex situation and I think what we are trying to do with the FinOps foundation is try and take a lot of the best practices across organizations that have been doing this at least for the last 10, 15 years. Take all the learnings and failures and turn them into hopefully opinionated approaches that people can take organizations can take to navigate through this faster rather than kind of falter and then decide that oh, this is not for us. >> Yeah. It's a great model, it's a great model. >> I know it's time John, go ahead. >> All right so, we got a little bumper sticker exercise we used to say what's the bumper sticker for the show? We used to say that, now we're modernizing, we're saying if you had to do an Instagram reel right now, short hot take of what's going on at re:Invent this year with AMD or CloudFix or just in general what would be the sizzle reel, that would be on Instagram or TikTok, go. >> Look, I think when you're at re:Invent right now and number one the energy is fantastic. 23 is going to be a building year. We've got a lot of difficult times ahead financially but it's the time, the ones that come out of 23 stronger and more efficient, and cost optimize are going to survive the long run. So now's the time to build. >> Well done, Rahul let's go for it. >> Yeah, so like Brad said, cost and efficiencies at the top of everyone's mind. Stuff that's the low hanging fruit, easy, use automation. Apply your sources to do most of the innovation. Take the easiest part to realizing savings and operate as efficiently as you possibly can. I think that's got to be key. >> I think they nailed it. They both nailed it. Wow, well it was really good. >> I put you on our talent list of >> And alright, so we repeat them. Are you part of our host team? I love this, I absolutely love this Rahul we wish you the best at CloudFix and your 17 other jobs. And I am genuinely impressed. Do you sleep actually? Last question. >> I do, I do. I have an amazing team that really helps me with all of this. So yeah, thanks to them and thank you for having us here. >> It's been fantastic. >> It's our pleasure. And Brad, I'm delighted we get you both now and again on our next segment. Thank you for being here with us. >> Thank you very much. >> And thank you all for tuning in to our live coverage here at AWS re:Invent, in fabulous Sin City with John Furrier, my name's Savannah Peterson. You're watching theCUBE, the leader in high tech coverage. (calm music)

Published Date : Nov 30 2022

SUMMARY :

How you feeling? I dunno, it's day on the cloud and cost is a big thing. Rahul from you are, the energy this year compared to last year Rahul, how are you feeling? the engagement, it's awesome. So that you can still use the cloud and then apply them to So just in case the audience isn't versed, and run about 40 to 45,000 AWS accounts just a couple pocket change, no big deal. at a lot of the tools how to approach cost optimization? is to have automation that helps you and Rahul does for your customers. We have the leading. to everyone's heart, right now. from just the choices they make in cloud. So it's the thing about x86 compatibility, The alternative is that you actually It's too many all the amazing people you have because that's the only way you scale. I think of you is like One of the things that in the background to all and actually the cloud has been one And that's the best part of it. If the customers aren't and it's going to be a beast. and the program? So it's kind of 15 years that you mentioned earlier, or have had the opportunity to learn the community around this and the engineering teams had of the best practices it's a great model. if you had to do an So now's the time to build. Take the easiest part to realizing savings I think they nailed it. Rahul we wish you the best and thank you for having us here. we get you both now And thank you all

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Brad Smith, AMD & Mark Williams, CloudSaver | AWS re:Invent 2022


 

(bright upbeat music) >> Hello everyone and welcome back to Las Vegas, Nevada. We're live from the show floor here at AWS re:Invent on theCUBE. My name is Savannah Peterson joined by my VIP co-host John Furrier. John, what's your hot take? >> We get wall-to-wall coverage day three of theCUBE (laughing loudly) shows popping, another day tomorrow. >> How many interviews have we done so far? >> I think we're over a hundred I think, (laughing loudly) we might be pushing a hundred. >> We've had a really fantastic line up of guests on theCUBE so far. We are in the meat of the sandwich right now. We've got a full line up of programming all day long and tomorrow. We are lucky to be joined by two fantastic gentlemen on our next segment. Brad, who's a familiar face. We just got to see you in that last one. Thank you for being here, you still doing good? >> Still good. >> Okay, great, glad nothing's changed in the last 14 minutes. >> 'no, we're good. >> Would've been tragic. And welcome, Mark, the CEO of Cloud Saver. Mark, how you doing this morning? >> I'm doing great, thanks so much. >> Savannah: How's the show going for ya'? >> It's going amazing. The turnout's just fantastic. It's record turnouts here. It's been lots of activity, it's great to be part of. >> So I suspect most people know about AMD, but Mark, I'm going to let you give us just a little intro to Cloud Saver so the audience is prepped... >> 'yeah, absolutely. So at Cloud Saver we help companies manage their Cloud spin. And the way that we do it is a little bit unique. Most people try and solve Cloud cost management just through a software only solution but we have a different perspective. There's so many complexities and nuances to managing your Cloud spin, that we don't think that software's enough. So our solution is a full managed service so we can plan our own proprietary technology with a full service delivery team, so that we come in and provide project management, Cloud engineering, FinOps analysts, and we come in and basically do all the cost authorization for the company. And so it's been a fantastic solution for us and something that's really resonated well within our customer base. >> I love your slogan. "Clean up the Cloud with the Cloud Saver Tag Manager'. >> Mark: That's right. >> So yesterday in the Keynote, Adams Lesky said, "Hey if you want to tighten your belt, come to the Cloud." So, big focus right now on right sizing. >> That's right. >> I won't say repatriation 'cause that's not kind of of happening, but like people are looking at it like they're not going to, it's not the glory days where you leave all your lights on in your house and you go to bed, you don't worry about the electricity bill. Now people are like, "Okay, what am I doing? Why am I doing it?" A lot more policy, a lot more focus. What are you guys seeing as the low hanging fruit, best practices, the use cases that people are implementing right now? >> Yeah, if you think about where things are at now from a Cloud cost management perspective, there's a lot of frustration in the marketplace because everybody sees their cost continually going up. And what typically happens is they'll say, okay we need to figure out what's going on with this cost and figure out where we can make some changes. And so they go out and get a cost visibility tool and then they're a little bit disappointed because all that visibility tool is completely dependent upon properly tagging your resources. So what a lot of people don't understand is that a lot of their pain that they're experiencing, the root cause is actually they've got a data problem which is why we built a entire solution to help companies clean up their Cloud, clean up their tags. It really is a foundational piece to help them understand how to manage their costs. >> I just.. >> Data is back in the data problem again >> Shocking, right? Not a theme we've heard on the show. Not a theme we've heard on the show at all. I mean, I think with tags it matters more than people realize and it can get very messy very quick. I know that this partnership is relatively new, six months, you told us before this show. Brad what does this partnership mean for AMD customers? >> Yeah, it's critical, they have a fantastic approach to this kind of a full service approach to cost optimization, compete optimization. AMD we're very, extremely focused on providing most cost efficient, most performance, and most energy efficient products on the market. And as Adam talked about, come to the Cloud to tighten your belt. I'll follow up. When you come to the Cloud, your choice matters, right? Your choice matters on what you use and what the downstream impact and cost is. And it also matters in sustainability and other other factors with our products. >> You know, yesterday Zeyess Karvellos one of our analysts on theCUBE, he used his own independent shop. We were talking about this focus and he actually made a comment I want to get your both reaction to, he said "Spend more in the Cloud, save more." Meaning there are ways to spend more on the Cloud and save more at the same time. >> Right. >> It's not just cut and eliminate, it's right side. I don't know what the right word is. Can you guys.. >> No, I think what you're saying is, is that there are areas where you need to spend more so you can be more efficient and get value that way, but there's also plenty of areas where you're spending money unnecessarily. Either you have resources that nobody's using. Let's find those and pull them to the front and center and turn them off, right? Or if you've over provisioned certain areas let's pull those back. So I think having the right balance of where you spend your money to get the value makes total sense. >> John: Yeah >> I like that holistic approach too. I like that you're not just looking at one thing. I mean, people, you're kind of, I'm thinking of you as like the McKinsey or like the dream team that just comes in tidies everything up. Makes sure that people are being, getting that total cost optimization. It's exciting. So who, I imagine, I mean obviously the entire organization benefits, but who benefits most? What types of roles? Who's using you? >> Right, so, Cloud cost management really benefits the entire organization, especially when times get tougher and everybody's looking to tighten their belt with cost. You know.. >> Wait every time when you say that, I'm like conscious, (laughing loudly) of my abdomen. we're in Vegas, there's great food, (laughing loudly) and we got, (laughing loudly) thanks a lot Adam, thanks a lot. (all laughing loudly). >> No, but it really does benefit everybody across the organization and it also helps people to keep cost management kind of front and center, right? No company allows people to have a complete blank check to go out there for infrastructure and as a way to make sure you've got proper checks and balances in place so that you're responsibly managing your IT organization. >> Yeah, and going back to the spend comment, spend more, you know, to save money. You know, look, we're going to be facing a very difficult situation in 23. I think there's going to be a lot of headwinds for a lot of companies. And the way to look at this is it's if you can provide yourself additional operating capital to work, there's other aspects to working with the business. Time to market, right? You're talking about addressing your top line. There's other ways to use applications and the services from AWS to help enable your business to grow even faster in '23 right? So '23 is a time to build, not necessarily a time to hang back and hope everything turns out okay. >> Yeah we can't go over it, (chuckles) We can't go under it, we got to go through it... >> Got to make it work >> Got to make our way through it. I think it's, yeah, it's so important. So as the partnership grows, what's next for you two companies? Brad will go to you first. >> Yeah sure you know, we're very excited to partner with Cloud Saver. It's fantastic company, have great team. And for us it's AMB is entering into the partnership space of this now. So now we've got a great position with AWS. We love their products, and now we're going to try to enable as many partners as we can in some specific areas. And for us cost optimization is priority number one. So you'll see a lot of programs that come out in '23 around this area. We're going to dedicate a lot of sales resources to help as many enterprise customers as we can, working with our close partners like Cloud Saver. >> Next ecosystem developing for you guys. >> Absolutely, absolutely, and you know AMD's they're still fairly new in the Cloud space, right? And this is a journey that takes a long time, and this is the next leg in our growth in the environment. >> Well, certainly the trend is more horsepower, more under the hood, more capabilities, customized >> Oh that's coming. >> Workloads. You're starting to see the specialized instances, you can see what's happening and soon it's going to be like a, it's own like computer in the Cloud >> Right. >> More horsepower. >> You think about this, I mean more than 400 instance types, more than 400 types of services out there in that range. And you think about all the potential interactions and applications. It's incredibly complex, right? >> Yeah that decision matrix just went like this in my brain when you said that. That is wild. And everyone wants to do more, faster, easier but also with the comfort of that cost savings, in terms of your customers priorities, I mean, you're talking to a lot of different people across a lot of different industries both of you are, I'm sure is cost optimization the number one priority as we're going into 2023? >> Yeah. Matter of fact, I have a chance to obviously speak with AWS leadership on a regular basis. Every single, they keep telling me for the past two months, every single CEO they're speaking to right now, it's the very first things out of the mouth. It's top of mind for every major corporation right now. And I think the message is also the same. It's like, great, let's help you do that but at the same time, is it not a bad time to re:Invest with some of those additional savings, right? And I think that's where the value of else comes into play. >> Yeah, and I think what you guys are demonstrating to also is another tell sign of this what I call NextGen Cloud evolution, which is as the end-to-end messaging and positioning expands and as you see more solutions. You know, let's face it, it's going to be more complex. So the complexity will be abstracted away by new opportunities like what you guys are doing, what you're enabling. So you're starting to see kind of platforms emerging across the board as well as more ISVs. So ISVs, people building software, starting to see now more symbiotic relationship, for developers and entrepreneurship. >> Yeah, so the complexity of the Cloud is certainly something that's not going to get any less as time goes on, right? And I think as companies realize that, they see it, they acknowledge it and I think they're going to lean on partners to help them navigate those waters. So that's where I think the combination of AMD and Cloud Saver, we can really partner very well because I think we're both very passionate about creating customer value, and I think there's a tremendous number of ways that we can collaborate together to bring that to the customers. >> And you know what's interesting too you guys are both hitting on this is that this next partner channel whatever you want to call it is very joint engineering and development. It's not just relationships and selling, there's integration and the new products that can come out is a phenomenal, we're going to watch. I think I predict that the ecosystem's going to explode big time in terms of value, just new things, joint engineering, API... >> 'it's so collaborative too. >> Yeah, it's going to be... >> 'well, the innovation in the marketplace right now is absolutely on fire. I mean, it's so exciting to see all the new technologies have on board. And to be able to see that kind of permeate throughout the marketplace is something that's just really fun and excited to be part of. >> Oh, when you think about the doom and gloom that we hear every day and you look around right now, everybody's building, right? And... >> this and smiling. >> And smiling, right? >> Paul: Today, (laughing loudly) >> Until Thursday when the legs start to get out. >> Yeah. >> Yeah, what recession? I mean, it's so crowded here. And again, this is the point that the Amazon is now a big player in this economy in 2008 that last recession, they weren't a factor. Now you got be tightening new solutions. I think you're going to see, I think more agility. I think Amazon and the ecosystem might propel us out the recession faster if you get the tailwind that might be a big thing we're watching. >> I agree. Cloud computing is inevitable. >> Yeah. >> It's inevitable. >> Yeah, it's no longer a conversation, it's a commitment. And I think we all certainly agree with that. So, Brad is versed in this challenge because we did it in our last segment. But Mark, we have a new tradition I should say, at re:Invent here, where we're looking for your 32nd Instagram reel, your sizzle your thought leadership hot take on the most important story or theme of the show this year. >> For the show as a whole. Wow, well, I think innovation is absolutely front and center today. I think, of the new technologies that we're seeing out there are absolutely phenomenal. I think they're taking the whole Cloud computing to the next level, and I think it's going to have a dramatic impact on how people develop applications and run workloads in the Cloud. >> Well done. What do you think John? I think you nailed it. >> Nailed it. Yeah, want to go for round two? >> Sure. >> Sure, I'll give a shot, (laughing loudly) So... >> 'get it, Brad. >> So, when in public Cloud choice matters? >> It matters. Think about the instance types you use think about the configurations you use and think about the applications you're layering in there and why they're there, right? Optimize those environments. Take advantage of all the tools you have. >> Yeah, you're going to start tuning your Cloud now. I mean, as it gets bigger and better, stronger you're going to start to see just fine tuning more craft, I guess. >> Mark: Yeah. >> In there, great stuff. >> Paul, and in these interesting times, I'm not committed to calling it a recession yet. I still have a chart of hope. I think that the services and the value that you provide to your customers are going to be one of those painkillers that will survive through this. I mean we're seeing a little bit of the trimming of the fat, of extraneous spending in the tech sector as a whole. But I can't imagine folks not wanting to leverage AMD and Cloud Saver, it's exciting, yeah. >> Saving money never goes out of style right? (laughing loudly) >> Saving money is always sexy. I love that, yeah, (laughing loudly) It's actually really... That's a great line goes on. Mark, thank you so much for being here and sharing your story with us. We really appreciate it, Brad. It's been a fabulous thing. You're just going to stay here all day, right? >> I'll just hang out, yeah. >> All right. >> I'm yours. >> I love that. And thank you all for tuning to us live here from the show floor at AWS re:Invent in fabulous sunny Las Vegas Nevada with John Furrier, I'm Savannah Peterson you're watching theCUBE, the leader in high tech coverage. (bright upbeat music)

Published Date : Nov 30 2022

SUMMARY :

We're live from the show We get wall-to-wall I think we're over a hundred We just got to see you in that last one. in the last 14 minutes. Mark, how you doing this morning? it's great to be part of. but Mark, I'm going to let you give us and nuances to managing your Cloud spin, I love your slogan. come to the Cloud." and you go to bed, in the marketplace I mean, I think with tags it matters more come to the Cloud to tighten your belt. and save more at the same time. I don't know what the right word is. of where you spend your money I like that you're not and everybody's looking to and we got, (laughing loudly) No company allows people to So '23 is a time to build, got to go through it... So as the partnership to partner with Cloud Saver. and you know AMD's and soon it's going to be like a, And you think about all both of you are, I'm sure And I think that's where the Yeah, and I think what Yeah, so the complexity and the new products that I mean, it's so exciting to about the doom and gloom the legs start to get out. that the Amazon is now a big I agree. And I think we all it's going to have a dramatic impact I think you nailed it. Yeah, want to go for round two? Take advantage of all the tools you have. I mean, as it gets bigger and the value that you You're just going to And thank you all for

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Brad Smith & Simon Ponsford | AWS re:Invent 2022


 

foreign continued coverage of AWS re invent my name is Savannah Peterson and I am very excited to be joined by two brilliant blokes in the space of efficiency and performance whether you're on Prem or in the cloud today's discussion is going to be fascinating please welcome Brad and Simon to the show how are you Simon coming in from the UK how you feeling well thank you excellent and Brad we have you coming in from Seattle how are you this morning doing fine thank you excellent and feeling bookish given your background love that I know that you both really care about efficiency and performance it's a very hot topic both of the show and in the industry right now I'm curious I'm going to open it up with you Simon what challenges and I think you've actually continued to tackle these throughout the course of your career what challenges were you facing and wanting to solve when you started yellow dog um really we're just looking at cloud and coming from an on-premise environment really wanted to be able to make accessing Cloud particularly a volume to be simple and straightforward um if you look at today at the number of instance types available from the major Cloud providers there's more than seven thousand different instance types whereas on-prem you go along you select your processes you select your systems it's already be really easy when you hit the cloud you've just got this amazing amount of choice so really it was all about how can you make Intelligent Decisions for you know are you going to run your workload how to match it with what you've got on premise and that was really the inspiration for Rafael so staying there for just a second what does yellow dog provide customers is a SAS system so um you get to it by accessing through the yellow platform and what it allows people to do is to be able to make Intelligent Decisions about where to run their workload would that be on premise or in the cloud it has a wealth of information it understands the costs the performance the latency and the availability of every different instance type in all different clouds it really allows people to uh to be able to make use of that information provision exactly what they need and to be able to run their workloads yeah it also includes a provisioner and it also includes a scheduler as well which is a cloud native scheduler so it's designed to be able to cope with um with cloud in terms of things like spots and interruptions and be able to uh to reschedule and fail over between clouds if there's ever need to do so yeah that sounds incredible and I know this means a lot for partners like AMD Brad talk to me about the partnership and what this means for AMD for your customers yeah absolutely it you know we're excited to be aligned with the uh with a company like yellow dog it's it's um you know the the importance of compute is becoming more and more prevalent every day and it's it's always been top of mind but especially now when you think about what the uh what the economy and the rest of the world is kind of facing over the next you know probably a year or longer it's so important that um that you're able to maximize your dollars and your spend and doing away with uh with uh with absolute certainty that you've got the right type of people behind you uh ensuring that you're your dollars are being spent very wisely and the great thing about yell dogs that they have tremendous insight into uh into cost optimization computer optimization across the entire Globe their their indexes is quite remarkable and what it does is it allows uh customers to actually see just how performant and cost efficient AMD is so it allows us to really put our best foot forward and and gives customers a chance to understand something that they probably weren't uh more familiar with the fact that uh that AMD uh is a tremendous a tremendous value in the marketplace yeah and and uh Simon can you tell us a little bit more about the yellow dog index I'm glad you brought that up Brad yes the yellow index is uh is essentially it's live it's available for anyone to access you can just go to index.yam.tech and you'll be able to see pretty much every single instance type that's available from all the major Cloud providers and be able to make your selection are you looking for GPU type nodes are you looking for AMD processors are you looking just for performance essentially what you're able to do is create a live view of effectively what's available in different data centers around the world and the price at this moment in time also just uh as Brad mentioned in terms of you know cost efficiency and uh and being taking green values seriously as we should we should do the yellow index also has the ability to be able to see at that point in time where the best place to be at a runner job is based upon the lowest carbon impact of running at this moment in time and that for many organizations gives an amazing Insight in not just about being able to find the the understand fishing processes but being able to ensure the greenest energy possible is powering that process when you want to be able to run your workload it's so powerful what you just said and I think when we exactly it's not just about it's not just about power but it's about place when we are are looking at Global Computing at scale what I know that there's ESG advantages in and ESG being a very hot topic when we're talking about AMW on AWS and and and leveraging tools like yellow dog what other sorts of advantages Beyond being least carbon impactful can your Mutual customers benefit from so it's not like I say there's many other features you know a very important thing when you're running a high performance Computing workload is being able to match the instruction set that you're running on premise and then being able to use that in the cloud as well and also to be able to make Intelligent Decisions of where should something run should would something be more efficient um to build on premise should we always try and maximize our on-premise resources before going into the cloud there's a lot about being able to just be able to make decisions and yellow itself it makes thousands of decisions per second to be in a workout where the the best and most optimized places to to run your workload yeah so Brad you work with a lot of companies at scale what type of scale is possible when leveraging Technologies like AMD and yellow dog combined well you know I love the fact that you mentioned uh you know HPC and it's one of the areas that actually is most exciting for for me personally and for and for AMD with the combination of yellow dog and AWS and AWS launched the very first HPC uh instance type last year and you know we're we're we haven't even begun to answer a question we haven't gotten to see um the full-scale capability in the cloud when it comes to these uh these very coordinated and very refined workloads that are running at massive scale and and uh you know we've got some some products we'll be launched in the near future as well that are incredibly performant and you know to be honest I don't think I don't think we have even come close to seeing the scale relative to somebody's very optimized workloads in HPC uh that that we're capable of so um we're excited we're excited for the next few years to see how how we can wrap in um some of the tremendous success that AMD has had on-prem in these these these massive compute centers and replicating that same success inside AWS with companies like yellow dog it's uh it we're excited to see what uh what's what's going to come forward can you give us a preview of anything on the record that gets you really excited about the future I was going to ask you what what had you looking forward to 2023 and Beyond but nothing well not nothing official of course uh but um I will say this you know AMD has recently successful had the launch for Genoa uh it's our next next-gen release and it is um it is proving to be it absolutely is the dominant compute engine it at this point that exists and you know when you start to couple that with the the prowess of AWS you know you could see that over time becoming something potentially that um you know um can really start to change the compute landscape quite a bit so we're hopeful that you know in the future we'll have something along those lines uh with AWS and others and um we're very uh we're very bullish in that area love it uh Simon what about you you've been passionate about low carbon I.T for a long time is carbon neutral Tech in our future what I realize is a bold and lofty claim for you but feel free to give us any of your future predictions um yeah so well I started here trying to build solutions for you know many years ago so 2006 um I was part of a team that launched the the world's lowest powered Windows PC that was actually based on the AMD technology back then so uh you can tell that AMD have been working on a low power for us for a long time in terms of carbon neutral yes I think um certainly there's a there's a few data centers around the world now that are getting very close to uh to carbon neutral some of which may have already achieved it so that's really interesting but so you know the the second part of that is really the the manufacturer of everything that goes into those Services systems and being able to to get to uh you know a net zero on those over a period of time and when we do that which is yeah not without challenges but but certainly possible then we really will have carbon neutral I.T which will be uh a benefit to everyone you know mankind itself yeah casual statement and I have to say that I wholeheartedly agree I think that it's one of the greater challenges of Our Generation especially as what we're able to do in HPC in particular since we're talking about it is only going to grow and scale and magnitude and the amount of data that we have to organize certain process is is wild even today so I love that I'm curious is there anything that you can share with us that's in the pipeline for Yellow Dog anything coming up in the future that's very exciting um so we're coming up very soon um we're going to release something called um version 4 again log which contains um what we call a resource framework which is all about making sure you've got everything you need before you run a job either on-prem or in the cloud so that might be anything from making sure you've got the right licenses making sure that your data is all in the right location making sure you've got all aspects of your workflow ready before you start launching compute and start really but you know burning through dollars with computer could potentially sat there uh not not doing anything until other tasks keep catch up so we're really excited about this new V4 release which will uh which will come out very soon awesome we can't wait to learn more about that hopefully here again on the cube Brad what do Partnerships with companies like yellowdog meme for you and for the customers that you're able to serve yeah it's it's incredibly important I it's you know there's one of the difficulties in in compute that we have today especially in Cloud compute there's there's so much available at this point I mean there was a point in time it was very simple and straightforward it's not even close to being that anymore green so you know one of the things I love about yellow dog itself is actually it does a great they do a great job of making very complex situations and environments fairly simple to understand especially from a business perspective and so one of the things that we love about it is it actually helps our customers you know the AMD direct customers better understand how to properly use our technology and to get the most out of it and so it's difficult for us to articulate that message because you know we are a Semiconductor Company so sometimes it's a little tough to be able to articulate workloads and applications in the way that our customer base will be able to understand but you know it's it's so critical to have companies like yellow dog in the middle that can actually you know make that translation for us directly to the customer um you know and and especially too when you start thinking about ESG and environmental relationships and I'd like to make a comment and one of the things that is fantastic about AMD AWS and yellow we all share the same Mission and we're very public about those missions about just being better to the to the planet and um you know AMD has taken some very aggressive uh targets through 2025 much beyond anything that the industry has expected and you know because of that we are you know we are the most um we are the most power efficient xa6 product on the marketplace and it's not even close and you know I look forward to the day when uh you know you start looking at instance types inside these public Cloud providers in conjunction with the old dog and you can actually even start to see maybe potentially what that carbon footprint is based on those decisions you make on compute and um you know considering that more than half to spend for everybody is generally compute in these environments it's critical to really know what your true impact in the world is and um it's just one of the best parts about a partnership like this oh what a wonderful note to close on and I love both the Synergy between all the partners on a technology level but most importantly on a mission level because none of it matters if we don't have a planet that we can continue to innovate on so I'm I'm really grateful that you're both here fighting a good fight working together and also making a lot of information available for companies of all different sizes as they're navigating very complex decision trees in and operating their stack so thank you both Simon and Brad I really appreciate your time it's been incredibly insightful and thank you to our audience for tuning in to our continuing coverage of AWS re invent here on thecube my name is Savannah Peterson and I look forward to learning more with you soon foreign [Music]

Published Date : Nov 21 2022

SUMMARY :

to the day when uh you know you start

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Ian Smith, Chronosphere | KubeCon + CloudNativeCon NA 2022`


 

(upbeat music) >> Good Friday morning everyone from Motor City, Lisa Martin here with John Furrier. This is our third day, theCUBE's third day of coverage of KubeCon + CloudNativeCon 22' North America. John, we've had some amazing conversations the last three days. We've had some good conversations about observability. We're going to take that one step further and look beyond its three pillars. >> Yeah, this is going to be a great segment. Looking forward to this. This is about in depth conversation on observability. The guest is technical and it's on the front lines with customers. Looking forward to this segment. Should be great. >> Yeah. Ian Smith is here, the field CTO at Chronosphere. Ian, welcome to theCUBE. Great to have you. >> Thank you so much. It's great to be here. >> All right. Talk about the traditional three pillars, approach, and observability. What are some of the challenges with that, and how does Chronosphere solve those? >> Sure. So hopefully everyone knows people think of the three pillars as logs, metrics and traces. What do you do with that? There's no action there. It's just data, right? You collect this data, you go put it somewhere, but it's not actually talking about any sort of outcomes. And I think that's really the heart of the issue, is you're not achieving anything. You're just collecting a whole bunch of data. Where do you put it? What are you... What can you do with it? Those are the fundamental questions. And so one of the things that we're focused on at Chronosphere is, well, what are those outcomes? What is the real value of that? And for example, thinking about phases of observability. When you have an incident or you're trying to investigate something through observability, you probably want to know what's going on. You want to triage any problems you detect. And then finally, you want to understand the cause of those and be able to take longer term steps to address them. >> What do customers do when they start thinking about it? Because observability has that promise. Hey, you know, get the data, we'll throw AI at it. >> Ian: Yeah. >> And that'll solve the problem. When they get over their skis, when do they realize that they're really not tackling it properly, or the ones that are taking the right approach? What's the revelation? What's your take on that? You're in the front lines. What's going on with the customer? The good and the bad. What's the scene look like? >> Yeah, so I think the bad is, you know, you end up buying a lot of things or implementing even in open source or self building, and it's very disconnected. You're not... You don't have a workflow, you don't have a path to success. If you ask different teams, like how do you address these particular problems? They're going to give you a bunch of different answers. And then if you ask about what their success rate is, it's probably very uneven. Another key indicator of problems is that, well, do you always need particular senior engineers in your instance or to help answer particular performance problems? And it's a massive anti pattern, right? You have your senior engineers who are probably need to be focused on innovation and competitive differentiation, but then they become the bottleneck. And you have this massive sort of wedge of maybe less experienced engineers, but no less valuable in the overall company perspective, who aren't effective at being able to address these problems because the tooling isn't right, the workflows are incorrect. >> So the senior engineers are getting pulled in to kind of fix and troubleshoot or observe what the observability data did or didn't deliver. >> Correct. Yeah. And you know, the promise of observability, a lot of people talk about unknown unknowns and there's a lot of, you know, crafting complex queries and all this other things. It's a very romantic sort of deep dive approach. But realistically, you need to make it very accessible. If you're relying on complex query languages and the required knowledge about the architecture and everything every other team is doing, that knowledge is going to be super concentrated in just a couple of heads. And those heads shouldn't be woken up every time at 3:00 AM. They shouldn't be on every instant call. But oftentimes they are the sort of linchpin to addressing, oh, as a business we need to be up 99.99% of the time. So how do we accomplish that? Well, we're going to end up burning those people. >> Lisa: Yeah. >> But also it leads to a great dissatisfaction in the bulk of the engineers who are, you know, just trying to build and operate the services. >> So talk... You mentioned that some of the problems with the traditional three pillars are, it's not outcome based, it leads to silo approaches. What is Chronosphere's definition and can you walk us through those three phases and how that really gives you that competitive edge in the market? >> Yeah, so the three phases being know, triage and understand. So just knowing about a problem, and you can relate this very specifically to capabilities, but it's not capabilities first, not feature function first. So know, I need to be able to alert on things. So I do need to collect data that gives me those signals. But particularly as you know, the industry starts moving towards as slows. You start getting more business relevant data. Everyone knows about alert storms. And as you mentioned, you know, there's this great white hope of AI and machine learning, but AI machine learning is putting a trust in sort of a black box, or the more likely reality is that really statistical model. And you have to go and spend a very significant amount time programming it for sort of not great outcomes. So know, okay, I want to know that I have a problem, I want to maybe understand the symptoms of that particular problem. And then triage, okay, maybe I have a lot of things going wrong at the same time, but I need to be very precise about my resources. I need to be able to understand the scope and importance. Maybe I have five major SLOs being violated right now. Which one is the greatest business impact? Which symptoms are impacting my most valuable customers? And then from there, not getting into the situation, which is very common where, okay, well we have every... Your customer facing engineering team, they have to be on the call. So we have 15 customer facing web services. They all have to be on that call. Triage is that really important aspect of really mitigating the cost to the organization because everyone goes, oh, well I achieved my MTTR and my experience from a variety of vendors is that most organizations, unless you're essentially failing as a business, you achieve your SLA, you know, three nines, four nines, whatever it is. But the cost of doing that becomes incredibly extreme. >> This is huge point. I want to dig into that if you don't mind, 'cause you know, we've been all seeing the cost of ownership miles in it all, the cost of doing business, cost of the shark fan, the iceberg, what's under the water, all those metaphors. >> Ian: Yeah. >> When you look at what you're talking about here, there are actually, actually real hardcore costs that might be under the water, so to speak, like labor, senior engineering time, 'cause Cloud Native engineers are coding in the pipelines. A lot of impact. Can you quantify and just share an example or illustrate where the costs are? 'Cause this is something that's kind of not obvious. >> Ian: Yeah. >> On the hard costs. It's not like a dollar amount, but time resource breach, wrong triage, gap in the data. What are some of the costs? >> Yeah, and I think they're actually far more important than the hard costs of infrastructure and licensing. And of course there are many organizations out there using open source observability components together. And they go, Oh it's free. No licensing costs. But you think again about those outcomes. Okay, I have these 15 teams and okay, I have X number of incidents a month, if I pull a representative from every single one of those teams on. And it turns out that, you know, as we get down in further phases, we need to be able to understand and remediate the issue. But actually only two teams required of that. There's 13 individuals who do not need to be on the call. Okay, yes, I met my SLA and MTTR, but if I am from a competitive standpoint, I'm comparing myself to a very similar organization that only need to impact those two engineers versus the 15 that I had over here. Who is going to be the most competitive? Who's going to be most differentiated? And it's not just in terms of number of lines of code, but leading to burnout of your engineers and the churn of that VPs of engineering, particularly in today's economy, the hardest thing to do is acquire engineers and retain them. So why do you want to burn them unnecessarily on when you can say, okay, well I can achieve the same or better result if I think more clearly about my observability, but reduce the number of people involved, reduce the number of, you know, senior engineers involved, and ultimately have those resources more focused on innovation. >> You know, one thing I want, at least want get in there, but one thing that's come up a lot this year, more than I've ever seen before, we've heard about the skill gaps, obviously, but burnout is huge. >> Ian: Yes. >> That's coming up more and more. This is a real... This actually doesn't help the skills gap either. >> Ian: Correct. >> Because you got skills gap, that's a cost potentially. >> Ian: Yeah. >> And then you got burnout. >> Ian: Yeah. >> People just kind of sitting on their hands or just walking away. >> Yeah. So one of the things that we're doing with Chronosphere is, you know, while we do deal with the, you know, the pillar data, but we're thinking about it more, what can you achieve with that? Right? So, and aligning with the know, triage and understand. And so you think about things like alerts, you know, dashboards, you be able to start triaging your symptoms. But really importantly, how do we bring the capabilities of things like distributed tracing where they can actually impact this? And it's not just in the context of, well, what can we do in this one incident? So there may be scenarios where you, absolutely do need those power users or those really sophisticated engineers. But from a product challenge perspective, what I'm personally really excited about is how do you capture that insight and those capabilities and then feed that back in from a product perspective so it's accessible. So you know, everyone talks about unknown unknowns in observability and then everyone sort of is a little dismissive of monitoring, but monitoring that thing, that democratizes access and the decision making capacity. So if you say I once worked at an organization and there were three engineers in the whole company who could generate the list of customers who were impacted by a particular incident. And I was in post sales at the time. So anytime there was a major incident, need to go generate that list. Those three engineers were on every single incident until one of them got frustrated and built a tool. But he built it entirely on his own. But can you think from an observability perspective, can you build a thing that it makes all those kinds of capabilities accessible to the first point where you take that alert, you know, which customers are affected or whatever other context was useful last time, but took an hour, two hours to achieve. And so that's what really makes a dramatic difference over time, is it's not about the day one experience, but how does the product evolve with the requirements and the workflow- >> And Cloud Native engineers, they're coding so they can actually be reactive. That's interesting, a platform and a tool. >> Ian: Yes. >> And platform engineering is the hottest topic at this event. And this year, I would say with Cloud Native hearing a lot more. I mean, I think that comes from the fact that SREs not really SRE, I think it's more a platform engineer. >> Ian: Yes. >> Not everyone's an... Not company has an SRE or SRE environment. But platform engineering is becoming that new layer that enables the developers. >> Ian: Correct. >> This is what you're talking about. >> Yeah. And there's lots of different labels for it, but I think organizations that really think about it well they're thinking about things like those teams, that developer efficiency, developer productivity. Because again, it's about the outcomes. It's not, oh, we just need to keep the site reliable. Yes, you can do that, but as we talked about, there are many different ways that you can burn unnecessary resources. But if you focus on developer efficiency and productivity, there's retainment, there's that competitive differentiation. >> Let's uplevel those business outcomes. Obviously you talked about in three phases, know, triage and understand. You've got great alignment with the Cloud Native engineers, the end users. Imagine that you're facilitating company's ability to reduce churn, attract more talent, retain talent. But what are some of the business outcomes? Like to the customer experience to the brand? >> Ian: Sure. >> Talk about it in some of those contexts. >> Yeah. One of the things that not a lot of organizations think about is, what is the reliability of my observability solution? It's like, well, that's not what I'm focused on. I'm focused on the reliability of my own website. Okay, let's take the, common open source pattern. I'm going to deploy my observability solution next to my core site infrastructure. Okay, I now have a platform problem because DNS stopped working in cloud provider of my choice. It's also affecting my observability solution. So at the moment that I need- >> And the tool chain and everything else. >> Yeah. At the moment that I need it the most to understand what's going on and to be able to know triage and understand that fails me at the same time. It's like, so reliability has this very big impact. So being able to make sure that my solution's reliable so that when I need it the most, and I can affect reliability of my own solution, my own SLA. That's a really key aspect of it. One of the things though that we, look at is it's not just about the outcomes and the value, it's ROI, right? It's what are you investing to put into that? So we've talked a little bit about the engineering cost, there's the infrastructure cost, but there's also a massive data explosion, particularly with Cloud Native. >> Yes. Give us... Alright, put that into real world examples. A customer that you think really articulates the value of what Chronosphere is delivering and why you're different in the market. >> Yeah, so DoorDash is a great customer example. They're here at KubeCon talking about their experience with Chronosphere and you know, the Cloud Native technologies, Prometheus and those other components align with Chronosphere. But being able to undergo, you know, a transformation, they're a Cloud Native organization, but going a transformation from StatsD to very heavy microservices, very heavy Kubernetes and orchestration. And doing that with your massive explosion, particularly during the last couple of years, obviously that's had a very positive impact on their business. But being able to do that in a cost effective way, right? One of the dirty little secrets about observability in particular is your business growth might be, let's say 50%, 60%, your infrastructure spend in the cloud providers is maybe going to be another 10, 15% on top of that. But then you have the intersection of, well my engineers need more data to diagnose things. The business needs more data to understand what's going on. Plus we've had this massive explosion of containers and everything like that. So oftentimes your business growth is going to be more than doubled with your observability data growth and SaaS solutions and even your on-premises solutions. What's the main cost driver? It's the volume of data that you're processing and storing. And so Chronosphere one of the key things that we do, because we're focused on organizational pain for larger scale organizations, is well, how do we extract the maximum volume of the data you're generating without having to store all of that data and then present it not just from a cost perspective, but also from a performance perspective. >> Yes. >> John: Yeah. >> And so feeding all into developer productivity and also lowering that investment so that your return can stand out more clearly and more valuably when you are assessing that TCO. >> Better insights and outcomes drives developer productivity for sure. That also has top theme here at KubeCon this year. It always is, but this is more than ever 'cause of the velocity. My question for you, given that you're the field chief technology officer for Chronosphere and you have a unique position, you've got a great experience in the industry, been involved in some really big companies and cutting edge. What's the competitive landscape? 'Cause the customers sometimes are confused by all the pitches they're getting from other vendors. Some are bolting on observability. Some have created like I would say, a shim layer or horizontally scalable platform or platform engineering approach. It's a data problem. Okay. This is a data architecture challenge. You mentioned that many times. What's the difference between a pretender and a player in this space? What's the winning architecture look like? What's a, I won't say phony or fake solution, but ones that customers should be aware of? Because my opinion, if you have a gap in the data or you configure it wrong, like a bolt on and say DNS crashes you're dead in the water. >> Ian: Yeah. >> What's the right approach from a customer standpoint? How do they squint through all the noise to figure out what's the right approach? >> Yeah, so I mean, I think one of the ways, and I've worked with customers in a pre-sales capacity for a very long time I know all the tricks of guiding you through. I think it needs to be very clear that customers should not be guided by the vendor. You don't talk to one vendor and they decide, Oh, I'm going to evaluate based off this. We need to particularly get away from feature based evaluations. Features are very important, but they're all have to be aligned around outcomes. And then you have to clearly understand, where am I today? What do I do today? And what is going to be the transformation that I have to go through to take advantage of these features? They can get very entrancing to say, Oh, there's a list of 25 features that this solution has that no one else has, but how am I going to get value out of that? >> I mean, distributed tracing is a distributed word. Distributed is the key word. This is a system architecture. The holistic big picture comes in. How do they figure that out? Knowing what they're transforming into? How does it fit in? >> Ian: Yeah. >> What's the right approach? >> Too often I say distributed tracing, particularly, you know, bought, because again, look at the shiny features look at the the premise and the MTTR expectations, all these other things. And then it's off to the side. We go through the traditional usage of metrics very often, very log heavy approaches, maybe even some legacy APM. And then it's sort of at last resort. And out of all the tools, I think distributed tracing is the worst in the problem we talked about earlier where the most sophisticated engineers, the ones who are being longest tenured, are the only ones who end up using it. So adoption is really, really poor. So again, what do we do today? Well, we alert, we probably want to understand our symptoms, but then what is the key problem? Oh, we spend a lot of time digging into the where the problem exists in my architecture, we talked about, you know, getting every engineer in at the same time, but how do we reduce the number of engineers involved? How do we make it so that, well, this looks like a great day one experience, but what is my day 30 experience like? Day 90. How is the product get more valuable? How do I get my most senior engineers out of this, not just on day one, but as we progress through it? >> You got to operationalize it. That's the key. >> Yeah, Correct. >> Summarize this as we wrap here. When you're in customer conversations, what is the key factor behind Chronosphere's success? If you can boil it down to that key nugget, what is it? >> I think the key nugget is that we're not just fixated on sort of like technical features and functions and frankly gimmicks of like, Oh, what could you possibly do with these three pillars of data? It's more about what can we do to solve organizational pain at the high level? You know, things like what is the cost of these solutions? But then also on the individual level, it's like, what exactly is an engineer trying to do? And how is their quality of life affected by this kind of tooling? And it's something I'm very passionate about. >> Sounds like it. Well, the quality of life's important, right? For everybody, for the business, and ultimately ends up affecting the overall customer experience. So great job, Ian, thank you so much for joining John and me talking about what you guys are doing beyond the three pillars of observability at Chronosphere. We appreciate your insights. >> Thank you so much. >> John: All right. >> All right. For John Furrier and our guest, I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching theCUBE live Friday morning from KubeCon + CloudNativeCon 22' from Detroit. Our next guest joins theCUBE momentarily, so stick around. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Oct 28 2022

SUMMARY :

the last three days. it's on the front lines Ian Smith is here, the It's great to be here. What are some of the challenges with that, the cause of those and be able to take Hey, you know, get the And that'll solve the problem. They're going to give you a So the senior engineers and the required knowledge in the bulk of the and how that really gives you the cost to the organization cost of the shark fan, are coding in the pipelines. What are some of the costs? reduce the number of, you know, but burnout is huge. the skills gap either. Because you got skills gap, People just kind of And it's not just in the context of, And Cloud Native engineers, is the hottest topic that enables the developers. Because again, it's about the outcomes. the Cloud Native engineers, Talk about it in One of the things that not the most to understand what's the value of what One of the dirty little when you are assessing that TCO. 'cause of the velocity. And then you have to clearly understand, Distributed is the key word. And out of all the tools, That's the key. If you can boil it down the cost of these solutions? beyond the three pillars For John Furrier and our

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Brent Meadows, Expedient & Bryan Smith, Expedient | VMware Explore 2022


 

(upbeat music) >> Hey everyone. Welcome to theCUBE's coverage of VMware Explore 2022. We are at Moscone West. Lisa Martin and Dave Nicholson here. Excited, really excited, whereas they were saying in the VMware keynote, pumped and jacked and jazzed to be back in-person with a lot of folks here. Keynote with standing room only. We've just come from that. We've got a couple of guests here from Expedient, going to unpack their relationship with VMware. Please welcome Brian Smith, the Senior Vice President and Chief Strategy Officer at Expedient. And Brent Meadows, the Vice President of Advanced Solution Architecture at Expedient. Guys it's great to have you on the program. >> Appreciate it bringing us on. >> Yep, welcome. >> Isn't it great to be back in person? >> It is phenomenal to be back. >> So let's talk about obviously three years since the last, what was called VMworld, so many dynamics in the market. Talk to us about what's going on at Expedient, we want to dig into Cloud Different, but kind of give us a lay of the land of what's going on and then we're going to uncrack the VMware partnership as well. >> Sure, so Expedient we're a full stack cloud service provider. So we have physical data centers that we run and then have VMware-based cloud and we've seen a huge shift from the client perspective during the pandemic in how they've really responded from everything pre-pandemic was very focused with Cloud First and trying to go that route only with hyper scaler. And there's been a big evolution with how people have to change how they think about their transformation to get the end result they're looking for. >> Talk about Cloud Different and what it's helping customers to achieve as everyone's in this accelerated transformation. >> Yeah. So, Cloud Different is something that Expedient branded. It's really about how the transformation works. And traditionally, companies thought about doing their transformation, at first they kept everything in house that they were doing and they started building their new applications out into a hyper scale cloud. And what that really is like is, a good analogy would be, it's like living in a house while you're renovating it. And I know what that's like from my relationship versus if you build a new house, or move to a new property that's completed already. And that's really the difference in that experience from a Cloud Different approach from transformation is you think of all the things that you have internally, and there's a lot of technical debt there, and that's a lot of weight that you're carrying when you're trying to do that transformation. So if you kind of flip that around and instead look to make that transformation and move all that technical debt into a cloud that's already built to run those same types of applications, a VMware-based cloud, now you can remove all of that noise, move into a curated stack of technology and everything just works. It has the security in place, your teams know how to run it, and then you can take that time you really reclaim and apply that towards new applications and new things that are strategic to the business. >> That's really critical, Brent, to get folks in the IT organization across the business, really focused on strategic initiatives rather than a lot of the mundane tasks that they just don't have time for. Brent, what are you hearing in the last couple of years with the dynamics we talked about, what are you hearing from the customer? >> Right. So, one of the big things and the challenges in the current dynamic is kind of that staffing part. So as people have built their infrastructure over the years, there's a lot of tribal knowledge that's been created during that process and every day more and more of that knowledge is walking out the door. So taking some of that technical debt that Brian mentioned and kind of removing that so you don't have to have all that tribal knowledge, really standardizing on the foundational infrastructure pieces, allows them to make that transition and not have to carry that technical debt along with them as they make their digital transformations. >> We heard a lot this morning in the keynote guys about customers going, most of them still being in cloud chaos, but VMware wanting them to get to cloud smart. What does that mean, Brian, from Expedient's perspective? What does cloud smart look like to Expedient and its customers? >> Yeah, we completely agree with that message. And it's something we've been preaching for a couple years in part of that Cloud Different story. And it's really about having a consistent wrapper across all of your environments. It doesn't matter if it's things that you're running on-premises that's legacy to things that are in a VMware-based cloud, like an Expedient cloud or things that are in a hyper scale, but having one consistent security, one consistent automation, one consistent cost management, really gives you the governance so that you can get the value out of cloud that you are hoping for and remove a lot of the noise and think less about the technology and more about what the business is getting out of the technology. >> So what does that look like as a practical matter? I imagine you have customers whose on-premises VMware environments look different than what you've created within Expedient data centers. I'm thinking of things like the level of adoption of NSX, how well a customer may embrace VSAN on-prem as an example. Is part of this transmogrification into your data center, kind of nudging people to adopt frameworks that are really necessary for success in the future? >> It's less of a nudge because a lot of times as a service provider, we don't talk about the technology, we talk more about the outcome. So the nice thing with VMware is we can move that same virtual machine or that container into the platform and the client doesn't always know exactly what's underneath because we have that standardized VMware stack and it just works. And that's part of the beauty of the process. I dunno if you want to talk about a specific client or... >> Yeah, so one of the ones we worked with is Bob Evans Foods. So they were in that transformation stage of refreshing, not only their office space and their data center, but also their VMware environment. So we helped them go through and first thing is looking at their existing environment, figuring out what they currently have, because you can't really make a good decision of what you need to change until you know where you're starting from. So we worked with them through that process, completely evacuated their data center. And from a business perspective, what that allowed them to do as well is have more flexibility in the choice of their next corporate office, because they didn't have to have a data center attached to it. So just from that data center perspective, we gave them some flexibility there. But then from an operations perspective, really standardize that process, offloaded some of those menial tasks that you mentioned earlier, and allow them to really look more towards business-driving projects, instead of just trying to keep those lights on, keeping the backups running, et cetera. >> Brian, question for you, here we are, the theme of the event is "The Center of the Multi-cloud Universe" which seems like a Marvel movie, I haven't seen any new superheroes yet, but I suspect there might be some here. But as customers end up and land in multi-cloud by default not by strategy, how does Expedient and VMware help them actually take the environment that they have and make it strategic so that the business can achieve the outcomes, improving revenue, finding new revenue streams, new products, new routes to market to delight those customers. How do you turn that kind of cloud chaos into a strategy? >> Yeah. I'd say there's a couple different components. One is really time. How can you give them time back for things that are creating noise and aren't really strategic to the business? And so if you can give that time back, that's the first way that you can really impact the business. And the second is through that standardization, but also a lot of times when people think of that new standard, they're only thinking if you're building from scratch. And what VMware has really helped is by taking those existing workloads and giving a standard that works for those applications and what you're building new and brings those together under a common platform and so had a really significant impact to the speed that somebody can get to that cloud operating model, that used to be a multi-year process and most of our clients can go from really everything or almost everything on-prem and a little bit in a cloud to a complete cloud operating model, on average, in four to six months. >> Wow! >> So if I have an on-premises environment and some of my workloads are running in a VMware context, VMware would make the pitch in an agnostic way that, "Well, you can go and deploy that "on top of a stack of infrastructure "and anybody and anywhere now." Why do customers come to you instead of saying, "Oh, we'll go to "pick your flavor of hyper scale cloud provider." What's kind of your superpower? You've mentioned a couple of things, but really hone it in on, why would someone want to go to Expedient? >> Yeah. In a single word, service. I mean, we have a 99% client retention rate and have for well over a decade. So it's really that expertise that wraps around all the different technology so that you're not worried about what's happening and you're not worried about trying to keep the lights on and doing the firefighting. You're really focused on the business. And the other way to, I guess another analogy is, if you think about a lot of the technology and the way people go to cloud, it's like if you got a set of Legos without the box or the instructions. So you can build stuff, it could be cool, but you're not going to get to that end state-- >> Hold on. That's how Legos used to work. Just maybe you're too young to remember a time-- >> You see their sales go up because now you buy a different set for this-- >> I build those sets with my son, but I do it grudgingly. >> Do you ever step on one? >> Of course I do. >> Yeah, there's some pain involved. Same thing happens in the transformation. So when they're buying services from an Expedient, you're buying that box set where you have a picture of what your outcome's going to be, the instructions are there. So you also have confidence that you're going to get to the end outcome much faster than you would if you're trying to assemble everything yourself. (David laughing) >> In my mind, I'm imagining the things that I built with Lego, before there were instructions. >> No death star? >> No. Nothing close with the death star. Definitely something that you would not want your information technology to depend upon. >> Got it. >> Brent, we've seen obviously, it seems like every customer these days, regardless of industry has a cloud first initiative. They have competitors in the rear view mirror who are, if they're able to be more agile and faster to market, are potential huge competitive threat. As we see the rise of multi-cloud in the last 12 months, there's also been a lot of increased analyst coverage for alternate specialty hybrid cloud. Talk to us about, Expedient was in the recent Gartner market guide for specialty cloud. How are these related? What's driving this constant change out in the customer marketplace? >> Sure. So a lot of that agility that clients are getting and trying to do that digital transformation or refactor their applications requires a lot of effort from the developers and the internal IT practitioners. So by moving to a model with an enterprise kind of like Expedient, that allows them to get a consistent foundational level for those technical debt, the 'traditional workloads' where they can start focusing their efforts more on that refactoring of their applications, to get that agility, to get the flexibility, to get the market advantage of time to market with their new refactored applications. That takes them much faster to market, allows them to get ahead of those competitors, if they're not already ahead of them, get further ahead of them or catch up the ones that may have already made that transition. >> And I would add that the analyst coverage you've seen in the last 9 to 12 months, really accelerate for our type of cloud because before everything was hyper scale, everything's going to be hyper scale and they realized that companies have been trying to go to the cloud really for over a decade, really 15 years, that digital transformation, but most companies, when you look at the analysts say they're about 30% there, they've hit a plateau. So they need to look at a different way to approach that. And they're realizing that a VMware-based cloud or the specialty cloud providers give a different mode of cloud. Because you had of a pendulum that everything was on-premises, everything swung to cloud first and then it swung to multi-cloud, which meant multiple hyper scale providers and now it's really landing at that equilibrium where you have different modes of cloud. So it's similar like if you want to travel the world, you don't use one mode of transportation to get from one continent to the other. You have to use different modes. Same thing to get all the way to that cloud transformation, you need to use different modes of cloud, an enterprise cloud, a hyper scale cloud, working them together with that common management plan. >> And with that said Brian, where have customer conversations gone in the last couple of years? Obviously this has got to be an executive level, maybe even a board level conversation. Talk to us about how your customer conversations have changed. Have the stakeholders changed? Has things gone up to stack? >> Yeah. The business is much more involved than what it's been in the past and some of the drivers, even through the pandemic, as people reevaluate office space, a lot of times data centers were part of the same building. Or they were added into a review that nobody ever asked, "Well, why are you only using 20% of your data center?" So now that conversation is very active and they're reevaluating that and then the conversation shifts to "Where's the best place?" And that's a lot of, the conference also talks about the best place for your application for the workload in the right location. >> My role here is to dive down into the weeds constantly to stay away from business outcomes and things like that. But somewhere in the middle there's this question of how what you provide is consumed. So fair to assume that often people are moving from CapEx model to an OPEX model where they're consuming by the glass, by the drink. What does that mean organizationally for your customers? And do you help them work through that journey, reorganizing their internal organization to take advantage of cloud? Is that something that Expedient is a part of, or do you have partners that help them through that? How does that work? >> Yeah. There's some unique things that an enterprise doesn't understand when they think about what they've done on-prem versus a service provider is. There's whole models that they can purchase with us in consumption, not just the physical hardware, but licensing as well. Do you want to talk about how clients actually step in and start to do that evaluation? >> Sure. So it really kind of starts on the front end of evaluating what they have. So going through an assessment process, because traditionally, if you have a big data center full of hardware, you've already paid for it. So as you're deploying new workloads, it's "free to deploy." But when you go to that cloud operating model, you're paying for each drink that you're taking. So we want to make sure that as they're going into that cloud operating model, that they are right sized on the front end. They're not over-provisioned on anything that they're going to just waste money and resources on after they make that transition. So it's really about giving them great data on the front end, doing all that collection from a foundational level, from a infrastructure level, but also from a business and IT operations perspective and figuring out where they're spending, not just their money, but also their time and effort and helping them streamline and simplify those IT operations. >> Let's talk about one of the other elephants in the room and that is the remote hybrid workforce. Obviously it's been two and a half years, which is hard to believe. I think I'm one of the only people that hates working from home. Most people, do you too? Okay, good. Thank you, we're normal. >> Absolutely. (Lisa laughing) But VMware was talking about desktop as a service, there was so much change and quick temporary platform set up to accommodate offsite workers during the pandemic. What are some of the experiences that your clients are having and how is Expedient plus VMware helping businesses adapt and really create them the right hybrid model for them going forward? >> Sure. So as part of being that full sack cloud service provider, desktop in that remote user has to be part of that consideration. And one of the biggest things we saw with the pandemic was people stood up what we call pandemic VDI, very temporary solutions. And you saw the news articles that they said, "We did it in 10 days." And how many big transformational events do people plan and execute in 10 days that transform their workforce? So now they're having to come back and say, "Okay, what's the right way to deploy it?" And do you want to talk about some of the specifics of what we're seeing in the adjustments that they're doing? >> Sure. So it is, when you look at it from the end user perspective, it's how they're operating, how they're getting their tools through their day to day job, but it's also the IT administrators that are having to provide that service to the end users. So it's really kind of across the board, it's affecting everyone. So it's really kind of going through and helping them figure out how they're going to support their users going forward. So we've spun up things like VMware desktop as a service providing that multi-tenant ability to consume on a per desktop basis, but then we've also wrapped around with a lot of security features. So one of the big things is as people are going and distributing where they're working from, that data and access to data is also opened up to those locations. So putting those protections in place to be able to protect the environment and then be able, if something does get in, to be able to detect what's going on. And then of course, with a lot of the other components, being able to recover those environments. So building the desktops, the end user access into the disaster recovery plans. >> And talk more, a little bit Brent, about the security aspect. We've seen the threat landscape change dramatically in the last couple of years, ransomware is a household word. I'm pretty sure even my mom knows what that means, to some degree. Where is that in customer conversations? I can imagine in certain industries like financial services and healthcare with PII, it's absolutely critical to ensure that that data is, they know where it is. It's protected and it's recoverable, 'cause everyone's talking about cyber resilience these days. >> Right. And if it's not conversation 1, it's conversation 1A. So it's really kind of core to everything that we do when we're talking to clients. It's whether it's production DR or the desktops, is building that security in place to help them build their security practice up. So when you think about it, it's doing it at layers. So starting with things like more advanced antivirus to see what's actually going on the desktop and then kind of layering above there. So even up to micro-segmentation, where you can envelop each individual desktop in their own quasi network, so that they're only allowed kind of that zero trust model where, Hey, if you can get to a file share, that's the only place you should be going or do I need web apps to get my day to day job done, but really restricting that access and making sure that everything is more good traffic versus unknown traffic. >> Yeah. >> And also on the, you asked about the clouds smarter earlier. And you can really weave the desktop into that because when you're thinking of your production compute environment and your remote desktop environment, and now you can actually share storage together, you can share security together and you start to get economies of scale across those different environments as well. >> So as we are in August, I think still yeah, 2022, barely for a couple more days, lot of change going on at VMware. Expedient has been VMware America's partner of the year before. Talk to us about some of the things that you think from a strategic perspective are next for the partnership. >> That it's definitely the multi-cloud world is here. And it's how we can go deeper, how we're going to see that really mature. You know, one of the things that we've actually done together this year was we worked on a project and evaluated over 30 different companies of what they spend on IT. Everything from the physical data center to the entire stack, to people and actually build a cloud transformation calculator that allows you to compare strategies, so that if you look at Strategy A over a five year period, doing your current transformation, versus that Cloud Different approach, it can actually help quantify the number of hours difference that you can get, the total cost of ownership and the speed that you can get there. So it's things like that that help people make easier decisions and simplify information are going to be part of it. But without a doubt, it's going to be how you can have that wrapper across all of your different environments that really delivers that cloud-like environment that panacea people have been looking for. >> Yeah. That panacea, that seems like it's critical for every organization to achieve. Last question for you. When customers come to you, when they've hit that plateau. They come to Expedient saying, "Guys, with VMware, help us accelerate past this. "We don't have the time, we need to get this done quickly." How do you advise them to move forward? >> Sure. So it goes back to that, what's causing them to hit that plateau? Is it more on the development side of things? Is it the infrastructure teams, not being able to respond fast enough to the developers? And really putting a plan in place to really get rid of those plateaus. It could be getting rid of the technical debt. It could be changing the IT operations and kind of that, the way that they're looking at a cloud transformation model, to help them kind of get accelerated and get them back on the right path. >> Back on the right path. I think we all want to get back on the right path. Guys, thank you so much for joining David and me on theCUBE today, talking about Expedient Cloud Different, what you're seeing in the marketplace, and how Expedient and VMware are helping customers to succeed. We appreciate your time. >> Yep. >> Thanks for having us. >> For our guests and Dave Nicholson, I'm Lisa Martin. You're watching theCUBE live from VMware Explorer '22, stick around, Dave and I will be back shortly with our next guest. (gentle upbeat music)

Published Date : Aug 30 2022

SUMMARY :

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Andy Smith, Laminar | AWS re:Inforce 2022


 

>>Welcome back to Boston. Everybody watching the cubes coverage, OFS reinforce 22 from Boston, Atlanta chow lobster, the SOS a ruin in my summer, Andy and Smith is here is the CMO of laminar. Andy. Good to see you. Good >>To see you. Great to be >>Here. So laminar came outta stealth last year, 2021, sort of, as we were exiting the isolation economy. Yeah. Why was laminar started >>Really about there's there's two mega trends in the industry that, that created a problem that wasn't being addressed. Right? So the two mega trends was cloud transformation. Obviously that's been going on for a while, but what most people doesn't don't realize is it really accelerated with COVID right? Being all, everybody having to be remote, et cetera, various stats I've read like increased five times, right? So cloud transformation are now you are now problem, right? That's going on? And then the other next big mega trend is data democratization. So more data in the cloud than ever before. And this is, this is just going and going and going. And the result of those two things, more data in the cloud, how am I securing that data? You know, the, the, the breach culture we're in like every day, a new, a new data breach coming up, et cetera, just one Twitter, one yesterday, et cetera. The, those two things have caused a gap with data security teams and, and that's what he >>Heard at attract. Yeah. So, you know, to your point and we track this stuff pretty carefully quarterly, and you saw, it was really interesting trend. You actually saw AWS's growth rate accelerate during the pandemic. Absolutely. You know? Absolutely. So you're talking about, you know, a couple of hundred billion dollars for the big four clouds. If you, if you include Alibaba and it's still growing at 35, you know, 40% a year, which is astounding, so, okay. So more cloud, more data. Explain why that's a, a problem for practitioners. >>Yeah, exactly. The reality is in, in the security, what, what are we doing? What all the security it's about protecting your data in the end, right? Like, like we're here at this at, at reinforce all these security vendors here really it's about protecting your data, your sensitive data. And, but what, what had been happening is all the focus was on the infrastructure, the network, et cetera, et cetera, and not as much focus, particularly on the data and, and the move to the cloud gave the developers and the data scientists, way more power. They don't longer have to ask for permission. And so they can just do what they want. And it's actually wonderful for the business. The business is moving faster, you spin up applications sooner, you get new, new insights. So all those things are really great, but because the developer has so much power, they can just copy data over here, make a backup over here, new et cetera. And, and security has no idea about all these copies of the, of the data that are out there. And they're typically not as well protected as that main production source. And that's the gap that >>Exists. Okay. So there was this shift from sort of perimeter hardening the perimeter, hardening the infrastructure and, and now your premises, it's moving to the data we saw when, when there was during the pandemic, there was definitely a shift to end point security. There was a shift to cloud security rethinking the network, but it was still a lot of, you know, kind of cha chasing the whackamole and people have talked about this is a data problem for years. Yeah. But it was, it's taken a while for, for companies, for the technology industry to, to come at it. You guys are one of the first, if not the first. Yeah. Why do you think it took so long? Is this cuz it's really hard. >>Yeah. I mean, it, it's hard. You need to focus on it. The, the traditional security has been around the network and the box, right. And those are still necessary. It's important to, you know, your use identity to cover the edge, to, to make sure people can't get into the box, but you also have to have data. So what, what happens is there's really good solutions for enterprise data security, looking at database, you know, technology, et cetera. There are good solutions for cloud infrastructure security. So the CSP of the world and the CWPP are protecting containers, you know, protecting the infrastructure. But there really wasn't much for cloud everything you build and run in the cloud. So basically your custom application, your custom applications in the IAS and PAs environments, there really wasn't anything solving that. And that's really where laminar is focused. >>Okay. So you guys use this term shadow data. We talk about shadow. It what's shadow data. >>Yeah. So what we're finding at a hundred percent of our customer environments and our POVs and talking to CISOs out there is that they have these shadow data assets and shadow data elements that they have no clue that existed. So here's the example. Everybody knows the main RDS database that is in production. And this is where, you know, our, our data is taken from. But what people don't realize is there's a copy of that. You know, in a dev environment, somebody went to run a test and they was supposed to be there for two weeks. But then that developer left forgot, left it there. They left the company, oh, now it's been there for two years that there was an original SQL database left over from a lift and shift project. They got moved to RDS, but nobody deleted that thing there, you know, it's a database connected to an application, the application left, but that database, that abandoned database is still sitting. These are all real life customer examples of shadow data that we run into. And there's, and what the problem is that main production data store is secured pretty well. It's following all your policies, et cetera. But all these shadow data resources are typically less well protected unmonitored. And that is what the attackers are after. >>So you're, you know, the old, the, the Watergate follow the money, you're following the data, >>Following the data. >>How do you follow that data if there's so much of it, it, and it's, you know, sometimes, you know, not really well understood where it is. How do you know where >>It is? Yeah. It's the beauty of partnering with somebody like AWS, right? So with each of the cloud providers, we actually take a role in your cloud account and use the APIs from the cloud provider to see all the changes in all the instances are going on. Like it is, the problem is way more complicated in the cloud because I mean, AWS has over 200 services, dozens of ways to store data, right. It's wonderful for the developer, but it's very hard for the security practitioner. And so, because we have that visibility through the cloud provider's APIs, we can see all those changes that are happening. We can then say, ah, that's a data store. Let me go analyze, make a copy, have a snapshot of that and do the analyzing of that data right inside our customer's account without pulling the data out. And we have complete visibility to everything. And then we can give that data catalog over to the customer. >>All right. I gotta ask you a couple Colombo questions. So if you know, we talk about encryption, everything's encrypted everything. If, if the data is encrypted, why then would I need laminar? >>Because I mean, we'll make sure that the data's encrypted okay. Right. Often. So it's not supposed to be and not right. Two is, we're gonna tell you what type of data is inside there. Oh, is this, is this health information? Is it personal identify information? Is it credit cards? You know, et cetera, C so we'll classify the data for you. We will also, then there's things like retention, period. How long should we, I hold onto that data, all the things about what are, who has access, what's the exposure level for that data. And so when you, when you think about data security posture, what's the posture of that data you're looking at at those data policies. It's something that has been very well defined and written down. But in the past, there was just no way to go verify that those, that, that, that policy is actually being followed. And so we're doing that verification automatically. >>So without the context, you can't answer those other questions. So you make sure it's encrypted. If it's not, or you can at least notify me that it's not, you don't do the encryption. Right. Or do you, >>We don't do it ourselves, but we can give you here. Here's the command in and the Amazon to go encrypt it >>Right. Then I can automate that. And then the classification is key because now you're telling me the context. So I can say, okay, apply this policy to that data, retain it for this long, get rid of it after X number of years, or if it's work, process, get rid of it now. Yeah. And then who should have access to that data. And so you can help at least inform how to enforce those policies. >>Exactly. And so we, we, we call it guided remediation because what we're, you know, talking to a CISO, they're like, I need 400 more alerts, like a hole in the head like that. Doesn't do me any good. If you can't tell me how to resolve the, the, the, this security gap that I have or this, then it doesn't do any good. And, and the first, first it starts with who do I need to go talk to? Right. So they have hundreds, if not thousands of developers. Oh, great. You found this issue. I, I, I don't know who to go. Like, I can't just delete it myself, but I need to go talk to somebody really, should this be deleted? We need, do we really, really need to hold onto this? So we, we help guide who the data owner is. So we give you who to talk to. You, give you all the context. Here's the data, here's the data asset that it's in. Here's our suggestion. Here's the problem. Here's our suggestion for >>Solution. And you started the company on AWS >>Started on AWS. Absolutely. >>So what's of course it's best cloud and why not start there? So what's the relationship like, I mean, how'd you get started? You said, okay, Hey, we're we got an idea for a company. We're gonna build it on AWS. We're gonna become a customer. We're gonna, you know, >>We actually, so insight partners is our main investor. Yeah. And they were very helpful in giving us access to literally hundreds of CSOs, who we had conversations with before we actually launched the company. And so we did some shifting and to, to figure out our exact use case. But by the time we came to market, it was in February this year, we actually GAed the product that, where like product market fit nailed because we'd had so many conversations that we knew the problem in the market that we needed to solve. And we knew where we needed to solve it first. And, and the, the, the relationship we AWS is great. We just got on the marketplace, just became a, a partner. So really good. Good >>Start. So I gotta ask you, so I always ask this question. So how do you actually know when you have product market fit? >>You it's about those conversations. Right. You know, so like, I I've been to lots of startups and sometimes you're you're, you, you each have a conversation and then they, they saying, oh, well kind of want this. And we kind of like that. And so it, the more conversations you have, the more, you know, you're solving a real problem. Right. And, and, and, and, and you re react to what that, what that prospect is telling you back and, or that advisor or that whoever we're talking to. And, and every single one of the CISO conversations we had was I don't have a good inventory of my data in the cloud. >>The reason I asked that, cause I always ask the startups, like, when do you scale? Cause I think startups sometimes scale too fast. They try to scale too fast, they'll hire 50 sales people. And then they, you know, churn, you know, they, they got a 50% churn, but they're trying to optimize their go to market when they got 50% of their customers are gonna leave. So it's, it's gotta be the sequential thing. So, so you got product market fit. So are, are you in the scaling phase >>Now? We are. Yeah. Yeah, yeah. So now it's about how quickly can we deliver? We, we we're ramping customer base significantly. And, and you know, we've got a whole go to market team in, you know, sales and marketing in the us and, and often off to the races >>And you just run on AWS or you run another clouds. >>It's multi-cloud so AWS, Azure, GCP, et cetera. >>Okay. So then my least my next question is it sort of, you can do this within each of the individual clouds today. Do you see a day and maybe it's here today is where you can create a single experience across those clouds >>Today. It's a single experience across cloud. So our SaaS, we have our SaaS portion runs in AWS, but the actual data analysis runs in each cloud provider. So AWS, Azure, GCP and snowflake too, actually. >>Ah, okay. So I come through your whatever portal, like if I can use that term. Yep. And that's running on AWS. Yes. You're SAS, as you say, and then you go out to these other environments, GCP, Azure, AWS itself, and snowflake. Yep. And I see laminar, is that right? Or >>There's a piece running inside our customer's environment. Okay. So, so we have a customer, they, the, we have, we get a role inside of their cloud account or read only role inside of their cloud account. And we spin up serverless functions in that cloud account. That's where all the analysis happens. And that's why we don't take any data out of the environment. So it all stays there. And, and therefore we don't, we don't actually see the data outside of the environment. Like, I, I can tell you there's a metadata comes out. I can tell you, there are credit cards inside that data store, but I can't tell you exactly which credit card it is cuz I don't know. So all the important actions happens are there and just the metadata metadata comes out. So we can give you a cross cloud dashboard of all your sensitive data. >>And of course, so take the example of snowflake. They're going across clouds, they're building what we call super cloud sort of, of a layer that floats on top. You're just sort of going wherever that data goes. >>Yeah, exactly. So, so each of there's a component that lives in the customer's environment in the, in those multi-cloud environments and then a single view of the world dashboard that is our SaaS component that runs an AWS. So >>You guys are, is, am I correct? You're series a funded >>Series, a funded yeah, exactly. >>And, and already scaling to go to market. Yeah. Which is, which is early to scale. Right. I mean you've got startup experience. Right? >>Absolutely. >>How does it compare? >>Well, what was amazing here was access. I mean, really it was through the relationship with insight. It was access to the CISOs that I had never had at any of the other startups I was with. You're trying to get meetings, you're meeting with a lot of practitioners, you know, et cetera. But getting all those conversations with buyers was, was super valuable for us to say, ah, I know I'm solving a real problem that has value that they will pay for. Right. And, and, and so that, that was a year and a half probably still of all that work going on. We just, just waited to GA until we understood the market >>Better. Yeah. Insight. They're amazing. The way to talk about scaling. I mean, they've just the last 10 years that comp that, that PE firm has just gone wild in terms of just their, their philosophy, their approach, their cadence, their consistency. And now of course their portfolio. >>Yeah. And, and they started doing a little bit earlier and earlier stage. I mean, I, I always think of them as PE too, but you know, they, they did our seed round. Right. They did our a round and, and they're doing earlier stages, but particularly what they saw in Laar was exactly what we started this conversation with. They saw cloud transformation speeding up, they saw data democratization happening. They're like, we need to invest in this now because this is a now a problem to solve. >>Yeah. It's interesting. Cuz when you go back even pre 2010, you talk to, you know, look at insight, they would wait. They would invest in companies unless there was, you know, on the way to five plus million dollar ARR, they weren't doing seed deals. Totally. Like they saw, wow, these actually can be pretty lucrative and we can play and we have a point of view and yeah. So cool. Well, congratulations. I'll give you the final word. What, what should we be watching for from, from Laar as sort of, you know, milestones that you guys want to hit and, and indicators of success. >>Yeah. Now it's all about growth partnerships, you know, integrations with, with other of the players out here. Right. And so, you know, like scaling our AWS partnership is one of the key aspects for us. And so, you know, just look for, look for the name out there and, and you'll start, you'll start to see it a lot more. And, and if, if you have the need, you know, come look us up. Laar security.com. >>Awesome. Well thanks very much for coming to Cuban. Good luck. Appreciate it. All right. >>Wonderful. Thanks. You're >>Welcome. All right. Keep it right there, everybody. This is Dave ante. We'll be back right after this short break from AWS reinvent 2022 in Boston. You're watching the cue.

Published Date : Jul 27 2022

SUMMARY :

Andy and Smith is here is the CMO of laminar. Great to be Yeah. So the two mega trends was cloud it's still growing at 35, you know, 40% a year, which is astounding, so, okay. And that's the gap that lot of, you know, kind of cha chasing the whackamole and the world and the CWPP are protecting containers, you know, protecting the infrastructure. We talk about shadow. And this is where, you know, our, our data is taken from. How do you follow that data if there's so much of it, it, and it's, you know, sometimes, of that and do the analyzing of that data right inside our customer's account without pulling the data out. So if you know, we talk about encryption, But in the past, there was just no way to go verify that those, that, that, that policy So without the context, you can't answer those other questions. We don't do it ourselves, but we can give you here. And so you can help at And so we, we, we call it guided remediation because what we're, you know, And you started the company on AWS Started on AWS. We're gonna, you know, But by the time we came to market, it was in February this year, So how do you actually know when you have product market fit? the more conversations you have, the more, you know, you're solving a real problem. And then they, you know, churn, you know, they, And, and you know, we've got a whole go to market team in, Do you see a day and maybe it's here today is where you can create a single experience across So our SaaS, we have our SaaS portion runs in AWS, You're SAS, as you say, and then you go out to So we can give you a cross cloud dashboard of all your sensitive data. And of course, so take the example of snowflake. So And, and already scaling to go to market. And, and, and so that, that was a year and a half probably And now of course their portfolio. but you know, they, they did our seed round. They would invest in companies unless there was, you know, on the way to five plus you know, like scaling our AWS partnership is one of the key aspects for All right. You're Keep it right there, everybody.

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Sean Smith, VMware | VeeamON 2022


 

(upbeat music) >> Hi everybody. We're back at VeeamON 2022, we're winding down coverage to The Cube day two. We've done a lot of VeeamON. We're at the Aria hotel, smaller physical audience, huge hybrid audience, little different program. Great keynotes, really loved the keynote yesterday and today kind of product day today. Sean Smith is here with myself and David Nicholson. He's the staff Solution Architect at VMware. Sean, thanks for coming on the Cube, taking some time with us. >> Hey guys. Great to be here and great to be in person again. >> Yeah, it sure is. Hoping to see VMworld is no longer VMworld, right? >> It's VMware Explore now. Yep. >> Okay. Awesome. Looking forward to that. That was one of the first shows we ever did. It's kind of got that same vibe, I hope you don't lose that, the core of VMware. >> What we've been told is it's still going to be, the core of what we do and it's going to be the showcase of VMware. >> Which is the ecosystem, great vibe. You always know a million people there, which is great fun. How's it going at VMware today? I mean, let's start there. It's been a while since we've talked physically with... >> Yeah. VMware is, we've come through the pandemic, fairly well, relative speaking to what others have done. I'm part of the VCPP Program, the VMware Cloud Provider Program, and I look after cloud service providers, cloud builders, people who are actually building out networks for customers and environments that are very specialized and focusing on their needs and VMware is forefront with cloud service providers these days, doing really well. >> The last time we were physically proximate to VMware executives, I think Pat Gelsinger was still the CEO, Dell still owned the majority of VMware. So that spin happened. So that's good. I think the ecosystem in particular is probably really happy about that. Does it have any effect on your world? >> From a day to day business perspective, not really, right. Obviously we still have a very tight relationship with Dell. We still do a lot of innovative solutions and products with the Dell team. We have a tight integration there. It really gives us the opportunity to also work with many other vendors as well. And focus on solutions that our customers are looking for really, is where VMware is tryna focus. >> Yeah. It's funny, we were at Red Hat Summit last week. IBM Think was right across the street there was very little mention, if any, I think they talked about an IBM mainframe at Red Hat Summit. That was it. I mean IBM fully owns Red Hat, but a lot of people said, we hope that it's going to be like VMware and you guys have always had that independent culture. >> Fiercely independent. >> Fiercely independent. Yes. >> Yes. It's like when you coach, I don't know me anyway, when I coach my kids baseball, I'm a tougher on them than am with the other kids. I think you guys were sometimes tougher on your own or... And rightly so, you have a huge ecosystem. >> We do. >> That is epic. And so you have to look out for that. VMware has always done that. VCPP the V is for a VMware what's what's the acronym. >> So the CPP is Cloud Provider Program. It's a program that's specifically aimed at our cloud service providers. There's several solutions within the program, which are really focused on helping them build business, helping them go to market, helping them with being able to, for certain part of it compete with the hyperscalers and our support several cloud providers, mostly out of the Northeast, and they're doing really well. They're doing well against the hyperscalers, they very often provide solutions that are not easy to get on a hyperscaler. When you want to have customer interaction and things like that. So the VCP Program as I said, is really tailored, it has solutions which are very much focused on allowing them to build their businesses as a cloud service provider. >> Just a follow up if I may. >> Yeah. >> So the history of VMware Cloud has been really interesting. At one point vCloud Air, we know what happened there. This is not vCloud Air. >> This is not vCloud Air. It's got nothing to do with vCloud Air. It's really a program where we provide solutions that the cloud builders build with, right? So it's software solutions. There's no hardware involved. There's no VMware having the environment, it's really cloud providers building solutions. >> So it's interesting, Dave, this has come full circle, you used to work at Virtustream. There was point Rodney was like, bring it on AWS, correlation and back said, we can't lose to a book seller and all that was just, fun marketing talk for media people like us. But the interesting thing is, well, so VMware Cloud on AWS. Huge success of VMware Cloud Foundation. Doing really well. And obviously you've got momentum. Everybody thought, not everybody. >> It's in Google's, in Azure, it's in Oracle. >> Yeah, yeah. Sorry. >> It's an IBM. >> IBM a... >> It's an IBM. >> Number one in IBM. Yeah. >> And so a lot of people thought, I shouldn't say everybody, but a lot of people thought, MSPs, the cloud service providers, non-hyperscalers are cooked through 2010, 2011. The exact opposite happened. >> It's 100%. >> It's growing like crazy. We want to understand why, but it's come full circle. >> Yeah, it certainly has. I mean, the industry has changed considerably and especially over the last few years with COVID, I will say that the cloud service providers that are support and by the way, Virtustream was one of them, when I first joined VMware, I supported Virtustream. And they have had to adapt their businesses, the hyperscalers have come at them with everything that they've got and honesty, the cloud service providers that I support are phenomenal growth. They they're growing on a par with what some of the hyperscalers are doing. So there's definitely a place for cloud service providers, they've got great business, they've got great customers, great relationships. And it's as I said, it's growing a huge business. >> So we've talked a lot about theme from the perspective of the idea of a Supercloud. Something that can overlay a variety of on-premises and off-premises providers and provide sort of a unified view, unified management methodology. How much is what at least was formerly known as the SDDC stack, the Software Defined Data Center stack, still a part of VMwares vision that is right in line with that, from what Veeam is doing. How much of your business is deploying SDDC stacks that are then customized in one way or another. >> 100% of it. >> 100% of it. Right, okay. >> Yeah. So, when you're talking about having that single view of everything in the cloud provider program, there's a product called VMware Cloud Director. and it is the multi-tenant view of the infrastructure and the environment that the cloud providers are building. Right. So VMware Cloud Director has gone through many iterations and we've recently launched Cloud Director Service, which is a SaaS offering of the product. But what it actually does is you put it on top of VMC on AWS. you put it on top of GCVE, you put it on top of the cloud service providers, SDDCs, right. All of these are SDDCs underneath. >> AVS and Azure. >> AVS and Azure. >> I was associated with that. So I must have it mentioned. >> Exactly. >> They're all SDDC's. >> SDDC's, yeah, yeah, exactly. And as well as your on premise environment. Right. So all of these federate together through the VMware Cloud Director, and you end up having a single pane of glass across all of those environments. So whether it's running in the hyperscale, or running on your premises, running in a cloud service provider's environment, you have a single view, a single interface that you log into and you can see everything that's going on inside your environment. So it really brings that holistic, single view of everything to reality. >> How about from a licensing perspective? >> So from a licensing perspective... >> I'm a non-premises customer, I'm running VMware on-prem, I have been, I was at world VMworld 2004 and enjoyed BattleBots. So hopefully you'll start bringing BattleBots back. >> We will have to. >> And now I'm dealing with a service provider. That is one of the partners that you're working with. How does that licensing work? >> So the Cloud Provider Program actually has a slightly different licensing model to what you would have on premises, right? They have a rental model with VMware, it's a PAYGo model, right. One of the great things about the program is that it's consumption based. So it makes it easy for cloud service providers to build a consumption based business, which is kind of where everything is moving, right? >> Yeah, for sure. >> So whether you have an on-premise environment that's licensed through what we call perpetual or ELA licensing, from a VMware perspective, you can still layer on top, that cloud service provider solution VCD, right? And you would obviously have a financial relationship with the cloud service provider in terms of the environment that you have with them. And they will be able to hook up that environment to your on-premises environment and get that single view. So the licensing is not a restriction, right, you can still continue to have your traditional licensed environment in your data center, as well as being able to connect into these seamlessly, right. That's the great thing about it. And that's where VMC, AVS, GCVE, the OCVS, the Oracle version, the RBM one, you can bring all of these together and really look at it from a holistic perspective, bring in things like NSX-T and other solutions like that VM as well, it works seamlessly across all these environments. >> I am talking about Supercloud, I asked Raghu last year, who's virtually at VMworld, I kind of explained that concept of hiding the complexity, the abstraction layer, being able to hide the underlying primitives and APIs, seems like it's evolving. One of the things he said was yes, but if developers want to go there, we let them. And that was a key point, because you're getting more into that DevOps. >> Correct 100%. >> And I would imagine the cloud service providers really oftentimes need for their reasons to get to those underlying primitives and APIs. >> And actually VCD is the enabler, right? So VCD allows you to provide a container based service sitting right alongside your IAS in the same SDDC, right? We're not even talking about segregating them out, you can have it inside the exact same SDDC, all linked together, all taking a common security approach to what's going on and providing you with that ease of use. So from an end user perspective, the DevOps type of people, VCD is an awesome solution, because they can go in fire up a new VM, or fire up a new container or whatever, without having to go through the rigmarole of asking IT for a VM, or asking somebody's permission, as a organization, you would give your DevOps teams certain amount of resources, how they use it's up to them, right? Whether they put containers in there or they bring VMs, it's all there. And it's all in one single solution. >> You mentioned that your community is doing very well growing it let's call it 35, 40% a year. And it's a market that's quite large worldwide. Because it's a lot of local, regional CSPs, a lot of big country CSPs and you said... >> It's four and a 1/2 thousand of them. So, it's huge. >> There you >> Versus four hyperscalers. >> Yeah, exactly. >> Include Alibaba. So, they might be individually smaller, but collectively they're larger. But you said that the hyperscalers coming after them with everything they had was a comment that you made, are customers choosing CSPs over hyperscalers? If so, when and why. >> Sometimes they are choosing CSPs over hyperscalers, but not always, very often they're choosing CSPs and hyperscalers, right. And it really depends on what their needs are. So historically speaking, it's been everybody rushing to the hyperscalers because that's the flavor of the day let's move out of our data center. It's much cheaper to run everything in these hyperscalers, and they do it. And then the bill comes in and reality suddenly hits. And it's definitely not as cheap as they thought it was going to be, right. So there's many aspects that cause tenants to not only rethink that, but also repatriate, right. Repatriation is a big thing for our cloud service providers. Things like egress costs, most cloud service providers have no egress costs, right? They encourage movement of things amongst themselves and for their tenants, because that's what they want, right? So egress costs are a huge problem for many tenants who come into these environments and that's sometimes why they would choose a CSP over a hyperscaler. But really, it's more about choosing the right place for your workload. There are workloads that belong in hyperscalers, right? And if you have a solution with a CSP like VCD, that allows you not only to be able to connect your on premises and the CSP, but also the hyperscalers and actually have a much more holistic solution where you can determine where you want to put stuff and put it in the right place. It's more about that, than it is about choosing one over the other really. >> Yeah, and sometimes it's more of a business differentiation than a technical one. Is it a hyperscale or is it a CSP? If you're licensing the SDDC stack and you're running it on IAS in Amazon or in Google or Azure? >> I think the other thing too is the CSPs oftentimes they manage service providers, right? Is that true? >> The relationship, right? And that's one of the things if you talk to a cloud service provider and yesterday I was, I had a session and I was talking to a bunch of people about VMware stuff. And I said to them, how many of you have tried to pick up a phone and talk to somebody at AWS? And there was laughter, because the reality is that what AWS does is a kind of one size fits all approach, right? There isn't somebody on the end of the phone that you can pick up and call, if they have a major outage that outage is affecting 1000s of different customers and you one of those thousands really means nothing to them, right? Whereas a cloud service provider, generally speaking, has a very tight one-on-one relationship with both from an engineering perspective, right. With their tenants, but also at a higher managerial level. So they create those relationships and those relationships often drive these things. It's not always financial, there is a financial component to it, but very often it's the relationship, have they got somebody that they can talk to? If they getting many different solutions, can they get all those solutions from one provider? And if they can, it's much easier for them to manage from a... >> And I think so does that manage service... There's also a lot of things that despite their breadth and portfolio that the cloud service providers don't support, you can't do Oracle rack in the cloud, right? But you can in a service provider. >> Exactly. >> And Oracle, look you can negotiate with Oracle, so you can get similar pricing AWS, but this price is two x. They're either on-prem or in Oracle. So I could take my Oracle instance, stick it into a managed service provider or cloud service provider, do whatever I need to, and there are I'm sure 1000s of configurations like that, that aren't necessarily identically supported, security edicts that aren't necessarily exactly the same, so many specials that managed service say welcome to your point. AWS is as long as it's black, it's good. >> Yeah, exactly. And that's the thing, right? Those cloud service providers are doing exactly that. They have Oracle racks in there, they have all sorts of those solutions that are there in their data centers. And proximity is also an issue, right? Very often the people who are using those systems need their ancillary things to be close by, they can't be 10s or 20s or 30 milliseconds away, they need to be sub millisecond connectivity. And those are the areas where the cloud service providers really shine, they can offer those solutions that really enable their tenants to get what they want at the end of the day. Again to your point, you can negotiate with Oracle, but these cloud service providers do it day in and day out. Who wants their business? >> Who wants to do that with Oracle anyway, their lawyers are smarter than yours. Veeam, what are you doing with Veeam, in resilient architectures and cyber recovery? >> Yeah, we are a sponsor here at the event and Veeam is a great partner with VMware and we're great partner to them. A lot of cloud service providers actually use Veeam as their primary backup solution for their tenants, right. VMware Cloud Director that I was talking about just now, the thing that gives you a view of everything over the top, Veeam was actually one of the very first vendors to integrate with VCD. And you can use your Veeam environment directly from the screen, you right click, and you say do a backup and that's as easy as that from a Veeam perspective. So we have a lot of integrations with Veeam. We help the cloud service providers, ransomware is a big talking thing around this event, but all over the place, right? So a lot of the solutions that Veeam brings to the party, these cloud service providers are also deploying into their environments to help with ransomware. They have so many solutions that help those cloud service providers provide a holistic solution. >> Well, Veeam was basically founded saying, Hey, we're going to better our business on VMware. I first saw Veeam at a V mug, I think in Boston, and I was like, who is Veeam? VMware is that their product? It was just so you guys have had a long relationship, even though initially VMware was probably saying the same thing, who the heck are these guys? Well, how do you like them now? Sean, thanks so much for... >> Thank you. It's been great to be here. Appreciate it. Thank you for watching. Keep it right there. We'll be back shortly. We'll get a couple more segments left. Dave and I are going to wrap up later in the day, you watching The Cube at VeeamON 2022, be right back. (upbeat music)

Published Date : May 18 2022

SUMMARY :

really loved the keynote yesterday Great to be here and great Hoping to see VMworld is It's VMware Explore now. It's kind of got that same vibe, and it's going to be Which is the ecosystem, great vibe. and VMware is forefront with Dell still owned the majority of VMware. and products with the Dell team. and you guys have always had Fiercely independent. And rightly so, you have a huge ecosystem. And so you have to look out for that. So the CPP is Cloud Provider Program. So the history of VMware Cloud that the cloud builders build with, right? and all that was just, It's in Google's, in Yeah, yeah. Number one in IBM. MSPs, the cloud service providers, but it's come full circle. and honesty, the cloud service from the perspective of 100% of it. and it is the multi-tenant view of I was associated with that. a single interface that you log into and enjoyed BattleBots. That is one of the partners One of the great things that you have with them. One of the things he said was yes, And I would imagine the And actually VCD is the enabler, right? a lot of big country CSPs and you said... So, it's huge. was a comment that you made, and put it in the right place. Yeah, and sometimes it's more of a And that's one of the things that the cloud service And Oracle, look you And that's the thing, right? Veeam, what are you doing with Veeam, So a lot of the solutions that It was just so you guys have Dave and I are going to

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Walton Smith, World Wide Technology | AWS re:Invent 2021


 

(upbeat music) >> Welcome back to Las Vegas. theCUBE is here, live at AWS re:Invent 2021. Lisa Martin with Dave Nicholson. theCUBE has two sets today, two, not one, two, two live sets, two remote sets, over 100 guests on the program at this event, it's a lot, talking about the next generation of cloud innovation with AWS and its massive ecosystem of partners and we are pleased to welcome Walton Smith to the program, the public sector, director of strategic partnerships for Worldwide Technology, Walton welcome to the program. >> Thank you so much for having me, it's really amazing to be here and look forward to a great conversation. Isn't it great to be in person again? >> It's so nice to be in person, I mean I'm glad everybody's being safe and, and checking vaccine status and whatnot, but it's good to get back and, and, and work with people cause we can really drive innovation when, when we get together. >> Those hallway conversations or those conversations here at events that you just can't replicate by video conferencing, right? Not replicate that, you getting grabbed in the hall and say, hey, have you thought about leveraging XYZ to do something? To me that's what makes this conference great. >> Talk to me about what's going on at WWT. What are some of the, the things that you guys have been working on? >> It's a really exciting time at Worldwide, we're really working closely with AWS to drive innovation to the edge. We're excited about their outpost offering, we actually have one in our data center, Sandy announced it today in a partnership with Intel to, to allow our customers to try to work out use cases, to, to kick the tires, so to speak, to see how it works as well as our partners to get their ISV products certified on the outpost platform. >> So I'm familiar with your ATC in St. Louis, is that what you're referring to? >> That's correct. >> Give us a little, give us a little insight into what goes on there, I know it's pretty amazing from a customer perspective because you are agnostic. because you are agnostic. >> Walton: Correct. >> You're there to serve the customer, but tell me, tell me what happens in the ATC. >> We say we're agnostic, but we have our, our, our preferences because we know- >> sure, sure, okay. what actually works. But our ATC is our crown jewel, it's about a $600 million data center that we built solely for proof of concepts for our customers. So our, our top customers come in and say, I have this problem, how can I solve it? And so with us being the single biggest reseller of just about every ISV is out there, I can stand up a, a, a Dell, I can stand up a, a, a Dell, Dell compute next to NetApp storage with Cisco router on top of it to replicate what my customer has at the VA, for example, and then to be able to plug in an outpost to show how leveraging the outpost can give them a single pane of glass to be able to work on their workload, so the training that our FSI, Federal System Integrators have put into their staff or our government customers on the Amazon platform can now be driven into their data center, so it's really taking the cloud down to where the data is. >> In terms of public sector, what are some of the prominent use cases that you guys are helping customers to solve, especially given the tumultuous times that we're still living in? Sure, so what we saw during COVID especially was how most of the government agencies had the capability to allow say 5% to 10% of their workforce to work remotely. And then with COVID, they went to 95% to a 100% workforce. So, a lot of the time we've spent over the last year is how do we securely allow our government employees to get access to the information, because as we know, the government was more valuable than ever to get us through this pandemic, we had to give them the tools that they needed to be able to make the decisions to, to move the country forward. >> Talk about security if you will for a second, we have seen such a dramatic change in the security landscape, the threat landscape, ransomware as a service, it's, you know, the cyber criminals, lot of money in it, they're becoming far more brazen. What are some of the things that you're seeing specifically with respect to security use cases? >> It's, it's gone from, let me just buy everything that's out there and that'll give me security to, I need to have visibility into my environment, because if, if you look at target, it's a great case studies around that, they had all the tools, they just didn't tie it all together. And so as more and more nation state actors And so as more and more nation state actors try to attack our government, or it's a great way to make money, I mean, in, in this, in the presentation, Sandy's today, they talked about, if you looked at the GDP of what's been taken in ransomware, it's like the 10th biggest country in the world, I mean, it's scary and staggering how much money is lost. So what we think, going back to our ATC, we can stand up their environment, we can work with the top security providers in the world to show those customers how we can give them that visibility, the, the, the protection and the ability to get back up, because there's really only two types of organizations, those who've been hacked and those who don't know they've been hacked, they're going to get in, it's how do we mitigate the damage, how do we get them back up and running and how we protect my customers or have some of the most sensitive data in the world, how do we protect that so our government can keep us safe and keep us moving forward. >> Yeah, cause these days it's a matter of when we get hacked, not if. And of course we are only hearing about the large attacks. >> Walton: Correct. We don't hear about- all of the ones that go on day in and day out, I think, I think I saw a stat recently that a ransomware attack happens like once every 11 seconds. >> Correct, I mean, just walking through here, how many text messages you've gotten? You want a free iPad click here, I mean, they're, they're down to the individual level. It's a whole lot cheaper to give a couple people, really powerful laptops, pizza and beer, and have them go attack, than it is to, to set up a real business and so, unfortunately, as long as there's money in it, there's going to be bad actors out there. We think partnering with AWS and other partners can help build solutions. >> You know, WWT has had an interesting history because you didn't start with the dawn of cloud. >> Walton: Right. So you've been in the business of AT for a long time So you've been in the business of AT for a long time and logistics out of St. Louis in a lot of ways. What does that look like in terms of navigating that divide? You know, there's a, there's a whole storied history of companies that were not able to cross the divide from the mainframe era to the client server era, let alone to cloud. You seem to have, you seem to be doing that pretty well. >> I, I appreciate that, I mean, we're the biggest company no one's ever heard of. We're 14, $15 billion privately held firm, the same two guys that founded it, still run it today and all they want to do is do cool things, they want it to be truly the best place to work. So from day one, they've invested in training our staff, building the ATC to give us the tools we need to be successful and then because we're a trusted partner with Amazon Intel and our other partners out there, they're investing in us to help build solutions, so we have over 6,000 engineers, they get up every day, how do I build something that can help our customers really drive change and innovation? So it's been a really fun ride and the, the best is yet to come. >> Talk to me about your customer focus, you know, when we talk, here we are at reinvent, we always talk with AWS about their, you know, Dave, we talked about this customer obsession, the fact that they're working backwards from the customer, do you share that sort of philosophy? Does WWT share that philosophy with AWS? >> 100%?, if you go to WWT.com we've published everything that we have so you can get full access to our lab to learn about x ISV and go deep to learn about x ISV and go deep and see the million and a half labs we've built around, say Red Hat and go and get access to it. So we think that if we educate our customers, there are going to be customers for life, and they're going to come to us with their biggest problems. And that what's, is what's exciting and what enables us to, to really continue to grow. >> And how did the customers help you innovate? And that's one of the things we, I was thinking yesterday with, with this AWS flywheel of when Adam was introducing, and now we have a, now we have, and it was because he would say, we did this, but you needed more, but you being the customer needed more. >> 100%, it, it's we want our customers to come to us with their biggest problems, because that's when we, the exciting innovation works. And so the ability to sit down with the foremost expert in, in virus control and be able to, in, in virus control and be able to, what are the tools that she need to be able to get ahead of the next change to COVID? How can we give them the tools to do that? That's what we want to do, the scalability, the ability to reach out to others is what Amazon brings. So we can bring the data science, we can bring the understanding of the storage, the security, and the network and then AWS gives that limitless scalability to solve those problems and to bring in someone from Africa, to bring in someone from the European Union to, to work together to solve those problems, that's what's, what's exciting and then coming back to the outpost, to be able to put that in the data center, we know the data center is better than just about anybody out there, so it would be the ability to add innovation to them, to bring those part ISV partners together. It's really exciting that Intel is funding it because they know that if, if customers can see the art of the possible, they're going to push that innovation. >> One of the things we've also sort of thematically Dave and I with guests, and the other has been talking about this week is that every company has to be a data company, whether it's public sector, private sector, if you're not, or if you're not on your way, there's a competitor right here in the rear view mirror ready to take your place. How do you help public sector organizations really develop, embrace an execute a data full course strategy? >> So we have a cadre of over 125 data scientists that work every day to help organizations unlock their most valuable asset, that data, their people and be able to put the data in the right place at the right time and so by investing in those data scientists, investing in the networking folks to be able to look at the holistic picture is how we can bring those solutions to our customers, because the data is the new oil of, of the environment and sorry for my Southern twang on the oil, but it, but it truly is the most valuable asset they have and so, how do we unlock that? How do they pull that data together, secure it? Because now that you're aggregating all that data, you're making it a treasure trove for those bad actors that are out there, so you've got to secure it, but then to be able to learn and, and automate based on, on what you learned from that data. >> You know I, I think with hindsight, it's easy to, it's easy to say, well, of course WWT is where WWT is today. Five years ago, though, I think it would have been an honest question to ask, how are you going to survive in the world of cloud? And here we are, you've got outposts. >> Walton: Sure. >> And, and of course it makes sense because you're focused on customers, sounds like I'm doing a commercial for you, But I'm a fan- >> I'll gladly apreciate that- because I, I, I've worked with you guys in a variety of roles for a long time, seems like yesterday we were testing a bunch of different storage arrays of the ATC and now you've got outposts in cloud and you're integrating it together. It's really more of the same, I'm sure if we had your founders here, they'd tell you, Dave, it's all the same. >> Walton: Correct. It's all the same. >> It's AT, it's where, where's the compute, where's the storage, how do you get access to it and the cloud has given the ability to, to scale and do things you could never imagine. I think it's the reason we're here is because our leadership continues to invest and pushing that envelope to give people the freedom to go out with that crazy idea, what if we did this? And having the tools and the ability to do that is, is what, what drives our innovation and that's what we bring to our customers and our partners, that ability to innovate to, that ability to innovate to, to tackle that next problem. >> So what's the tip of the spear right now for you guys? What are you, what's, what's, what's kind of, what's next? What are you waiting to have delivered to the ATC to racket, stack and cable up? >> Lot's of stuff that I can't tell you about because there, there's things that Amazon is, is always working on that we work with before it, it's, it's made public, so there's a lot of really cool stuff in the pipeline, because the, as you think about moving to the data center, that's one thing, moving to truly to the edge, where you can help that war fighter, where you can help that mission, where you can do disaster recovery, leveraging the snowball family, the outpost family, and custom built tools that really allow for quick response and custom built tools that really allow for quick response to whatever that problem is, is that next front and that's where we've been for a long time, helping our, our war fighters and folks do what needs to be done. Outpost sees that you can leverage big AWS Outpost sees that you can leverage big AWS to build the models, push it down to the edge because you don't have time or the bandwidth to get it back into the big cloud, to be able to put that compute and storage and analytics on the edge to make real time decisions, is what we have to do to stay relevant and that's where the joint partnership is really exciting. >> It's what you have to do to stay relevant, it's also what your customers need, cause one of the things that we've learned in the pandemic is that real-time data and access to it is no longer, longer a nice to have, this is business critical for everything. >> Correct and even if you have a fat pipe to get it, you need to make real time decisions and if you're in a really sandy space, excuse me, making hard decisions, you've got to get the best information to that soldier when, when they need it to, to save our lives or to save the other people's lives so it's, it's, it's not just a nice to have, it's mission critical. >> It is mission critical, Walton, thank you so much, we're out of time, but thank you for joining Dave and me talking about- >> Really enjoyed it. all the stuff going on with, with worldwide, the partnership with AWS, how you're helping really transform the public sector, we appreciate your time and your insights. >> Thank you so much, have a great conference. >> Thanks, you too. >> Okay, thanks. >> All right, from my buddy, Dave Nicholson, I'm Lisa Martin, you're watching theCUBE, the global leader in live tech coverage. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Dec 3 2021

SUMMARY :

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Jas Bains, Jamie Smith and Laetitia Cailleteau | AWS Executive Summit 2021


 

(bright upbeat music) >> Welcome to The Cube. We're here for the AWS Executive Summit part of Reinvent 2021. I'm John Farrow, your host of the Cube. We've got a great segment focus here, Art of the Possible is the segment. Jas Bains, Chief Executive at Hafod and Jamie Smith, director of research and innovation and Laetitia Cailleteau who's the global lead of conversational AI at Accenture. Thanks for joining me today for this Art of the Possible segment. >> Thank you. >> So tell us a little bit about Hafod and what you guys are doing to the community 'cause this is a really compelling story of how technology in home care is kind of changing the game and putting a stake in the ground. >> Yeah, so Hafod is one of the largest not for profits in Wales. We employ about 1400 colleagues. We have three strands a service, which practices on key demographics. So people who are vulnerable and socioeconomically disadvantaged. Our three core strands of service are affordable housing, we provide several thousand homes to people in housing need across Wales. We also are an extensive provider of social provision, both residential and in the community. And then we have a third tier, which is a hybrid in between. So that supports people who are not quite ready for independent living but neither are they ready for residential care. So that's a supportive provision. I suppose what one of the things that marks Hafod out and why we're here in this conversation is that we're uniquely placed as one of the organizations that actually has a research and innovation capacity. And it's the work of the research and innovation capacity led by Jamie that brought about this collaboration with Accenture which is great in great meaning and benefits. So thousands of our customers and hopefully universal application as it develops. >> You know this is a really an interesting discussion because multiple levels, one, the pandemic accelerated this needs so, I want to get comments on that. But two, if you look at the future of work and work and home life, you seeing the convergence of where people live. And I think this idea of having this independent home and the ecosystem around it, there's a societal impact as well. So what brought this opportunity together? How did this come together with Accenture and AWS? >> We're going for Jamie and Laetitia. >> Yeah, I can start. Well, we were trying to apply for the LC Aging Grand Challenge in the U.K., so the United Kingdom recognized the need for change around independent living and run a grand challenge. And then we got together as part of this grand challenge. You know, we had some technology, we had trialed with AGK before and Hanover Housing Association. Hafod was really keen to actually start trying some of that technology with some of the resident. And we also worked with Swansea University, was doing a lot of work around social isolation and loneliness. And we came together to kind of pitch for the grand challenge. And we went quite far actually, unfortunately we didn't win but we have built such a great collaboration that we couldn't really let it be, you know, not going any further. And we decided to continue to invest in this idea. And now we here, probably 18 months on with a number of people, Hafod using the technology and a number of feedbacks and returns coming back and us having a grand ambitions to actually go much broader and scale this solution. >> Jas and Jamie, I'd love to get your reaction and commentary on this trend of tech for good because I mean, I'm sure you didn't wake up, oh, just want to do some tech for good. You guys have an environment, you have an opportunity, you have challenges you're going to turn into opportunities. But if you look at the global landscape right now, things that are jumping out at us are looking at the impact of social media on people. You got the pandemic with isolation, this is a first order problem in this new world of how do we get technology to change how people feel and make them better in their lives. >> Yeah, I think for us, the first has to be a problem to solve. There's got to be a question to be answered. And for us, that was in this instance, how do we mitigate loneliness and how do we take services that rely on person to person contact and not particularly scalable and replicate those through technology somehow. And even if we can do 10% of the job of that in-person service then for us, it's worth it because that is scalable. And there are lots of small interventions we can make using technology which is really efficient way for us to support people in the community when we just can't be everywhere at once. >> So, John, just to add, I think that we have about 1500 people living in households that are living alone and isolated. And I think the issue for us was more than just about technology because a lot of these people don't have access to basic technology features that most of us would take for granted. So far this is a two-prong journey. One is about increasing the accessibility to tech and familiarizing people so that they're comfortable with these devices technology and two importantly, make sure that we have the right means to help people reduce their loneliness and isolation. So the opportunity to try out something over the last 12 months, something that's bespoke, that's customized that will undoubtedly be tweaked as we go forward has been an absolutely marvelous opportunity. And for us, the collaboration with Accenture has been absolutely key. I think what we've seen during COVID is cross-fertilization. We've seen multi-disciplinary teams, we've got engineers, architects, manufacturers, and clinicians, and scientists, all trying to develop new solutions around COVID. And I think this probably just exemplary bias, especially as a post COVID where industry and in our case for example public sector and academia working together. >> Yeah, that's a great example and props to everyone there. And congratulations on this really, really important initiative. Let's talk about the home care solution. What does it do? How does it work? Take us through what's happening? >> Okay, so Home Care is actually a platform which is obviously running on AWS technology and this particular platform is the service offered accessible via voice through the Alexa device. We use the Echo Show to be able to use voice but also visuals to kind of make the technology more accessible for end user. On the platform itself, we have a series of services available out there. We connecting in the background a number of services from the community. So in the particular case of Hafod, we had something around shopping during the pandemic where we had people wanting to have access to their food bank. Or we also had during the pandemic, there was some need for having access to financial coaching and things like that. So we actually brought all of the service on the platform and the skills and this skill was really learning how to interact with the end user. And it was all customized for them to be able to access those things in a very easy way. It did work almost too well because some of our end users have been a kind of you know, have not been digital literate before and it was working so well, they were like, "But why can't it do pretty much anything on the planet? "Why can't it do this or that?" So the expectations were really, really high but we did manage to bring comfort to Hafod residents in a number of their daily kind of a need, some of the things during COVID 'cause people couldn't meet face to face. There was some challenge around understanding what events are running. So the coaches would publish events, you know, through the skills and people would be able to subscribe and go to the event and meet together virtually instead of physically. The number of things that really kind of brought a voice enabled experience for those end users. >> You know, you mentioned the people like the solution just before we, I'm going to get the Jamie in a second, but I want to just bring up something that you brought up. This is a digital divide evolution because digital divide, as Josh was saying, is that none about technology,, first, you have to access, you need access, right? First, then you have to bring broadband and internet access. And then you have to get the technology in the home. But then here it seems to be a whole nother level of digital divide bridging to the new heights. >> Yeah, completely, completely. And I think that's where COVID has really accelerated the digital divide before the solution was put in place for Hafod in the sense that people couldn't move and if they were not digitally literate, it was very hard to have access to services. And now we brought this solution in the comfort of their own home and they have the access to the services that they wouldn't have had otherwise on their own. So it's definitely helping, yeah. >> It's just another example of people refactoring their lives or businesses with technology. Jamie, what's your take on the innovation here and the technical aspects of the home care solutions? >> I think the fact that it's so easy to use, it's personalized, it's a digital companion for the home. It overcomes that digital divide that we talked about, which is really important. If you've got a voice you can use home care and you can interact with it in this really simple way. And what I love about it is the fact that it was based on what our customers told us they were finding difficult during this time, during the early lockdowns of the pandemic. There was 1500 so people Jas talked about who were living alone and at risk of loneliness. Now we spoke to a good number of those through a series of welfare calls and we found out exactly what it is they found challenging. >> What were some of the things that they were finding challenging? >> So tracking how they feel on a day-to-day basis. What's my mood like, what's my wellbeing like, and knowing how that changes over time. Just keeping the fridge in the pantry stocked up. What can I cook with these basic ingredients that I've got in my home? You could be signposted to basic resources to help you with that. Staying connected to the people who are really important to you but the bit that shines out for me is the interface with our services, with our neighborhood coaching service, where we can just give these little nudges, these little interventions just to mitigate and take the edge of that loneliness for people. We can see the potential of that coming up to the pandemic, where you can really encourage people to interact with one another, to be physically active and do all of those things that sort of mitigate against loneliness. >> Let me ask you a question 'cause I think a very important point. The timing of the signaling of data is super important. Could you comment on the relevance of having access to data? If you're getting something connected, when you're connected like this, I can only imagine the benefits. It's all about timing, right? Knowing that someone might be thinking some way or whether it's a tactical, in any scenario, timing of data, the right place at the right time, as they say. What's your take on that 'cause it sounds like what you're saying is that you can see things early when people are in the moment. >> Yeah, exactly. So if there's a trend beginning to emerge, for example, around some of these wellbeing, which has been on a low trajectory for a number of days, that can raise a red flag in our system and it alerts one of our neighborhood coaches just to reach out to that person and say, "Well, John, what's going on? "You haven't been out for a walk for a few days. "We know you like to walk, what's happening?" And these early warning signs are really important when we think of the long-term effects of loneliness and how getting upstream of those, preventing it reaching a point where it moves from being a problem into being a crisis. And the earlier we can detect that the more chance we've got of these negative long-term outcomes being mitigated. >> You know, one of the things we see in the cloud business is kind of separate track but it kind of relates to the real world here that you're doing, is automation and AI and machine learning bringing in a lot of value if applied properly. So how are you guys seeing, I can almost imagine that patterns are coming in, right? Do you see patterns in the data? How does AI and analytics technology improve this process especially with the wellbeing and emotional wellbeing of the elderly? >> I think one of the things we've learned through the pilot study we've done is there's not one size fits all. You know, all those people are very different individuals. They have very different habits. You know, there's some people not sleeping over the night. There's some people wanting to be out early, wanting to be social. Some people you have to put in much more. So it's definitely not one size fits all. And automation and digitalization of those kinds of services is really challenging because if they're not personalized, it doesn't really catch the interest or the need of the individuals. So for me as an IT professional being in the industry for like a 20 plus years, I think this is the time where personalization has really a true meaning. Personalization at scale for those people that are not digitally literate. But also in more vulnerable settings 'cause there's just so many different angles that can make them vulnerable. Maybe it's the body, maybe it's the economy position, their social condition, there's so many variation of all of that. So I think this is one of the use case that has to be powered by technology to complement the human side of it. If we really want to start scaling the services we provide to people in general, meaning obviously, in all the Western country now we all growing old, it's no secret. So in 20 years time the majority of everybody will be old and we obviously need people to take care of us. And at the moment we don't have that population to take care of us coming up. So really to crack on those kinds of challenges, we really need to have technology powering and just helping the human side to make it more efficient, connected than human. >> It's interesting. I just did a story where you have these bots that look at the facial recognition via cameras and can detect either in hospitals and or in care patients, how they feel. So you see where this is going. Jas I got to ask you how all this changes, the home care model and how Hafod works. Your workforce, the career's culture, the consortium you guys are bringing to the table, partners, you know this is an ecosystem now, it's a system. >> Yes John, I think that probably, it's also worth talking a little bit about the pressures on state governments around public health issues which are coming to the fore. And clearly we need to develop alternative ways that we engage with mass audiences and technology is going to be absolutely key. One of the challenges I still think that we've not resolved in the U.K. level, this is probably a global issue, is about data protection. When we're talking to cross governmental agencies, it's about sharing data and establishing protocols and we've enjoyed a few challenging conversations with colleagues around data protection. So I think those need to be set out in the context of the journey of this particular project. I think that what's interesting around COVID is that, hasn't materially changed the nature in which we do things, probably not in our focus and our work remains the same. But what we're seeing is very clear evidence of the ways, I mean, who would have thought that 12 months ago, the majority of our workforce would be working from home? So rapid mobilization to ensure that people can use, set IT home effectively. And then how does that relationship impact with people in the communities we're serving? Some of whom have got access to technology, others who haven't. So that's been, I think the biggest change, and that is a fundamental change in the design and delivery of future services that organizations like us will be providing. So I would say that overall, some things remain the same by and large but technology is having an absolutely profound change in the way that our engagement with customers will go forward. >> Well, you guys are in the front end of some massive innovation here with this, are they possible and that, you're really delivering impact. And I think this is an example of that. And you brought up the data challenges, this is something that you guys call privacy by design. This is a cutting edge issue here because there are benefits around managing privacy properly. And I think here, your solution clearly has value, right? And no one can debate that, but as these little blockers get in the way, what's your reaction to that? 'Cause this certainly is something that has to be solved. I mean, it's a problem. >> Yeah, so we designed a solution, I think we had, when we design, I co-designed with your end-users actually. We had up to 14 lawyers working with us at one point in time looking at different kinds of angles. So definitely really tackle the solution with privacy by design in mind and with end users but obviously you can't co-design with thousands of people, you have to co-design with a representative subset of a cohort. And some of the challenge we find is obviously, the media have done a lot of scaremongering around technology, AI and all of that kind of things, especially for people that are not necessarily digitally literate, people that are just not in it. And when we go and deploy the solution, people are a little bit worried. When we make them, we obviously explain to them what's going to happen if they're happy, if they want to consent and all that kind of things. But the people are scared, they're just jumping on a technology on top of it we're asking them some questions around consent. So I think it's just that the solution is super secured and we've gone over millions of hoops within Accenture but also with Hafod itself. You know, it's more that like the type of user we deploying the solution to are just not in that world and then they are little bit worried about sharing. Not only they're worried about sharing with us but you know, in home care, there there's an option as well to share some of that data with your family. And there we also see people are kind of okay to share with us but they don't want to share with their family 'cause they don't want to have too much information kind of going potentially worrying or bothering some of their family member. So there is definitely a huge education kind of angle to embracing the technology. Not only when you create the solution but when you actually deploy it with users. >> It's a fabulous project, I am so excited by this story. It's a great story, has all the elements; technology, innovation, cidal impact, data privacy, social interactions, whether it's with family members and others, internal, external. In teams themselves. You guys doing some amazing work, thank you for sharing. It's a great project, we'll keep track of it. My final question for you guys is what comes next for the home care after the trial? What are Hafod's plans and hopes for the future? >> Maybe if I just give an overview and then invite Jamie and Laetitia. So for us, without conversations, you don't create possibilities and this really is a reflection of the culture that we try to engender. So my ask of my team is to remain curious, is to continue to explore opportunities because it's home care up to today, it could be something else tomorrow. We also recognize that we live in a world of collaboration. We need more cross industrial partnerships. We love to explore more things that Accenture, Amazon, others as well. So that's principally what I will be doing is ensuring that the culture invites us and then I hand over to the clever people like Jamie and Laetitia to get on with the technology. I think for me we've already learned an awful lot about home care and there's clearly a lot more we can learn. We'd love to build on this initial small-scale trial and see how home care could work at a bigger scale. So how would it work with thousands of users? How do we scale it up from a cohort of 50 to a cohort of 5,000? How does it work when we bring different kinds of organizations into that mix? So what if, for example, we could integrate it into health care? So a variety of services can have a holistic view of an individual and interact with one another, to put that person on the right pathway and maybe keep them out of the health and care system for longer, actually reducing the costs to the system in the long run and improving that person's outcomes. That kind of evidence speaks to decision-makers and political partners and I think that's the kind of evidence we need to build. >> Yeah, financial impact is there, it's brutal. It's a great financial impact for the system. Efficiency, better care, everything. >> Yeah and we are 100% on board for whatever comes next. >> Laetitia-- >> What about you Laetitia? >> Great program you got there. A amazing story, thank you for sharing. Congratulations on this awesome project. So much to unpack here. I think this is the future. I mean, I think this is a case study of represents all the moving parts that need to be worked on, so congratulations. >> Thank you. >> Thank you. >> We are the Art of the Possible here inside the Cube, part of AWS Reinvent Executive Summit, I'm John Furrier, your host, thanks for watching. (bright upbeat music)

Published Date : Nov 9 2021

SUMMARY :

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Jas Bains, Laetitia Cailleteau and Jamie Smith AWS Executive Summit 2021


 

(bright upbeat music) >> Welcome to The Cube. We're here for the AWS Executive Summit part of Reinvent 2021. I'm John Farrow, your host of the Cube. We've got a great segment focus here, Art of the Possible is the segment. Jas Bains, Chief Executive at Hafod and Jamie Smith, director of research and innovation and Laetitia Cailleteau who's the global lead of conversational AI at Accenture. Thanks for joining me today for this Art of the Possible segment. >> Thank you. >> So tell us a little bit about Hafod and what you guys are doing to the community 'cause this is a really compelling story of how technology in home care is kind of changing the game and putting a stake in the ground. >> Yeah, so Hafod is one of the largest not for profits in Wales. We employ about 1400 colleagues. We have three strands a service, which practices on key demographics. So people who are vulnerable and socioeconomically disadvantaged. Our three core strands of service are affordable housing, we provide several thousand homes to people in housing need across Wales. We also are an extensive provider of social provision, both residential and in the community. And then we have a third tier, which is a hybrid in between. So that supports people who are not quite ready for independent living but neither are they ready for residential care. So that's a supportive provision. I suppose what one of the things that marks Hafod out and why we're here in this conversation is that we're uniquely placed as one of the organizations that actually has a research and innovation capacity. And it's the work of the research and innovation capacity led by Jamie that brought about this collaboration with Accenture which is great in great meaning and benefits. So thousands of our customers and hopefully universal application as it develops. >> You know this is a really an interesting discussion because multiple levels, one, the pandemic accelerated this needs so, I want to get comments on that. But two, if you look at the future of work and work and home life, you seeing the convergence of where people live. And I think this idea of having this independent home and the ecosystem around it, there's a societal impact as well. So what brought this opportunity together? How did this come together with Accenture and AWS? >> We're going for Jamie and Laetitia. >> Yeah, I can start. Well, we were trying to apply for the LC Aging Grand Challenge in the U.K., so the United Kingdom recognized the need for change around independent living and run a grand challenge. And then we got together as part of this grand challenge. You know, we had some technology, we had trialed with AGK before and Hanover Housing Association. Hafod was really keen to actually start trying some of that technology with some of the resident. And we also worked with Swansea University, was doing a lot of work around social isolation and loneliness. And we came together to kind of pitch for the grand challenge. And we went quite far actually, unfortunately we didn't win but we have built such a great collaboration that we couldn't really let it be, you know, not going any further. And we decided to continue to invest in this idea. And now we here, probably 18 months on with a number of people, Hafod using the technology and a number of feedbacks and returns coming back and us having a grand ambitions to actually go much broader and scale this solution. >> Jas and Jamie, I'd love to get your reaction and commentary on this trend of tech for good because I mean, I'm sure you didn't wake up, oh, just want to do some tech for good. You guys have an environment, you have an opportunity, you have challenges you're going to turn into opportunities. But if you look at the global landscape right now, things that are jumping out at us are looking at the impact of social media on people. You got the pandemic with isolation, this is a first order problem in this new world of how do we get technology to change how people feel and make them better in their lives. >> Yeah, I think for us, the first has to be a problem to solve. There's got to be a question to be answered. And for us, that was in this instance, how do we mitigate loneliness and how do we take services that rely on person to person contact and not particularly scalable and replicate those through technology somehow. And even if we can do 10% of the job of that in-person service then for us, it's worth it because that is scalable. And there are lots of small interventions we can make using technology which is really efficient way for us to support people in the community when we just can't be everywhere at once. >> So, John, just to add, I think that we have about 1500 people living in households that are living alone and isolated. And I think the issue for us was more than just about technology because a lot of these people don't have access to basic technology features that most of us would take for granted. So far this is a two-prong journey. One is about increasing the accessibility to tech and familiarizing people so that they're comfortable with these devices technology and two importantly, make sure that we have the right means to help people reduce their loneliness and isolation. So the opportunity to try out something over the last 12 months, something that's bespoke, that's customized that will undoubtedly be tweaked as we go forward has been an absolutely marvelous opportunity. And for us, the collaboration with Accenture has been absolutely key. I think what we've seen during COVID is cross-fertilization. We've seen multi-disciplinary teams, we've got engineers, architects, manufacturers, and clinicians, and scientists, all trying to develop new solutions around COVID. And I think this probably just exemplary bias, especially as a post COVID where industry and in our case for example public sector and academia working together. >> Yeah, that's a great example and props to everyone there. And congratulations on this really, really important initiative. Let's talk about the home care solution. What does it do? How does it work? Take us through what's happening? >> Okay, so Home Care is actually a platform which is obviously running on AWS technology and this particular platform is the service offered accessible via voice through the Alexa device. We use the Echo Show to be able to use voice but also visuals to kind of make the technology more accessible for end user. On the platform itself, we have a series of services available out there. We connecting in the background a number of services from the community. So in the particular case of Hafod, we had something around shopping during the pandemic where we had people wanting to have access to their food bank. Or we also had during the pandemic, there was some need for having access to financial coaching and things like that. So we actually brought all of the service on the platform and the skills and this skill was really learning how to interact with the end user. And it was all customized for them to be able to access those things in a very easy way. It did work almost too well because some of our end users have been a kind of you know, have not been digital literate before and it was working so well, they were like, "But why can't it do pretty much anything on the planet? "Why can't it do this or that?" So the expectations were really, really high but we did manage to bring comfort to Hafod residents in a number of their daily kind of a need, some of the things during COVID 'cause people couldn't meet face to face. There was some challenge around understanding what events are running. So the coaches would publish events, you know, through the skills and people would be able to subscribe and go to the event and meet together virtually instead of physically. The number of things that really kind of brought a voice enabled experience for those end users. >> You know, you mentioned the people like the solution just before we, I'm going to get the Jamie in a second, but I want to just bring up something that you brought up. This is a digital divide evolution because digital divide, as Josh was saying, is that none about technology,, first, you have to access, you need access, right? First, then you have to bring broadband and internet access. And then you have to get the technology in the home. But then here it seems to be a whole nother level of digital divide bridging to the new heights. >> Yeah, completely, completely. And I think that's where COVID has really accelerated the digital divide before the solution was put in place for Hafod in the sense that people couldn't move and if they were not digitally literate, it was very hard to have access to services. And now we brought this solution in the comfort of their own home and they have the access to the services that they wouldn't have had otherwise on their own. So it's definitely helping, yeah. >> It's just another example of people refactoring their lives or businesses with technology. Jamie, what's your take on the innovation here and the technical aspects of the home care solutions? >> I think the fact that it's so easy to use, it's personalized, it's a digital companion for the home. It overcomes that digital divide that we talked about, which is really important. If you've got a voice you can use home care and you can interact with it in this really simple way. And what I love about it is the fact that it was based on what our customers told us they were finding difficult during this time, during the early lockdowns of the pandemic. There was 1500 so people Jas talked about who were living alone and at risk of loneliness. Now we spoke to a good number of those through a series of welfare calls and we found out exactly what it is they found challenging. >> What were some of the things that they were finding challenging? >> So tracking how they feel on a day-to-day basis. What's my mood like, what's my wellbeing like, and knowing how that changes over time. Just keeping the fridge in the pantry stocked up. What can I cook with these basic ingredients that I've got in my home? You could be signposted to basic resources to help you with that. Staying connected to the people who are really important to you but the bit that shines out for me is the interface with our services, with our neighborhood coaching service, where we can just give these little nudges, these little interventions just to mitigate and take the edge of that loneliness for people. We can see the potential of that coming up to the pandemic, where you can really encourage people to interact with one another, to be physically active and do all of those things that sort of mitigate against loneliness. >> Let me ask you a question 'cause I think a very important point. The timing of the signaling of data is super important. Could you comment on the relevance of having access to data? If you're getting something connected, when you're connected like this, I can only imagine the benefits. It's all about timing, right? Knowing that someone might be thinking some way or whether it's a tactical, in any scenario, timing of data, the right place at the right time, as they say. What's your take on that 'cause it sounds like what you're saying is that you can see things early when people are in the moment. >> Yeah, exactly. So if there's a trend beginning to emerge, for example, around some of these wellbeing, which has been on a low trajectory for a number of days, that can raise a red flag in our system and it alerts one of our neighborhood coaches just to reach out to that person and say, "Well, John, what's going on? "You haven't been out for a walk for a few days. "We know you like to walk, what's happening?" And these early warning signs are really important when we think of the long-term effects of loneliness and how getting upstream of those, preventing it reaching a point where it moves from being a problem into being a crisis. And the earlier we can detect that the more chance we've got of these negative long-term outcomes being mitigated. >> You know, one of the things we see in the cloud business is kind of separate track but it kind of relates to the real world here that you're doing, is automation and AI and machine learning bringing in a lot of value if applied properly. So how are you guys seeing, I can almost imagine that patterns are coming in, right? Do you see patterns in the data? How does AI and analytics technology improve this process especially with the wellbeing and emotional wellbeing of the elderly? >> I think one of the things we've learned through the pilot study we've done is there's not one size fits all. You know, all those people are very different individuals. They have very different habits. You know, there's some people not sleeping over the night. There's some people wanting to be out early, wanting to be social. Some people you have to put in much more. So it's definitely not one size fits all. And automation and digitalization of those kinds of services is really challenging because if they're not personalized, it doesn't really catch the interest or the need of the individuals. So for me as an IT professional being in the industry for like a 20 plus years, I think this is the time where personalization has really a true meaning. Personalization at scale for those people that are not digitally literate. But also in more vulnerable settings 'cause there's just so many different angles that can make them vulnerable. Maybe it's the body, maybe it's the economy position, their social condition, there's so many variation of all of that. So I think this is one of the use case that has to be powered by technology to complement the human side of it. If we really want to start scaling the services we provide to people in general, meaning obviously, in all the Western country now we all growing old, it's no secret. So in 20 years time the majority of everybody will be old and we obviously need people to take care of us. And at the moment we don't have that population to take care of us coming up. So really to crack on those kinds of challenges, we really need to have technology powering and just helping the human side to make it more efficient, connected than human. >> It's interesting. I just did a story where you have these bots that look at the facial recognition via cameras and can detect either in hospitals and or in care patients, how they feel. So you see where this is going. Jas I got to ask you how all this changes, the home care model and how Hafod works. Your workforce, the career's culture, the consortium you guys are bringing to the table, partners, you know this is an ecosystem now, it's a system. >> Yes John, I think that probably, it's also worth talking a little bit about the pressures on state governments around public health issues which are coming to the fore. And clearly we need to develop alternative ways that we engage with mass audiences and technology is going to be absolutely key. One of the challenges I still think that we've not resolved in the U.K. level, this is probably a global issue, is about data protection. When we're talking to cross governmental agencies, it's about sharing data and establishing protocols and we've enjoyed a few challenging conversations with colleagues around data protection. So I think those need to be set out in the context of the journey of this particular project. I think that what's interesting around COVID is that, hasn't materially changed the nature in which we do things, probably not in our focus and our work remains the same. But what we're seeing is very clear evidence of the ways, I mean, who would have thought that 12 months ago, the majority of our workforce would be working from home? So rapid mobilization to ensure that people can use, set IT home effectively. And then how does that relationship impact with people in the communities we're serving? Some of whom have got access to technology, others who haven't. So that's been, I think the biggest change, and that is a fundamental change in the design and delivery of future services that organizations like us will be providing. So I would say that overall, some things remain the same by and large but technology is having an absolutely profound change in the way that our engagement with customers will go forward. >> Well, you guys are in the front end of some massive innovation here with this, are they possible and that, you're really delivering impact. And I think this is an example of that. And you brought up the data challenges, this is something that you guys call privacy by design. This is a cutting edge issue here because there are benefits around managing privacy properly. And I think here, your solution clearly has value, right? And no one can debate that, but as these little blockers get in the way, what's your reaction to that? 'Cause this certainly is something that has to be solved. I mean, it's a problem. >> Yeah, so we designed a solution, I think we had, when we design, I co-designed with your end-users actually. We had up to 14 lawyers working with us at one point in time looking at different kinds of angles. So definitely really tackle the solution with privacy by design in mind and with end users but obviously you can't co-design with thousands of people, you have to co-design with a representative subset of a cohort. And some of the challenge we find is obviously, the media have done a lot of scaremongering around technology, AI and all of that kind of things, especially for people that are not necessarily digitally literate, people that are just not in it. And when we go and deploy the solution, people are a little bit worried. When we make them, we obviously explain to them what's going to happen if they're happy, if they want to consent and all that kind of things. But the people are scared, they're just jumping on a technology on top of it we're asking them some questions around consent. So I think it's just that the solution is super secured and we've gone over millions of hoops within Accenture but also with Hafod itself. You know, it's more that like the type of user we deploying the solution to are just not in that world and then they are little bit worried about sharing. Not only they're worried about sharing with us but you know, in home care, there there's an option as well to share some of that data with your family. And there we also see people are kind of okay to share with us but they don't want to share with their family 'cause they don't want to have too much information kind of going potentially worrying or bothering some of their family member. So there is definitely a huge education kind of angle to embracing the technology. Not only when you create the solution but when you actually deploy it with users. >> It's a fabulous project, I am so excited by this story. It's a great story, has all the elements; technology, innovation, cidal impact, data privacy, social interactions, whether it's with family members and others, internal, external. In teams themselves. You guys doing some amazing work, thank you for sharing. It's a great project, we'll keep track of it. My final question for you guys is what comes next for the home care after the trial? What are Hafod's plans and hopes for the future? >> Maybe if I just give an overview and then invite Jamie and Laetitia. So for us, without conversations, you don't create possibilities and this really is a reflection of the culture that we try to engender. So my ask of my team is to remain curious, is to continue to explore opportunities because it's home care up to today, it could be something else tomorrow. We also recognize that we live in a world of collaboration. We need more cross industrial partnerships. We love to explore more things that Accenture, Amazon, others as well. So that's principally what I will be doing is ensuring that the culture invites us and then I hand over to the clever people like Jamie and Laetitia to get on with the technology. I think for me we've already learned an awful lot about home care and there's clearly a lot more we can learn. We'd love to build on this initial small-scale trial and see how home care could work at a bigger scale. So how would it work with thousands of users? How do we scale it up from a cohort of 50 to a cohort of 5,000? How does it work when we bring different kinds of organizations into that mix? So what if, for example, we could integrate it into health care? So a variety of services can have a holistic view of an individual and interact with one another, to put that person on the right pathway and maybe keep them out of the health and care system for longer, actually reducing the costs to the system in the long run and improving that person's outcomes. That kind of evidence speaks to decision-makers and political partners and I think that's the kind of evidence we need to build. >> Yeah, financial impact is there, it's brutal. It's a great financial impact for the system. Efficiency, better care, everything. >> Yeah and we are 100% on board for whatever comes next. >> Laetitia-- >> What about you Laetitia? >> Great program you got there. A amazing story, thank you for sharing. Congratulations on this awesome project. So much to unpack here. I think this is the future. I mean, I think this is a case study of represents all the moving parts that need to be worked on, so congratulations. >> Thank you. >> Thank you. >> We are the Art of the Possible here inside the Cube, part of AWS Reinvent Executive Summit, I'm John Furrier, your host, thanks for watching. (bright upbeat music)

Published Date : Oct 27 2021

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Rick Smith, IBM | IBM Think 2021


 

>> Announcer: From around the globe. >> (upbeat music) It's the cube with digital coverage of IBM Think 2021 brought to you by IBM. >> Hi, welcome back everyone to the Cubes coverage of IBM Think 2021 virtual. I'm John Furrier, host of the cube. Got a great guest, Rick Smith, CTO of IBM Anthem client team. Rick. Great to see you. Thanks for coming on the cube. >> Yeah. Thank you, John. Nice to see you as well, virtually. >> First introduce yourself, what you do there, what's going on on your plate these days, honestly, COVID, we're coming out of it soon. Take a minute to introduce yourself. >> Yeah, so I've got about 15 years in the seat with Anthem. Previous to that I worked at Pretty university as the CTO in Indiana. So haven't really left, but started working with Anthem as a technical architect, eventually moved into the CTO role and have been part of, you know, a long journey with them that started at a managed services agreement in 2005. And here we are in 2021. So I've been through a lot of changes they've made to improve themselves and move into digitalization. And certainly the changes we've made too to accommodate that as we went through the years. >> Awesome. Well, thanks for that setup. I really want to dig into this expansion of project Cirrus. You guys have had a multi decade partnership with IBM and then last year you launched this expansion, project Cirrus. Can you describe this project? And what does it mean? And this new term I've heard, enterprise hybrid cloud as a service. Sounds very interesting. >> Yeah. So that's my term. I'm hoping you made it patent or something like that. But the reality is you hear our CEO talk and say that 75% of corporate workloads are not in the cloud yet. Right? And Anthem is no different, right? So they starting to go into cloud and those kinds of things. But they said to us, you know, "Hey, we've got a long series of excellence with you from a delivery perspective, reliability perspective is kind of the bedrock of what we do, but we don't want to be in the data center business, right? And we want to transform and move to cloud. We want to become a more of an AI company and these kinds of things. And we said, well, we think we can actually put together a program... Excuse me, program for you to allow you to do that, right? And so we formed something called project Cirrus which is really an expansion of our partnership. So if I look back, John, we did about 80% of the end-to-end delivery for Anthem from a managed services perspective. In other words, they did a few pieces and we said, we think we could improve that if we had the entire 100%. And so project Cirrus was about, you know, extending from 80% to 100%. It was also about taking a series of applications that were important to them and actually say, we'll actually take them on and transform them 100% all the way to cloud and take advantage of new things. It was about a commitment to closing those data centers, right? So they have five strategic data centers. And about 24,000 hosts that we said we will actually commit to getting those, you know, getting you out of the data centers and moving those to either IBM cloud or close to IBM cloud if you will, I'll come back to that in a minute. And we'll also build something called ATEC, Anthem Technology Excellent Center, if you will. And that's near and dear to my heart because that's sort of my baby, right? So it's a transformation engine and we can talk a little bit more about that in a second. But he said the key to this for us is that, if we look at our trend line, John, over the number of years with Anthem, when we started about 2007 looking at this data, we've grown the number of hosts. We've had to manage, over 600% during that time period. But we've driven down high priority incidents by over 90%. So think about that. You know, this is really important for them to have resiliency and stability in their organization. You know, huge acceleration number of hosts, but drive down the a P zero incidents, if you will. And they said, we need to maintain that and continue to improve upon that. Right? >> Yeah. >> So Cirrus was a commitment to take that further, right? Start driving AAN, AI into the operations, if you will in everything that we do. So Anthem is transforming to do AI and machine learning for their members. We're committed to transforming and doing the same kind of thing on our operational side if you will. >> Yeah, that's awesome. And I think one of the things that's interesting that jumps out at me just as you're talking, first of all super exciting that project you got out there, a lot going on to unpack, but let's do that. I mean, what I hear you saying which is getting me kind of all triggered in a good way is you got transformation going on and innovation same time. You're innovating with this new enterprise hybrid clouds of service concept. You take in more efficiency, you're doing the classic transformational things, making things more efficient, all that good stuff for agility, but it's actually innovative. So this idea of an enterprise hybrid cloud as a service is pretty innovative because now you're talking about things with AI and scale that come into play, right? So you got the setup, you got it moving into being innovative but scales right there. What is this enterprise hybrid cloud as a service? Because is it just agility, is it the AI piece? Where do you see that going? >> Yeah, that's a great question. Right? And you're a great stuff, man, Johnson. (Smith laughs) So again, Anthem's not ready to move all of their workload to cloud, right? And we recognize (indistinct)is going to be out of the data center business. So how can we take non traditional workloads, right? Get them close to cloud, right? Get them very close to cloud, get us out of the managing the data center and actually allow us to move seamlessly from non traditional workloads into cloud. And so what we did was something we think is very innovative. This is the enterprise hybrid cloud piece for me, right? 'Cause normally hybrid cloud says, you have a client data center location and you have cloud. We marry the two together. We said, you're not going to have a data center location anymore. We're going to have our data centers, you know, IBM cloud. And we're actually going to put some dedicated space right next to cloud. And when I say next to cloud, I literally mean within a few feet. And we're going to bring these non traditional workloads there, we're going to take the network operation brain and bring it there. And we're going to allow you then to basically be able to move seamlessly from that to directly into cloud and improve operations at the same time. There's other a side benefit to this too. The other unintended sort of benefit is that what any organization, right? That you find stuff in the data center that hasn't been looked at for a long period of time, right? Application teams haven't looked at it, et cetera, et cetera. We're literally touching every single host. Right? So this gives us an opportunity to also work with our teams and find things that really can just be thrown away. Right? And this is great because we're actually making them more efficient, optimizing the cost structures as we go about it. >> Yeah. I mean the operational model changes me. You mentioned that just that whole point about you're kind of doing some discovery on apps, this becomes kind of sets the table for AI ops which is just code word for day two operations or full cloud native environments, which now you're seeing cloud native include legacy. Yes. Because you can put containers into the mix and you can then create these integration points that you don't have to kind of get rid of the old to bring in the new. So the dimension of what's going on here is pretty interesting, right? When you start thinking about that, "Okay. I can modernize the same time as connect two existing systems." >> That's exactly right. And we put the things very close to one another. And if there's any concerns over data security compliance or healthcare regulated industry, of course, we can have the workloads located in the best location to ensure that security is in place. Right? So that's what's beautiful about it, right? We can kind of hit every layer that's possible from having it just as secure as completely privatized to going directly over to public cloud or connecting the two together as we go along. >> Well, you're definitely a pioneer. I love that enterprise hybrid cloud as a service. I think that's something that's relevant. We're living in a hybrid world. I mean, the cube, we used to go to events now it's virtual events, but when now the events come back, they're hybrid events. Every company is experiencing this phenomenon on hybrid something, not just technology. The ops got to adapt, so super cool. You mentioned something that was your baby. I want to get back to you. And you said you want to talk about, I want to just bring that up. This Anthem technology excellence center is your baby. ATech I think you said for short. >> Yeah. We call it Atech for short. And really, John, we said that it's got to be more than just taking that other 20% that we don't run today. And we're doing some very innovative things moving non-traditional workloads. Like I said, all that kind of stuff was very cool, right? But we need a transformation engine, right? And we need the ability to transform skills. Like upscale the people at Anthem as well as IBM, right there on the account team, it's a big account. We want to think of new ways to work together. Right? Traditional managed services is like, what? Someone cuts a ticket and says, "Give me X by her seat." Right? That's the traditional model. And we said, that's not good enough. We need to collaborate better together. And we are willing to redefining how we form our teams to work with Anthem. Right? So if we want to form, for example, a product ownership team that builds it, runs it, maintains it. And that team has Anthem plus IBM together. we're going to use ATEC as a vehicle to design that and drive it and make sure they have all the skills they need within that group to do that. Right? That's new ways of working together. And it's also to drive things like site reliability engineering, right? Cloud service management operations, make sure that Anthem has the right training, make sure we work together on these kinds of things. So it's really kind of an exciting thing. And it's intended to be a co-created model, right? So we actually work with the Anthem, we co-create using IBM garage methodologies and then the idea is to coast staff it, but it's tended to be a thin layer of world-class engineering. That's really the whole point of it. And yeah, I'm super excited about that. As you move forward, yeah. >> While you're speaking our language, the cube we'd love the co-creation we do with media. It's always fun to create content together. And sometimes in real time put it together like we're doing now. And it creates a bond. I mean, I got to bring this up because this is becoming more and more obvious. And now mainstream, the notion of co-creation, the notion of ecosystems and ecosystems really meaning network effect and integrating with other parties, right? Companies and our systems. If you look at the underlying business model as a systems management software bottle. Okay. So with that, these ecosystems, the network effect. If you build together, you stay together. I mean, this is a different mindset. It's different dynamic. It's a different relationship that companies are now looking for in what used to be called suppliers. Are you supplying something? Are you building together? Right. So this seems to be the theme. Can you expand on this new trend? >> Right. And get away from the strict racing, this person does, this person does that. Instead, we build a team together that has all the skills necessary and that team owns a product life cycle. They build it, run it and maintain it. And that's changing the way we deliver services from IBM perspective significantly, right? Because that's not our traditional model but that's what we're doing. So we're really out in the front end, on the front edge if you will. Changing that model completely. And it's one of the most exciting things for me, you know, as far as going forward. >> You know, this whole idea of partnerships has always kind of been there but now it gets modernized and uplifted if you will, to a new level. And it really is about watching each other's backs too when you have that kind of... 'Cause we're talking about like pushing the envelope on probably the biggest confluence of tech trends I've ever seen in my career. And I've seen many big waves, you know, from the different revolutions and inflection points. Now it's sort of all coming together, right? At scale too, it's happening very fast. I mean, the change over is happening in years that once you took decades before. So it's really is a team approach. >> Yeah. There's no doubt about it. And I see it every day in the work we're doing. And it's like, for example, at Atech where we're working with the data scientists at the Anthem, we're thinking of new ways to build things they've never done before. We're hoping to enable their science, enable the things they want to do for digitization standpoint, the same token I'm taking, you know, a data scientist and putting them on the operation side too. Right? So we're doing both these kinds of things together. And really I didn't say this before, but this whole thing is about driving automation, right? Driving down, no human touch, soft service, automation. That is kind of been the linchpin of this. And I also want to say John, that doing this all during a pandemic, you know, we signed our new agreement together with them at a quarter, at the end of March in 2020. And we went live in August 1st with all the changes, the extra 20% capacity to over 300 plus applications completely, started Atech from co-creation in a pandemic. And we both agreed as a company, I give great credit to our client and to the numbers involved that everyone set up front and during March. The pandemic's not an excuse to get anything done. So, we're going to go forward and make it happen. That's probably the thing I'm most proud about. That was just... It's crazy when you think of how big the project was and do pull it off during a pandemic. >> Yeah. There's going to be two sides of the street and this one, this pandemics over the ones who made it through and refactored and or innovated. Cause it's not just about being and having a tale, it's about taking advantage of the situation and the ones who didn't do anything. Whether they were in the cloud or not, that's not to me. That's not the issue of you're in the cloud you had an advantage. >> It's not. Right. >> But there's going to be two sides of the streets. And I think the one thing that the pandemic has shown us and I'd love to get your reaction as a final comment here is that when you pull back when the pandemic, it showed all the scabs, it shows everything. And you can see what's obvious and it becomes a forcing function. Necessity's the mother of all invention as expression goes so you can see what's worth doubling down on and you can see the productivity gains and that becomes clear. >> Yeah. Yeah. And I think there's good and bad with everything, right? Pros and cons, like you said, and you know, one of the cons I think is the having to schedule all interactions is definitely a con, right? Because when you spend time not only with the client virtually but in person, you do get the advantage of having, you know, chalk talks and things like that. They're not scheduled. Right? So that's definitely one of the cons side, but one of the pro side is it did provide some focus, right? Kind of extreme focus and on what's important and allowed us to, you know, I think dove some bonds with the Anthem leadership team and the application teams doing it virtually over cameras like this that maybe happen at a larger scale than they might have normally been because the pandemic kind of allowed us to do that and made that happen. >> Great stuff, Rick, great insight. Great to have you on the cube as always. Great to talk tech, talk business, talk about the transformation and innovation and the cloud scale. Thanks for coming on Rick Smith, CTO of the IBM Anthem client team. Thanks for coming on the cube. >> You're welcome. Thanks John. >> Okay. Cube coverage of IBM Think 2021. I'm John. For your host of the cube. Thanks for watching. (soft music) (upbeat music)

Published Date : May 12 2021

SUMMARY :

brought to you by IBM. I'm John Furrier, host of the cube. Nice to see you as well, virtually. Take a minute to introduce yourself. And certainly the changes we've made too and then last year you But they said to us, you know, the operations, if you will is it the AI piece? and improve operations at the same time. So the dimension of what's going on here And we put the things I mean, the cube, we used to go to events And it's intended to be a And now mainstream, the on the front edge if you will. And I've seen many big waves, you know, the same token I'm taking, you know, and the ones who didn't do anything. It's not. And you can see what's obvious is the having to schedule Great to have you on the cube as always. Thanks John. Thanks for watching.

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Darrell Jordan Smith, Red Hat | Red Hat Summit 2021 Virtual Experience


 

(upbeat music) >> And, welcome back to theCube's coverage of Red Hat Summit, 2021. I'm John Furrier, host of theCube. We've got a great segment here on how Red Hat is working with telcos and the disruption in the telco cloud. We've got a great guest Cube alumni, Darrell Jordan Smith, senior vice president of industries and global accounts at Red Hat. Darrell, great to see you. Thanks for coming back on theCube. >> Oh, it's been, it's great to be here and I'm really excited about having the opportunity to talk to you today. >> Yeah, we're not in person, in real life's coming back soon. Although I hear Mobile World Congress, might be in person this year, looking like it's good. A lot of people are going to be virtual and activating I know. A lot to talk about. This is probably one of the most important topics in the industry because when you talk about telco industry, you're really talking about the edge. You're talking about 5G, talking about industrial benefits for business, because it's not just edge for connectivity access. We're talking about innovative things from self-driving cars to business benefits. It's not just consumer, it's really bringing that together. You guys are really leading with the cloud-native platform from REL, OpenShift managed services. Everything about the cloud-native underpinnings, you guys have been successful as a company. But now in your area, telco is being disrupted. You're leading the way >> Absolutely. Give us your take on this, this is super exciting. >> Well, it's actually one of the most exciting times. I've been in the industry for 30 years. I'm probably aging myself now, but in the telecommunications industry, this for me, is the most exciting. It's where, you know, technology is actually going to visibly change, the way, that everyone interacts with the network. And with the applications that are being developed out there on, on our platform. and, you know, as you mentioned, IoT, and a number of the other AI and ML innovations, that are occurring in the marketplace. We're going to see a new wave of applications and innovation. >> What's the key delivery workload you're seeing, with 5G environment. Obviously it's not just, you know 5G in the sense of thinking about mobile phones or mobile computers as they are now. It's not just that consumer, "Hey surf the web and check your email and get an app and download and, and communicate". It's bigger than that now. Can you tell us, where you see the workloads coming in on the 5G environment? >> You, you hit the nail on the head. The, the, the, the killer application, isn't the user or the consumer and the way that we traditionally have known it. Because you might be able to download a video and that might take 20 seconds less, but you're not going to pay an awful lot more money for that. The real opportunity around 5G, is the industrial applications. Things like connected car. You know automotive driving, factory floor automation. How you actually interface digitally with your bank. How we're doing all sorts of things, more intelligently at the edge of the network, using artificial intelligence and machine learning. So all of those things are going to deliver a new experience, for everyone that interacts with the network and the telcos are at the heart of it. >> You know, I want to get into the real kind of underpinnings, of what's going on with the innovations happening. You just kind of laid out kind of the implications of the use cases and the target application workloads, but there's kind of two big things going on with the edge and 5G. One is under the hood networking, you know, what's going on with the moving the packets around the workload, throughput, bandwidth, et cetera, and all that, that goes on under the hood. And then there's the domain expertise in the data, where AI and machine learning have to kind of weave in. So let's take the first part, first. OpenShift is out there. Red Hat's got a lot of products, but you have to nail the networking requirements and cloud native with containerization, because at large scales, not just packets, it's all kinds of things going on, security, managing compute at the edge. There's a lot of things under the hood, if you will, from a networking perspective. >> Could you share what Red Hat's doing in that area? >> Yep, so, so that's a very good question, in that we've been building on our experience with OpenStack and the last time I was on theCube, I talked about, you know, people virtualizing network applications and network services. We're taking a lot of that knowledge, that we've learned from OpenStack and we're bringing that into the container based world. So we're looking at how we accelerate packets. We're looking at how we build cloud-native applications, on bare metal, in order to drive that level of performance. We're looking at actually how we do, the certification around these applications and services, because they may be sitting in different applets across the cloud. And in some instances running on multiple clouds, at the same time. So we're building on our experience from OpenStack. We're bringing all of that into OpenShift, our container based environment. With all of the tooling necessary to make that effective. >> It's interesting with all the automation going on and certainly with the edge developing nicely, the way you're describing it, it's certainly disrupting the telco cloud. You have an operator mindset a cloud-native operator thinking, kind of, I mean it's distributed computing. We know that, but it's hybrid. So it's essentially cloud operations. So there's an operator mindset here, that's just different. Could you just share quickly, before we move on to the next segment, what's different about this operating model, for the, these new kinds of operators. As, as you guys have been saying, the CIO is the new cloud operator. That's the skill set they have to be thinking. And certainly IT, to anyone else provisioning and managing infrastructure has to think like an operator, what's your view? >> Exactly. They certainly do need to think like an operator. They need to look at how they automate a lot of these functions, because they're actually deployed in many different places, all at the same time. They have to live independently of each other, that's what cloud-native actually really is. So the whole, the whole notion of five nines and vertically orientated stacks of five nines availability that's kind of going out the window. We're looking at application availability, across a hybrid cloud environment and making sure the application can live and sustain itself. So operators as part of OpenShift is one element of that, operations in terms of management and orchestration and all the tooling that we actually also provide as Red Hat, but also in conjunction with a big partner ecosystem, such as companies like Netcracker, for example, or IBM as another example. Or Ericsson bringing their automation tool sets and their orchestration tool sets, to that whole equation, to address exactly that problem. >> Yeah. You bring up the ecosystem and this is really an interesting point. I want to, just hit on that real quick, because it reminds me of the days, when we had this massive innovation wave in the nineties. During that era, the client server movement, really was about multi-vendor, right? And that, you start to see that now and where this ties into here I think, is and I want to get your reaction to this is that, you know, moving to the cloud was all about to 2015, moved to the cloud, move to the cloud, cloud-native. Now it's all about not only being agile and better performance, but you're going to have smaller footprints, with more security requirements, more net, enterprise requirements. This is now, it's more complicated. So you have to kind of make the complication go away. And now you have more people in the ecosystem, filling in these white spaces. So, you have to be performance and purpose built, if you will. I hate to use that word, but, or, or at least performing and agile, smaller footprint, greater security, enabling other people to participate. That's a requirement. Can you share your reactions to that? >> Well, that's core of what we do at Red Hat. I mean, we take open source community software, into a hardened distribution, fit for the telecommunications marketplace. So we're very adapt to working with communities and third parties. That ecosystem is really important to us. We're investing hundreds of engineers, literally hundreds of engineers, working with our ecosystem partners, to make sure that their application is services certified running on our platform. But also importantly, is certified to be running in conjunction with other cloud-native applications that sit under the same cloud. So that, that is not trivial to achieve, in any stretch of the imagination. And a lot of IT technology skills come to bear. And as you mentioned earlier a lot of networking skills, things that we've learned, and we build with a lot of these traditional vendors as we bring that to the marketplace. >> You know, I've been saying on theCube, I think five years ago, I started talking about this and it was kind of a loose formulation. I want to get your reaction, because you brought up ecosystem. Now saying, you know, you're going to see the big clouds develop obviously Amazon and Microsoft came in after and now Google and others. And then I said, there's going to be a huge wave of, of what I call secondary clouds. And you see companies, like Snowflake building on top of Amazon. And so you start to see the power law, of new cloud service providers emerging, that can either sit and work with, across multiple clouds, either one cloud or others, that's now multi-cloud and hybrid. But this rise of the new, more CSPs, more cloud service providers. This is a huge part of your area right now because some call that telco, telco cloud, edge hits that. What is Red Hat doing in this cloud service provider market specifically? How do you help them? If I'm a cloud service provider, what do I get in working with Red Hat? How do I be successful? Because it's very easy to be a cloud service provider now more than ever. What do I do? How do you help? How do you help me? >> Well, we, we, we offer a, a platform called OpenShift which is our containerized based platform, but it's not just a container. It involves huge amounts of tooling associated with operating it, developing in and around it. So the, the concept that we have, is that you can bring those applications, develop them once, on one, one single platform, and run it on premise. You can run it natively as a service in Microsoft's environment. You can actually run it natively as a service in Amazon's environment. You can run it natively in IBM's environment. You can build an application once and run it in all of them, depending on what you want to achieve and who actually provides you the best zoning, the best terms and conditions, the best, the best tooling in terms of other services, such as an AI, associated with that. So it's all about developing it once, certifying it once, but deploying it in many, many different locations, leveraging the largest possible developer ecosystem, to drive innovation through applications on that common platform. >> So the assumption there, is that's going to drive down costs. Can you tell me about why the benefits, the economics are there? Talk about the economics. >> Well, Yeah, so, so, A, it does drive down costs and that's an important aspect but more importantly, it drives up agility, so time to market advantage is actually attainable for you. So many of the telcos when they deploy a network service, traditionally it would take them literally, maybe a year to roll it all out. They have to do it in days, they have to do updates in real time, in day two operations, in literally minutes. So we were building the fabric necessary, in order to enable those applications and services to occur. And as you move into the edge of the network and you look at things like private 5G networks, service providers or telcos, in this instance, will be able to deliver services all the way out to the edge, into that private 5G environment and operate that, in conjunction with those enterprise clients. >> So OpenShift allows me if I get this right, from the CSP to run, have a horizontally scalable organization. Okay. And from a unification platform standpoint. Okay. Whether it's 5G and other functions, is that correct? >> Darrell: That's correct. >> Okay. So you've got that. Now I want to come in and bring in the top of the stack with the other element that's been been a big conversation here at Red Hat Summit and in the industry. That is AI and the use of data. One of the things that's emerging is the ability to have both the horizontal scale, as well as the specialism of the data and have that domain expertise. You're in the industries for Red Hat. This is important because you're going to have, one industry is going to have different jargon, different language, different data, different KPIs. So you got to have that domain expertise, to enable the ability, to, to write the apps and also enable AI. Can you comment on how that works and what's Red Hat do in there? >> So, so, so, we, we're developing OpenShift and a number of our, other technologies, to be fit for the edge of the network, where a lot of these AI applications will reside, because you want them at the closest to the client or the, or the application itself, where it needs to reside. We're, we're creating that edge fabric, if you like. The next generation of hybrid cloud is really going to be, in my view at the edge. We're enabling a lot of the service providers to go after that, but we're also igniting by industry. You mentioned different industries. So if I look at, for example, manufacturing with MindSphere, we recently announced with Siemens, how they do at the edge of the network, factory automation, collecting telemetry, doing real-time data and analytics, looking at materials going through the factory floor, in order to get a better quality result, with lower, lower levels of imperfections, as they run through that system. It's just one industry and they have, their own private and favorite AI platforms and data sets they want to work with. With their own data scientists who understand that, that, that ecosystem inherently. You can move that to healthcare. And you can imagine, you know, how you actually interface with your healthcare professionals here in North America, but also around the world. How those applications and services and what the AI needs to do, in terms of understanding x-rays and looking at, you know common errors associated with different x-rays, so, so our practitioner can make a more specific diagnosis, faster, saving money and potentially lives as well. So different, different vertical markets in this space, have different AI and ML requirements and needs, different data sciences and different data models. And what we're seeing is an ecosystem of companies, that are starting up there in that space, you know, we have Watson as part of IBM, but you have Perceptor Labs, you have H2O and a number of other, very very important AI based companies in that ecosystem. >> Yeah. And you've got the horizontal scalability of the control plane then in the platform, if you will, that gives us cross-organizational leverage and enable that, that vertical domain expertise. >> Exactly. And you'd want to build an AI application, that might run on a factory floor for certain reasons, it's location and what they're actually physically building. You might want to run that on premise. You might actually want to put it in the IBM cloud, or in Zuora or into AWS. You develop it once to OpenShift, you can deploy it in all of those as a service, sitting natively in those environments. >> Darrell, great chat. You got a lot going on. telco cloud, there is a lot of cloud-native disruption going on. It's a challenge and an opportunity. And some people have to be on the right side of history, on this one, if they're going to get it right. We'll know, and the scoreboard will be very clear, 'cause this is a shift, it's a shift. So again, you hit all the key points that I wanted to get out, but I want to ask you two more areas that are hot here at Red Hat Summit 21, as well, again as well in the industry. I want to get your reaction and thoughts on. And they are DevSecOps and automation. Okay. Two areas everyone's talking about, DevOps, which we know is infrastructure as code, programmability, under the hood, modern application development, all good. You add the second there, security, DevSecOps, it's critical. Automation is continuing to be the benefits of cloud-native. So DevSecOps and automation, what's your take, and how's that impact the telco world and your world? >> You can't, you can't operate a network without having security in place. You're talking about very sensitive data. You're talking about applications that could be real-time critical And this is actually, even lifesaving or life threatening, if you don't get them right. So the acquisition that Red Hat recently made around StackRox, really helps us, make that next level of transition into that space. And we're looking at about how we go about securing containers, in a cloud-native environment. As you can imagine, there'll be many many thousands, tens of thousands of containers running. If one is actually misbehaving for want of a better term, that creates a security risk and a security loophole. We're shoring that up. That's important for the deployment OpenShift in the telco domain and other domains. In terms of automation, if you can't do it at scale and if you look at 5G and you look at the radios at the edge of the network and how you're going to provision those services. You're talking about hundreds of thousands of nodes, hundreds of thousands. So you have to automate a lot of those processes, otherwise you can't scale to meet the opportunity. You can't physically deploy. >> You know, Darrell this is a great conversation, you know as a student of history and Dave Vellante and I always kind of joke about that. And you've been in and around the industry for a long time. Telcos have been balancing this evolution of digital business for many, many decades. And now with cloud-native, it's finally a time where you're startin' to see, that it's just the same game, now, new infrastructure. You know, video, voice, text, data, all now happening, all transformed and going digital, all the way, all aspects of it. In your opinion, how should telcos be thinking about, as they put their plans in place for next generation? Because you know, the world is, is now cloud-native. There's a huge surface here of opportunities, different ecosystem relationships. The power dynamics are shifting. It's, it's really a time where there will be winners and there will be losers. What's your, what's your view on on how the telco industry needs to Cloudify, and how to be positioned for success? >> So, so one of the things I, I truly believe very deeply, that the telcos need to create a platform, horizontal platform that attracts developer and ecosystems to their platform, because innovation is going to sit elsewhere. Then you know, there might be a killer application that one telco might create, but in reality, most of those innovations, the most of those disruptors are going to occur from outside of that telco company. So you want to create an environment, where you're easy to engage and you've got maximum sets of tools and versatility and agility in order to attract that innovation. If you attract the innovation, you're going to ignite the business opportunity that 5G and 6G and beyond is going to actually provide you, or enable your business to drive. And you've really got to unlock that innovation. And you can only unlock it, in our view at Red Hat innovation, if you're open. You know, you follow open standards, you're using open systems and open source, is a method or a tool, that you guys, if you're a telco I would ask, you guys need to leverage and harness. >> Yeah. And there's a lot. And there's a lot of upside there if you get that right. >> Yes. >> There's plenty of upside. A lot of leverage, a lot of assets, take advantage of the whole offline, online, coming back together. We are living in a hybrid world, certainly with the pandemic. We've seen what that means. It's put a spotlight, on critical infrastructure and the critical shifts. If you had to kind of get pinned down Darrell, how would you describe that learnings from the pandemic. As folks start to come out of the pandemic, there is a light at the end of the tunnel. As we come out of this pandemic, companies want a growth strategy. Want to be positioned for success. What's your learning coming out of the pandemic? >> So from, from my perspective, which really kind of in one respect was, was very admirable, but, in another respect is actually deeply, a lot of gratitude, is the fact that the telecommunications companies, because of their carrier grade capabilities and their operational prowess, were able to keep their networks up and running and they had to move significant capacity from major cities to rural areas, because everyone was working from home. And in many different countries around the world, they did that extremely, extremely well. And their networks held up. I don't know, and maybe someone will correct me and email me, but I don't know one telco had a huge network outage, through this pandemic. And that kept us connected. It kept us working. And it also, what I also learned is, that in certain countries, particularly Latam, where they have a very large prepaid market. They were worried that the prepaid market in the pandemic would go down, because they felt that people would have less money to spend. And therefore they wouldn't top up their phones as much. The opposite effect occurred. They saw prepaid grow. And that really taught me, that, that connectivity is critical, in times of stress, that we are also, where everyone's going through. So, I think there were some key learnings there. >> Yeah, I think you're right on the money there. It's like they pulled the curtain back of all the FUD and said, you know, necessity's the mother of invention. And when you look at what happened and what had to happen, to survive in the pandemic and be functional, you're, you nailed it. The network stability, the resilience, but also the new capabilities that were needed, had to be delivered in an agile way. And I think, you know, it's pretty much a forcing function, for all the projects that are on the table, to know which ones to double down on. So, I think you pretty much nailed it. >> Thank you. Darrell Jordan Smith, senior vice president of industries and global accounts for Red Hat, theCube alumni. Thanks for that insight. Thanks for sharing. Great conversation around telcos and telco clouds and all the edge opportunities. Thanks for coming on. >> Thank you, John. >> Okay. It's theCube's coverage of Red Hat Summit 21. I'm John Furrier, your host. Thanks for watching. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Apr 28 2021

SUMMARY :

and the disruption in the telco cloud. to talk to you today. in the industry because when Give us your take on this, and a number of the other coming in on the 5G environment? and the way that we kind of the implications and the last time I was on it's certainly disrupting the telco cloud. and all the tooling And that, you start to see that now in any stretch of the imagination. And so you start to see the power law, is that you can bring those applications, So the assumption there, So many of the telcos from the CSP to run, and bring in the top of the stack the closest to the client the platform, if you will, put it in the IBM cloud, and how's that impact the and if you look at 5G and going digital, all the that the telcos need to create a platform, there if you get that right. and the critical shifts. in the pandemic would go down, that are on the table, the edge opportunities. coverage of Red Hat Summit 21.

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Darrell Jordan Smith, Red Hat | Red Hat Summit 2021 Virtual Experience DONOTPUBLISH


 

>>mhm >>Yes, >>everyone welcome back to the cubes coverage of Red Hat summit 2021. I'm john for your host of the cube, we've got a great segment here on how Red Hat is working with telcos and the disruption in the telco cloud. We've got a great guest cube alumni Darrell Jordan smith, senior vice president of industries and global accounts at Red Hat, uh Darryl, great to see you. Thanks for coming back on the cube. >>It's great to be here and I'm really excited about having the opportunity to talk to you >>today. Yeah, we're not in person in real life is coming back soon, although I hear mobile world congress might be in person this year looking like it's good a lot of people gonna be virtual activating. I know a lot to talk about this is probably one of the most important topics in the industry because when you talk about telco industry, you're really talking about um the edge, talking about five G talking about industrial benefits for business because it's not just Edge for connectivity access. We're talking about internet of things from self driving cars to business benefits. It's not just consumer, it's really bringing that together, you guys are really leading with the cloud native platform from rail, open shift men and services. Everything about the cloud native underpinnings you guys have been successful as a company but now in your area, telco is being disrupted. Absolutely. Give us your take on this is super exciting. >>Well, it's actually one of the most exciting times I've been in the industry for 30 years are probably aging myself now. But in the telecommunications industry, this, for me is the most exciting. It's where technology is actually going to visibly change the way that everyone interacts with the network and with the applications that are being developed out there on our platform and as you mentioned IOT and a number of the other ai and Ml innovations that are occurring in the market place. We're going to see a new wave of applications and innovation. >>What's the key delivery workloads you're seeing with Five G environment? Um, obviously it's not just, you know, five G in the sense of thinking about mobile phones or mobile computers as they are now. Um, it's not just that consumer, hey, surf the web and check your email and get an app and download and communicate. It's bigger than that. Now, can you tell us Where you see the workloads coming in on the 5G environment? >>You hit the nail on the head, The the the, the killer application isn't the user or the consumer and the way that we traditionally have known it, because you might be able to download a video in that take 20 seconds less, but you're not going to pay an awful lot more money for that. The real opportunity around five years, the industrial applications, things that I connected car, automotive, driving, um factory floor automation, how you actually interface digitally with your bank, how we're doing all sorts of things more intelligently at the edge of the network using artificial intelligence and machine learning. So all of those things are going to deliver a new experience for everyone that interacts with the network and the telcos are at the heart of it. >>You know, I want to get into the real kind of underpinnings of what's going on with the innovations happening. You just kind of laid out kind of the implications of the use cases and the target application workloads. But there's kind of two big things going on with the edge in five G one is under the hood, networking, you know, what's going on with the moving the packets around the workload, throughput, bandwidth etcetera, and all that goes on under the hood. And then there's the domain expertise in the data where AI and machine learning have to kind of weaving. So let's take the first part first. Um open shift is out there. Red hat's got a lot of products, but you have to nail the networking requirements and cloud Native with container ization because at large scales, not just packaged, it's all kinds of things going on security, managing a compute at the edge. There's a lot of things under the hood, if you will from a networking perspective, could you share what red hats doing in that area? >>So when we last spoke with the cube, we talked a lot about GMOs and actually people living Darryl, >>can I Cause you really quickly? I'm really sorry. Keep your answer in mind. We're gonna >>go right from that question. >>We're just kidding. Um, are you, is anything that you're >>using or touching running into the desk? We're just getting >>a little bit of shakiness on your camera >>and I don't want to. >>So anyway, >>that is my, my elbows. No worries. So no >>worries. Okay, so take your answer. I'll give you like a little >>321 from behind the scenes >>and and we'll go right as if >>john just ask >>the questions, we're gonna stay running. >>So I think, uh, >>can you ask the question just to get out of my mind? Perfect. Well let's, let's do >>from that. So we'll stay on your shot. So you'll hear john, but it'll be as if >>he just asked the question. So jOHn >>team up. Here we go. I'm just gonna just jimmy and just keep my other question on the okay, here we go. So Darryl, open shift is optimized for networking requirements for cloud native. It's complex into the hood. What is red hat doing under the hood to help in the edge in large complex networks for large scale. >>Yeah. So, so that's a very good question in that we've been building on our experience with open stack and the last time I was on the cube, I talked about, you know, people virtualizing network applications and network services. We're taking a lot of that knowledge that we've learned from open stack and we're bringing that into the container based world. So we're looking at how we accelerate packets. We're looking at how we build cloud native applications on bare metal in order to drive that level of performance. We're looking at actually how we do the certification around these applications and services because they may be sitting in different app lets across the cloud, but in some instances running on multiple clouds at the same time. So we're building on our experience from open stack, we're bringing all of that into open shipping, container based environment with all of the tallinn necessary to make that effective. >>It's interesting with all the automation going on. Certainly with the edge developing nicely the way you're describing it, certainly disrupting the Telco cloud, you have an operator mindset of cloud Native operator thinking, kind of, it's distributed computing, we know that, but it's hybrid. So it's essentially cloud operations. So there's an operator mindset here that's just different. Could you just share quickly before we move on to the next segment? What's different about this operating model for the, these new kinds of operators? As you guys been saying, the C I O is the new cloud operator, That's the skill set they have to be thinking and certainly to anyone else provisioning and managing infrastructure has to think like an operator, what's your >>view? They certainly do need anything like an operator. They need to look at how they automate a lot of these functions because they're actually deployed in many different places will at the same time they have to live independently of each other. That's what cloud native actually really is. So the whole, the whole notion of five nines and vertically orientated stacks of five nines availability that's kind of going out the window. We're looking at application availability across a hybrid cloud environment and making sure the application can live and sustain itself. So operators as part of open shift is one element of that operations in terms of management and orchestration and all the tooling that we actually also providers red hat but also in conjunction with a big partner ecosystem, such as companies like net cracker, for example, or IBM as another example or Erickson bringing their automation tool sets and their orchestration tool sets of that whole equation to address exactly that problem >>you bring up the ecosystem. And this is really an interesting point. I want to just hit on that real quick because reminds me of the days when we had this massive innovation wave in the nineties during that era. The client server movement really was about multi vendor, right. And that you're starting to see that now and where this ties into here I think is when we get your reaction to this is that, you know, moving to the cloud was all about 2 2015. Move to the cloud moved to the cloud cloud native. Now it's all about not only being agile and better performance, but you're gonna have smaller footprints with more security requires more enterprise requirements. This is now it's more complicated. So you have to kind of make the complications go away and now you have more people in the ecosystem filling in these white spaces. So you have to be performance and purpose built if you will. I hate to use that word, but or or at least performing an agile, smaller footprint grade security enabling other people to participate. That's a requirement. Can you share your reaction to that? >>Well, that's the core of what we do. A red hat. I mean we take open source community software into a hardened distribution fit for the telecommunications marketplace. So we're very adapt to working with communities and third parties. That ecosystem is really important to us. We're investing hundreds of engineers, literally hundreds of engineers working with our ecosystem partners to make sure that their applications services certified, running on our platform, but but also importantly is certified to be running in conjunction with other cloud native applications that sit over the same cloud. So that that is not trivial to achieve in any stretch of the imagination. And a lot of 80 technology skills come to bear. And as you mentioned earlier, a lot of networking skills, things that we've learned and we've built with a lot of these traditional vendors, we bring that to the marketplace. >>You know, I've been saying on the cube, I think five years ago I started talking about this, it was kind of a loose formulation, I want to get your reaction because you brought up ecosystem, you know, saying, you know, you're gonna see the big clouds develop out. The amazon Microsoft came in after and now google and others and I said there's gonna be a huge wave of of what I call secondary clouds and you see companies like snowflake building on on top of amazon and so you start to see the power law of new cloud service providers emerging that can either sit and work with across multiple clouds. Either one cloud or others that's now multi cloud and hybrid. But this rise of the new more C. S. P. S, more cloud service providers, this is a huge part of your area right now because some call that telco telco cloud edge hits that. What is red hat doing in this cloud service provider market specifically? How do you help them if I'm a cloud service provider, what do I get in working with Red Hat? How do I be successful because it's very easy to be a cloud service provider now more than ever. What do I do? How do you help? How do you help me? >>Well, we we we offer a platform called open shift which is a containerized based platform, but it's not just a container. It involves huge amounts of tooling associated with operating it, developing and around it. So the concept that we have is that you can bring those applications, developed them once on 11 single platform and run it on premise. You can run it natively as a service in Microsoft environment. You can actually run it natively as a service in amazon's environment. You can running natively on IBM's Environment. You can build an application once and run it in all of them depending on what you want to achieve, who actually provide you the best, owning the best terms and conditions the best, the best tooling in terms of other services such as Ai associated with that. So it's all about developing it once, certifying it once but deploying it in many, many different locations, leveraging the largest possible developing ecosystem to drive innovation through applications on that common platform. >>So assumption there is that's going to drive down costs. Can you why that benefits the economics are there? We talk about the economics. >>Yeah. So it does drive down costs a massive important aspect but more importantly it drives up agility. So time to market advantages actually attainable for you so many of the tell coast but they deploy a network service traditionally would take them literally maybe a year to roll it all out. They have to do it in days, they have to do updates in real time in data operations in literally minutes. So we were building the fabric necessary in order to enable those applications and services to occur. And as you move into the edge of the network and you look at things like private five G networks, service providers or telcos in this instance will be able to deliver services all the way out to the edge into that private five G environment and operate that in conjunction with those enterprise clients. >>So open shit allows me if I get this right on the CSP to run, have a horizontally scalable organization. Okay. From a unification platform standpoint. Okay, well it's 5G and other functions, is that correct? That's correct. Ok. So you've got that now, now I want to come in and bring in the top of the stack or the other element. That's been a big conversation here at Redhead Summit and in the industry that is A I and the use of data. One of the things that's emerging is the ability to have both the horizontal scale as well as the special is um of the data and have that domain expertise. Uh you're in the industries for red hat. This is important because you're gonna have one industry is going to have different jargon, different language, different data, different KPI S. So you've got to have that domain expertise to enable the ability to write the apps and also enable a I can, you know how that works and what were you doing there? >>So we're developing open shift and a number of other of our technologies to be fit for the edge of the network where a lot of these Ai applications will reside because you want them closer to the client or the the application itself where it needs to reside. We're creating that edge fabric, if you like. The next generation of hybrid cloud is really going to be, in my view at the edge we're enabling a lot of the service providers to go after that but we're also igniting by industry, You mentioned different industries. So if I look at, for example, manufacturing with mind sphere, we recently announced with Seaman's how they do at the edge of the network factory automation, collecting telemetry, doing real time data and analytics, looking at materials going through the factory floor in order to get a better quality results with lower, lower levels of imperfections as they run through that system and just one industry and they have their own private and favorite Ai platforms and data sets. They want to work with with their own data. Scientists who understand that that that ecosystem inherently you can move that to health care and you can imagine how you actually interface with your health care professionals here in north America, but also around the world, How those applications and services and what the Ai needs to do in terms of understanding x rays and looking at common errors associated with different x rays to. A practitioner can make a more specific diagnosis faster saving money and potentially lives as well. So different different vertical markets in this space have different AI and Ml requirements and needs different data science is different data models. And what we're seeing is an ecosystem of companies that are starting up there in that space that we have, what service part of IBM. But you have processed the labs of H T H 20 and a number of other very, very important AI based companies in that ecosystem. >>Yeah. And you get the horizontal scalability of the control plane and in the platform if you will, that gives you cross organizational leverage uh and enable that than vertical expertise. >>Exactly. And you want to build an Ai application that might run on a factory floor for for certain reasons to its location and what they're actually physically building. You might want to run their on premise, you might actually want to put it into IBM cloud or in Zur or into AWS, You develop, it wants to open shift, you can deploy it in all of those as a service sitting natively in those environments. >>Darrell, great chat. I got a lot going on telco cloud, There's a lot of cloud, native disruption going on. It's a challenge and an opportunity and some people have to be on the right side of history on this one if they're going to get it right. Well, no, and the scoreboard will be very clear because this is a shift, it's a shift. So again, you hit all the key points that I wanted to get out. But I want to ask you to more areas that are hot here at red hat summit 21 as well again and as well in the industry and get your reaction and thoughts on uh, and they are def sec ops and automation. Okay. Two areas. Everyone's talking about DEV ops which we know is infrastructure as code programming ability under the hood. Modern application development. All good. Yeah, the second their security to have sex shops. That's critical automation is continuing to be the benefits of cloud native. So Deb see cops and automation. What you're taking has that impact the telco world in your world. >>You can't you can't operate a network without having security in place. You're talking about very sensitive data. You're talking about applications that could be real time chris pickling mrs actually even life saving or life threatening if you don't get them right. So the acquisition that red hat recently made around stack rocks, really helps us make that next level of transition into that space. And we're looking about how we go about securing containers in a cloud native environment. As you can imagine, there will be many, many thousands tens of thousands of containers running if one is actually misbehaving for what one of a better term that creates a security risk in a security loophole. Were assuring that up that's important for the deployment, open shift in the Tokyo domain and other domains in terms of automation. If you can't do it at scale and if you look at five G and you look at the radios at the edge of the network and how you're gonna provision of those services. You're talking about hundreds of thousands of nodes, hundreds of thousands. You have to automate a lot of those processes, otherwise you can't scale to meet the opportunity, you can't physically deploy, >>you know, Darryl, this is a great conversation, you know, as a student of history and um development and I always kind of joke about that and you you've been around the industry for a long time. Telcos have been balancing this um evolution of digital business for many, many decades. Um and now with Cloud Native, it's finally a time where you're starting to see that it's just the same game now, new infrastructure, you know, video, voice, text data all now happening all transformed and going digital all the way, all aspects of it in your opinion. How should telcos be thinking about as they put their plans in place for next generation because you know, the world is now cloud Native. There's a huge surface here of opportunities, different ecosystem relationships, the power dynamics are shifting. It's it's really a time where there will be winners and there will be losers. What's your, what's your view on on how the telco industry needs to clarify and how they be positioned for success. >>So, so one of the things I truly believe very deeply that the telcos need to create a platform, horizontal platform that attracts developer and ecosystems to their platform because innovation is gonna sit elsewhere, then there might be a killer application that one telco might create. But in reality most of those innovations that most of those disruptors are going to occur from outside of that telco company. So you want to create an environment where you're easy to engage and you've got maximum sets of tools and versatility and agility in order to attract that innovation. If you attract the innovation, you're going to ignite the business opportunity that 5G and 60 and beyond is going to actually provide you or enable your business to drive. And you've really got to unlock that innovation and you can only unlock in our view, red hat innovation. If you're open, you follow open standards, you're using open systems and open source is a method or a tool that you guys, if you're a telco, I would ask you guys need to leverage and harness >>and there's a lot, there's a lot of upside there if you get that right, there's plenty of upside, a lot of leverage, a lot of assets to advantage the whole offline online. Coming back together, we are living in a hybrid world, certainly with the pandemic, we've seen what that means. It's put a spotlight on critical infrastructure and the critical shifts. If you had to kind of get pinned down Darryl, how would you describe that learnings from the pandemic as folks start to come out of the pandemic? There's a light at the end of the tunnel as we come out of this pandemic, companies want a growth strategy, wanna be positioned for success what you're learning coming out of the pandemic. >>So from my perspective, which really kind of 11 respect was was very admirable. But another respect is actually deeply uh a lot of gratitude is the fact that the telecommunications companies because of their carrier, great capabilities and their operational prowess were able to keep their networks up and running and they had to move significant capacity from major cities to rural areas because everyone was working from home and in many different countries around the world, they did that extremely and with extremely well. Um and their networks held up I don't know and maybe someone will correct me and email me but I don't know one telco had a huge network outage through this pandemic and that kept us connected. It kept us working. And it also what I also learned is that in certain countries, particularly at a time where they have a very large prepaid market, they were worried that the prepaid market in the pandemic would go down because they felt that people would have enough money to spend and therefore they wouldn't top up their phones as much. The opposite effect occurred. They saw prepaid grow and that really taught me that that connectivity is critical in times of stress that we're also everyone's going through. So I think there are some key learnings that >>yeah, I think you're right on the money there. It's like they pulled the curtain back of all the fun and said necessity is the mother of invention and when you look at what happened and what had to happen to survive in the pandemic and be functional. Your, you nailed it, the network stability, the resilience, but also the new capabilities that were needed had to be delivered in an agile way. And I think, you know, it's pretty much the forcing function for all the projects that are on the table to know which ones to double down on. So I think you pretty much nailed it. Darrell Jordan smith, senior vice president of industries and global accounts for red hat kibble, unnatural. Thanks for that insight. Thanks for sharing great conversation around telcos and telco clouds and all the edge opportunities. Thanks for coming on. >>Thank you john >>Okay. It's the cubes coverage of Red Hat summit 21. I'm John for your host. Thanks for watching. Mhm mhm

Published Date : Apr 27 2021

SUMMARY :

Thanks for coming back on the cube. Everything about the cloud native underpinnings you guys have been successful as a company but now in your with the applications that are being developed out there on our platform and as you Um, it's not just that consumer, hey, surf the web and check your email and get So all of those things are going to deliver a new experience for everyone on with the edge in five G one is under the hood, networking, you know, can I Cause you really quickly? We're just kidding. So no I'll give you like a little can you ask the question just to get out of my mind? So we'll stay on your shot. he just asked the question. I'm just gonna just jimmy and just keep my other question on the with open stack and the last time I was on the cube, I talked about, you know, people virtualizing certainly disrupting the Telco cloud, you have an operator mindset of cloud Native operator one element of that operations in terms of management and orchestration and all the tooling to this is that, you know, moving to the cloud was all about 2 2015. And a lot of 80 technology skills come to bear. and others and I said there's gonna be a huge wave of of what I call secondary clouds and you see companies So the concept that we have is that you can bring those that benefits the economics are there? And as you move into the edge of the network and you look at One of the things that's emerging is the ability to have both enabling a lot of the service providers to go after that but we're also igniting by industry, that gives you cross organizational leverage uh and enable that than You develop, it wants to open shift, you can deploy it in all of those as a service sitting natively So again, you hit all the key points that I wanted to get out. You have to automate a lot of those processes, otherwise you can't scale to meet the opportunity, development and I always kind of joke about that and you you've been around the industry for a long time. So you want to create an environment where you're easy to engage and you've got maximum If you had to kind of get pinned down Darryl, how would you describe that learnings from the pandemic a lot of gratitude is the fact that the telecommunications companies because of and said necessity is the mother of invention and when you look at what happened and what I'm John for your host.

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IBM13 Rick Smith V2


 

(upbeat music) >> Announcer: From around the globe. It's the cube with digital coverage of IBM Think 2021 brought to you by IBM. >> Hi, welcome back everyone to the Cubes coverage of IBM Think 2021 virtual. I'm John Furrier, host of the cube. Got a great guest, Rick Smith, CTO of IBM Anthem client team. Rick. Great to see you. Thanks for coming on the cube. >> Yeah. Thank you, John. Nice to see you as well, virtually. >> First introduce yourself, what you do there, what's going on on your plate these days, honestly, COVID, we're coming out of it soon. Take a minute to introduce yourself. >> Yeah, so I've got about 15 years in the seat with Anthem. Previous to that I worked at Pretty university as the CTO in Indiana. So haven't really left, but started working with Anthem as a technical architect, eventually moved into the CTO role and have been part of, you know, a long journey with them that started at a managed services agreement in 2005. And here we are in 2021. So I've been through a lot of changes they've made to improve themselves and move into digitalization. And certainly the changes we've made too to accommodate that as we went through the years. >> Awesome. Well, thanks for that setup. I really want to dig into this expansion of project Sirius. You guys have had a multi decade partnership with IBM and then last year you launched this expansion, project Sirus. Can you describe this project? And what does it mean? And this new term I've heard, enterprise hybrid cloud as a service. Sounds very interesting. >> Yeah. So that's my term. I'm hoping you made it patent or something like that. But the reality is you hear our CEO talk and say that 75% of corporate workloads are not in the cloud yet. Right? And Anthem is no different, right? So they starting to go into cloud and those kinds of things. But they said to us, you know, "Hey, we've got a long series of excellence with you from a delivery perspective, reliability perspective is kind of the bedrock of what we do, but we don't want to be in the data center business, right? And we want to transform and move to cloud. We want to become a more of an AI company and these kinds of things. And we said, well, we think we can actually put together a program... Excuse me, program for you to allow you to do that, right? And so we formed something called project Sirius which is really an expansion of our partnership. So if I look back, John, we did about 80% of the end-to-end delivery for Anthem from a managed services perspective. In other words, they did a few pieces and we said, we think we could improve that if we had the entire 100%. And so project Sirius was about, you know, extending from 80% to 100%. It was also about taking a series of applications that were important to them and actually say, we'll actually take them on and transform them 100% all the way to cloud and take advantage of new things. It was about a commitment to closing those data centers, right? So they have five strategic data centers. And about 24,000 hosts that we said we will actually commit to getting those, you know, getting you out of the data centers and moving those to either IBM cloud or close to IBM cloud if you will, I'll come back to that in a minute. And we'll also build something called ATEC, Anthem Technology Excellent Center, if you will. And that's near and dear to my heart because that's sort of my baby, right? So it's a transformation engine and we can talk a little bit more about that in a second. But he said the key to this for us is that, if we look at our trend line, John, over the number of years with Anthem, when we started about 2007 looking at this data, we've grown the number of hosts. We've had to manage, over 600% during that time period. But we've driven down high priority incidents by over 90%. So think about that. You know, this is really important for them to have resiliency and stability in their organization. You know, huge acceleration number of hosts, but drive down the a P zero incidents, if you will. And they said, we need to maintain that and continue to improve upon that. Right? >> Yeah. >> So Sirius was a commitment to take that further, right? Start driving AAN, AI into the operations, if you will in everything that we do. So Anthem is transforming to do AI and machine learning for their members. We're committed to transforming and doing the same kind of thing on our operational side if you will. >> Yeah, that's awesome. And I think one of the things that's interesting that jumps out at me just as you're talking, first of all super exciting that project you got out there, a lot going on to unpack, but let's do that. I mean, what I hear you saying which is getting me kind of all triggered in a good way is you got transformation going on and innovation same time. You're innovating with this new enterprise hybrid clouds of service concept. You take in more efficiency, you're doing the classic transformational things, making things more efficient, all that good stuff for agility, but it's actually innovative. So this idea of an enterprise hybrid cloud as a service is pretty innovative because now you're talking about things with AI and scale that come into play, right? So you got the setup, you got it moving into being innovative but scales right there. What is this enterprise hybrid cloud as a service? Because is it just agility, is it the AI piece? Where do you see that going? >> Yeah, that's a great question. Right? And you're a great stuff, man, Johnson. (Smith laughs) So again, Anthem's not ready to move all of their workload to cloud, right? And we recognize (indistinct)is going to be out of the data center business. So how can we take non traditional workloads, right? Get them close to cloud, right? Get them very close to cloud, get us out of the managing the data center and actually allow us to move seamlessly from non traditional workloads into cloud. And so what we did was something we think is very innovative. This is the enterprise hybrid cloud piece for me, right? 'Cause normally hybrid cloud says, you have a client data center location and you have cloud. We marry the two together. We said, you're not going to have a data center location anymore. We're going to have our data centers, you know, IBM cloud. And we're actually going to put some dedicated space right next to cloud. And when I say next to cloud, I literally mean within a few feet. And we're going to bring these non traditional workloads there, we're going to take the network operation brain and bring it there. And we're going to allow you then to basically be able to move seamlessly from that to directly into cloud and improve operations at the same time. There's other a side benefit to this too. The other unintended sort of benefit is that what any organization, right? That you find stuff in the data center that hasn't been looked at for a long period of time, right? Application teams haven't looked at it, et cetera, et cetera. We're literally touching every single host. Right? So this gives us an opportunity to also work with our teams and find things that really can just be thrown away. Right? And this is great because we're actually making them more efficient, optimizing the cost structures as we go about it. >> Yeah. I mean the operational model changes me. You mentioned that just that whole point about you're kind of doing some discovery on apps, this becomes kind of sets the table for AI ops which is just code word for day two operations or full cloud native environments, which now you're seeing cloud native include legacy. Yes. Because you can put containers into the mix and you can then create these integration points that you don't have to kind of get rid of the old to bring in the new. So the dimension of what's going on here is pretty interesting, right? When you start thinking about that, "Okay. I can modernize the same time as connect two existing systems." >> That's exactly right. And we put the things very close to one another. And if there's any concerns over data security compliance or healthcare regulated industry, of course, we can have the workloads located in the best location to ensure that security is in place. Right? So that's what's beautiful about it, right? We can kind of hit every layer that's possible from having it just as secure as completely privatized to going directly over to public cloud or connecting the two together as we go along. >> Well, you're definitely a pioneer. I love that enterprise hybrid cloud as a service. I think that's something that's relevant. We're living in a hybrid world. I mean, the cube, we used to go to events now it's virtual events, but when now the events come back, they're hybrid events. Every company is experiencing this phenomenon on hybrid something, not just technology. The ops got to adapt, so super cool. You mentioned something that was your baby. I want to get back to you. And you said you want to talk about, I want to just bring that up. This Anthem technology excellence center is your baby. ATech I think you said for short. >> Yeah. We call it Atech for short. And really, John, we said that it's got to be more than just taking that other 20% that we don't run today. And we're doing some very innovative things moving non-traditional workloads. Like I said, all that kind of stuff was very cool, right? But we need a transformation engine, right? And we need the ability to transform skills. Like upscale the people at Anthem as well as IBM, right there on the account team, it's a big account. We want to think of new ways to work together. Right? Traditional managed services is like, what? Someone cuts a ticket and says, "Give me X by her seat." Right? That's the traditional model. And we said, that's not good enough. We need to collaborate better together. And we are willing to redefining how we form our teams to work with Anthem. Right? So if we want to form, for example, a product ownership team that builds it, runs it, maintains it. And that team has Anthem plus IBM together. we're going to use ATEC as a vehicle to design that and drive it and make sure they have all the skills they need within that group to do that. Right? That's new ways of working together. And it's also to drive things like site reliability engineering, right? Cloud service management operations, make sure that Anthem has the right training, make sure we work together on these kinds of things. So it's really kind of an exciting thing. And it's intended to be a co-created model, right? So we actually work with the Anthem, we co-create using IBM garage methodologies and then the idea is to coast staff it, but it's tended to be a thin layer of world-class engineering. That's really the whole point of it. And yeah, I'm super excited about that. As you move forward, yeah. >> While you're speaking our language, the cube we'd love the co-creation we do with media. It's always fun to create content together. And sometimes in real time put it together like we're doing now. And it creates a bond. I mean, I got to bring this up because this is becoming more and more obvious. And now mainstream, the notion of co-creation, the notion of ecosystems and ecosystems really meaning network effect and integrating with other parties, right? Companies and our systems. If you look at the underlying business model as a systems management software bottle. Okay. So with that, these ecosystems, the network effect. If you build together, you stay together. I mean, this is a different mindset. It's different dynamic. It's a different relationship that companies are now looking for in what used to be called suppliers. Are you supplying something? Are you building together? Right. So this seems to be the theme. Can you expand on this new trend? >> Right. And get away from the strict racing, this person does, this person does that. Instead, we build a team together that has all the skills necessary and that team owns a product life cycle. They build it, run it and maintain it. And that's changing the way we deliver services from IBM perspective significantly, right? Because that's not our traditional model but that's what we're doing. So we're really out in the front end, on the front edge if you will. Changing that model completely. And it's one of the most exciting things for me, you know, as far as going forward. >> You know, this whole idea of partnerships has always kind of been there but now it gets modernized and uplifted if you will, to a new level. And it really is about watching each other's backs too when you have that kind of... 'Cause we're talking about like pushing the envelope on probably the biggest confluence of tech trends I've ever seen in my career. And I've seen many big waves, you know, from the different revolutions and inflection points. Now it's sort of all coming together, right? At scale too, it's happening very fast. I mean, the change over is happening in years that once you took decades before. So it's really is a team approach. >> Yeah. There's no doubt about it. And I see it every day in the work we're doing. And it's like, for example, at Atech where we're working with the data scientists at the Anthem, we're thinking of new ways to build things they've never done before. We're hoping to enable their science, enable the things they want to do for digitization standpoint, the same token I'm taking, you know, a data scientist and putting them on the operation side too. Right? So we're doing both these kinds of things together. And really I didn't say this before, but this whole thing is about driving automation, right? Driving down, no human touch, soft service, automation. That is kind of been the linchpin of this. And I also want to say John, that doing this all during a pandemic, you know, we signed our new agreement together with them at a quarter, at the end of March in 2020. And we went live in August 1st with all the changes, the extra 20% capacity to over 300 plus applications completely, started Atech from co-creation in a pandemic. And we both agreed as a company, I give great credit to our client and to the numbers involved that everyone set up front and during March. The pandemic's not an excuse to get anything done. So, we're going to go forward and make it happen. That's probably the thing I'm most proud about. That was just... It's crazy when you think of how big the project was and do pull it off during a pandemic. >> Yeah. There's going to be two sides of the street and this one, this pandemics over the ones who made it through and refactored and or innovated. Cause it's not just about being and having a tale, it's about taking advantage of the situation and the ones who didn't do anything. Whether they were in the cloud or not, that's not to me. That's not the issue of you're in the cloud you had an advantage. >> It's not. Right. >> But there's going to be two sides of the streets. And I think the one thing that the pandemic has shown us and I'd love to get your reaction as a final comment here is that when you pull back when the pandemic, it showed all the scabs, it shows everything. And you can see what's obvious and it becomes a forcing function. Necessity's the mother of all invention as expression goes so you can see what's worth doubling down on and you can see the productivity gains and that becomes clear. >> Yeah. Yeah. And I think there's good and bad with everything, right? Pros and cons, like you said, and you know, one of the cons I think is the having to schedule all interactions is definitely a con, right? Because when you spend time not only with the client virtually but in person, you do get the advantage of having, you know, chalk talks and things like that. They're not scheduled. Right? So that's definitely one of the cons side, but one of the pro side is it did provide some focus, right? Kind of extreme focus and on what's important and allowed us to, you know, I think dove some bonds with the Anthem leadership team and the application teams doing it virtually over cameras like this that maybe happen at a larger scale than they might have normally been because the pandemic kind of allowed us to do that and made that happen. >> Great stuff, Rick, great insight. Great to have you on the cube as always. Great to talk tech, talk business, talk about the transformation and innovation and the cloud scale. Thanks for coming on Rick Smith, CTO of the IBM Anthem client team. Thanks for coming on the cube. >> You're welcome. Thanks John. >> Okay. Cube coverage of IBM Think 2021. I'm John. For your host of the cube. Thanks for watching. (soft music) (upbeat music)

Published Date : Apr 15 2021

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brought to you by IBM. I'm John Furrier, host of the cube. Nice to see you as well, virtually. Take a minute to introduce yourself. And certainly the changes we've made too and then last year you But they said to us, you know, the operations, if you will is it the AI piece? and improve operations at the same time. So the dimension of what's going on here And we put the things I mean, the cube, we used to go to events And it's intended to be a And now mainstream, the on the front edge if you will. And I've seen many big waves, you know, the same token I'm taking, you know, and the ones who didn't do anything. It's not. And you can see what's obvious is the having to schedule Great to have you on the cube as always. Thanks John. Thanks for watching.

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Walter Bentley and Jason Smith, Red Hat | AnsibleFest 2020


 

(upbeat music) >> Narrator: From around the globe, it's theCUBE with digital coverage of Ansible Fest 2020 brought to you by Red Hat. >> Welcome back to theCUBE's coverage, Cube virtual's coverage of Ansible Fest 2020 virtual. We're not face to face this year. I'm your host John Furrier with theCube. We're virtual, this theCube virtual and we're doing our part, getting the remote interviews with all the best thought leaders experts and of course the Red Hat experts. We've got Walter Bentley, Senior Manager of Automation practice with Red Hat and Jason Smith, Vice President of North American services, back on theCube. We were in Atlanta last year in person. Guys, thanks for coming on virtually. Good morning to you. Thanks for coming on. >> Good morning John. Good morning, good morning. >> So since Ansible Fest last year a lot's happened where she's living in seems to be an unbelievable 2020. Depending on who you talk to it's been the craziest year of all time. Fires in California, crazy presidential election, COVID whole nine yards, but the scale of Cloud has just unbelievably moved some faster. I was commenting with some of your colleagues around the snowflake IBO it's built on Amazon, right? So value is changed, people are shifting, you starting to clear visibility on what these modern apps are looking like, it's Cloud native, it's legacy integrations, it's beyond lift and shift as we've been seeing in the business. So I'd love to get, Jason we'll start with you, your key points you would like people to know about Ansible Fest 2020 this year because there's a lot going on this year because there's a lot to build on and there's a tailwind for Cloud native and customers have to move fast. What's your thoughts? >> Yeah so, a lot has happened since last year and customers are looking to be a lot more selective around their automation technologies. So they're not just looking for another tool. They're really looking for an automation platform, a platform that they can leverage more of an enterprise strategy and really be able to make sure that they have something that's secure, scalable, and they can use across the enterprise to be able to bring teams together and really drive value and productivity out of their automation platform. >> What's the key points in the customers and our audience around the conversations around the learning, that's the new stuff happening in using Ansible this year? What are the key top things, Jason? Can you comment on what you're seeing the big takeaway for our audience watching? >> Yeah, so a lots change like you said, since last year. We worked with a lot of customers around the world to implement Ansible and automation at scale. So we're using our automation journeys as we talked about last year and really helping customers lay out a more prescriptive approach on how they're going to deliver automation across their enterprise. So customers are really working with us because we're working with the largest customers in the world to implement their strategies. And when we work with new customers we can bring those learnings and that experience to them. So they're not having to learn that for the first time and figure it out on their own, but they're really able to learn and leverage the experience we have through hundreds of customers and at enterprise scale and can take the value that we can bring in and help them through those types of projects much more quickly than they could on their own. >> It's interesting. We were looking at the research numbers and look at the adoption of what Ansible's doing and you guys are with Red Hat it's pretty strong. Could you share on the services side because there's a lot of services going on here? Not just network services and software services, just traditional services. What are the one or two reasons why customer engaged with Red Hat services? What would that be? >> Yeah so, like I said, I mean, we bring that experience. So customers that typically might have to spend weeks troubleshooting and making decisions on how they're going to deliver their implementations, they can work with us and we can bring those best practices in and allow them to make those decisions and implement those best practices within hours instead of weeks, and really be able to accelerate their projects. Another thing is we're a services company as part of a product company. So we're not there just to deliver services. We're really focused on the success of the customer, leveraging our technologies. So we're there to really train and mentor them through the process so that they're really getting up to speed quickly. They're taking advantage of all of the expertise that we have to be able to build their own experience and expertise. So they can really take over once we're gone and be able to support and advance that technology on their own. So they're really looking to us to not only implement those technologies for them, but really with them and be able to train and mentor them. Like I said, and take advantage of those learnings. We also help them. We don't just focus on the technologies but really look at the people in process side of things. So we're bringing in a lot of principles from DevOps and Agile on open practices and helping customers really transform and be able to do things in a new way, to be much more efficient, a lot more agile, be able to drive a lot more value out of our technology. >> Walter, I got to ask you, last year we were chatting about this, but I want to get the update. And I'd like you to just give us a quick refresh definition about the automation adoption journey because this is a real big deal. I mean, we're looking at the trends. Everyone realizes automation is super important at scale, as you think about whether it's software data, anything's about automation it's super important, but it's hard. I mean, the marketplace we were looking at the numbers. I was talking to IDC for you guys at this festival and of Ansible Fest, and they said about five to 10% of enterprises are containerized, which means this huge wave coming of containerization. This is about the automation adoption journey because you start containerizing, (laughs) right? You start looking at the workflows on the pipelinig and how the codes being released and everything. This is important stuff. Give us the update on the automation adoption journey and where it is in the portfolio. >> Well, yeah, just as you called it out, last year on main stage and Ansible fest, almost every customer expressed the need and desire to have to have a strategy as to how they drive their adoption of automation inside their enterprise. And as we've gone over the past few months of splitting this in place with many customers, what we've learned is that many customers have matured into a place where they are now looking at the end to end workflow. Instead of just looking at the tactical thing that they want to automate, they are actually looking at the full ribbon, the full workflow and determining are there changes that need to be made and adjusted to be more efficient when it comes to dealing with automation. And then the other piece as we alluded to already is the contagious nature of that adoption. We're finding that there are organizations that are picking up the automation adoption journey, and because of the momentum it creates inside of that organization we're finding other municipalities that are associated with them are now also looking to be able to take on the journey because of that contagious nature. So we can see that how it's spreading in a positive way. And we're really looking forward to being able to do more of it as the next quarter and the next year comes up. >> Yeah, and that whole sharing thing is a big part of the content theme and the community thing. So great reference on that, good thing is word of mouth and community and collaboration is a good call out there. A quick question for you, you guys recently had a big win with NTT DoCoMo and their engagement with you guys on the automation, adoption journey. Walter, what were some of the key takeaways? Jason you can chime in too I'd like to get some specifics around where it's been successful >> To me, that customer experience was one that really was really exciting, primarily because we learned very early on that they were completely embodying that open source culture and they were very excited to jump right in and even went about creating their own community of practice. We call them communities of practice. You may know them as centers of excellence. They wanted to create that very early in increment, way before we were even ready to introduce it. And that's primarily because they saw how being able to have that community of practice in place created an environment of inclusion across the organization. They had legacy tools in place already, actually, there was a home grown legacy tool in place. And they very quickly realized that it didn't need to remove that tool, they just needed to figure out a way of being able to how to optimize and streamline how they leverage it and also be able to integrate it into the Ansible automation platform. Another thing I wanted to very quickly note is that they very quickly jumped onto the idea of being able to take those large workflows that they had and breaking them up into smaller chunks. And as you already know, from last year when we spoke about it, that's a pivotal part of what the automation adoption journey brings to our organization. So to sum it all up, they were all in, automation first mindset is what that was driving them. And all of those personas, all of those personal and cultural behaviors are what really helped drive that engagement to be very successful. >> Jason, we'll get your thoughts on this because again, Walter brought up last year's reference to breaking things up into modules. We look at this year's key news it's all about collections. You're seeing content is a big focus, content being not like a blog post or a media asset. Like this is content, but code is content. It's sharing. If it's being consumed by other people, there's now community. You're seeing the steam of enabling. I mean, you're looking at successes, like you guys are having with NTT DoCoMo and others. Once people realize there's a better way and success is contagious, as Walter was saying, you are now enabling new ways to do things faster at scale and all that good stuff has been go check out the keynotes. You guys talk about it all day long with the execs. But I want to learn, right? So when you enable success, people want to be a part of it. And I could imagine there's a thirst and demand for training and the playbooks and all the business models, innovations that's going on. What are you seeing for people that want to learn? Is there training? Is there certifications? Because once you get the magic formula as Walter pointed out, and we all know once people see what success looks like, they're going to want to duplicate it. So as this wave comes, it's like having the new surfboard. I want to surf that wave. So what's the update on Ansible's training, the tools, how do I learn, it's a certification of all. Just take a minute to explain what's going on. >> Yeah, so it's been a crazy world as we've talked about over the last six, seven months here, and we've really had to adapt ourselves and our training and consulting offerings to be able to support our remote delivery models. So we very, very quickly back in the March timeframe, we're able to move our consultants to a remote work force and really implement the tools and technologies to be able to still provide the same value to customers remotely as we have in person historically. And so it's actually been really great. We've been able to make a really seamless transition and actually our C-SAT net promoter scores have actually gone up over the last six months or so. So I think we've done a great job being able to still offer the same consulting capabilities remotely as we have onsite. And so that's obviously with a real personal touch working hand in hand with our customers to deliver these solutions. But from a training perspective, we've actually had to do the same thing because customers aren't onsite, they can't do in person training. We've been able to move our training offerings to completely virtual. So we're continuing to train our customers on Ansible and our other technologies through a virtual modality. And we've also been able to take all of our certifications and now offer those remotely. So as, whereas customers historically, would have had to gone into a center and get those certifications in person, they can now do those certifications remotely. So all of our training offerings and consulting offerings are now available remotely as well as they were in person in the past and will be hopefully soon enough, but it's really not-- >> You would adopt to virtual. >> Excuse me. >> You had to adopt to the virtual model quickly for trainings. >> Exactly. >> What about the community role? What's the role of the community? You guys have a very strong community. Walter pointed out the sharing aspect. Well, I pointed out he talked about the contagious people are talking. You guys have a very robust community. What's the role of community in all of this? >> Yeah, so as Walter said, we have our communities a practice that we use internally we work with customers to build communities of practice, which are very much like a centers of excellence, where people can really come together and share ideas and share best practices and be able to then leverage them more broadly. So, whereas in the past knowledge was really kept in silos, we're really helping customers to build those communities and leverage those communities to share ideas and be able to leverage the best practices that are being adopted more broadly. >> That's awesome. Yeah, break down those silos of course. Open up the data, good things will happen, a thousand flowers bloom, as we always say. Walter, I want to get your thoughts on this collection, what that enables back to learning and integrations. So if collections are going to be more pervasive and more common place the ability to integrate, we were covering for VMware world, there's a VMware module collection, I should say. What are customers doing when you integrate in cross technology parties because now obviously customers are going to have a lot of choice and options. If I'm an integration partner, it's all about Cloud native and the kinds of things we're talking about, you're going to have a lot of integration touch points. What's the most effective way for customers integrating other technology partners into Ansible? >> And this is one of the major benefits that came out of the announcement last year with the Ansible automation platform. The Anible automation platform really enables our customers to not just be able to do automation, but also be able to connect the dots or be able to connect other tools, such as other ITM SM tools or be able to connect into other parts of their workflows. And what we're finding in breaking down really quickly is two things. Collections obviously, is a huge aspect. And not just necessarily the collections but the automation service catalog is really where the value is because that's where we're placing all of these certified collections and certified content that's certified by Red Hat now that we create alongside with these vendors and they're unavailable to customers who are consuming the automation platform. And then the other component is the fact that we're now moved into a place where we now have something called the automation hub. which is very similar to galaxy, which is the online version of it. But the automation hub now is a focus area that's dedicated to a customer, where they can store their content and store those collections, not just the ones that they pull down that are certified by Red hat, but the ones that they create themselves. And the availability of this tool, not only just as a SaaS product, but now being able to have a local copy of it, which is brand new out of the press, out of the truck, feature is huge. That's something that customers have been asking for a very long time and I'm very happy that we're finally able to supply it. >> Okay, so backup for a second, rewind, fell off the truck. What does that mean? It's downloadable. You're saying that the automation hub is available locally. Is that what-- >> Yes, Sir. >> So what does that mean for the customer? What's the impact for them? >> So what that means is that previously, customers would have to connect into the internet. And the automation hub was a SaaS product, meaning it was available via the internet. You can go there, you can sync up and pull down content. And some customers prefer to have it in house. They prefer to have it inside of their firewall, within their control, not accessible through the internet. And that's just their preferences obviously for sometimes it's for compliance or business risk reasons. And now, because of that, we were able to meet that ask and be able to make a local version of it. Whereas you can actually have automation hub locally your environment, you can still sync up data that's out on the SaaS version of automation hub, but be able to bring it down locally and have it available with inside of your firewall, as well as be able to add your content and collections that you create internally to it as well. So it creates a centralized place for you to store all of your automation goodness. >> Jason, I know you got a hard stop and I want to get to you on the IBM question. Have you guys started any joint service engages with IBM? >> Yeah, so we've been delivering a lot of engagements jointly through IBM. We have a lot of joint customers and they're really looking for us to bring the best of both Red Hat services, Red Hat products, and IBM all together to deliver joint solutions. We've actually also worked with IBM global technology services to integrate Ansible into their service offerings. So they're now really leveraging the power of Ansible to drive lower cost and more innovation with our customers and our joint customers. >> I think that's going to be a nice lift for you guys. We'll get into the IBM machinery. I mean, you guys got a great offering, you always had great reviews, great community. I mean, IBM's is just going to be moving this pretty quickly through the system, I can imagine. What's some of the the feedback so far? >> Yeah, it's been great. I mean, we have so many, a large joint customers and they're helping us to get to a lot of customers that we were never able to reach before with their scale around the world. So it's been great to be able to leverage the IBM scale with the great products and services that Red Hat offers to really be able to take that more broadly and continue to drive that across customers in an accelerated pace. >> Well, Jason, I know you've got to go. We're going to stay with Walter while you drop off, but I want to ask you one final question. For the folks watching or asynchronously coming in and out of Ansible Fest 2020 this year. What is the big takeaway that you'd like to share? What is the most important thing people should pay attention to? Well, a couple things it don't have to be one thing, do top three things. what should people be paying attention to this year? And what's the most important stories that you should highlight? >> Yeah, I think there's a lot going on, this technology is moving very quickly. So I think there's a lot of great stories. I definitely take advantage of the customer use cases and hearing how other customers are leveraging Ansible for automation. And again really looking to not use it just as a tool, but really in an enterprise strategy that can really change their business and really drive cost down and increase revenues by leveraging the innovation that Ansible and automation provides. >> Jason, thank you for taking the time. Great insight. Really appreciate the commentary and hopefully we'll see you next year in person Walter. (all talking simultaneously) Walter, let's get back to you. I want to get into this use case and some of the customer feedback, love the stories. And we look, we'd love to get the new data, we'd love to hear about the new products, but again, success is contagious, you mentioned that I want to hear the use cases. So a lot of people have their ear to the ground, they look up the virtual environments, they're learning through new ways, they're looking for signals of success. So I got to ask you what are the things that you're hearing over and over again, as you guys are spinning up engagements? What are some of the patterns that are emerging that are becoming a trend in terms of what customers are consistently doing to overcome some of their challenges around automation? >> Okay, absolutely. So what we're finding is that over time that customers are raising the bar on us. And what I mean by that is that their expectations out of being able to take on tools now has completely changed and specifically when we're talking around automation. Our customers are now leading with the questions of trying to find out, well, how do we reduce our operational costs with this automation tool? Are we able to increase revenue? Are we able to really truly drive productivity and efficiency within our organization by leveraging it? And then they dovetail into, "Well, are we able to mitigate business risk, "even associated with leveraging this automation tool?" So as I mentioned, customers are up leveling what their expectations are out of the automation tools. And what I feel very confident about is that with the launch of the Ansible automation platform we're really able to be able to deliver and show our customers how they're able to get a return on their investment, how by taking part and looking at re-working their workflows how we're able to bring productivity, drive that efficiency. And by leveraging it to be able to mitigate risks you do get the benefits that they're looking for. And so that's something that I'm very happy that we were able to rise to the occasion and so far so good. >> Last year I was very motivated and very inspired by the Ansible vision and content product progress. Just the overall vibe was good, community of the product it's always been solid, but one of the things that's happening I want to get your commentary and reaction to this is that, and we've been riffing on this on theCube and inside the community is certainly automation, no brainer, machine learning automation, I mean, you can't go wrong. Who doesn't want automation? That's like saying, "I want to watch more football "and have good food and good wifi. I mean, it's good things, right? Automation is a good thing. So get that. But the business model issues you brought up ROI from the top of the ivory tower and these companies, certainly with COVID, we need to make money and have modern apps. And if you try to make that sound simple, right? X as a service, SaaS everything is a service. That's easy to say, "Hey, Walter, make everything as a service." "Got it, boss." Well, what the hell do you do? I mean, how do you make that happen? You got Amazon, you got Multicloud, you got legacy apps. You're talking about going in and re-architecting the application development process. So you need automation for the business model of everything as a service. What's your reaction to that? Because it's very complicated. It's doable. People are getting there but the Nirvana is, everything is a service. This is a huge conversation. I mean, it's really big, but what's your reaction to that when I bring that up. >> Right. And you're right, it is a huge undertaking. And you would think that with the delivery of COVID into our worlds that many organizations would probably shy away from making changes. Actually, they're doing the opposite. Like you mentioned, they're running towards automation and trying to figure out how do they optimize and be able to scale, based on this new demand that they're having, specifically new virtual demand. I'm happy you mentioned that we actually added something to the automation adoption journey to be able to combat or be able to solve for that change. And being able to take on that large ask of everything as a service, so to speak. And increment zero at the very beginning of the automation adoption journey we added something called navigate. And what navigate is, is it's a framework where we would come in and not just evaluate what they want to automate and bring that into a new workflow, but we evaluate what they already have in place, what automation they have in place, as well as the manual tasks and we go through, and we try to figure out how do you take that very complex, large thing and stream it down into something that can be first off determined as a service and made available for your organization to consume, and as well as be able to drive the business risks or be able to drive your business objectives forward. And so that exercise that we're now stepping our customers through makes a huge difference and puts it all out in front of you so that you can make decisions and decide which way you want to go taking one step at a time. >> And you know it's interesting, great insight, great comment. I think this is really where the dots are going to connect over the next few years. Everything is as a service. You got to lay the foundation. But if you really want to get this done I got to ask you the question around Ansible's ability to integrate and implement with other products. So could you give an examples of how Ansible has integrated and implemented with other Red Hat products or other types of technology vendors products? >> Right. So one example that always pops to the top of my head and I have to give a lot of credit to one of my managing architects who was leading this effort. Was the simple fact that you when you think about a mainframe, right? So now IBM is our new family member. When you think about mainframes, you think about IBM and it just so happens that there's a huge ask and demand and push around being able to automate ZOS mainframe. And IBM had already embarked on the path of determining, well, can this be done with Ansible? And as I mentioned before, my managing architect partnered up with the folks on IBM's side, so the we're bringing in Red Hat consulting, and now we have IBM and we're working together to move that idea forward of saying, "Hey, you can automate things with the mainframe." So think about it. We're in 2020 now in the midst of a new normal. And now we're thinking about and talking about automating mainframes. So that just shows how things have evolved in such a great way. And I think that that story is a very interesting one. >> It's so funny the evolution. I'm old enough to remember. I came out of college in the 80s and I would look at the old mainframe guys who were like "You guys are going to be dinosaurs." They're still around. I mean, some of the banking apps, I mean some of them are not multi threaded and all the good stuff, but they are powering, they are managing a workload, but this is the beautiful thing about Cloud. And some of the Cloud activities is that you can essentially integrate, you don't have to replace the old to bring in the new. This has been a common pattern. This is where containers, microservices, and Cloud has been a dream state because you can essentially re layer and glue it together. This is a big deal. What's your reaction to that? >> No, it's a huge deal. And the reality is, is that we need all of it. We need the legacy behaviors around infrastructure. So we need the mainframe still because they has a distinct purpose. And like you mentioned, a lot of our FSI customers that is the core of where a lot of their data and performance comes out of. And so it's not definitely not a pull out and replace. It's more of how they integrate and how can you streamline them working together to create your end to end workflow. And as you mentioned, making it available to your organizations to consume as a service. So definitely a fan of being able to integrate and add to and everything has a purpose. Is what we're coming to learn. >> Agility, the modern application, horizontal scalability, Cloud is the new data center. Walter great insights, always great to chat with you. You always got some good commentary. I want to ask you one final question. I asked Jason before he dropped off. Jason Smith, who was our guest here and hit a hard stop. What is the most important story that people should pay attention to this year at Ansible Fest? Remember it's virtual, so there's going to be a lot of content around there, people are busy, it's asynchronous consumption. What should they pay attention to from a content standpoint, maybe some community sizes or a discord group? I mean, what should people look at in this year? What should they walk away with as a key message? Take a minute to share your thoughts. >> Absolutely. Absolutely key messages is that, kind of similar to the message that we have when it comes down to the other circumstances going on in the world right now, is that we're all in this together. As an Ansible community, we need to work together, come together to be able to share what we're doing and break down those silos. So that's the overall theme. I believe we're doing that with the new. So definitely pay attention to the new features that are coming out with the Ansible automation platform. I alluded to the on-prem automation hub, that's huge. Definitely pay attention to the new content that is being released in the service catalog. There's tons of new content that focus on the ITSM and a tool. So being able to integrate and leverage those tools then the easier math model, there's a bunch of network automation advances that have been made, so definitely pay attention to that. And the last teaser, and I won't go into too much of it, 'cause I don't want to steal the thunder. But there is some distinct integrations that are going to go on with OpenShift around containers and the SQL automation platform that you definitely are going to want to pay attention to. If anyone is running OCP in their environment they definitely going to want to pay attention to this. Cause it's going to be huge. >> Private cloud is back, OpenStack is back, OCP. You got OpenShift has done really well. I mean, again, Cloud has been just a great enabler and bringing all this together for developers and certainly creating more glue, more abstractions, more automation, infrastructure is code is here. We're excited for it Walter, great insight. Great conversation. Thank you for sharing. >> No, it's my pleasure. And thank you for having me. >> I'm John Furrier with theCube, your host for theCube virtual's, part of Ansible Fest, virtual 2020 coverage. Thanks for watching. (gentle upbeat music)

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brought to you by Red Hat. and of course the Red Hat experts. Good morning John. and customers have to move fast. and really be able to make sure and that experience to them. and look at the adoption and really be able to and how the codes being and because of the momentum it creates and their engagement with you guys and also be able to integrate it and the playbooks and and technologies to be able to You had to adopt to What about the community role? and be able to leverage the best practices the ability to integrate, that came out of the You're saying that the automation and be able to make a local version of it. and I want to get to to drive lower cost and more innovation I mean, IBM's is just going to and continue to drive We're going to stay with And again really looking to So I got to ask you what are the things And by leveraging it to and reaction to this of everything as a service, so to speak. the dots are going to connect and I have to give a lot of credit the old to bring in the new. and add to and everything has a purpose. that people should pay attention to that are going to go on with and bringing all this And thank you for having me. I'm John Furrier with theCube,

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Greg Smith, Madhukar Kumar & Thomas Cornely, Nutanix | Global .NEXT Digital Experience 2020


 

>> From around the globe it's theCUBE with coverage of the GLOBAL.NEXT DIGITAL EXPERIENCE brought to you by Nutanix. >> Hi and welcome back, we're wrapping up our coverage of the Nutanix .Next Global Digital Experience, I'm Stu Miniman and I'm happy to welcome to the program, help us as I said wrap things up. We're going to be talking about running better, running faster and running anywhere. A theme that we've heard in the keynotes and throughout the two day event of the show. We have three VPs to help go through all the pieces coming up on the screen with first of all we have Greg Smith who's the vice president of product technical marketing right next to him is Madhukar Kumar, who is the vice president of product and solutions marketing and on the far end, the senior vice president Thomas Cornely, he is the senior vice president, as I said for product portfolio management. Gentlemen, thank you so much for joining us. >> Good to be here Stu. >> Alright, so done next to show we really enjoy, of course this the global event so not just the US and the European and Asia but what really gets to see across the globe and a lot going on. I've had the pleasure of watching Nutanix since the early days, been to most of the events and the portfolio is quite a bit bigger than just the original HCI solution. Thomas since you've got to portfolio management is under your purview, before we get into summarizing all of the new pieces and the expansion of the cloud and software and everything just give us if you could that overview of the portfolio as it's coming into the show. >> Yeah absolutely Stu. I mean as you said we've been doing this now for 10 plus years and we've grown the portfolio we developed products over the years and so what we rolled out at this conference is a new way and to talk about what we do at Nutanix and what we deliver in terms of set of offerings and we talk about the 4 D's. We start with our digital hyper converged infrastructure cartridges, dual core HCI stack that you can run on any server and that stack these two boards are data center services which combines our storage solutions, our business computing and data recovery solution and security solutions on DevOps services, which is our database automation services, our application delivery automation services and now our new common and that's one of the service offerings and then our desktop services catridges which is our core VDI offering and offering our discipline and service offerings. So put all these together this is what we talk about in the 4 D's, which is on Nutanix cloud platform that you can run on premises and now on any job. >> Well thank you Thomas for laying the ground work for us, Greg we're going to come to you first that run better theme as Thomas said and as we know HCI is at the core a lot of discussions this year of course, the ripple effect of the global pandemic has more people working remotely that's been a tailwind for many of the core offerings, but help us understand, how's that building out some of the new things that we should look at in the HCI. >> Yeah ,thanks too for Nutanix and our customers a lot of it begins with HCI, right. And what we've seen in the past year is really aggressive adoption for HCI, particularly in core data center and private cloud operations and customers are moving to HCI in our not only for greater simplicity, but to get faster provisioning and scaling. And I think from a workload perspective, we see two things, that ACI is being called upon to deliver even more demanding apps those with a really very low latency such as large scale database deployments. And we also see that HCI is expected to improve the economics of IT and the data center and specifically by increasing workload density. So we have a long history, a storied history of continually improving HCI performance. In fact every significant software release we've optimized the core data path and we've done it again. We've done it again with our latest HCI software release that we announced just this week as our next. The first enhancement we made was in 518, was to reduce the CPU overhead and latency for accessing storage devices such as SSD and NBME and we've done this by managing storage space on physical devices in the HCI software. So rather than rely on slower internal file systems and this new technology is called block store and our customers can take advantage of block store simply by upgrading to the new software released and we're seeing immediate performance gains of 20 to 25% for IOPS and latency. And then we built on top of that, we've added software support for Intel Optane by leveraging user space library, specifically SPDK or storage performance development kit. And SPDK allows Nutanix to access devices from user space and avoid expensive interrupts and systems calls. So with this support along with block store we're seeing application performance gains about this 56% or more. So we're just building our own a legacy of pushing performance and software and that's the real benefit of moving to HCI. >> And just to add to that too when it comes to run better I think one of the things that we think of running better is automation and operation then when it comes to automation and operation there are a couple of ways I would say significant announcements that we also did to. One is around Comm as a service. Comm is one of those products that our customers absolutely love and now with Comm as a service you have a SaaS plane, so you can just without installing anything or configuring anything you could just take advantage of that. And the other thing we also announced is something called Nutanix central and Nutanix central gives you the way to manage all your applications on Nutanix across all of your different clusters and infrastructure from a single place as well. So two big parts of a run better as well. >> Well, that's great and I've really, is that foundational layer, Madhukar if we talk about expanding out, running faster the other piece we've talked about for a few years is step one is you modernize the platform and then step two is really you have to modernize your application. So maybe help us understand that changing workload cloud native is that discussion that we've been having a few years now, what are you hearing from your customers and what new pieces do you have to expand and enable that piece of the overall stack? >> Yeah, so I think what you mentioned which is around cloud data the big piece over there is around Cybernetics's and they already had a carbon, so with carbon a lot of the things of complexities around managing cybernetics is all taken care of, but there are higher level aspects on it like you have to have observability, you have to have log, you have to have managed the ingress ,outgress which has a lot of complexity involved with, so if you're really just looking for building of applications what we found is that a lot of our customers are looking for a way to be able to manage that on their own. So what we announced which is carbon platform service enables you to do exactly that. So if you're really concerned about creating cloud native applications without really worrying too much about how do I configure the cybernetics clusters? How do I manage Histio? How do I manage all of that carbon platform service that actually encapsulates all of that to a sass plate So you can go in and create your cloud native application as quickly and as fast as possible, but just in a typical Nutanix style we wanted to give that freedom of choice to our customers as well. So if you do end up utilizing this what you can also choose is the end point where you want these application to run and you could choose any of the public clouds or the hyper scaler or you could use a Nutanix or an IOT as an endpoint as well. So that was one of the big announcements we've made. >> Great, Greg and Madhukar before we go on, it's one of the things that I think is a thread throughout but maybe doesn't get highlighted as much but security of course is been front and center for a while, but here in 2020 is even more emphasized things like ransomware, of course even more so today than it has been for a couple of years. So maybe could it just address where we are with security and any new pieces along there that we should understand? >> Yeah, I can start with that if I could. So we've long had security in our platform specifically micro-segmentation, fire walling individual workloads to provide least privilege access and what we've announced this week at .Next is we've extended that capability, specifically we've leveraged some of the capabilities in Xi beam and this is our SAS based service to really build a single dashboard for security operators. So with security central, again a cloud based SAS app, Nutanix customers can get a single pane from which they can monitor the entire security posture of their infrastructure and applications, it gives you asset reporting, asset inventory reporting, you can get automated compliance checks or HIPAA or PCI and others. So we've made security really easy in keeping with the Nutanix theme and it's a security central is a great tool for that security operations team so it's a big step for Nutanix and security. >> Yeah. >> To actually add on this one, one bit piece of security central is to make it easier, right. To see your various network bills and leverage the flow micro segmentation services and configure them on your different virtual machines, right? So it's really a key enabler here to kind of get a sense of what's going on in your environment and best configure and best protect and secure infrastructure. >> Thomas is exactly right. In fact, one of the things I wanted to chime into and maybe Greg you could speak a little bit more about it. One of my favorite announcements that we heard or at least I heard was the virtualized networking and coming from a cloud native world, I think that's a big deal. The ability to go create your virtual private cloud or VPCs and subnets and then be able to do it across multiple clouds. That's, something I think has been long time coming, so I was personally very, very pleased to hear that as well. Greg, do you want to add a little bit more? >> Yeah, that's a good point I'm glad you brought that up, when we talk about micro-segmentation that's one form of isolation, but what we've announced is virtual networking. So we really adopted some cloud principles, specifically virtual private clouds constructs that we can now bring into private cloud data centers. So this gives our customers the ability to define and deploy virtual networks or overlays this sort of sit on top of broadcast domains and VLANs and it provides isolation for different environments. So a number of great use cases, we see HCI specifically being relied upon for fast provisioning in a new environment. But today the network has always been sort of an impediment to that we're sort of stuck with physical network plants, switches and routers. So what virtual networking allows us to do is through APIs, is to create an isolated network a virtual private cloud on a self service basis. This is great for organizations that increasing operating as service providers and they need that tenant level segmentation. It's also good for developers who need isolated workspace and they want to spin it up quickly. So we see a lot of great use cases for virtual networks and it just sort of adds to our full stack so we've software defined compute, we've software defined storage, now we're completing that with software defining networking. >> And if I have it right in my notes the virtual networking that's in preview today correct? >> Yes, we announce it this week and we are announcing upcoming availability, so we have number of customers who are already working with us to help define it and ready to put it into their environments. The virtual private network is upcoming from Nutanix. >> Yeah, so I absolutely I've got, Mudhakar, I've got a special place in my heart for the networking piece that's where a lot of my background is, but there was a different announcement that got a little bit more of my attention and Thomas we're going to turn to you to talk a little bit more about clusters. I got to speak with Monica and Tarkin, ahead of the conference when you had the announcement with AWS, for releasing Nutanix clusters and this is something we've been watching for a bit, when you talk about the multicloud messaging and how you're taking the Nutanix software and extending it even further that run anywhere that you have talk about in the conference. So Thomas if you could just walk us through the announcements as I said something we've been excited, I've been watching this closely for the last couple of years with Nutanix and great to see some of the pieces really starting to accelerate. >> Well absolutely and as you said this is something that's been core to the strategy in terms of getting and enabling customers to go and do more with hybrid cloud and public cloud and if you go back a few weeks when we announced clusters on AWS this was a few weeks back now, we talked of HCI is a prerequisite to getting the most of your hybrid cloud infrastructure, which is the new HCI in our mind and what we covered at .Next was this great announcement with Microsoft Azure, right, and just leveraging their technologies bringing some of their control plan onto our cloud platform but also now adding clusters on Azure and announcing that we'll be doing this in a few months. Enabling the customers to go and take the same internet cloud platform the same consistent set of operations and technology services from data center services, DevOps services and desktop services and deploying those anywhere on premises, on AWS or on Microsoft Azure and again for us cloud is not a destination. This is not a now we just accomplished something. This is a new way of operating, right? And so it's touching, giving customers options in terms of where they want to go to count so we keep on adding new counts as we go but also it's a new form of consuming infrastructure, right? From an economist perspective you probably know, you don't extend it you're pressing into the moving to is fiction based offering on all of our solutions and our entire portfolio and as we go and enable these clusters offering, we're not making consumptions more granular to non customers do not consume our software on an hourly basis or a monthly basis. So again this is kind of that next step of cloud is not just technology, it's not a destination it's a new way of operating and consuming technology. >> Why think about the flexibility that this brings to existing new techs customers it gives them enormous choices in terms of new infrastructure and whether they set up new clusters. So think about in text a customer today. They may have data centers throughout the US or in Europe and in Asia Pacific, but now they have a choice rather than employ their Nutanix environment, in an existing data center or Colo, they can put it into AWS and they can manage it exactly the same. So it just provides near infinite choice for our customers of how they deploy HCI and our full software stack. In addition to the consumption that Thomas talked about, consumption choices. >> Yeah, just to add to that again I should have said this is also one of my favorite announcements as well, yesterday. We Greg, myself, Thomas, we were talking to some industry analysts and they were talking about, Hey, you know how there is a need for pods where you have compute, you have network and you have storage altogether, and now people want to run it across multiple different destination but they have to have the freedom of choice. Today using one different kind of hardware tomorrow you want to use something else. They should be portability for that, so with clusters, I think what we have been able to do is to take that concept and apply it across public cloud. So the same whether you want to call it a pod or whatever but compute, storage, networking. Now you have the freedom of choice of choosing a public cloud as an end point where you want to run it. So absolutely one of those I would say game-changing announcements that we have made more recently. >> Yeah-- >> To close that loop actually and talk about portability as enabling quality of occupations. But also one thing that's really unique in terms of how we're delivering this to customers is probability of licenses. The fact that you have a subscription term license for on premises you can very easily now repay the license if you decide to move a workload and move a cluster from one premises to your count of choice, that distance is also affordable. But so again, full flexibility for these customers, freedom of choice from a technology perspective but also a business perspective. >> Well, one of the things I think that really brings home how real this solution is, it's not just about location, Thomas as you said, it's not about a destination, but it's about what you can do with those workloads. So one of the use cases I saw during the conference was talking about a very long partner of a Nutanix Citrix and how that plays out in this clusters type of environment so maybe if you could just illustrate that as one of those proof points is how customers can leverage the variety of choice. >> Yeah, we're very excited about this one, right? Because given what we're currently going through as a humanity right now, across the world with COVID situation, and the fact that we all have now to start looking at working from home, enabling scaling of existing infrastructure and doing it without having to go and rethink your design enabling this clusters in our Citrix solution is just paramount. Because what it will ask you to do is if you say you started and you had an existing VDI solution on premises using Citrix, extending that now and you putting new capacity in every location where you can go and spin this up in any AWS region or Azure region, no one has to go and the same images, the same processes, the same operations of your original desktop infrastructure would apply regardless of where you're moving now your workforce to work remotely. And this is again it's about making this very easy and keeping that consistency operations, from managing the desktops to managing that core infrastructure that is now enabled by using different clusters on Azure or AWS. >> Well, Thomas back in a previous answer, I thought you were teeing something up when you said we will be entering a new era. So when you talk about workloads that are going to the cloud, you talk about modernization probably the hottest area that we have conversations with practitioners on is what's happening in the database world. Of course, there's migrations, there's lots of new databases on there, and Nutanix era is helping in that piece. So maybe if we could as kind of a final workload talk about how that's expanding and what updates you have for the database. >> Absolutely and so I mean Eras is one of our key offerings when it comes to a database automation and really enabling teams to start delivering database as a service to their own and users. We just announced Era 2.0 which is now taking Era to a whole other level, allowing you to go and manage your devices on cross clusters. And this is very topical in this current use case, because we're talking of now I can use era to go in as your database that might be running on premises for production and using Era to spin up clones for test drive for any team anywhere potentially in cloud then using clusters on the all kind of environments. So those use cases of being which more leverage the power of the core is same structure of Nutanix for storage management for efficiency but also performance and scaling doing that on premises and in unique cloud region that you may want to leverage, using Era for all the automation and ensuring that you keep on with your best practices in terms of deploying and hacking your databases is really critical. So Era 2.0 great use cases here to go and just streamline how you onboard databases on top of HCI whether you're doing HCI on premises or HCI in public town, and getting automation of those operations at any scale. >> Yeah, hey Tom has mentioned a performance and Era has been a great extension to the portfolio sitting on top of our HCI. As you know Stu database has long been a popular workload to run it all HCI, particularly Nutanix and it extends from scalability performance. A lot of I talked about earlier in terms of providing that really low latency to support the I-Ops, to support the transactions per second, that are needed these very demanding databases. Our customers have had great success running SAP, HANA, Oracle SQL server. So I think it's a combination of Era and what we're doing as Thomas described as well as just getting a rock solid foundational HCI platform to run it on and so that's what we're very excited about to go forward in the database world. >> Wonderful, well look, we covered a lot of ground here. I know we probably didn't hit everything there but it's been amazing to watch Nutanix really going from simplicity at its core and software driving it to now that really spiders out and touches a lot of pieces. So I'll give you each just kind of final word as you having conversations with your customers, how do they think of Nutanix today and expect that we have a little bit of diversity and the answers but it's one of those questions I think the last couple of years you've asked when people register for .Next. So it's, I'm curious to hear what you think on that. Maybe Greg if we start with you and kind of go down the line. >> Yeah, for me what sums it up is Nutanix makes IT simple, It makes IT invisible and it allows professionals to move away from the care and feeding structure and really spend more time with the applications and services that power their business. >> And I agree with Greg I think the two things that always come up, one is the freedom of choice, the ability for our customers to be able to do so many different things, have so many more choices and we continue to do that every time we add something new or we announce something new and then just to add onto what Greg said is to try and make the complexities invisible, so if there are multiple layers, abstract them out so that our customers are really focused on doing things that really matter versus trying to manage all the other underlying layers, which adds more complexity. >> Yeah You could just kind of send me to it up right. In the end, internet is becoming much more than HCI, as hyper converged infrastructure this is not taking it to another level with the hybrid cloud infrastructure and when you look at what's been built over the last few years from the portfolio points that we now have, I think it was just growing recognition that internet actually delivers this cloud platform that you can all average to go and get to a consistency of services, operations and business operations in any location, on premises through our network constant providers through our Nutanix cloud offerings and hyper scaler with Nutanix clusters. So I think things are really changing, the company is getting to a whole other level and I couldn't be more excited about what's coming out now the next few years as we keep on building and scaling our cloud platform. >> And I'll just add my perspective as a long time watcher of Nutanix. For so long IT was the organization where you typically got an answer of no, or they were very slow to be able to react on it. It was actually a quote from Alan Cohen at the first .Next down in Miami he said, "we take need to take those nos "and those slows and get them to say go." So the ultimate, what we need is of course reacting to the business, taking those people, eliminating some of the things that were burdensome or took up too much time and you're freeing them up to be able to really create value for the business. Want to thank Greg, Madhukar, Thomas, thank you so much for helping us wrap up, theCUBE is always thrilled to be able to participate in .Next great community customers really engaged and great to talk with all three of you. >> Thank you. >> Alright so that's a rack for theCUBES coverage of the Nutanix Global.Next digital experience. Go to thecube.com. thecube.net is the website where you can go see all of the previous interviews we've done with the executives, the partners, the customers. I'm Stu Miniman and as always thank you for watching theCUBE.

Published Date : Sep 9 2020

SUMMARY :

brought to you by Nutanix. and on the far end, and the portfolio is quite a bit bigger and that's one of the service offerings and as we know HCI is at the core and that's the real and Nutanix central gives you the way is really you have to and you could choose and any new pieces along there and this is our SAS based service and leverage the flow and then be able to do it and it just sort of adds to our full stack and ready to put it and great to see some of the pieces Well absolutely and as you said that this brings to and you have storage altogether, now repay the license if you decide and how that plays out in this clusters and the fact that we all have now to start and what updates you have and ensuring that you keep on and so that's what and kind of go down the line. and services that power their business. and then just to add onto what Greg said and get to a consistency of services, and great to talk with all three of you. and as always thank you

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Lester Waters, Patrick Smith & Ezat Dayeh | IoTahoe | Data Automated


 

>> Announcer: From around the globe, it's theCUBE, with digital coverage of data automated and event series brought to you by IO Tahoe. >> Welcome back everybody to the power panel, driving business performance with smart data life cycles. Lester Waters is here. He's the chief technology officer from IO Tahoe, he's joined by Patrick Smith, who is field CTO from Pure Storage and Ezat Dayeh, who's a system engineering manager at Cohesity. Gentlemen, good to see you. Thanks so much for coming on this panel. >> Thank you, Dave. >> Let's start with Lester. I wonder if each of you could just give us a quick overview of your role and what's the number one problem that you're focused on solving for your customers? Let's start with Lester please. >> Yes, I'm Lester waters, chief technology officer for IO Tahoe, and really the number one problem that we are trying to solve for our customers is to help them understand what they have. 'Cause if they don't understand what they have in terms of their data, they can't manage it, they can't control it, they can't monitor it. They can't ensure compliance. So really that's finding all you can about your data that you have and building a catalog that can be readily consumed by the entire business is what we do. >> Great. All right, Patrick, field CTO in your title. That says to me you're talking to customers all the time. So you've got a good perspective on it. Give us you know, your take on things here. >> Yeah, absolutely. So my patch is EMEA and talk to customers and prospects in lots of different verticals across the region. And as they look at their environments and their data landscape, they're faced with massive growth in the data that they're trying to analyze and demands to be able to get in site faster and to deliver business value faster than they've ever had to do in the past. So big challenges that we're seeing across the region. >> Got it. And is that, Cohesity? You're like the new kid on the block, you guys are really growing rapidly, created this whole notion of data management backup and beyond, but from a system engineering manager, what are you seeing from customers, your role and the number one problem that you're solving? >> Yeah, sure. So the number one problem, I see time and again, speaking with customers, fall around data fragmentation. So due to things like organic growth, you know, even maybe budgetary limitations, infrastructure has grown over time, very piecemeal and it's highly distributed internally. And just to be clear, you know, when I say internally, you know, that could be that it's on multiple platforms or silos within an on-prem infrastructure, but that it also does extend to the cloud as well. So we've seen, you know, over the past few years, a big drive towards cloud consumption, almost at any cost in some examples. You know, there could be business reasons like moving from things like CapEx to a more of an OPEX model. And what this has done is it's gone to, to create further silos, you know, both on-prem and also in the cloud. And while short term needs may be met by doing that, what it's doing is it's causing longer term problems and it's reducing the agility for these customers to be able to change and transform. >> Right, hey cloud is cool. Everybody wants to be in the cloud, right? So you're right. It creates maybe unintended consequences. So let's start with the business outcome and kind of try to work backwards. I mean, people, you know, they want to get more insights from data. They want to have a more efficient data life cycle, but so Lester, let me start with you, thinking about like the North star to creating data-driven cultures, you know, what is the North star for customers here? >> I think the North star in a nutshell is driving value from your data without question. I mean, we differentiate ourselves these days by even in nuances in our data. Now, underpinning that there's a lot of things that have to happen to make that work out well, you know, for example, making sure you adequately protect your data, you know, do you have a good, do you have a good storage subsystem? Do you have a good backup and recovery point objectives, recovery time objectives? Do you, are you fully compliant? Are you ensuring that you're ticking all the boxes? There's a lot of regulations these days in term, with respect to compliance, data retention, data privacy, and so forth. Are you ticking those boxes? Are you being efficient with your data? You know, in other words, I think there's a statistic that someone mentioned to me the other day, that 53% of all businesses have between three and 15 copies of the same data. So, you know, finding and eliminating those is part of the, part of the problem is you need to chase. >> Yeah, so Patrick and Ezat, I mean, you know, Lester touched on a lot of the areas that you guys are involved in. I like to think of, you know, you're right. Lester, no doubt, business value, and a lot of that comes from reducing the end to end cycle times, but anything that you guys would, would add to that, Patrick, maybe start with Patrick. >> Yeah, I think, I think getting value from data really hits on, it hits on what everyone wants to achieve, but I think there are a couple of key steps in doing that. First of all, is getting access to the data and that really hits three big problems. Firstly, working out what you've got. Secondly, after working out what you've got, how to get access to it, because it's all very well knowing you've got some data, but if you can't get access to it, either because of privacy reasons, security reasons, then that's a big challenge. And then finally, once you've got access to the data, making sure that you can process that data in a timely manner and at the scale that you need to, to deliver your business objectives. So I think those are really three key steps in successfully getting value from the data within our organization. >> Ezat, I'll ask you, anything else you'd fill in? >> Yeah, so the guys have touched on a lot of things already. For me, you know, it would be that an organization has got a really good global view of all of its data. It understands the data flow and dependencies within their infrastructure, understands the precise legal and compliance requirements and have the ability to action changes or initiatives within their environment, forgive the pun, but with a cloud-like agility. You know, and that's no easy feat, right? That is hard work. Another thing as well is that it's for companies to be mature enough, to truly like delete and get rid of unneeded data from their system. You know, I've seen so many times in the past, organizations paying more than they need to because they've acquired a lot of data baggage. Like it just gets carried over from refresh to refresh. And, you know, if you can afford it great, but chances are, you want to be as competitive as possible. And what happens is that this results in, you know, spend that is unnecessary, not just in terms of acquisition, but also in terms of maintaining the infrastructure, but then the other knock on effect as well is, you know, from a compliance and a security point of view, you're exposing yourself. So, you know, if you don't need it, delete it or at least archive it. >> Okay, So we've talked about the challenges in some of the objectives, but there's a lot of blockers out there, and I want to understand how you guys are helping remove them. So Lester, what are some of those blockers? I mean, I can mention a couple, there's their skillsets. There's obviously you talked about the problem of siloed data, but there's also data ownership. That's my data. There's budget issues. What do you see as some of the big blockers in terms of people really leaning in to this smart data life cycle? >> Yeah, silos is probably one of the biggest one I see in businesses. Yes, it's my data, not your data. Lots of compartmentalization and breaking that down is one of the, one of the challenges and having the right tools to help you do that is only part of the solution. There's obviously a lot of cultural things that need to take place to break down those silos and work together. If you can identify where you have redundant data across your enterprise, you might be able to consolidate those, you know, bring together applications. A lot of companies, you know, it's not uncommon for a large enterprise to have, you know, several thousand applications, many of which have their own instance of the very same data. So if there's a customer list, for example, it might be in five or six different sources of truth. And there's no reason to have that, and bringing that together by bringing those things together, you will start to tear down the business boundary silos that automatically exist. I think, I think one of the other challenges too, is self service. As Patrick mentioned, gaining access to your data and being able to work with it in a safe and secure fashion, is key here. You know, right now you typically raise a ticket, wait for access to the data, and then maybe, you know, maybe a week later out pops the bit you need and really, you know, with data being such a commodity and having timeliness to it, being able to have quick access to that data is key. >> Yeah, so I want to go to Patrick. So, you know, one of the blockers that I see is legacy infrastructure, technical debt, sucking all the budget. You've got, you know, too many people having to look after, you know, storage. It's just, it's just too complicated. And I wonder if you have, obviously that's my perspective, what's your perspective on that? >> Yeah, absolutely. We'd agree with that. As you look at the infrastructure that supports people's data landscapes today, for primarily legacy reasons, the infrastructure itself is siloed. So you have different technologies with different underlying hardware, different management methodologies that are there for good reason, because historically you had to have specific fitness for purpose, for different data requirements. That's one of the challenges that we tackled head on at Pure with the flash blade technology and the concept of the data hub, a platform that can deliver in different characteristics for the different workloads, but from a consistent data platform. And it means that we get rid of those silos. It means that from an operational perspective, it's far more efficient. And once your data set is consolidated into the data hub, you don't have to move that data around. You can bring your applications and your workloads to the data rather than the other way around. >> Now, Ezat, I want to go to you because you know, in the world, in your world, which to me goes beyond backup. I mean, one of the challenges is, you know, they say backup is one thing. Recovery is everything, But as well, the CFO doesn't want to pay for just protection. And one of the things that I like about what you guys have done is you've broadened the perspective to get more value out of your, what was once seen as an insurance policy. I wonder if you could talk about that as a blocker and how you're having success removing it. >> Yeah, absolutely. So, you know, as well as what the guys have already said, you know, I do see one of the biggest blockers as the fact that the task at hand can, you know, can be overwhelming for customers and it can overwhelm them very, very quickly. And that's because, you know, this stuff is complicated. It's got risk, you know, people are used to the status quo, but the key here is to remember that it's not an overnight change. It's not, you know, a flick of a switch. It's something that can be tackled in a very piecemeal manner, and absolutely like you you said, you know, reduction in TCO and being able to leverage the data for other purposes is a key driver for this. So like you said, you know, for us specifically, one of the areas that we help customers around with first of all, it's usually data protection. It can also be things like consolidation of unstructured file data. And, you know, the reason why customers are doing this is because legacy data protection is very costly. You know, you'd be surprised how costly it is. A lot of people don't actually know how expensive it can be. And it's very complicated involving multiple vendors. And it's there really to achieve one goal. And the thing is, it's very inflexible and it doesn't help towards being an agile data driven company. So, you know, this can be, this can be resolved. It can be very, you know, pretty straightforward. It can be quite painless as well. Same goes for unstructured data, which is very complex to manage. And, you know, we've all heard the stats from the analysts, you know, data obviously is growing at an extremely rapid rate. But actually when you look at that, you know, how is it actually growing? 80% of that growth is actually in unstructured data. And only 20% of that growth is in structured data. So, you know, these are quick win areas that the customers can realize. Immediate TCO improvement and increased agility as well, when it comes to managing and automating their infrastructure. So, yeah, it's all about making, you know, doing more with, with what you have. >> So let's paint a picture of this guys, if you could bring up the life cycle, I want to explore that a little bit and ask each of you to provide a perspective on this. And so, you know, what you can see here is you've got this, this cycle, the data life cycle, and what we're wanting to do is really inject intelligence or smarts into this life cycle, you can see, you start with ingestion or creation of data. You're storing it. You got to put it somewhere, right? You got to classify it, you got to protect it. And then of course you want to, you know, reduce the copies, make it efficient, and then you want to prepare it, so the businesses can actually consume it. And then you've got clients and governance and privacy issues. And at some point when it's legal to do so, you want to get rid of it. We never get rid of stuff in technology. We keep it forever. But I wonder if we could start with you Lester. This is, you know, the picture of the life cycle. What role does automation play in terms of injecting smarts into the life cycle? >> Automation is key here. You know, especially from the discover catalog and classified perspective. I've seen companies where we, where they go and will take and dump their, all of their database schemes into a spreadsheet so that they can sit down and manually figure out what attribute 37 needs for a column name. And that's only the tip of the iceberg. So being able to automatically detect what you have, automatically deduce what's consuming the data, you know, upstream and downstream, being able to understand all of the things related to the life cycle of your data, backup archive, deletion. It is key. So having good tools is very important. >> So Patrick, obviously you participated in the store piece of this picture. So I wonder if you could just talk more specifically about that, but I'm also interested in how you affect the whole system view, the end to end cycle time. >> Yeah, I think Lester kind of hit the nail on the head in terms of the importance of automation, because data volumes are just so massive now that you, you can't, you can't effectively manage or understand or catalog your data without automation. But once you, once you understand the data and the value of the data, then that's where you can work out where the data needs to be at any point in time. And that's where we come into play. You know, if data needs to be online, if it's hot data, if it's data that needs to be analyzed, and, you know, we're moving to a world of analytics where some of our customers say, there's no such thing as cold data anymore, then it needs to be on a performance platform, but you need to understand exactly what the data is that you have to work out where to place it and where it fits into that data life cycle. And then there's that whole challenge of protecting it through the life cycle, whether that's protecting the hot data or as the data moves off into, you know, into an archive or into a cold store, still making sure you know where it is, and easily retrievable, should you need to move it back into the working set. So I think automation is key, but also making sure that it ties into understanding where you place your data at any point in time. >> Right, so Pure and Cohesity, obviously, partner to do that. And of course, Ezat, you guys are part of the protect, you're certainly part of the retain, but also you provide data management capabilities and analytics. I wonder if you could add some color there. >> Yeah, absolutely. So like you said, you know, we focus pretty heavily on data protection as just one of our areas and that infrastructure, it is just sitting there really you know, the legacy infrastructure, it's just sitting there, you know, consuming power, space cooling and pretty inefficient. And, you know, one of our main purposes is like we said, to make that data useful and automating that process is a key part of that, right? So, you know, not only are we doing things like obviously making it easier to manage, improving RPOs and RTOs with policy-based SLAs, but we're making it useful and having a system that can be automated through APIs and being an API first based system. It's almost mandatory now when you're going through a digital, you know, digital transformation. And one of the things that we can do is as part of that automation, is that we can make copies of data without consuming additional capacity available, pretty much instantaneously. You might want to do that for many different purposes. So examples of that could be, you know, for example, reproducing copies of production data for development purposes, or for testing new applications for example. And you know, how would you, how would you go about doing that in a legacy environment? The simple answer is it's painfully, right? So you just can't do those kinds of things. You know, I need more infrastructure to store the data. I need more compute to actually perform the things that I want to do on it, such as analytics, and to actually get a copy of that data, you know, I have to either manually copy it myself or I restore from a backup. And obviously all of that takes time, additional energy. And you end up with a big sprawling infrastructure, which isn't a manageable, like Patrick said, it's just the sheer amount of data, you know, it doesn't, it doesn't warrant doing that anymore. So, you know, if I have a modern day platform such as, you know, the Cohesity data platform, I can actually do a lot of analytics on that through applications. So we have a marketplace for apps. And the other great thing is that it's an open system, right? So anybody can develop an app. It's not just apps that are developed by us. It can be third parties, it could be customers. And with the data being consolidated in one place, you can then start to start to realize some of these benefits of deriving insights out of your data. >> Yeah, I'm glad you brought that up earlier in your little example there, because you're right. You know, how do you deal with that? You throw people at the problem and it becomes nights and weekends, and that sort of just fails. It doesn't scale. I wonder if we could talk about metadata. It's increasingly important. Metadata is data about the data, but Lester, maybe explain why it's so important and what role it plays in terms of creating smart data lifecycle. >> Well, yes, metadata, it does describe the data, but it's, a lot of people think it's just about the data itself, but there's a lot of extended characteristics about your data. So, imagine if for my data life cycle, I can communicate with the backup system from Cohesity and find out when the last time that data was backed up, or where it's backed up to. I can communicate exchange data with Pure Storage and find out what tier it's on. Is the data at the right tier commensurate with its use level that Patrick pointed out? And being able to share that metadata across systems. I think that's the direction that we're going in. Right now we're at the stage, we're just identifying the metadata and trying to bring it together and catalog it. The next stage will be, okay using the APIs that we have between our systems. Can we communicate and share that data and build good solutions for our customers to use? >> I think it's a huge point that you just made. I mean, you know, 10 years ago, automating classification was the big problem and it was machine intelligence. You know, we're obviously attacking that, but your point about as machines start communicating to each other and you start, you know, it's cloud to cloud, there's all kinds of metadata, kind of new metadata that's being created. I often joke that someday there's going to be more metadata than the data. So that brings us to cloud. And Ezat, I'd like to start with you, because you were talking about some cloud creep before. So what's your take on cloud? I mean, you've got private clouds, you got hybrid clouds, public clouds, inter clouds, IOT, and the edge is sort of another form of cloud. So how does cloud fit into the data life cycle? How does it affect the data life cycle? >> Yeah, sure. So, you know, I do think, you know, having the cloud is a great thing and it has got its role to play and you can have many different permutations and iterations of how you use it. And, you know, as I, as I may have sort of mentioned previously, you know, I've seen customers go into the cloud very, very quickly. And actually recently they're starting to remove web codes from the cloud. And the reason why this happens is that, you know, cloud has got its role to play, but it's not right for absolutely everything, especially in their current form as well. So, you know, a good analogy I like to use, and this may sound a little bit cliche, but you know, when you compare clouds versus on premises data centers, you can use the analogy of houses and hotels. So to give you an idea, so, you know, when we look at hotels, that's like the equivalent of a cloud, right? I can get everything I need from there. I can get my food, my water, my outdoor facilities. If I need to accommodate more people, I can rent some more rooms. I don't have to maintain the hotel. It's all done for me. When you look at houses, the equivalent to, you know, on premises infrastructure, I pretty much have to do everything myself, right? So I have to purchase the house. I have to maintain it. I have to buy my own food and water, eat it. I have to make improvements myself, but then why do we all live in houses, not in hotels? And the simple answer that I can, I can only think of is, is that it's cheaper, right? It's cheaper to do it myself, but that's not to say that hotels haven't got their role to play. You know, so for example, if I've got loads of visitors coming over for the weekend, I'm not going to go and build an extension to my house, just for them. I will burst into my hotel, into the cloud, and use it for, you know, for things like that. And you know, if I want to go somewhere on holiday, for example, then I'm not going to go buy a house there. I'm going to go in, I'm going to stay in a hotel, same thing. I need some temporary usage. You know, I'll use the cloud for that as well. Now, look, this is a loose analogy, right? But it kind of works. And it resonates with me at least anyway. So what I'm really saying is the cloud is great for many things, but it can work out costlier for certain applications while others are a perfect fit. So when customers do want to look at using the cloud, it really does need to be planned in an organized way, you know, so that you can avoid some of the pitfalls that we're talking about around, for example, creating additional silos, which are just going to make your life more complicated in the long run. So, you know, things like security planning, you know, adequate training for staff is absolutely a must. We've all seen the, you know, the horror stories in the press where certain data maybe has been left exposed in the cloud. Obviously nobody wants to see that. So as long as it's a well planned and considered approach, the cloud is great and it really does help customers out. >> Yeah, it's an interesting analogy. I hadn't thought of that before, but you're right. 'Cause I was going to say, well, part of it is you want the cloud experience everywhere, but you don't always want the cloud experience, especially, you know, when you're with your family, you want certain privacy. I've not heard that before Ezat, so that's a new perspective, so thank you. But so, but Patrick, I do want to come back to that cloud experience because in fact, that's what's happening in a lot of cases. Organizations are extending the cloud properties of automation on-prem and in hybrid. And certainly you guys have done that. You've created, you know, cloud-based capabilities. They can run in AWS or wherever, but what's your take on cloud? What's Pure's perspective? >> Yeah, I thought Ezat brought up a really interesting point and a great analogy for the use of the public cloud, and it really reinforces the importance of the hybrid and multicloud environment, because it gives you that flexibility to choose where is the optimal environment to run your business workloads. And that's what it's all about. And the flexibility to change which environment you're running in, either from one month to the next or from one year to the next, because workloads change and the characteristics that are available in the cloud change on a pretty frequent basis. It's a fast moving world. So one of the areas of focus for us with our cloud block store technology is to provide effectively a bridge between the on-prem cloud and the public cloud, to provide that consistent data management layer that allows customers to move their data where they need it when they need it. And the hybrid cloud is something that we've lived with ourselves at Pure. So our Pure1 management technology actually sits in a hybrid cloud environment. We started off entirely cloud native, but now we use the public cloud for compute and we use our own technology, the end of a high performance network link to support our data platform. So we get the best of both worlds. And I think that's where a lot of our customers are trying to get to is cloud flexibility, but also efficiency and optimization. >> All right, I want to come back in a moment there, but before we do, Lester, I wonder if we could talk a little bit about compliance governance and privacy. You know, that, a lot of that comes down to data, the EU right now, I think the Brits on this panel are still in the EU for now, but the EU are looking at new rules, new regulations going beyond GDPR, tightening things up in a, specifically kind of pointing at the cloud. Where does sort of privacy, governance, compliance fit in to the, to the data life cycle, then Ezat, I want your thoughts on this as well. >> Yeah, this is a very important point because the landscape for compliance around data privacy and data retention is changing very rapidly and being able to keep up with those changing regulations in an automated fashion is the only way you're going to be able to do it. Even, I think there's a, some sort of a, maybe a ruling coming out today or tomorrow with the change to GDPR. So this is, these are all very key points, and being able to codify those rules into some software, whether you know, IO Tahoe or your storage system or Cohesity that'll help you be compliant is crucial. >> Yeah, Esat, anything you can add there? I mean, this really is your wheelhouse. >> Yeah, absolutely. So, you know, I think anybody who's watching this probably has gotten the message that, you know, less silos is better. And then absolutely it also applies to data in the cloud as well. So, you know, by aiming to consolidate into fewer platforms, customers can realize a lot better control over their data. And then natural effect of this is that it makes meeting compliance and governance a lot easier. So when it's consolidated, you can start to confidently understand who is accessing your data, how frequently are they accessing the data? You can also do things like detecting anomalous file access activities, and quickly identify potential threats. You know, and this can be delivered by apps which are running on one platform that has consolidated the data as well. And you can also start getting into lots of things like, you know, rapidly searching for PII. So personally identifiable information across different file types. And you can report on all of this activity back to the business, by identifying, you know, where are you storing your copies of data? How many copies have you got and who has access to them? These are all becoming table stakes as far as I'm concerned. >> Right, right. >> The organizations continue that move into digital transformation and more regulation comes into law. So it's something that has to be taken very, very seriously. The easier you make your infrastructure, the easier it will be for you to comply with it. >> Okay, Patrick, we were talking, you talked earlier about storage optimization. We talked to Adam Worthington about the business case. You get the sort of numerator, which is the business value and then the denominator, which is the cost. And so storage efficiency is obviously a key part of it. It's part of your value proposition to pick up on your sort of earlier comments, and what's unique about Pure in this regard? >> Yeah, and I think there are, there are multiple dimensions to that. Firstly, if you look at the difference between legacy storage platforms, they used to take up racks or isles of space in a data center with flash technology that underpins flash blade, we effectively switch out racks for rack units. And it has a big play in terms of data center footprint, and the environmentals associated with the data center, but it doesn't stop at that. You know, we make sure that we efficiently store data on our platforms. We use advanced compression techniques to make sure that we make flash storage as cost competitive as we possibly can. And then if you look at extending out storage efficiencies and the benefits it brings, just the performance has a direct effect on staff, whether that's, you know, the staff and the simplicity of the platform, so that it's easy and efficient to manage, or whether it's the efficiency you get from your data scientists who are using the outcomes from the platform and making them more efficient. If you look at some of our customers in the financial space, their time to results are improved by 10 or 20 X by switching to our technology from legacy technologies for their analytics platforms. >> So guys we've been running, you know, CUBE interviews in our studios remotely for the last 120 days, it's probably the first interview I've done where I haven't started off talking about COVID, but digital transformation, you know, BC, before COVID. Yeah, it was real, but it was all of a buzzy wordy too. And now it's like a mandate. So Lester, I wonder if you could talk about smart data life cycle and how it fits into this isolation economy and hopefully what will soon be a post isolation economy? >> Yeah, COVID has dramatically accelerated the data economy. I think, you know, first and foremost, we've all learned to work at home. I, you know, we've all had that experience where, you know, there were people who would um and ah about being able to work at home just a couple of days a week. And here we are working five days a week. That's had a knock on impact to infrastructure to be able to support that. But going further than that, you know, the data economy is all about how a business can leverage their data to compete in this new world order that we are now in. So, you know, they've got to be able to drive that value from their data and if they're not prepared for it, they're going to falter. We've unfortunately seen a few companies that have faltered because they weren't prepared for this data economy. This is where all your value is driven from. So COVID has really been a forcing function to, you know, it's probably one of the few good things that have come out of COVID, is that we have been forced to adapt. And it's been an interesting journey and it continues to be so. >> Well, is that too, you know, everybody talks about business resiliency, ransomware comes into effect here, and Patrick, you, you may have some thoughts on this too, but Ezat, your thoughts on the whole work from home pivot and how it's impacting the data life cycle. >> Absolutely, like, like Lester said, you know, we've, we're seeing a huge impact here. You know, working from home has, has pretty much become the norm now. Companies have been forced into basically making it work. If you look at online retail, that's accelerated dramatically as well. Unified communications and video conferencing. So really, you know, the point here is that yes, absolutely. You know, we've compressed you know, in the past maybe four months, what probably would have taken maybe even five years, maybe 10 years or so. And so with all this digital capability, you know, when you talk about things like RPOs and RTOs, these things are, you know, very much, you know, front of mind basically and they're being taken very seriously. You know, with legacy infrastructure, you're pretty much limited with what you can do around that. But with next generation, it puts it front and center. And when it comes to, you know, to ransomware, of course, it's not a case of if it's going to happen, it's a case of when it's going to happen. Again, we've all seen lots of stuff in the press, different companies being impacted by this, you know, both private and public organizations. So it's a case of, you know, you have to think long and hard about how you're going to combat this, because actually malware also, it's becoming, it's becoming a lot more sophisticated. You know, what we're seeing now is that actually, when, when customers get impacted, the malware will sit in their environment and it will have a look around it, it won't actually do anything. And what it's actually trying to do is, it's trying to identify things like your backups, where are your backups? Because you know, what do, what do we all do? If we get hit by a situation like this, we go to our backups. But you know, the bad actors out there, they, you know, they're getting pretty smart as well. And if your legacy solution is sitting on a system that can be compromised quite easily, that's a really bad situation, you know, waiting to happen. And, you know, if you can't recover from your backups, essentially, unfortunately, you know, people are going to be making trips to the bank because you're going to have to pay to get your data back. And of course, nobody wants to see that happening. So one of the ways, for example, that we look to help customers defend against this is actually we have, we have a three pronged approach. So protect, detect, and respond. So what we mean by protect, and let me say, you know, first of all, this isn't a silver bullet, right? Security is an industry all of itself. It's very complicated. And the approach here is that you have to layer it. What Cohesity, for example, helps customers with, is around protecting that insurance policy, right? The backups. So by ensuring that that data is immutable, cannot be edited in any way, which is inherent to our file system. We make sure that nothing can affect that, but it's not just external actors you have to think about, it's also potentially internal bad actors as well. So things like being able to data lock your information so that even administrators can't change, edit or delete data, is just another way in which we help customers to protect. And then also you have things like multifactor authentication as well, but once we've okay, so we've protected the data. Now, when it comes, now it comes to detection. So again, being, you know, ingrained into data protection, we have a good view of what's happening with all of this data that's flowing around the organization. And if we start to see, for example, that backup times, or, you know, backup quantities, data quantities are suddenly spiking all of a sudden, we use things like, you know, AI machine learning to highlight these, and once we detect an anomaly such as this, we can then alert our users to this fact. And not only do we alert them and just say, look, we think something might be going on with your systems, but we'll also point them to a known good recovery point as well, so that they don't have to sit searching, well, when did this thing hit and you know, which recovery point do I have to use? And so, you know, and we use metadata to do all of these kinds of things with our global management platform called Helios. And that actually runs in the cloud as well. And so when we find this kind of stuff, we can basically recover it very, very quickly. And this comes back now to the RPOs and the RTOs. So your recovery point objective, we can shrink that, right? And essentially what that means is that you will lose less data. But more importantly, the RTO, your recovery time objective, it means that actually, should something happen and we need to recover that data, we can also shrink that dramatically. So again, when you think about other, you know, legacy technology out there, when something like this happens, you might be waiting hours, most likely days, possibly even weeks and months, depending on the severity. Whereas we're talking about being able to bring data back, you know, we're talking maybe, you know, a few hundred virtual machines in seconds and minutes. And so, you know, when you think about the value that that can give an organization, it becomes, it becomes a no brainer really, as far as, as far as I'm concerned. So, you know, that really covers how we respond to these situations. So protect, detect, and respond. >> Great, great summary. I mean, my summary is adverse, right? The adversaries are very, very capable. You got to put security practices in place. The backup Corpus becomes increasingly important. You got to have analytics to detect anomalous behavior and you got to have, you know, fast recovery. And thank you for that. We got to wrap, but so Lester, let me, let me ask you to sort of paint picture of the sort of journey or the maturity model that people have to take. You know, if they want to get into it, where do they start and where are they going? Give us that view. >> I think first it's knowing what you have. If you don't know what you have, you can't manage it, you can't control it, you can't secure it, you can't ensure it's compliant. So that's first and foremost. The second is really, you know, ensuring that you're compliant. Once you know what you have, are you securing it? Are you following the regulatory, the applicable regulations? Are you able to evidence that? How are you storing your data? Are you archiving it? Are you storing it effectively and efficiently? You know, have you, Nirvana from my perspective is really getting to a point where you've consolidated your data, you've broken down the silos and you have a virtually self service environment by which the business can consume and build upon their data. And really at the end of the day, as we said at the beginning, it's all about driving value out of your data. And the automation is key to this journey. >> That's awesome. And you just described sort of a winning data culture. Lester, Patrick, Ezat, thanks so much for participating in this power panel. >> Thank you, David. >> Thank you. >> Thank you for watching everybody. This is Dave Vellante for theCUBE. (bright music)

Published Date : Jul 16 2020

SUMMARY :

brought to you by IO Tahoe. to the power panel, I wonder if each of you could that you have and building a catalog Give us you know, your and demands to be able what are you seeing from customers, to create further silos, you know, I mean, people, you know, So, you know, finding Ezat, I mean, you know, manner and at the scale that you need to, So, you know, if you don't need it, and I want to understand how you guys enterprise to have, you know, So, you know, one of the So you have different technologies to you because you know, from the analysts, you know, And so, you know, what you can you know, upstream and downstream, So I wonder if you could or as the data moves off into, you know, And of course, Ezat, you And you know, how would you, You know, how do you deal with that? And being able to share that I mean, you know, 10 years ago, the equivalent to, you know, you know, when you're with your family, And the flexibility to that comes down to data, whether you know, IO Tahoe Yeah, Esat, anything you can add there? the message that, you know, So it's something that has to you talked earlier about whether that's, you know, So guys we've been running, you know, I think, you know, first and foremost, Well, is that too, you know, So it's a case of, you know, you know, fast recovery. And the automation is key to this journey. And you just described sort Thank you for watching everybody.

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Colin Blair & David Smith, Tech Data | HPE Discover 2020


 

>>from around the globe. It's the Cube covering HP. Discover Virtual experience Brought to you by HP. >>Welcome to the Cube's coverage of HP Discover 2020 Virtual Experience. I'm Lisa Martin, and I'm pleased to be joined by two guests from HP longtime partner Tech Data. We have calling Blair the vice president of sales and marketing of I. O. T. And Data Solutions and David Smith, H P E Pre Sales Field Solutions are common. And David, Welcome to the Cube. Thanks, Lisa. Great to see. So let's start with the calling. HP and Technical have been partners for over 40 years, but tell our audience a little bit about tech data before we get into the specifics of what you're doing and some of the cool I o. T. Stuff with HP. I >>think that the Tech data is a Fortune 100 distributor. We continued to evolved to be a solutions aggregator in these next generation technology businesses. As you've mentioned, we've been serving the I T distribution markets globally for for 40 plus years, and we're now moving into next generation technologies like Wild Analytics, I O. T and Security bubble Lifecycle Management services. But to be able todo position ourselves with our customer base and the needs of their clients have. So I'm excited to be here today to talk a little bit about what we're doing in I, O. T. And Analytics with David on the HPC side >>and in addition to the 40 plus years of partnership calling that you mentioned that Detected and HP have you've got over 200 plus hp. Resource is David, you're one of those guys in the field. Talk to us about some of the things that you're working on with Channel Partners Table David to enable them, especially during such crazy times of living and now >>absolutely, absolutely so. What we can do is we can provide strong sales and technical enablement if your team, for example, wants to better understand how to position HP portfolio if they require assistance and architect ing a secure performance i o t. Solution. We can help ensure that you're technical team is fully capable of having that conversation, and it's one that they're able to have of confidence, weaken validate the proposed HP solutions with the customers, technical requirements and proposed use case. We can even exist on a customer calls, if it would, would benefit our partner to kind of extend out to that. We also have a a a deep technical bench that Colin can speak to in the OT space toe lean on as well. For so solution is that kind of span into the space beyond where HP typically operates, which would be edge, compute computing and network. Sic security. >>Excellent call and tell me a little bit about Tech Data's investments in I o. T. When did this start? What are you guys doing today? >>Sure, we started in the cloud space. First tackle this opportunity in data center modernization and hybrid cloud. That was about seven years ago. Shortly thereafter we started investing very materially in the security cyber security space. And then we follow that with Data Analytics and then the Internet of things. Now we've been in those spaces with our long term partners for some time. But now that we're seeing this movement to the intelligent edge and a real focus on business outcomes and specialization, we've kind of tracked with the market, and we feel like we've invested a little bit ahead of where the channel is in terms of supporting our ecosystem of partners in this space. >>So the intelligent edge has been growing for quite some time. Poland in the very unique times that we're living in in 2020 how are you seeing that intelligent edge expand even more? And what are some of the pressing opportunities that tech data and HPC i O T solutions together can address? >>So a couple. So the first is a Xai mentioned earlier just data center modernization. And so, in the middle of code 19 and perhaps postcode 19 we're going to see a lot of clients that are really focused on monetizing the things that they've got. But doing so to drive business outcomes. We believe that increasingly, the predominance of use cases and compute and analytics is going to move to the edge. And HP has got a great portfolio for not just on premise high performance computing but also hybrid cloud computing. And then when we get into the edge with edge line and networking with Aruba and devices that need to be a digitized and sense arised, it's a really great partnership. And then what we're able to do also, Lisa, is we've been investing in vertical markets since 2000 and seven, and I've been a long the ride with that team, most all of that way. So we've got deep specialization and healthcare and industrial manufacturing, retail and then public sector. And then the last thing we've kind of turned on here recently just last month is a strategic partnership in the smarter cities space. So we're able to leverage a lot of those vertical market capabilities. Couple that with our HP organization and really drive specialized repeatable solutions in these vertical markets, where we believe increasingly, customers are going to be more interested in a repeatable solutions that can drive quick proof of value proof of concepts with minimal viable what kinds of products. And that's that's kind of the apartment today with RHB Organization and the HP Corporation >>David. Let's double click into some of those of vertical markets that Colin mentioned some of the things that pop into minor healthcare manufacturing. As we know, supply chains have been very challenged during covered. Give us an insight into what you're hearing from channel partners now virtually, but what are some of the things that are pressing importance? >>So from a pressing and important to Collins exact point, and your exact point as well is really it's all about the edge computing space now from a product perspective Azaz Colin had mentioned earlier. HP has their edge line converged systems, which is kind of taking the functionality of OT and edge T Excuse me of OT and I t and combine it into a single edge processing compute solution. You kind of couple that with the ability to configure components such as Tesla GP, use in specific excellent offerings to offer an aid and things like realtime, video processing and analytics. Uh, and a perfect example of this is, ah so for dissing and covert space. If if I need to be able to analyze a group of people to ensure they're staying as far apart as possible or, you know within self distant guidelines, that is where kind of the real time that's like an aspect of things can be taken advantage of same things with with the leveraging cameras where you could actually take temperature detection as as well, so it's really kind of best to think of Edge Lines Solutions is data center computing at the edge kind of transition into the Aruba space. Uh Rubio says offerings aid in the island Security is such a clear pass device inside, which allows for device discovery of network and monitoring of wired and wireless devices. There's also Aruba asset tracking and real time location of solutions, and that's particularly important in the healthcare space as well. If I have a lot of high value assets, things like wheelchairs, things like ventilation devices, where these things low located within my facilities and how can I keep keep track of them? They also, and by that I mean HP. They also kind of leveraging expanse ecosystem of partners. As an example, they leverage thing works allow their i o t solutions as well, when you kind of tying it all together with HP Point. Next to the end, customers provided with comprehensive loyalty solution. >>So, Colin, how ready? Our channel partners and the end user customers to rapidly pivot and start either deploying more technologies at the edge to be able to deliver some of the capabilities that David talked about in terms of analytics and sensors for social distancing. How ready are the channel partners and customers to be able to understand, adopt and execute this technology. >>So I think on the understanding side, I think the partners are there. We've been talking about digital transformation in the channel for a couple of years now, and I think what's happened through the 19 Pandemic is that it's been a real spotlight on the need for those business outcomes to to solve for very specific problems. And that's one of the values that we serve in the channel. So we've got a solution offering that we call our solution factory. And what we do really says is we leverage a process to look outside the industry. At Gartner, Magic Quadrant Solutions forced a Wave G two crowd. You know, top leaders, visionaries and understand What are those solutions that are in demand in these vertical markets that we talked about? And then we do a lot of work with David and his team internally in the HP organization to be able to do that and then build out that reference architectures so that we know that there's a solution that drives a bill of materials and a reference architecture that's going to work that clients are going to need and then we can do it quickly. You know, Tech data. Everything's about being bold, acting now getting scale. And we've got a large ecosystem partners that already have great relationships. So we pride ourselves on being able to identify what are those solutions that we can take to our partners that they can quickly take to their end users where you know we've We've kind of developed out what we think the 70 or 80% of that solution is going to look like. And then we drive point next and other services capabilities to be able to complete that last mile, if you will, of some of the customization. So we're helping them. For those who aren't ready, we're helping them. For those who already have very specific use cases and a practice that they drive with repeatable solutions were coming alongside them and understanding. What can we do? Using a practice builder approach, which is our consultative approach to understand where our partners are going in the market, who their clients are, what skill sets do they have? What supplier affinities do they want to drive? What brand marketing or demand generation support do they need? And that's where we can take some of these solutions, bring them to bear and engage in that consultative engagement to accelerate being ready as, as you rightly say, >>so tech. It has a lot of partners. You in general. You also have a lot of partners in the i o T space calling What? How do you from a marketing hat perspective? How do you describe the differentiation that Tech data and HP ease Iot solutions delivered to the channel to the end user? >>A couple of different things? I think that's that's differentiation. And that's one of the things that we strive for in the channel is to be specialized and to be competitively differentiated. And so the first part, I say to all of my team, Lisa, is you know, whether it's our solution consultants or our technical consultants, our solutions to the developers or the software development team that works my organization. Our goal is to be specialized in such a way that we're having relevant value added conversations not only our channel partners, but also end users of our partners want to bring us into those conversations, and many do. The next is really education and enablement as you would expect. And so there's a lot of things that are specialized in our technical. We drive education certification programs, roadshows, seminars, one of the things that we're seeing a lot of interest now. Lisa is for a digital marketing, and we're driving. Some really need offerings around digital marketing platforms that not only educate our partners but also allow our partners to bring their end users and tour some of this some of these technologies. So whether it's at our Clearwater office, where we've got an I. O T. Solution center, that we we take our partners and their clients through or we're using our facilities Teoh to do executive briefings and ideation as a service that, you know, kind of understanding the art of the possible. With both our resellers and their clients work, we're using our solution. Our solution catalogs that we've built an interactive pdf that allows our partners to understand over 50 solutions that we've got and then be able to identify. Where would they like to bring in David and his team and then my consultants to do that, that deep planning on business development, uh, that we talked about a little bit earlier. >>So the engagement right now is maybe even more important than it has been in a while because it's all hands off and virtual David. Talk to me about some of the engagement and the enablement piece that call and talked about. How are you able to really keep a channel partner and their end user customers engaged and interested in what you're able to deliver through this from New Virtual World? >>That's a great, great question. And we work in conjunction with our marketing teams to make sure that as new technologies and quite in I O. T space as well as within the HP East base as well that that our channel partners are educated and aware that these solutions exist. I know for a fact that for the majority of them you kind of get this consistent bombardment of new technology. But being able to actually have someone go out and explain it and then being able to correspondingly position it's use case and it's functionality and why it would provide value for your end customer is one of the benefits of tech data ads to kind of build upon that previous statement. The fact that We have such a huge portfolio of partners, so you kind of have HP and the edge compute space. But we have so many different partners in the OT space where it's really just a phone call, an email, a Skype message, a way to have that conversation around interoperability and then provide those responses back to our partners. >>Excellent. One more question before we go. Colin for you, A lot of partners. Why HP fry Mt. >>So a couple of reasons? One of the one of the biggest reasons as HP is just a great partner. And so when you look at evaluating I. O. T solutions that tend to be pretty comprehensive in many cases, Lisa it takes 10 or 12 partners to complete a really i o t solution and address that use case that that's in the field. And so when you have a partner like HP who's investing in these programs, investing in demand generation, investing in the spectrum of technology, whether it's hybrid Cloud Data Center, compute storage or your edge devices and Iot gateways, then to be able to contextualize those into what we call market ready solutions in each one of these vertical markets where there's references and there's use cases. And there were coupling education that specific rest of solutions. You know HP can do all of those things, and that's very important. Because in this new world, no one can go it alone anymore. It takes it takes partnerships, and we're all better together. And HP really does embrace that philosophy. And they've been a great partner for us in the Iot space. >>Excellent. Well, Colin and David, thank you so much for joining me today on the Cube Tech data. H p e i o t better together. Thank you so much. It's been a pleasure talking with you. >>Thank you. >>Thank you. Lisa. >>And four Collet and David. I am Lisa Martin. You're watching the Cube's virtual coverage of HP Discover 2020. Thanks for watching. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Published Date : Jun 23 2020

SUMMARY :

Discover Virtual experience Brought to you by HP. And David, Welcome to the Cube. But to be able todo position ourselves with our customer base and the and in addition to the 40 plus years of partnership calling that you mentioned that Detected team is fully capable of having that conversation, and it's one that they're able to have of confidence, What are you guys doing today? And then we follow that with Data Analytics and then the Internet So the intelligent edge has been growing for quite some time. And that's that's kind of the apartment today with RHB Organization that pop into minor healthcare manufacturing. You kind of couple that with the ability to configure How ready are the channel partners and customers to be able to that clients are going to need and then we can do it quickly. You also have a lot of partners in the i o T And so the first part, I say to all of my team, Lisa, is you know, So the engagement right now is maybe even more important than it has been in a while because a fact that for the majority of them you kind of get this consistent bombardment One more question before we go. And HP really does embrace that philosophy. Thank you so much. Thank you. And four Collet and David.

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Bill Smith, IBM Global Financing | IBM Think 2020


 

[Music] from the cube studios in Palo Alto in Boston it's the cube covering the IBM think brought to you by IBM welcome back to the cubes coverage of IBM think 2020 the digital version of IBM think Bill Smith is here he's the general manager of IBM Global Financing bill thanks for coming on thank you very much for having me up I'm looking forward to it yeah me too so you know I remember the days of the the glory days of IBM you know leasing I used to run the leasing program for a couple of years at IDC and it was just it was an awesome time but things have changed a lot I mean iBM has really transformed its financing army what do we need to know about today's IBM Global Financing well some things are still saying but as you said a lot is different we constantly are celebrating our 40th anniversary this year a big part of our business is now software and services financing a lot of project man Singh we still do a lot of hardware business but it's a much much smaller portion of our thirty billion dollar asset base so it's a great business it was a great business back then when you were involved in it the very profitable and and interesting business today as it was then as I said big difference though a lot of software and services yeah well I've of course I would have mentioned that most if not all mainframes are still leased but now you've expanded it to many many more areas what can you tell us about you know some of the financial metrics you know what's the profile of the business look like yeah sure it's a it's a big business it looks a lot like a bank and we're around 30 billion in asset we do business and you know 40 plus countries around the world 26% return on equity most of the portfolio's very high percentage of that portfolio is investment rate so a couple other key metrics is we we actually issue our own debt we became an SCC registrant a couple years ago we have a you know many debt holders we only have one owner and one equity owner and that's IBM it's a very good business but 2% of IBM's revenue but about 10% of IBM's from yeah well so now this is an important aspect that I want to join to it when people you know look at the IBM balance sheet they'll you know go out or whatever Yahoo Finance and say oh my gosh look at all this debt must be you know I know of course the redhead acquisition is part of that but you're carrying a lot of the debt as part of the financing operation but people need to understand it's a very profitable and very high quality debt and if we could just address that one of the big benefits to becoming an SCC registrant is the amount of transparency that we were able to provide the investors so unlike other captive financing companies they just get rolled in to different units or parts of the books you know we actually report in the segment reporting every quarter we certify just like they you know public company would we're still a wholly owned subsidiary but the level of transparency is really great for the investors which is why you know debt holders were able to Willington by our paper it's still a very client based business we do very specialized structures we only do business and NIT as I told the board many times I'd be on board many times we don't do planes trains and automobiles we only do we only do I see and and really you know 99 percent of our businesses is IBM only so you talked about branching into software and services I'm interested in how the the client base has has transformed as a result of that sure you know there's a lot of digital transformations going on there's still a lot of ERP implementations around the world very large project so we we described it as project financing so if client will come to us and say bill we'd like to match the benefit of this very large GBS or services engagement that the IBM team is leading we like to match the benefit when we have the cash outlay so we'll put a structure together that will delay the payment for when those benefits begin to come online for the enterprise and then match payment with when benefits are actually received it's proven to be a very very effective financing instrument for us but highly effective economic instruments for the clients also gives if I'm you know contracting with IBM services you've got a major incentive for the services organization to deliver value as soon as possible and that aligns everybody doesn't it it absolutely does you know we have a lot of business partners where they'll do similar structures as well so other integrators you know if the redhead acquisition and and clients moving to a hybrid cloud model sometimes there's a migration that will take place between the traditional legacy systems and when they move that cloud well that bubble of been we take Dera so will will finance that migration effort for the client and again to match their cash outlays with when they receive the benefit that I've left from that cloud migration in the day there were tons of leasing companies who would take the risk and predict the residual values and then they'd take the paper and and and then it was just an awesome business and of course the government provided some incentives to do that with the investment tax credit what about things like refurbished equipment is that's still something that you do today or is that a thing of the mainframe pass that's great yeah that's a great question you know it's a it's still a really important and a sustainable business for us we we take equipment back that comes off of a lease or sometimes alone but typically a lease and we will refurbish that or reman factor that equipment and then put it back into market oftentimes it goes into our services organization for them to use with their clients the global technology services typically you know we will we will matram a fact or a remarket about 29,000 IT devices a week 16,000 tons of idea quipment around the in a year around the world so these remanufacturing refurbishing centers so it's a even though the hardware business has come down in its percentage of IBM's business compared to software and services it's still a very very big business as you can see by the the size of the number of equipment and the tonnage what about some of the initiatives that are so you mentioned you know the digital transformation a lot going on with cloud machine intelligence I mean those big projects you know some of them are still multi-year you know seven weeks people say oh there's no more multi-year projects but digital transformations are multi-year projects even though you might take them in chunks but I'm going to capitalize those can I finance them as well what role does does IBM finance play in that you absolutely can and and that is a big big part of our business today though the the client will they look I've got a very large digital transformation project going to take place in four countries we are looking for an opportunity to match those cash outlays with when those countries come online or when we begin to receive the benefits we also want you've been and some of the software that goes with this digital transformation and we also want to spin and the IT infrastructure that's required so we may put those services software and hardware on a different financial instruments but it looks like you know one total bill for the client and it and its global it's a global footprint so we're able to handle the different currencies around the world and and again most importantly match those cash outlays with when the benefits are received so bill you know as long as I've been in this business the IT investments from a CFOs perspective have always been viewed as a higher risk granted higher reward but but you know the the CFOs would say okay you're gonna have to have a little higher IRR for this one because you know the business moves so fast technology changes so quickly how are you seeing the CIO - CFO conversation evolve what's your advice to see iPods in terms of how they talk to two CFO's that's another really good question so I was just on with actually new client this morning one was the F of the other one was a treasurer and they were asking my opinion about this financial instrument and and and getting some advice actually the conversation went look it's not really cost the debt issue the cost of money is always part of the economic decision but oftentimes those clients use financing instrument as a way to manage the asset manage the asset throughout the life the project they also want to focus on the delivery the quality of the delivery I think that takes place during these very very large project financing engagements so the CFO specifically said look I really like business case it's quite clear when we're gonna receive these benefit what I'd like to know Bill is how do you view the risk of the implementation and you know we were able to share with them the risk work that we do with with GBS team our level of confidence that it will be done on time and on budget and the skill level of the of the partner team that's been assigned so it actually has allowed us to have a different conversation with different group or senior level at the account CFO Treasury sometimes the controller you play an important role in de-risking the the business case and as well I mean I would imagine right now in there you know these on certain times that you know IBM Global Financing can provide liquidity to businesses who need it that you you know are confident you know are stable business but might need some help you know getting through this pandemic we can and as you said the what makes us a little different is you know we make credit decisions on what we call arm's length credit visions you know for a standalone albeit at the financing company so we're very very focused on maintaining the right investment grade of the portfolio we're going to make really really good prudent risk decisions you know that being said we have some fabulous IBM clients that have been clients for a long time we work very closely with them understanding their financial structures what's what's important to them and they're very transparent with us about you know with financial challenges they have so we'll continue to provide that liquidity we are going to be very prudent but we'll certainly help those really good clients well last question it's kind of where do you see this going what's your kind of vision for IBM global global finance and give us a little glimpse of the future sure you know I think you'll see us continue to migrate in the direction of the IBM company moves the IBM company is aggressively moving towards a hybrid cloud model we'll continue to provide those migration services will continue to do you know some short-term financing a part of the business we didn't talk about was the commercial financing we provide short-term working capital through IBM 6000 isness partners so to help them with their free cash flow running their businesses you know that's a pretty big business for us we'll do about you know 14 billion or so in financing to that commercial financing business so I'll see that continue as well and then finally I'm sure you'll see us continue to grow the software and services financing as well and we'll stay with the very very high anything rate for whatever is left of IBM's Hardware portfolio point you made about the partner financing is huge like you said it helps them bridge their free cash flow it makes IBM a more attractive partner for through those resellers and partners it does and we've been in that business for a very very long time oftentimes we are one of the you know largest predators for those partners so the liquidity that we provide Danville allow them to run their businesses day to day with that short term working capital is something that we're very committed to you over the long term for IBM product and services so IBM Global Financing a very important and strategic part of IBM's business a differentiator a very few companies actually can provide that type of service to their clients and so bill really appreciate you coming to the Kuban and sharing that with with our audience great to have you back yeah very much Brad you've been a real pleasure - our pleasure as well thank you for watching everybody this is Dave Volante for the cube our continuous coverage of IBM think 2020 we'll be right back right after this short break you're watching the cube [Music] you

Published Date : May 5 2020

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Andy Smith, Centrify | RSAC USA 2020


 

>>Fly from San Francisco. It's the cube covering RSA conference, 2020 San Francisco brought to you by Silicon angle media >>and welcome back. You're ready Jeffrey here with the cube. We are a day four here at the RSA conference in Moscone Thursday. We've been going all day Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday. It's a huge conference over 40,000 people, you know, kind of the first big us conference after the mobile world Congress thing with a coronavirus. So we were all kind of curious to see how it would work out. There was some companies that pulled out but you know Rohit and the team stayed the course, they got the support they needed from the city and it's turned out to be quite a show. So I'm sure there's a lot of people all over the industry kind of watching this as an indicator of how do you execute a conference and these kinds of crazy times. So we're excited for our next guest. He's Andy Smith, the senior vice president of marketing for Centrify. >>Andy, great to see you. Good to be here, Jeff. Doing great. So you said you've been coming to this show for a while, you're a seasoned veteran of the industry. First off kind of general impressions of this show versus versus other kinds of RSAs you've been doing in the past. It's super interesting to watch. It ebbs and flows of the security industry, right? I mean I've been 15 years over the past 25 I've been at this show and you've seen it be big and then shrink down, you know, to one hall and then the two halls again. I mean what's interesting the last couple of years is it's, it's big again, like security is hot. We know budgets are going up, a breach, cultures out there. And so, you know, the IC, the RSA show is a reflection of what's happening with the industry when you look at the size and number of attendees. >>Right. The other kind of theme this year was the human centric, uh, boat. And we had row head guy on just a little bit earlier in his keynote. I thought it was really interesting. It was not about security per se. It was not about threats and detection. It was really about stories and narratives and peoples and kind of taking that back as an industry. I wonder, you know, kinda your impression as this kind of human centric theme as we're surrounded by tech tech and more tech. It is, if you think about human centric, it's a, it's a big piece of your, your security strategy, right? I mean, uh, what, there was just this morning, uh, one of the sharks got fished, right? Lost $400,000. One of the, yeah. And so, uh, you know, educating people about looking out for fishing attacks, right? Uh, uh, looking at insiders who are one of our biggest threats and you know, they're, they're a huge piece of this is not technology at all. >>Right? I thought Wendy's keynote was great too from Cisco. Talking about everything we do on computers is about clicking. And yet we tell people, you know, click the download the patch, but don't click on anything else. And really, you know, kind of taken an approach that people need to be part of the solution. They're not these horrible people that keep clicking on the wrong things, but you really need to integrate them into your strategy. Yeah, absolutely. I mean, it's about educating your workforce. It's about educating consumers, right? Whether you're talking B to C security or whether you're talking to me to be that human element and educating to be diligent right to you, you got to know a little bit about how to look for something that might be suspicious and know what is, what you should be clicking on, what you shouldn't. There's, there's not a lot of technology that can solve that for you. >>It's getting out and, and, and making sure people are educated. And unfortunately, the bad guys have been working hard on their grammar and, uh, and doing all the AI on the background. So, you know, it's not, a lot of things today are not easily identifiable like they used to. They've gotten, that's no longer really kind of a baseline, a hope not to click that thing. They've gotten way better. Right? So rather than these attacks that are spray and pray, they're going after, you know, just going after anybody. They can, they're targeted now. Right? So spear fishing, right. And uh, and so specific individuals. And that's why one of the things that, that is a little bit coming up at this show and something that we talk about is identity centric security. So that you've got a tie, that kind of human element to your security. >>You know, there's network centric, but getting identity centric and tying that human element to your security aspect, making sure the security, the identity technologies and the security technologies are working together. That is brings that human element into your own security strategy. And when you, when you talk about identity, how should people be thinking about identity? Because clearly we see the kind of the rise in multi-factor now, right? We have to do, we have to go to the, our phones all the time with the code. Now we're hearing people, you know, can spoof identity, they can Smoove faces. I guess identity is not a face, but you know, some of these indicators of identity. So when you help people think about identity, what are some of the factors they should think about? What are the things they don't but they should be thinking about? Yeah, yeah. >>I mean some of the things that we talked a lot about is multifactor authentication. So although yes, right, real sophisticated people can have ways of getting around that, but most attackers and hackers are lazy, right? They're going to go for somebody who's got no multi-factor in place, like even doing the basics is way better than doing nothing. I mean, the statistics bear out that you do a little something right? And then you can always step it up and get more sophisticated where you've got tokens that you have to put your finger on, right? And you know, you can get smart cards and all those kinds of things. You can get much more sophisticated, but multi-factor in general works. I mean, you're just going to take it a far bit above. But what's interesting about identity, because we always think of humans, right? But when we talk identity, where this market is going is identity is machines. >>You have to give a machine an identity, you have to give a service account, an identity, you have to give a microservice identity. And these more and more, this is just completely automated world. This isn't humans logging into things anymore. This is microservices talking to each other. Each of those needs an identity needs an authorization cause they have accounts that can be hacked also. Right? So the you need protect those just as much as needed to protect those human accounts. It's funny cause we, we cover a lot of RPA shows, right? And the whole talk of, of of people that do RPA, right, is that they're, they're, they treat them as people, right? They treat them as kind of like your little assistance, your own little bot to do little tasks that you assigned them to do. So treating them with kind of an identity protocol. >>Then that gives all the authorizations and you kind of leverage all that back end is the way to integrate them into the workforce. Absolutely. It's all about access controls, authentication, authorization. Those are the controls that have been there forever. You're supplying these two new types of identities and you know, the, we're in the privileged access management space, so it used to always be a windows admin or a Unix Linux admin logging into a physical box, right? And so it was about protecting those accounts. But more and more it's about giving a machine and identity and a microservice and identity and how are those things talking to each other? We're protecting, that's all completely automated with dev ops. You think about if I have a, as I moved to the cloud, I want to be able to scale out dynamically, right? Uh, horizontally, vertically. So all of a sudden new servers, virtual servers or containers just popping up automatically. >>You have to be able to control the access to all those automatically, dynamically on the spot, and then they shrink back down. You need to get rid of all that, right? So the automation that's come into our space, although the same, I'm still trying to do authentication, authorization, same type of privilege access controls we've been doing for 30 years, but how they're applied in this new world is much different right now. What about then you layer you layer on top of that zero trust, so I definitely want to identify, but I have zero trust and I'm presuming at some point in time you might end up either being a bad guy or some bad guy's going to come in via your credential. How does the zero trust piece fit on top of the identity kind of management? It's really why we're talking about identity centric security now is because you can't, you, you have to assume somebody on your network. >>You can't trust all those perimeter controls that are there. The reality is they're going to get in and so that identity centric security starts at that access layer and not not trusting just because you got onto the network that, Oh, sure, here you go. You can, you can do whatever you want. That's where zero trust comes in. I don't, every time I want to get access to a piece of data or a system, et cetera, I need to do that F indication that authorization apply, that multi-factor. Those are all identity centric controls that result in this, this journey towards the zero trust world. It's, it's funny, uh, I've sat down with Mike and Caesar, uh, for scout and you know, he talks about when they do the little sniff on all the little devices that are plugged into the networks and it's usually multiples back of what people think are on the network, especially remote location. >>People are plugging stuff in. But then too, you know, like you said in the machine, identify, you know, what should a logic cam do and how should it act. And as soon as it starts acting and asking for things in accounts payable, maybe that's not necessarily what a lot to take camera wants do or should be doing. Yeah. Yeah. And so first there's like knowing what that device is giving you an identity so he know what it is, know what it should be doing. It has a role, it has specific access and authorization rights that are granted to it. So the logic camera, if I know what that camera is, you have an identity. I know what it's supposed to be doing. I should be able to restrict the access it has to just what it needs to do. Right. Rather than it's got root account to do whatever or some God account to create, you know, like those are the kinds of controls we have in place. >>And it's just logical identity management controls that have been there forever. But you're a, once you can identify those devices connected, you can, you can give them those, you know, limited. There's talk about least privilege, right? That's again, a 30 year old control, but giving at least privilege on just what it should do and nothing more. And do you see in the future just more and more kind of multifactor, uh, validation points that we'll have to get added to the, to the process as we move from single factor to factor, however many factors is going to take? For sure. Yeah. I mean, so the multi-factor, cause there's one thing are you authenticate yourself at the front door, right? So that's what most authentication is, but there's this concept of continuous authentication. You're the trust in that, uh, that initial authentication degrades as your session goes on. >>Right? So the longer I've had a session open, you know, is that still that same person or that same service that is clicking away at the keyboard there? There's cool stuff, wrong continuous authentication where there they can tell it's still the same person based on the cadence. They click on the keyboard, other biometric methods, the swiping I do on my phone and stuff like that. So there's ways to have continuous concepts now called continuous authentication. Right? And so I absolutely see that those behavior based, uh, types of, uh, of authentication. You're going out through a user's entire session. So I want to shift gears a little bit. One of the things that amazes me about this show, and I don't know when it was small, but it's been big ever since I've been coming. It's right, there's so many vendors here, there's so many companies in this and there's so many kinds of stories that a lot of really enthusiastic people work in booths that are screaming at you to come over and tell you all the great things they do. >>From a marketing point of view, you're, you're the SVP marketing. How do you, you know, kind of package your messaging, how do you kind of break through the clutter? What advice do you give to, to buyers, um, to help them kind of navigate what is a, a very large, loud and complex system? Yeah, it's a, it's a complex battle, right? So you have to be able to, because there are so many different technologies here, uh, in, in the security arena, uh, we're all fighting for the same share of wallet in a sense. Right? And so first you have to identify yourself with something people recognize a market that people recognize like identity, privilege, access management, endpoint security, you know, et cetera. But then you have to differentiate yourself within that market, right? So you've got to add something to the market space I'm in to that gives a little twist. >>So for us, it's identity centric, privilege access management and that, you know, we suppose that against Balt centric or you know, something else that we've tried to put the other bets. So you try to, in your message, you got to categorize what's the space I'm in and how do I differentiate? And in something as short and brand-able as possible. And then you got to have this kind of ongoing solutions, partnership relationship with, with your clients, right? Because this is not something you're going to be switching things out that frequently and, and, and, and the landscape and the threats evolve and change so rapidly. I think we've had a number of people come on to publish this report or that report, his report, he's come out every six months and there's actually the online version so he can keep up with what happened today or what happens tomorrow. >>So not an easy, uh, not an easy kind of marketing challenge to stay relevant, stay connected and state stay really in people's mind. Well, and you know, there's, there's awareness aspects to it and it is really just what really helps is you just create as many happy customers as you can. Right? I mean, you're amazed at the how connected this industry actually is. I mean, the attendees that are coming to this conference, they know each other. They've been coming here from here. It's just like we have. Right, right. And a word of mouth between people who have used your technology, they share that with something else. I mean the security industry as big as it is, it's, it's super interconnected. One person goes from one company to the other and so tons of business just comes from word of mouth, referral, etc. So the happier you can keep your customers, the more uh, you know, mind share. >>You can get up there. Okay. Last question before I let you go. We just like to say we just had row hit on one of the topics was they just got bought by a symphony. I think it's symphony, a private equity firm. Um, we met the other night at a, at a cocktail party put on by Tom Thoma Bravo and you were at Centrify before they came in. And after, you know, I think some people are kind of confused, you know, what is private equity, how does it impact the company? So wonder if you can kind of share, you know, how that transition has come along and you know, kind of give us an update on what's going on at Centrify and where you guys are going next. Yeah, so we were acquired about a year and a half ago now, uh, by private equity and you know, they basically, they take later stage companies and uh, help them get, uh, profitable, uh, they increased value and then they look for going, taking that company IPO or selling it off, et cetera. >>Right? But it's really about looking for opportunities, uh, in existing market with larger companies, the venture capitalists will go after smaller, much larger risks. These are bigger dollar amounts, right? Larger companies. But then they, they look about how to optimize. They're very sophisticated on how to run a B to B business. Tama Bravo happens to have a huge investment in security and it comes like eight or 10 companies there the other night. Yeah. So they, they realize that this is a hot space right now. So they've, if they can take a company and create value that they realize that there's more stuff popping up. There's probably money being invested in. And one of the things that, but not all private equities created equal. Yes, they are about all about kind of optimizing, increasing value. But what we really found with Tom or Bravo is they're interested in investing in that company, looking at other folds and acquisitions, et cetera. >>And that's a part of a strategy for me as a, as a manager and an I'm part of the executive team. When you're backed, they don't have the money to go after acquisitions. Uh, like that they, you know, they make these smaller investments. We're talking about Bravo actually does have the capital to look at other things that can be immediately accretive and add to your value. And that's a, a real part of our strategy now that didn't exist before we were owned by PE. I think they spun out a whole nother, another company out of what your technology say. Correct. Exactly. So one of the unique things about our particular acquisition is Centrify was both a privileged access management. And a identity as a service. And I Daz a company and they looked at what we were doing and they said, geez, you're really selling to two different markets and it's two different sales cycles and two different business models. >>We could actually create more value if we split these up and each of you focused on your individual markets. And so that there's a, there's an MQ and a market segment and a wave for IDASS and there's an MQ and a wave, you know, et cetera for Pam. But there's not anything that does both. And that's what Centrify was. So they actually, we, we completely divested of our IDASS capabilities spun off in an entirely separate company called adaptive. And so over the last year, that's was a lot of the work that was going on. It was, was splitting this company, uh, uh, into two. But it really provided us a much more focused to go after the market that we were going after. Well, they wouldn't come in if they didn't see some opportunity to, uh, to pull some more value out that wasn't really being unlocked. Absolutely. Right. Andy, we'll thank for taking a few minutes and uh, and great to catch up and best you for the rest of the show. Awesome. Thanks a lot, Jay. He's Andy. I'm Jeff. You're watching the cube where? At the RSA show in San Francisco. Thanks for watching. We'll see you next time.

Published Date : Feb 28 2020

SUMMARY :

RSA conference, 2020 San Francisco brought to you by Silicon It's a huge conference over 40,000 people, you know, kind of the first big us conference after the mobile And so, you know, I wonder, you know, kinda your impression as this kind of human centric theme as we're And really, you know, kind of taken an approach that people need to you know, it's not, a lot of things today are not easily identifiable like they used to. a face, but you know, some of these indicators of identity. And you know, you can get smart cards and all those kinds of things. So the you need protect those just as much as needed to protect those human Then that gives all the authorizations and you kind of leverage all that back end is the way to you have to assume somebody on your network. uh, for scout and you know, he talks about when they do the little sniff on all the little devices that So the logic camera, if I know what that camera is, you have an identity. I mean, so the multi-factor, cause there's one thing are you authenticate yourself at the front door, So the longer I've had a session open, you know, is that still that same person or that same And so first you have to identify yourself with something people recognize And then you got to have this kind of ongoing the more uh, you know, mind share. how that transition has come along and you know, kind of give us an update on what's going on at Centrify and where you guys And one of the things that, but not all private equities created equal. like that they, you know, they make these smaller investments. We could actually create more value if we split these up and each of you focused on your individual markets.

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Chris Betz & Chris Smith, CenturyLink | RSAC USA 2020


 

>>live from San Francisco. It's the queue covering our essay conference 2020 San Francisco Brought to you by Silicon Angle Media >>Hey, welcome back here. Ready? Jeff Frick here with the Cube. We're in our 2020 the biggest security conference in the country, if not the world. I guess there's got to be 50,000 people. We'll get the official word tomorrow. It's our sixth year here and we're excited to be back. I'm not sure why. It's 2020. We're supposed to know everything at this point in time with the benefit on inside. We got two people that do. You know a lot. We're excited to have him. My left is Chris Bets is the SVP and chief security officer for Centurylink. Chris, Great to see you. And to his left is Chris Smith, VP Global security Services for Centurylink. Welcome. >>Thank you for having me. >>Absolutely. You guys just flew into town >>just for the conference's great To be here is always a really exciting space with just a ton of new technology coming out. >>So let's just jump into it. What I think is the most interesting and challenging part of this particular show we go to a lot of shows you 100 shows a year. I don't know that there's one that's got kind of the breadth and depth of vendors from the really, really big the really, really small that you have here. And, you know, with the expansion of Moscone, either even packing more women underneath Howard Street, what advice do you give to people who are coming here for the first time? Especially on more than the buyer side as to how do you navigate this place >>when I when I come here and see So I'm always looking at what the new technologies are. But honestly, having a new technology is not good enough. Attackers are coming up with new attacks all the time. The big trick for me is understanding how they integrate into my other solutions. So I'm not so I'm not just focused on the technology. I'm focused on how they all fit together. And so the vendors that have solutions that fit together that really makes a difference in my book. So I'm looking for for products that are designed to work with each other, not just separate >>from a practice standpoint. The theme of IRA say this year is the human element, and for us, if you look at this floor, it's overwhelming. And if you're a CSO of an average enterprise, it's hard to figure out what you need to buy and how to build a practice with all of the emerging tools. So for us core to our practice, I think any mature, 30 security practices having a pro services capability and consulting capability that can be solved this all together, that helps you understand what to buy, what things to piece together and how to make it all work >>right. And it's funny, the human element that is the kind of the global theme. And what's funny is for all the technology it sounds like. Still, the easiest way in is through the person, whether it's a phishing attack or there's a myriad of ways that people are getting him to the human. So that's kind of a special challenge or trying to use technology to help people do a better job. At the end of the day, sometimes you're squishy ISS or easier access point is not a piece of technology, but it's actually a person. It's >>often because We asked people to do the wrong things. We're having them. Focus on security steps. Use email. Security is an easy to grasp example way all go through training every year to teach folks how to make sure that they avoid clicking on the wrong emails for us more often than a year. So the downside of that is arresting people to take a step away from their job and try to figure out how to protect themselves. And is this a bad emails that are really focusing on the job? So that's why it's so important to me to make sure that we've got solutions that help make the human better and frankly, even worse in security. We don't have the staff that we need. And so how do we help Make sure that the right tools are there, that they work together. They automate because asking everybody to take those steps, it's just it's a recipe for disaster because people are going to make mistakes >>right? Let's go a little deeper into the email thing. A friend of mines and commercial real estate, and he was describing an email that he got from his banker describing a wire transfer from one of his suppliers that he has a regular, ongoing making relationship with. You know, it's not the bad pronunciation and bad grammar and kind of the things that used to jump out is an obvious. But he said it was super good to the point where thankfully, you know, it was just this time. But, you know, he called the banker like, did you just send me this thing? So you know where this as the sophistication of the bad guys goes up specifically targeting people, how do you try to keep up with how do you give them the tools to know Woe versus being efficient? I'm trying to get my job done. >>Yeah, for me, it starts with technology. That takes a look. We've only got so many security practitioners in the company. Actually. Defend your email example. We've got to defend every user from those kinds of problems. And so how do I find technology solutions that help take the load off security practitioners so they can focus on the niche examples that really, really well crafted emails and help take that load off user? Because users just not gonna be able to handle that right? It's not fair to ask them. And like you said, it was just poorly time that helped attack. So how do we help? Make sure that we're taking that technology load off, identify the threats in advance and protect them. And so I think one of the biggest things that Chris and I talk a lot about is how to our solutions help make it easier for people to secure themselves instead of just providing only technology technology advantage, >>our strategy for the portfolio and it sort of tied to the complexity. CN This floor is simplicity. So from our perspective, our goal is a network service provider is to deliver threat free traffic to our customers even before it gets to the human being. And we've got an announcement that we launched just a week ago in advance of the show called Rapid Threat Defense. And the idea is to take our mature threat Intel practice that Chris has a team of folks focused on that. We branded black Lotus labs and Way built a machine learning practice that takes all the bad things that we see out in the network and protects customers before it gets to their people. >>So that's an interesting take. You have the benefit of seeing a lot of network traffic from a lot of customers and not just the stuff that's coming into my building. So you get a much more aggregated approach, so tell us a little bit more about that. And what is the Black Lotus Labs doing? And I'm also curious from an industry point of view, you know, it's just a collaboration with the industry cause you guys are doing a lot of traffic. There's other big network providers carrying a lot of traffic. How well do you kind of work together when you identify some nasty new things that you're doing the horizon? And where do you draw the line between better together versus still independent environment? >>When we're talking about making the Internet safer, it's not really to me a lot about competitive environment. It's really about better together. That's one of things I love about the security community. I'm sure you see it every year when you're here. You're talking security practitioners how across every industry security folks work together to accomplish something that's meaningful. So as the largest world's largest global I P we get to see a ton of traffic, and it's really, really interesting we'll be able to put together, you know, at any given point in time. We're watching many tens of thousands of probable malware networks. We're protecting our customers from that. But we're also able to ourselves take down nearly 65 now where networks every month just knock them off the Internet. So identify the command and control, and we take it off the Internet. We work with our partners. We go talk to hosting providers, maybe competitors of ours. And we say, Hey, here's a bad, bad actors bad server that's being used to control now where? Going shut it down. And so the result of that is not only protecting our customers, but more importantly, protecting tens of thousands of customers every month. By removing now where networks that were attacking, that really makes a difference. To me, that's the biggest impact we bring. And so it really is a better together. It's a collaboration story and, of course, for said, we get the benefit of that information as we're developing it as we're building it, we can protect our customers right away while we're building the confidence necessary to take something as dramatic and action as shutting down on our network. Right. Unilaterally, >>Citrix. I was gonna ask you kind of the impact of I o t. Right in this in this crazy expansion of the tax services, when you hear about all the time with my favorite example, somebody told the story of attacking a casino through the connected thermometer in the fish tank in the lobby, which may or may not be true, is still a great story. Great story. But I'm curious, you know, looking at the network, feeding versus the devices connecting that's really in an interesting way to attack this proliferation of attack services. You're getting it before it necessarily gets to all these new points of presence doing it based on the source. For >>us, that's the only way to make it scalable. It is true that automation blocking it before it gets to the azure to a device. It is what will create simplicity and value for our customers. >>Right on the other piece of the automation. Of course, that we hear about all the time is there just aren't enough security professionals, period. So if you don't have the automation. You don't have the machine learning, as you said, to filter low hanging fruit and the focus your resource. If they need to be, you're not going to do it. The bad news is the bad guys, similar tools. So as you look at kind of the increase in speed of automation, the increase in automated connectivity between these devices making decisions amongst each other, how do you see that kind of evolving? But you're kind of role and making sure you stay a step ahead of the bad guys. For >>me, it's not about just automation. It's about allowing smart people to put their brains against hard problems, hard impactful problems and so on. So simply automating is not enough. It's making sure that automation is reducing the the load on people so that they're able to focus on those hard, unique problems really solve all those solutions and, yes, Attackers, Attackers build automation as well. And so if we're not building faster and better than we're falling behind, so like every other part of this race, it's about getting better, faster and why it's so important that technology work together because we're constantly throwing out more tools and if they don't work better together, even if we got incremental automation, these place way still miss overall because it's end to end that we need to defend ourselves and our customers >>layered on what he said. For the foreseeable future, you're gonna need smart security people that help protect your practice. Our goal in automation is take the road tasks out of out of the gate. They live so they can focus on the things that provide the most value protecting their enterprise. >>Right when you're looking, you talked about making sure things work together, for you talked about making sure things work together. How do you decide what's kind of on the top of the top of the stack, where everybody wants to own the single pane of glass? Everybody wants to be the control plane. Everybody wants to be that thing that's on your computer all the time, which is how you work your day to day. How do you kind of dictate what are the top level tools while still going out? And, he said, exploring some of these really cutting edge things out around the fringe, which don't necessarily have a full stack solution that you're going to rely on but might have some cool kind of point solutions if you will, or point products to help you plug some new and emerging holes. Yeah, >>yeah. So for us, yeah, we take security capabilities and we build them into the other things that we sell. So it's not a bolt on. So when you buy things from us, whether whether it's bandwidth or whether its SD wan and security comes baked in, so it's not something you have to worry about integrating later. It's an ingredient of the things that we sell in all of the automation that we build is built into our practice, So it's simple for our customers to understand, like, simple and then layered. On top of that, we've got a couple different ways that we bring pro services and consulting to our practice. So we've got a smart group of folks that could lean into staff, augment and sit on site, do just about anything to help customers build a practice from day zero to something more mature. But now we're toying with taking those folks in building them into products and services that we sell for 10 or 20 hours a month as an ingredient. So you get that consulting wrapper on top of the portfolio that we sell as a service provider. >>Get your take on kind of budgets and how people should think about their budgets. And when I think of security, I can't help but think of like insurance because you can't spend all your money on security. But you want to spend the right amount on security. But at the end of the day, you can't be 100% secure, right? So it's kind of kind of working the margins game, and you have to make trade offs in marketing, wants their money and product development, wants their money and sales, wants their money. So what people are trying to assess kind of the risk in their investment trade offs. What are some of the things they should be thinking about to determine what is the proper investment on security? Because it can't just be, you know, locker being 100% it's not realistic, and then all the money they help people frame that. >>Usually when companies come to us in, Centurylink plays in every different segment, all the way down to, you know, five people company all the way to the biggest multinationals on the planet. So that question is, in the budget is a little bit different, depending on the type of customer, the maturity and the lens are looking at it. So, typically, way have a group of folks that we call security account managers those our consultants and we bring them in either in a dedicated or a shared way. Help companies that's us, wear their practices today in what tool sets for use again things that they need to purchase and integrate to get to where they need to be >>really kind of a needs analysis based on gaps as much as anything else. >>That's part of the reason why we try to build prisons earlier, so many of the technologies into our solution so that so that you buy, you know, SD wan from us, and you get a security story is part of it is that that allows you to use the customer to save money and really have one seamless solution that provides that secure experience. We've been building firewalls and doing network based security for going on two decades now, in different places. So at this point, that is a good place that way, understand? Well, we can apply automation against it. We can dump, tail it into existing services and then allow focused on other areas of security. So it helps. From a financial standpoint, it also helps customers understand from where they put their talent. Because, as you talked about, it's all about talents even more so than money. Yes, we need to watch our budgets. But if you buy these tools, how do you know about the talent to deploy them? And easier You could make it to do that simpler. I think the better off right >>typical way had the most success selling security practices when somebody is either under attacker compromised right, then the budget opens right up, and it's not a problem anymore. So we thought about how to solve that commercially, and I'll just use Vitas is an example. We have a big D dos global DDOS practice that's designed to protect customers that have applications out on the Internet that are business critical, and if they go down, whether it's an e commerce or a trading site losing millions of dollars a day, and some companies have the money to buy that up front and just have it as a service. And some companies don't purchase it from us until they're under attack. And the legacy telco way of deploying that service was an order and a quote. You know, some days later, we turned it up. So we've invested with Christine the whole orchestration layer to turn it up in minutes and that months so you can go to our portal. You can enter a few simple commercial terms and turn it on when you need it. >>That's interesting. I was gonna ask you kind of how has cloud kind of changed the whole go to market and the way people think about it. And even then you hear people have stuff that's secure in the cloud, but they mis configured a switch left something open. But you're saying, too it enables you to deploy in a very, very different matter based on you know, kind of business conditions and not have that old, you know, get a requisite get a p o requisition order, install config. Take on another kind of crazy stuff. Okay, so before I let you go, last question. What are your kind of priorities for this show for Centurylink when it's top of mind, Obviously, you have the report and the Black Lotus. What do you guys really prioritizing for this next week? Here for Cisco. >>We're here to help customers. We have a number of customers, a lot of learning about our solutions, and that's always my priority. And I mentioned earlier we just put out a press release for rapid threat defense. So we're here to talk about that, and I think the industry and what we're doing this little bit differently. >>I get to work with Chris Motions Week with customers, which is kind of fun. The other part that I'm really excited about, things we spent a bunch of time with partners and potential partners. We're always looking at how we bring more, better together. So one of the things that we're both focused on is making sure that we're able to provide more solutions. So the trick is finding the right partners who are ready to do a P I level integration. The other things that Chris was talking about that really make this a seamless and experience, and I think we've got a set of them that are really, really interested in that. And so those conversations this week will be exceptionally well, I think that's gonna help build better technology for our customers even six months. >>Alright, great. Well, thanks for kicking off your week with the Cube and have a terrific week. Alright. He's Chris. He's Chris. I'm Jeff. You're watching the Cube. Where? The RSA Conference in downtown San Francisco. Thanks for watching. See you next time. >>Yeah, yeah.

Published Date : Feb 26 2020

SUMMARY :

our essay conference 2020 San Francisco Brought to you by Silicon We're in our 2020 the biggest security You guys just flew into town just for the conference's great To be here is always a really exciting space with just a ton of new technology Especially on more than the buyer side as to how do you navigate this place So I'm not so I'm not just focused on the technology. an average enterprise, it's hard to figure out what you need to buy and how to build And it's funny, the human element that is the kind of the global theme. So the downside of that is arresting people to take So you know where this as the sophistication of the bad guys goes up specifically And so I think one of the biggest things that Chris and I talk a lot about is how to our solutions And the idea is to take our mature threat Intel practice that Chris has a team of folks And I'm also curious from an industry point of view, you know, it's just a collaboration with the industry cause you So identify the command and control, and we take it off the Internet. I was gonna ask you kind of the impact of I o t. Right in this in this crazy expansion of the the azure to a device. You don't have the machine learning, as you said, to filter low hanging fruit and the focus the the load on people so that they're able to focus on those hard, take the road tasks out of out of the gate. cool kind of point solutions if you will, or point products to help you plug some new It's an ingredient of the things that we sell in all of the automation that we build is built into But at the end of the day, you can't be 100% secure, all the way down to, you know, five people company all the way to the biggest multinationals on the planet. into our solution so that so that you buy, you know, and some companies have the money to buy that up front and just have it as a service. I was gonna ask you kind of how has cloud kind of changed the whole go And I mentioned earlier we just put out a press release So one of the things that we're both focused on is making sure that we're able to See you next time.

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Patrick Smith, Pure Storage & Eric Greffier, Cisco | Cisco Live EU Barcelona 2020


 

>> Announcer: Live from Barcelona, Spain, it's theCUBE! Covering Cisco Live 2020. Brought to you by Cisco and its ecosystem partners. >> Welcome back, this is theCUBE's live coverage of Cisco Live 2020, here in Barcelona. Our third year of the show, over 17,000 in attendance between the Cisco people, their large partner ecosystem, and the customers, I'm Stu Miniman, my cohost for this segment is Dave Vellante. John Furrier's scouring the show for all of the news at the event, and joining us, we have two first time guests on the program, first, sitting to my left is Patrick Smith, who is the field CTO for EMEA with Pure Storage. Sitting to his left is Eric Greffier, who is the managing director of EMEAR specialists with Cisco, so you have a slightly larger region than Patrick does, gentlemen, thanks so much for joining us. >> Patrick: Great to be here. >> All right, so, we know this show, we were talking that broad ecosystem, and of course Cisco in the data center group has very strong storage partnerships, highlighted by their converged infrastructure stacks. I wrote my research many many years ago, Cisco's brilliant job was when they entered the server market, they made sure that that fragmented storage ecosystem, they made partnerships across the board. And of course, when Pure's ascendancy with the flash era made the stack, so helping to paint those data centers orange with your Cisco partnership, so Patrick, give us the update here, 2020, what's interesting and important to know about Pure Storage and Cisco customer base? >> You know, we continue to see significant adoption of FlashStack, our converged infrastructure with Cisco. Driving just great interest and great growth, both for Pure and for Cisco with the UCS platform, and the value that the customers see in FlashStack, bringing together storage, networking and compute together with overall automation of the stack, and that really gives customers fantastic time to value. And that's what they're looking for in this day and age. >> All right, and Eric, what differentiates the partnership with Pure, versus, as you said, you do work with many of the storage companies out there. >> Well, we had a baby together, it was called FlashStack, and it was couple of years ago now, and as you said, I think the key element for us is really to have those CVDs, those Cisco Validated Designs together, and FlashStack was a great addition to our existing partnership at that time, talking about a couple of years ago. And of course, with the flash technology of Pure, we've seen the demand that we'd say going and going, and it has been amazing, amazing trajectory together. >> But talk a little bit more about the CVDs, the different use cases that you're seeing. You don't have to go through all 20, but maybe pick a couple of your favorite children. >> Well, just to make sure that people understand what CVD means, it's Cisco Validated Design, and this is kind of an outcome in the form of a document, which is available for customers and partners, which is the outcome of the partnership from R&D to R&D, which is just telling customers and partners what they need to order and have in it to fit all of this together for a specific business outcome. And the reason why we have multiple CVDs, is we have one CVD per use case. So the more use cases we have together, the more the CVD's precise, and you just have to follow the CVD design principles. Of course, the later swarms, and maybe Patrick can say a word, but we've been of course doing things regarding analytics and AI, because this is a big demand right now, so maybe Patrick, you want to say a word on this. >> Yeah, you guys were first with the AI and bringing AI and storage together with your partnership with Nvidia, so maybe double down on that. >> The FlashBlade was our move into building a storage platform for AI and model analytics, and we've seen tremendous success with that in lots of different verticals. And so with Cisco we launched FlashStack for AI, which brings together FlashBlade networking, and Cisco's fantastic compute platform with capability for considerable scale of Nvidia GPUs. So an in-a-box capability to really deliver fast time to market solutions for the growing world of analytics and modern AI, people want quick insight into the vast amounts of data we have, and so FlashStack for AI is really important for us being able to deliver as part of the Cisco ecosystem, and provide customers with a platform for success. >> What's happening with modernization, generally, but specifically in Europe, obviously Cisco, long history in Europe, Pure, you've got a presence here, good presence, but obviously much newer. Larger proportion, far larger proportion is in North America, so it's a real opportunity for you guys. What are you seeing in terms of modernization of infrastructure, and apps in the European community? >> Modernization I think is particularly important, and it's more and more seen under the guise of digital transformation, because investing in infrastructure just doesn't get the credit that sometimes it deserves. But the big push there is really all around simpler infrastructure, easier management, and the push for automation. Organizations don't want to have large infrastructure support teams who are either installing or managing in a heavy touch way, their environments, and so the push towards automation, not just at the infrastructure layer, but all the way up the stack, is really key. And you know, we were talking earlier, behind us we have the DevNet sessions here, all about how customers of Cisco and by correlation Pure, can really optimize the management to their environment, use technology like Intersight, like Ansible and others, to really minimize the overhead of managing technology, deliver services faster to customers and be more agile, in this always-on world that we live in, there's no time to really add a human to the cycle of managing infrastructure. >> I think we've been very proud over the years because this notion of converged infrastructure, which was, the promise was to simplify and modernize the data centers, before it was like, "Everything needs to get connected to anything," and coming was this notion of a pod, everything converged, "We've done the job for you, mister customer, "just think about adding some pod." This has been the promise for the last 10 years, and we've been very proud, almost to have created this market, but it wouldn't have been possible without the partnership with the storage players, and with Pure, we've been one step further in terms of simplifying things for customers. >> I love the extension you're talking about, because absolutely converged infrastructure was supposed to deliver on that simplicity, and it was, let's think of the entire rack as a unit of how we manage it, but with today's applications, with the speed of change happening in the environment, we've gone beyond human speed, and so therefore if we don't have the automation that you were talking about, we can't keep up with what the business needs to be able to do there. >> Yeah, that's what it's all about, it's the rapid rate of change. Whether it's business services, whether it's supporting developers in the developer environment, more and more our customers are becoming software development organizations, their developers are a key resource, and making them as efficient as possible is really important, so being able to quickly spin up development environments, new environments for developers, using snapshot technology, giving them the latest sets of data to test their applications on, is really central to enabling and empowering the developer. >> You know, you talk about Cisco's play and kind of creation of the converged infrastructure, Mark, and I think that's fair, by the way. Others may claim it, but I think the mantle goes to you. But there were two friction points, or headwinds, that we pointed out early in the day, the first was organizational, the servers team, the storage team, the network team didn't speak together, then the practitioner told us one day, "Look, you want to solve that problem, "put it in and watch what happens." 'Cause if you try to figure out the organization you'll never get there, and that sort of took care of itself. The other was the channel. The channel likes things separate, they can add value, they have this sort of box selling mentality, so I wonder if you could update us on what the mindset is in the channel, and how that's evolved. >> Yeah, it's a great question. I think the channel actually really likes the simplicity of a converged infrastructure to sell, it's a very simple message, and it really empowers the channel to take, to your point about organization, they have the full stack, all in one sellable item, and so they don't have to fight for the different components, it's one consistent unit that they sell as a whole, and so I think it simplifies the channel, and actually, we find that customers are actively seeking out, it's shown by our growth with FlashStack that customers are actually seeking out the channel partners who are selling FlashStack. >> Yeah, and do you think the channel realizes, "Wow, we really do have to go up the stack, "add more value, do things like partner with"? >> Well for most of the partners, they were heavily specialized on storage or compute or network, so for most of them, supporting the converged infrastructure was to be able to put a foot into another market, which was an expansion for them, which was part number one. Part number two, maybe the things that we've been missing, because since the beginning we had APIs around all those platforms. I don't believe in the early days, I'm talking about five years from now, that they got, that they could really really build something upon the converged infrastructure. Now, if you go through the DevNet area here at Cisco Live, you will see that I think this is the time now for them to understand, and really build new services on top of it, so I believe the value for the channel is pretty obvious now, more than ever. >> Well yeah, it's a great point, you don't usually hear converged infrastructure and infrastructure as code in the same conversation, but the maturation of the platforms underneath are bringing things together. >> They really are, in the same way that IT organizations are freeing up more time to focus up the stack on automation and added value, the same is true of the partners. It's interesting the corollary between the two. >> So I have a question on your act two, so what got us here the last 10 years, both firms were disruptors. Cisco came in and disrupted the compute space, it was misunderstood, "Cisco getting into servers, "that'll never work!" "Well, really not getting into servers, "we're changing the game." "Ah, okay," 10 years later. Pure, all-flash, really created some havoc in the industry, injected a ton of flash into the data center, practically drove a truck through the legacy business. Okay, so very successful. What's act two for you guys, what do you envision, disruptors, are you more incrementalists, I'd love to hear your thoughts on that. >> I start, Patrick. Probably for us, phase two is what you heard yesterday morning, I think Liz Anthony did a great speech regarding Cisco Intersight Workload Optimizer, sorry for the name, this is a bit long, but what it means is now we truly connect the infrastructure to the application performance, and the fact that we can place and discuss about converged infrastructure but in the context of what truly matters for customers, which is application, this is the first time ever you're going to see such amount of R&D put into bringing the two worlds together. So this is just the beginning, but I think this was probably for me yesterday one of the most important announcement ever. And by the way, Pure is coming with this announcement, so if you as a customer buy Cisco Intersight Workload Optimizer, you'll get everything you need to know about Pure and if you have to move things around the storage area, you know the tool will be doing it for you. So we are really the two of us in this announcement, so Patrick, if you want to? >> No, I mean as Eric mentioned, Intersight's important for Cisco, it's important for us, we're very proud to be early integrators as a third party into Intersight to allow that simple management, but you know, as you talk about the future, we were viewed as disruptors when we first came to market with flash array, and we consider still ourselves to be disruptors and innovators, and the amount of our revenue that we invest in innovation, in what is a really focused product portfolio, I think is showing benefits, and you've seen the announcements over the last six months or so with FlashArray//C, bringing all the benefits of flash to tier two applications, and just the interest that that has generated is huge. In the world of networking with NVMe, we have a fabric in RoCEv2, just increasing the performance for business applications that will have fantastic implications for things like SAP, time and performance-critical databases, and then what we announced with direct memory with adding SCM as a read cache onto flash array as well. Really giving customers investment protection for what they bought from us already, because they can, as you well know, Evergreen gives customers an asset that continues to appreciate in value, which is completely the opposite. >> And you're both sort of embracing that service consumption model, I mean Cisco's becoming a very large proportion of your business, you guys have announced some actual straight cloud plays, you've built an aray inside of AWS, which is pretty innovative, so. >> Yes, and as well as the cloud play with Cloud Block Store in AWS, there's Pure as a service, which takes that cloud-like consumption model and allows a customer to run it in their own data center without owning the assets, and that's really interesting, because customers have got used to the cloud-like consumption model, and paying as an OpEx rather than CapEx, and so bringing that into their own facility, and only paying for the data you have written, really does change the game in terms of how they consume and think about their storage environments. >> Patrick, we'd just love to get your viewpoint, you've been talking to a lot of customers this week, you said you've been checking out the DevNet zone, for people that didn't make it to the show here, what have they been missing, what would their peers be telling them in the hallway conversations? >> There's a huge amount as we've been talking about, there's a huge amount on automation, and actually we see it as we go into customers, the number of people we're now talking to who are developers but not developers developing business applications but developers developing code for managing infrastructure is key, and you see it all around the DevNet zone. And then, the focus on containers, I've been talking about it for a long time, and containers is so important for enterprises going forward. We have a great play in that space, and I think as we roll forward, the next three to five years, containers is just going to be the important technology that will be prevalent across enterprises large and small. >> Dave: Yeah, we agree. >> Eric and Patrick, thank you so much for giving us the update, congratulations on all the progress and definitely look forward to keeping an eye on your progress. >> Thanks very much. >> All right, Dave Vellante and I will be back with much more here from Cisco Live 2020 in Barcelona, thanks for watching theCUBE. (techno music)

Published Date : Jan 29 2020

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by Cisco and its ecosystem partners. and the customers, I'm Stu Miniman, and of course Cisco in the data center group and the value that the customers see in FlashStack, with Pure, versus, as you said, and as you said, I think the key element for us the different use cases that you're seeing. the more the CVD's precise, and you just have to follow and bringing AI and storage together and we've seen tremendous success with that and apps in the European community? and so the push towards automation, the data centers, before it was like, the automation that you were talking about, in the developer environment, and kind of creation of the converged infrastructure, the channel to take, to your point about organization, because since the beginning we had APIs and infrastructure as code in the same conversation, They really are, in the same way Cisco came in and disrupted the compute space, and the fact that we can place and discuss and just the interest that that has generated is huge. you guys have announced some actual straight cloud plays, and only paying for the data you have written, the next three to five years, Eric and Patrick, thank you so much with much more here from Cisco Live 2020 in Barcelona,

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Michael Segal, NETSCOUT Systems & Eric Smith, NETSCOUT Systems | CUBEConversation, January 2020


 

(upbeat music) >> Narrator: From our studios, in the heart of Silicon Valley, Palo Alto, California. This is a CUBE Conversation. >> Hello and welcome to theCUBE studios, in Palo Alto California, for another CUBE Conversation, where we go in-depth with thought leaders driving innovation across the tech industry. I'm your host, Peter Burris. Anybody that's read any Wikibon research or been a part of any conversation with anybody here at SiliconANGLE, knows we're big believers in the notion of digital business, and digital business transformation. Simply put, the difference between a business and a digital business is the role that data plays in a digital business. Digital businesses use data to change their value propositions, better manage and get greater visibility and utilization out of their assets, and ultimately drive new types of customer experience. That places an enormous burden on the technologies, the digital technologies that have historically been associated with IT, but now are becoming more deeply embedded within the business. And that digital business transformation is catalyzing a whole derivative set of other transformations. Including for example, technology, data centers, security, et cetera. It's a big topic, and to start to parse it and make some sense of it, we're joined by two great guests today- Michael Segal is the area vice-president of strategic alliances at NETSCOUT Systems, and Eric Smith is the senior product line manager of NETSCOUT Systems. Gentlemen, welcome to theCUBE. >> Pleasure to be here, Peter. >> Okay, so, Michael let's get going on. Give us a quick update on NETSCOUT Systems. >> Yeah, so maybe just a quick introduction of what NETSCOUT actually does. So, NETSCOUT assures service performance and security for the largest enterprises and service providers in the world. And the way we accomplish it is through what we refer to as offering visibility without borders. Now, this visibility without borders provides actionable intelligence that enables, very quickly and efficiently to enterprises and service providers, ensure their service performance and security, understand, discover problems, root cause, and solution. So it overall reduces their mean time to repair, and it's being used to assure that digital transformation and other transformation initiatives are executed effectively by the IT organization. >> All right, so let's jump in to this notion of transformation. Now, I know that you and I have spent, on a couple different occasions, talked about the idea of digital business transformation. What does digital business transformation mean to NETSCOUT, and some of the other derivative transformations that are associated with it? >> Right, so as you described very very concisely in your introduction, the business transformation is about enabling the business through digital services and data to differentiate itself from competition very very effectively. Now, one of the aspects of this digital transformation is that now more than ever before, the CIOs are taking a very active role in this transformation because obviously, information technology is responsible for digital services and processing and analyzing data. So with that in mind, the CIOs now need to support the business aspects of agility, right? So if your business agility involves introducing new services very quickly and efficiently, the IT organization needs to support that, and at the same time, they also need to assure that the employee productivity and end user experience is maintained at the highest levels possible. So this is exactly where NETSCOUT comes in, and we support the IT organization by providing this visibility without borders, to assure that employee productivity and end user experience is maintained and any issues are resolved very quickly and efficiently. >> Especially customer experience, and that's increasingly the most important, end users that any digital business has to deal with. At this point in time Eric, I want to bring you in to the conversation. When we talk about this notion of greater visibility, greater security, over digital assets, and the role that the CIO is playing, that also suggests that there is a new class of roles for architects, for people who have historically been associated more with running the networks, running the systems, how is their role changing, and how is that part of the whole concept of data centered transformation? >> Right, so, the guys that have typically been in what you might consider network operations types of roles, their roles are evolving as well, as the entire organization does. So as Michael mentioned beforehand, no longer is the digital business wholly and solely confined to an IT department that is working just with their employees. They're now part of the business. They're not just the cost center anymore, they're actually an asset to the business. And they are supporting lines of business. So the folks that have traditionally had these roles have just maintained the network, maintained the applications, are having to become experts in other aspects. So as certain applications disaggregate, or potentially move out partially into the cloud, they kind of become cloud architects as well, whether it's a public cloud or a private cloud, they have to understand those relationships and they have to understand what happens when you spread your network out beyond your traditional data center core. >> So let's build on that, because that suggests that the ultimate solution for how we move forward has to accommodate greater visibility, end-to-end, across resources, not only that we have traditionally controlled, and therefore could decide how much visibility we had, if the tooling was right, but also resources that are outside of our direct purview. How does that work as we think about building this end to end visibility to improve the overall productivity and capability, as you said, the productivity and end user experience, of the systems we're deploying? >> Yeah, so maybe we can start with the end in mind, and what I mean by that is what you just described as end user productivity and user experience, so how do we measure it, right? So in order to measure it, what we need to look is the visibility at the service level. And what I mean by visibility at the service level is actually looking, not just at once specific component that is associated with the servers such as application, it's one component, however application is running on a network, you have service enablers, for example to authenticate, to do accounting, to do DNS resolution, so you need to look at all of these components of a service and be able to effectively provide visibility across all of them. Now, the other aspect of this visibility, as you mentioned, end-to-end, which is an excellent observation as well, because you're looking at the data center, which is still very strategic assets, your crown jewels are still going to be in the data center, some of the data will remain there, but now you are expanding to the edge, maybe colos, maybe microdata centers in the colos, then you move workloads, migrate them to public clouds, it can be IaaS, you have more SaaS providers that provide you with different services. So this aspect of end-to-end really evolves into geographically dispersed, very complex and highly scalable architecture. >> Yeah, we like to say that the cloud is not an architecture, not a strategy, for centralizing resources. Rather, it's a strategy for greater distributing resources, allowing data to be where it needs to be to perform the function, or where it gets captured, allowing the service to be able to go to the data, to be able to perform the work that needs to be conducted from a digital business standpoint. That suggests that even though a customer, let's call it the end user, and the end user experience, may get a richer set of capabilities, but the way by which that work is being performed gets increasingly complex, and partly, it sounds like, that it's complexity that has to be administered and monitored so that you don't increase the time required to understand the nature of a problem, understand the nature of the fix. Have I got that right? >> You got it absolutely right, and I would add to this that the complexity that you described is being further magnified by the fact that you lose control to some extent, as you mentioned before, right? >> Or because, let's put it this way, it becomes a contracting challenge as opposed to a command and control challenge. Now the CIO can't tell Mike, "Go fix it", the CIO has to get on the phone with a public cloud provider and say, our service level says, and that's a different type of interaction. >> Right, and usually the service provider would say, the problem is not on my side, it's on your side, so the traditional finger pointing in war rooms now, is being expanded across multiple service providers, and you need to be able to very effectively and quickly identify this is the root cause, this is why it's your fault, service provider, it's not our fault, please go and fix it. >> So let's dig into that if we can, Eric, this notion of having greater visibility so that you are in a better position to actually identify the characteristics of the problem, and where the responsibilities lie. How is that working? >> So, in the past, or when the digital transformation started it's initial rise, it wasn't. And what was happening is, as you both have alluded to a moment ago, I can no longer call Mike and Suzie downstairs, and say you know, voicemail is not working, things are just, not working. Well, you can go sic them on it and they go fix it. What's happening now is that data is leaving your data center, it may be going through something like a colo, which is aggregating the data, and then sending it on to your partner, that is providing these services. So what you have to have is a way to regain that visibility into those last mile segments, if you will, so that as you work with your partners, whether it's the colo or the in-software provider, that you can say look, I can see things from here, I can see things to there, and here's where it goes south, and this is the problem, help me fix it. And so, as you said a moment ago, you cannot let your mean time to resolution expand simply because you're engaging in these digital transformation activities. You need to remain at least as good as you did before, and hopefully better. >> Well, you have to be better, because your business is becoming more dependent on your digital business capabilities, increasingly it's becoming your business. So let me again dig a little more deeper technically into that. A lot of companies are attempting to essentially provide a summary view of that data, that's moving around a network, moving across these different centers and locations, edge, colo, et cetera, what is the right way to do it? What constitutes real truth when we talk about how these systems are going to work? >> So NETSCOUT believes, and I think most people wouldn't argue with us, that when you can actually see the packet data that goes across the network, you know what elements are talking to which ones, and you can see that, and you can build metrics, and you can build views upon that, that is very high fidelity data, and you absolutely know what's going on. We like to call it the single source of truth. So as things come from the deep part of the data center, whether it's a virtualized server farm, all the way through this core of the network, and your service enablers like Michael mentioned, all the through the colos, and out into an IAS or SaaS type of environment, if you're seeing what's actually being on the wire, and who's talking to whom, you know what's going on, and you can quickly triage and identify what the problem is so that you can solve it. >> Now is that something that increasingly architects or administrators are exploiting as they use these new classes of tools to gain that visibility into how the different services are working together? And also, is that becoming a feature of how SLAs and contracts are being written, so that we can short circuit the finger pointing with our service providers? >> Yeah, so there's kind of like you said, two parts that, the first is I think, a lot of the traditional IT operations folks, as you mentioned earlier, are learning new roles, so to some degree, it is new for them, and I don't know that everybody has started to make use of those tools yet, but that's part of what our story is to them, is that we can provide those tools for you, so that you can continue to isolate and solve these problems. And I'm sorry, what was the second part of your question? >> Well, the second part is, how does that translate into contracting? Does that knowledge about where things actually work inform a contracting process to reduce the amount of finger pointing, which by the way, is a major transaction cost and a major barrier to getting things done quickly. >> Absolutely, and so you since you have this high fidelity data at every step of the way, and you can see what's happening, you can prove to your partners where the problem lies. If I find it on my side of it, okay, no harm no foul, I'll go fix it and move on with my life. But with that data, with that high fidelity data, and being able to see all the transactions and all the applications, and all the communications that happens end-to-end, through the network between me and my partner, I can show them that they are outside of their SLA. And to your point, it should shorten the time between the finger pointing, because I have good data that says, this is the problem. You can't dispute that. And so, they're much more inclined to work with you in a hopefully, very good way, to fix the problem. >> So that brings us back to the CIO. And I want to close with you on this, Michael. That's got to make a CIO happier, who is today facing a lot of business change, and is trying to provide a lot, you said agility, I'll use the word an increasing array of business and strategy options based on digital technology. Ensuring that they have greater certainty in the nature of the services, the provider of the services, and in the service levels of the services, has got to be an essential feature of their decision making toolkit as they provide business with different ranges of options, right? >> Absolutely correct. In fact, the high fidelity data is so critical in order to accomplish this, right, so in order for the CIO to be able to demonstrate to the CEO and other key executives that his objectives are met, the KPIs for that are along the lines of your efficiency, your service delivery capabilities, and being able to monitor everything in real time. So, the high fidelity data, I just want to elaborate a little bit more on what it means, because that's the difference between having these key performance indicators that are relevant for the CIO, and relevant also for other key stakeholders, and having something that is best guess, and maybe it's going to help. So high fidelity data, the way that NETSCOUT defines it, has several components. First of all, because it's based on traffic, or packet data, or wire data, it means that we continuously monitor the data, continuously analyze it, and it's the single source of truth because there's consistency in terms of what data is being exchanged. So the more visibility you get into the data that's being exchanged between different workloads, the more intelligence you can glean from it. The other aspect is that it's really, we mentioned, the service level, and if you think of packet data, it's all layers two through seven, so you have the data link layer, you have the network, you have the transport, you have the session, you have application, you can holistically identify any application, and provide you with error codes and in context, say you know the log and latency and error codes give you the overall picture. So this all together constitutes very high fidelity data. And at the end of the day, if the CIO wants to accelerate the digital transformation with confidence, this is the kind of high fidelity data that you need in order to assure that your key performance indicators, as CIO, are being maintained. >> This is the as is truth. >> Exactly. >> All right, Michael Segal, Eric Smith, I want to thank you both for being on theCUBE. >> Thank you for having me. >> Thank you very much Peter, for having us. >> And thanks for joining us for another CUBE Conversation. I'm Peter Burris, see you next time. (upbeat music)

Published Date : Jan 16 2020

SUMMARY :

in the heart of Silicon Valley, Palo Alto, California. and a digital business is the role that data plays Okay, so, Michael let's get going on. and service providers in the world. and some of the other derivative transformations and at the same time, they also need to assure that and how is that part of the whole concept and they have to understand what happens the overall productivity and capability, as you said, and what I mean by that is what you just described administered and monitored so that you don't the CIO has to get on the phone with a public cloud provider and you need to be able to very effectively and quickly the characteristics of the problem, so that as you work with your partners, Well, you have to be better, and you can see that, and you can build metrics, so that you can continue to isolate and a major barrier to getting things done quickly. and all the communications that happens end-to-end, and in the service levels of the services, So the more visibility you get into the data I want to thank you both for being on theCUBE. Thank you very much Peter, I'm Peter Burris, see you next time.

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Beth Smith, IBM Watson | IBM Data and AI Forum


 

>> Narrator: Live from Miami, Florida. It's theCUBE. Covering IBM's data and AI forum. Brought to you by IBM. >> Welcome back to the port of Miami everybody. This is theCube, the leader in live tech coverage. We're here covering the IBM AI and data forum. Of course, the centerpiece of IBM's AI platform is Watson. Beth Smith is here, she's the GM of IBM Watson. Beth, good to see you again. >> You too. Always good to be with theCUBE. >> So, awesome. Love it. So give us the update on Watson. You know, it's beyond Jeopardy. >> Yeah, yeah. >> Oh, wow. >> That was a long time ago now. (laughs) >> Right, but that's what a lot of people think of, when they think of Watson. What, how should we think about Watson today? >> So first of all, focus Watson on being ready for business. And then, a lot of people ask me, "So what is it?" And I often describe it as a set of tools, to help you do your own AI and ML. A set of applications that are AI applications. Where we have prebuilt it for you, around a use case. And there is examples where it gets embedded in a different application or system that may have existed already. In all of those cases, Watson is here, tuned to business enterprise, how to help people operational-wise, AI. So they can get the full benefit, because at the end of the day it's about those business outcomes. >> Okay, so the tools are for the super geeks, (Beth laughs) who actually want to go in and build the real AI. >> (laughs) That's right, that's right. >> The APPS are, okay. It's prebuilt, right? Go ahead and apply it. >> That's right. >> And the embedded is, we don't even know we're using it, right? >> That's right, or you may. Like, QRadar with Watson has an example of using Watson inside of it. Or, OpenPages with Watson. So sometimes you know you're using it. Sometimes you don't. >> So, how's the mix? I mean, in terms of the adoption of Watson? Are there enough like, super techies out there, who are absorbing this stuff? Or is it mostly packaged APPS? Is it a mix? >> So it is a mix, but we know that data science skills are limited. I mean, they're coveted, right? And so those are the geeks, as you say, that are using the tool chain as a part of it. And we see that in a lot of customers and a lot of industries around the world. And then from a packaged APP standpoint, the biggest use case of adoption is really around customer care, customer service, customer engagement. That kind of thing. And we see that as well. All around the world, all different industries. Lots of great adoption. Watson Assistant is our flagship in that. >> So, in terms of, if you think about these digital initiatives, we talked about digital transformation, >> Yup. >> Last few years, we kind of started in 2016 in earnest, it's real when you talk to customers. And there was a ton of experimentation going on. It was almost like spaghetti. Throw against the wall and see what sticks. Are you seeing people starting to place their bets on AI, Narrowing their scope, and really driving you know, specific business value now? >> Beth: Yeah. >> Or is it still kind of all over the place? >> Well, there's a lot of studies that says about 51% or so still stuck in experimentation. But I would tell you in most of those cases even, they have a nice pilot that's in production, that's doing a part of the business. So, 'cause people understand while they may be interested in the sexiness of the technology, they really want to be able to get the business outcomes. So yes, I would tell 'ya that things have kind of been guided, focused towards the use cases and patterns that are the most common. You know, and we see that. Like I mentioned, customer care. We see it in, how do you help knowledge workers? So you think of all those business documents, and papers and everything that exists. How do you assist those knowledge workers? Whether or not it's an attorney or an engineer, or a mortgage loan advisor. So you see that kind of use case, and then you see customers that are building their own. Focused in on, you know, how do they optimize or automate, or predict something in a particular line of business? >> So you mentioned Watson Assistant. So tell us more about Watson Assistant, and how has that affected adoption? >> So Watson Assistant as I said, it is our flagship around customer care. And just to give you a little bit of a data point, Watson Assistant now, through our public cloud, SaaS version, converses with 82 million end users a month. So it's great adoption. And this is, this is enabling customers. Customers of our customers, to be able to get self-service help in what they're doing. And Watson Assistant, you know, a lot of people want to talk about it being a chat bot. And you can do simple chat bots with it. But it's to sophisticated assistance as well. 'Cause it shows up to do work. It's there to do a task. It's to help you deal with your bank account, or whatever it is you're trying to do, and whatever company you're interacting with. >> So chat bots is kind of a, (laughs) bit of a pejorative. But you're talking about digital systems, it's like a super chat bot, right? >> Beth: Yeah. I saw a stat the other day that there's going to be, by I don't know, 2025, whatever. There's going to be more money spent on chat bot development, or digital assistance, than there is on mobile development. And I don't know if that's true or not, >> Beth: Mhm, wow. But it's kind of an interesting thing. So what are you seeing there? I mean, again I think chat bots, people think, oh, I got to talk into a bot. But a lot of times you don't know you're, >> Beth: That's right. >> so they're getting, they're getting better. I liken it to fraud detection. You know, 10 years ago fraud detection was like, six months later you'll, >> Right. >> you'll get a call. >> Exactly. >> And so chat bots are just going to get better and better and better, and now there's this super category that maybe we can define here. >> That's right. >> What is that all about? >> That's right. And actually I would tell you, they kind of, they can become the brain behind something that's happening. So just earlier today I was, I was with a customer and talking about their email CRM system, and Watson Assistant is behind that. So chat bots aren't just about what you may see in a little window. They're really about understanding user intent, guiding the user through what they're trying to either find out or do, and taking the action as a part of it. And that's why we talk about it being more than chat bots. 'Cause it's more than a FAQ interchange. >> Yes, okay. So it's software, >> Beth: Yes. >> that actually does, performs tasks. >> Beth: Yes. >> Probably could call other software, >> Beth: Absolutely. >> to actually take action. >> That's right. >> I mean, I see. We think of this as systems of agency, actually. Making, sort of, >> That's right. >> decisions and then I guess, the third piece of that is, having some kind of human interaction, where appropriate, right? >> That's right. >> What do you see in terms of, you know, infusing humans into the equation? >> So, well a couple of things. So one of the things that Watson Assistant will do, is if it realizes that it's not the expert on whatever it is, then it will pass over to an expert. And think of that expert as a human agent. And while it's doing that, so you may be in the queue, because that human person is tied up, you can continue to do other things with it, while you're waiting to actually talk to the person. So that's a way that the human is in the loop. I would tell you there's also examples of how the agents are being assisted in the background. So they have the interaction directly with the user, but Watson Assistant is helping them, be able to get to more information quicker, and narrow in on what the topic is. >> So you guys talk about the AI ladder, >> Beth: Mhm. >> Sort of, Rob talked about that this morning. My first version of the AI ladder was building blocks. It was like data and AI analytics, ML, and then AI on top of that. >> Beth: Yup. >> I said AI. Data and IA. >> Beth: Yup. >> Information Architecture. Now you use verbs. Sort of, to describe it. >> Beth: Yup. Which is actually more powerful. Collect, organize, analyze and infuse. Now infuse is like the Holy Grail, right? 'Cause that's operationalizing and being able to scale AI. >> Beth: That's right. >> What can you tell us about how successful companies are infusing AI, and what is IBM doing to help them? >> So, I'm glad you picked up first of all, that these are verbs and it's about action. And action leads to outcome, which is, I think, critical. And I would also tell you yes, infuse is, you know, the Holy Grail of the whole thing. Because that's about injecting it into business processes, into workflows, into how things are done. So you can then see examples of how attorneys may be able to get through their legal prep process in just a few minutes, versus 10, 15 hours on certain things. You can see conversion rates of, from a sales standpoint, improve significantly. A number of different things. We've also got it as a part of supply chain optimization, understanding a little bit more about both inventory, but also where the goods are along the way. And particularly when you think about a very complicated thing, there could be a lot of different goods in various points of transit. >> You know, I was sort of joking. Not joking, but mentioning Jeopardy at first. 'Cause a lot of people associate Watson with Jeopardy. >> Beth: Right. >> I can't remember the first time I saw that. It had to be the mid part of the last decade. What was it? >> Beth: February of 2011. >> 2011, okay I thought I even saw demos before that. I'm actually sure I did. Like in, back in some lab in IBM. And of course, the potential like, blew your mind. >> Right. >> I suspect you guys didn't even know what you had at the time. You were like, "Okay, we're going to go change the world." And you know, when you drive up and down 101 in Silicone Valley, it's like, "Oh, Watson this, Watson that." You know, you get the consumer guys, doing facial recognition, ad serving. You know, serving up fake news, you know. All kinds of applications. But IBM started to do something different. You're trying to really change business. Did you have any clue as to what you had at the time? And then how much of a challenge you were taking on, and then bring us to where we are now, and what do you see as a potential for the next 10 years? >> So, of course we had a clue. So let me start there. (Dave laughs) But with that, I think the possibilities of it weren't completely understood. There's no question in my mind about that. And what the early days were, were understanding, okay, what is that business application? What's the pattern that's going to come about as a part of it? And I think we made tremendous progress on that along the way. I would tell you now, you mentioned operationalizing stuff, and you know, now it's about, how do we help companies have it more throughout their company? Through different lines of business, how does it tie to various things that are important to us? And so that brings in things like trust, explainablity, the ethics of what it's doing. Bias detection and mitigation. And I actually believe a lot of that, and the operationalizing it within the processes, is where we're going to head, going forward. Of course there'll continue to be advancements on the features and the capabilities, but it's going to be about that. >> Alright, I'm going to ask you the it's depends question. (Beth laughs) So I know that's your answer, but at the macro, can machines make better diagnosis than doctors today, and if not, when will they be able to, in your view? >> So I would actually tell you that today they cannot, but what they can do is help the doctor make a better diagnosis than she would have done by herself. And because it comes back to this point of, you know, how the machine can process so much information, and help the expert, in this case the doctor's the expert, it could be an attorney, it could be an engineer, whatever. Help that expert be able to augment the knowledge that he or she has as a part of it. So, and that's where I think it is. And I think that's where it will be for my lifetime. >> So, there's no question in your mind that machines today, AI today, is helping make better diagnosis, it's just within augmented or attended type of approach. >> Absolutely. >> And I want to talk about Watson Anywhere. >> Beth: Okay, great. >> So we saw some discussion in the key notes and some demos. My understanding is, you could bring Watson Anywhere, to the data. >> That's right. >> You don't have to move the data around. Why is that important? Give us the update on Watson Anywhere. >> So first of all, this is the biggest requirement I had since I joined the Watson team, three and a half years ago. Was please can I have Watson on-prem, can I have Watson in my company data center, etcetera. And you know, we needed to instead, really focus in on what these patterns and use cases were, and we needed some help in the platform. And so thanks to Cloud Pak for data, and the underlying Red Hat OpenShift and container platform, we now are enabled to truly take Watson anywhere. So you can have it on premise, you can have it on the other public clouds, and this is important, because like you said, it's important because of where your data is. But it's also important because the workloads of today and tomorrow are very complex. And what's on cloud today, may be on premise tomorrow, may be in a different cloud. And as that moves around, you also want to protect the investment of what you're doing, as you have Watson customize for what your business needs are. >> Do you think you timed it right? I mean, you kind of did. All this talk about multicloud now. You really didn't hear much about it four or five years ago. For awhile I thought you were trying to juice your cloud business. Saying, "You want, if you want Watson, you got to go to the IBM cloud." Was there some of that, or was it really just, "Hey, now the timing's right." Where clients are demanding it, and hybrid and multicloud and on-prem situations? >> Well look, we know that cloud and AI go hand in hand. So there was a lot of positive with that. But it really was this technology point, because had I taken it anywhere three and a half years ago, what would've happened is, every deployment would've been a unique environment, a unique stack. We needed to get to a point that was a modern day, you know, infrastructure, if you will. And that's what we get now, with a container based platform. >> So you're able to scale it, such that every instance isn't a snowflake, >> That's right. >> that requires customization. >> That's right. So then I can invest in the enhancements to the actual capabilities it is there to do, not supporting multiple platform instantiations, under the covers. >> Well, okay. So you guys are making that transparent to the customer. How much of an engineering challenge is that? Can you share that with us? You got to run on this cloud, on that cloud, or on forever? >> Well, now because of Cloud Pak for data, and then what we have with OpenShift and Kubernetes and containers, it becomes, well, you know, there's still some technical work, my engineering team would tell you it was a lie. But it's simple now, it's straightforward. It's a lot of portability and flexibility. In the past, it would've been every combination of whatever people were trying to do, and we would not have had the benefit of what that now gives you. >> And what's the technical enable there? Is it sort of open API's? Architecture that allows for the interconnectivity? >> So, but inside of Watson? Or the overall platform? >> The overall platform. >> So I would say, it's been, at it's, at it's core it's what containers bring. >> Okay, really. So it's that, it's that. It's the marriage of your tech, >> Yeah. >> with the container wave. >> That's right. That's right. Which is why the timing was critical now, right? So you go back, yes they existed, but it really hadn't matured to a point of broad adoption. And that's where we are now. >> Yeah, the adoption of containers, Kubernetes, you know, micro services. >> Right, exactly. Now it's on a very steep curve. >> Exactly. >> Alright, give your last word on, big take away, from this event. What do you hearing, you know, what are you, some of the things you're most excited about? >> So first of all, that we have all of these clients and partners here, and all the buzz that you see. And that we've gotten. And then the other thing that I would tell you is, the great client examples. And what they're bragging on, because they are getting business outcomes. And they're getting better outcomes than they thought they would achieve. >> IBM knows how to throw an event. (Beth laughs) Beth, thanks so much for coming to theCUBE. >> Thank you, good to >> Appreciate it. >> see you again. >> Alright, great to see you. Keep it right there everybody, we'll be back. This is theCUBE live, from the IBM Data Forum in Miami, we'll be right back. (upbeat instrumental music)

Published Date : Oct 22 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by IBM. Beth, good to see you again. Always good to be with theCUBE. So give us the update on Watson. That was a long time ago now. a lot of people think of, to help you do your own AI and ML. and build the real AI. (laughs) That's right, Go ahead and apply it. So sometimes you know you're using it. and a lot of industries around the world. and really driving you know, But I would tell you So you mentioned Watson Assistant. And just to give you a little bit of a data point, So chat bots is kind of a, I saw a stat the other day So what are you seeing there? I liken it to fraud detection. are just going to get better and better and better, what you may see in a little window. So it's software, that actually does, of agency, actually. is if it realizes that it's not the expert that this morning. Data and IA. Now you use verbs. and being able to scale AI. And I would also tell you yes, 'Cause a lot of people associate I can't remember the first time I saw that. And of course, as to what you had at the time? and you know, ask you the it's depends question. So I would actually tell you that machines today, you could bring Watson Anywhere, You don't have to move the data around. And you know, I mean, you kind of did. you know, infrastructure, to the actual capabilities it is there to do, So you guys are making that transparent to the customer. my engineering team would tell you it was a lie. So I would say, It's the marriage of your tech, So you go back, you know, micro services. Now it's on a very steep curve. you know, what are you, and all the buzz that you see. for coming to theCUBE. from the IBM Data Forum in Miami,

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NEEDS APPROVAL Chris Smith, Ticketmaster | ESCAPE/19


 

(upbeat techno music) >> Narrator: From New York, it's theCUBE, Covering Escape/19. >> Okay, welcome back to theCUBE coverage here in New York City for the first inaugural Multi-Cloud Conference called Escape/2019 as in gathering of industry thought leaders, experts, entrepreneurs, engineers, really having substantive conversations around what multi-cloud is, what it's going to look like, what are some of the thing, technical and business opportunities around that, really small intimate conference. Again first inaugural conference. I'm here with my next guest to talk about that Chris Smith, Vice President of Engineering, on Data Science at Ticketmaster. Chris, thanks for coming on. >> Thank you very much Don. >> Appreciate taking the time. >> Glad to talk to you. >> Practitioner out there, you know, we all go scar tissue. >> Yes we do. >> If you don't have scar tissue, if you're not breaking things and then the learning from it then you're not advancing. But sometimes you don't want to step too far forward right? >> Yep, yep. >> Can you get back it's like you know. So you guys have a great experience. Legacy business, I remember buying tickets when I was going to conference back in the day when I was in, you know, in college. >> Yep. >> Buy it at Ticketmaster. >> That's right, that was Ticketmaster then, Ticketmaster now. >> Now it's lot of online provisioning of all direct to consumer. So you guys are a journey, tell the story. >> Well certainly, the company Ticketmaster, has had an incredibly long journey, starting back our first concert was Electric Light Orchestra which kind of like puts that in in context. >> (laughs) I was in eighth grade, '79. >> Yeah, yeah that was back at ASU. And even then we were a very innovative technology company we were making ticketing platforms that performed better, got more capacity out of the hardware than anybody else could do, anything close to that. We were really pioneered that idea of the what was at the time called the electronic ticket. Which was the idea that, you know, you could go to any store that was selling tickets for an event and the same inventory would be available at each store instead of the old model of a bunch of tickets getting sent out to each place >> That was bad-ass back in the day. >> That was really cutting edge and we've been evolving ever since then for 40 years. We were also very early onto the web scene. We were selling tickets online before anybody else was and before most people were selling anything online really to a degree. So we've been pioneers in a lot of areas, we see ourselves as the technology partner for the live events business. That's really what we are. And as a consequence, we're always sitting on that edge right? Trying to innovate and move to new opportunities but at the same time trying to provide that quality of experience at scale. >> Yeah. >> That is so critical to the business. >> And there's a big business so it's not like it's your nimble start up but you got to be agile. What are the learnings? Take us through the cloud learnings as you guys pioneered and started to go into that pioneering mode which was okay, you don't have to be a rocket scientist to figure out what a cloud's going to do. So you guys probably said hey, we got to go look at this, let's go pioneer our impact, take us through that what happened? >> Yeah absolutely, and I think there's two interesting contexts that started that conversation right? One was we're one of the few online businesses that launches a denial of services attack against itself on a regular basis, basically every day, right? And so we have traffic patterns that are unusual even for a typical e-commerce site where we might see loads that are a hundred x, you know beginning of a Taylor Swift on sale. There's going to be traffic like no one's business. And then when all her tickets are sold, there's not going to be nearly as much traffic right? And so that is the nature of our business and cloud is very attractive for its elastic capacity. When we were running on prim, we have to provide all that capacity all the time, just to have it for that one peak moment that might literally be the highest traffic level we see all year, right? So that drew a lot of the interest in looking at the cloud in the first place. And then the other aspect was we'd been working on, you know we'd been running on prim for nearly 40 years at the time and there is a lot of technical debt that had accumulated in the system at that point. And so, there was an interest in maybe potentially being able to leverage cloud vendors' infrastructure, and migrate systems onto that and then sort of declare bankruptcy on some of that technical debt rather than trying to pay it off. And so that, those were the two thoughts that were driving that conversation. I think we got really excited by the possibility and we committed really heavily to the idea of a strategy of just moving aggressively into the cloud as fast as we possibly could. And we knew that in the process, that we would be breaking some things, we'd be you know discovering some challenges et cetera, and that's definitely what happened, right? >> (laughs) What was the big learning? >> I think the biggest learning was that, you know, we had been developing systems for decades literally, with our on prim environment and so the systems were actually very well tuned for that on prim environment and that on prim environment was very well tuned for them. >> Yeah, yeah exactly. >> And it clouds use-- >> On all levels, hardware, software. >> Yeah, all the way through 'cause it's a fully integrated, vertically integrated solution. We build a lot of this stuff custom ourselves. >> John: Yeah, and we would decompose all that. >> And so it was very difficult to migrate some parts of that to the cloud and more importantly we're pretty smart guys, we can figure out how to move stuff into the cloud. But then to do it in a cost effective manner. Required in a lot of cases, really dramatically changing the design and architecture even of the software at a pretty fundamental level that you just can't do overnight. And so ironically, you know, the technical debt that we had in our infrastructure didn't seem quite so huge once you start thinking about the technical debt of the entire stack, right? And so then we realized that we could be much more strategic about how we went after our cloud strategy and that's kind of where we are now. Where we are being smart about, there's a lot of new products that are being developed, that, you know, we can build from the get go with the idea of them being designed for the cloud. >> Cloud native. >> Exactly, so we have a lot of stuff like that, that's just being built, in fact, the bulk of our website now when you go to visit it as a consumer, the bulk of that is running in the cloud right now. But, there are some really critical systems that are core to that experience, that are still running on prim. >> So you guys had to essentially re-architect the operating environment to take into account hybrid operating. >> Yes. >> Decoupling the critical systems that can't be tampered with, maybe put some containers of Kubernetes move some services around. But for the most part treat Cloud Native as Cloud Native, Greenfield apps and nurture-- >> Yeah but there's also refactoring opportunities. So there's a lot of opportunities where you need to go in and change the product anyway and that can be an opportunity to make things a lot more cloud friendly and better take advantage of the capabilities that the cloud has, so it's actually a mix of both. >> Give an example of a good opportunity to refactory, 'cause this comes up a lot in my CUBE interviews. Like okay, 'cause it's all opportunity, opportunistic, but what are the characteristics for a great refactoring opportunity the tune up? >> So a lot of times when you want to refactor really what you want to do is take a set of capabilities that you may have in a much larger system and pull 'em out and manipulate them and play around with them and do things differently. So, our ticket purchasing process we're constantly looking at tweaking the process. Now the core pieces of it remain the same right? But we might want to change the experience and provide something more innovative that's different from what people used to do. And so one of the areas we're working on for this as an example is reserve-less checkout. Where you just buy the ticket without ever actually reserving the seat. That's a very small minor change in the flow, but to make that really work you have to pull out the pieces of the system anyway right? And grab, say I want these four pieces to rearrange differently, so that's a great refactoring opportunity. You can make all those pieces, what we actually did is we've made those pieces into lambdas that are sitting in AWS, they're basically not running most of the time which is great. >> Yeah. (laughs) >> Really cheap when it's not running right? >> Yeah, exactly. >> Very efficient. But then when we need them they run very efficiently and more importantly we can now manipulate the order of operations for this stuff. So breaking things out into those composable parts whenever you know you need to do that anyway, it's a great opportunity to change it. >> So great for work flow refactoring there. >> Absolutely. >> Final question for you, I know we got to break for lunch, but, then really appreciate you coming and sharing your insight. >> Absolutely. >> As a pioneer in data science and data you got machine learning certainly is the engine of AI. AI gets math and cognition are kind of coming into it. Learning machines, deep learning, bla bla bla, what's your, in your opinion, what are some pioneering areas that are ripe pioneering grounds to dig into in data science and data? When you think about CloudScale, Hybrid and just, in general what are the ripe opportunities for people to pioneer in daily. What's the next frontier in your mind? >> So I think the trend right now that's maybe not the frontier, but it's now where the main shift is, is to moving into what I would call real time learning, right? Where you're doing refactor, reinforcement learning, or online learning of some form. Where you're literally, the data's arriving in real time, transforming your model in real time, learning in real time, that's key to our strategy and it's very very common. But I think in terms of where the frontiers are it's actually kind of everywhere, in the sense that the name of the game is the cost of doing that work is getting lower and lower. You know, data's getting cheaper, computes' getting cheaper, and also the products for doing it are getting more productized, so you need less expertise and you can deploy them more quickly. So what you want to look at is businesses that are traditionally been too low margin right? To apply machine learning to but have large scale, right? Which is like the commodity, everything in that's commoditized, right? Now there's an opportunity to, there's the cost have gone so low-- >> To squeeze insight out of those areas. >> That you can now optimize that small margin and get value from it with you know, otherwise like 10 years ago it would have been so costly to build a machine learning infrastructure for it. You would've lost more money than you would've gained. >> So you could, what your saying is, these areas that were not attractive because of cost in the past, that have large scale, there's penetration opportunities to create value and insight that could-- >> Absolutely. >> Bring in new franchises and new capabilities. >> And that's why I think you know the Andreessen's software's eating the world thing, that's what that's really about is as those costs get lower, as the ability to deploy gets easier, suddenly businesses that before didn't make any sense to invest in this way, they totally make sense and in fact there's huge opportunities to completely transform the landscape by getting in. >> Chris you're a man of our world, we love you, thank you for coming on theCUBE. >> Thank you so much. >> That's great insight. >> Look at this we're getting insider on the future of data, which I believe everything that he just said is totally relevant. You're an entrepreneur out there, you can attack big markets and get in there with a position with great IP, great intellectual property, again this is the modern world of computer science. >> It is. >> Don't ya think? >> It absolutely is. >> This is the benefit of scale and cloud. >> Absolutely. >> I wish I was 20 something years old again. (laughs) We've been through the ringer. >> Yes. >> Chris, thanks for coming on. Keep coverage here in New York for the first inaugural conference, Escape/2019, I'm John Furrier here, thanks for watching. (upbeat techno music)

Published Date : Oct 19 2019

SUMMARY :

Narrator: From New York, it's theCUBE, for the first inaugural Multi-Cloud Conference Practitioner out there, you know, But sometimes you don't want to step too far forward right? So you guys have a great experience. That's right, that was Ticketmaster then, So you guys are a journey, tell the story. Well certainly, the company Ticketmaster, that performed better, got more capacity out of the hardware back in the day. but at the same time trying to provide that quality as you guys pioneered and started to go And so that is the nature of our business and so the systems were actually very well tuned Yeah, all the way through 'cause it's a fully integrated, And so ironically, you know, the technical debt in fact, the bulk of our website now the operating environment to take into account But for the most part treat Cloud Native as Cloud Native, and that can be an opportunity to make things a great refactoring opportunity the tune up? So a lot of times when you want to refactor and more importantly we can now manipulate but, then really appreciate you coming and data you got machine learning So what you want to look at is businesses that are with you know, otherwise like 10 years ago as the ability to deploy gets easier, thank you for coming on theCUBE. you can attack big markets and get in there I wish I was 20 something years old again. for the first inaugural conference, Escape/2019,

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