Dave Brown, Amazon & Mark Lohmeyer, VMware | AWS re:Invent 2020
>>from >>around the globe. It's the Cube with digital coverage of AWS reinvent 2020 sponsored by Intel, AWS and our community partners. >>Hello and welcome back to the Cube Coverage of eight of us reinvent 2020 Virtual. I'm John for your host of the Cube. Normally we're in person this year. It's a virtual event. It is reinvent and cube virtual here. We got great interview here. Segment with VM ware and A W s. Two great guests. Keep both Cube alumni. Marc Lemire, senior vice president, general manager, The Cloud Services Business Unit VM Ware and Dave Brown, Vice president Elastic Compute Cloud easy to from Amazon Web services Gentlemen, great to see you guys. Thanks for coming on. >>Great. Thank you. Good to be back. >>Thanks. Great to be back. >>So you know, Dave, we love having you on because ec2 obviously is the core building block of a device. Once the power engine, it's the core product. And Mark, we were just talking a few months ago at VM World of momentum you guys have had on the business front. It's even mawr accelerated with co vid on the pandemic. Give us the update The partnership three years ago when Pat and Andy in San Francisco announced the partnership has been nothing but performance. Business performance, technical integration. Ah, lots happened. What's the update here for reinvent? >>Yeah, I guess the first thing I would say is look, you know, the partnership has has never been stronger. You know, as you said, uh, we announced the partnership and delivered the initial service three years ago. And I think since then, both companies have really been focused on innovating rapidly on behalf of our customers bringing together the best of the VM, or portfolio, and the best of, you know, the entire AWS. A set of capabilities. And so we've been incredibly pleased to be able to deliver those that value to our joint customers. And we look forward to continue to work very closely together. You know, across all aspects of our two companies toe continue to deliver more and more value to our joint customers. >>Well, I want to congratulate you guys at VM where, you know, we've been following that story from day one. I let a lot of people skeptical on the partnership. We were pretty bullish on it. We saw the value. It's been just been great Synergy day. I want to get your thoughts because, you know, I've always been riffing about enabling technologies and and the way it works is enabling technologies. Allow your partners to make more money, too. Right? So you guys do that with the C two, and I know that for a fact because we're doing well with our virtual event cloud, but are easy to bills are up, but who cares? We're doing well. This is the trend you guys are enabling partners, and VM Ware in particular, has a lot of customers that are on AWS. What's your perspective on all this? >>You know the part. The part maker system is so important for us, right? And we get from our customers. We have many customers who, you know, use VM ware in their own environment. They've been using it for years and years, um, true for many other software applications as well and other technologies. Andi, when they moved to AWS there very often. When you use those tools on those services on AWS is well and so you know, we we partner with many, many, many, many companies, and so it's a high priority for us. The VM Ware partnership, I think, is being sort of role model for us in terms of, you know, sitting out outside Sana goal back in 2016. I think it waas and, you know, delivering on that. Then continue to innovate on features over the last three years listening to our customers, bringing larger customers on board, giving them more advanced networking features, improving. You know that the instance types of being whereas utilizing to deliver value to their customers and most recently, obviously, with Outpost AWS outposts and parking with VM ware on VM are enabled outposts and bringing that to our customers and their own data centers. So we see the whole partner ecosystem is critically important. Way were spent a lot of time with VM and other partners on something that our customers really value. >>Mark, I want to get your thoughts on this because I was just riffing with Day Volonte about this. Um, heightened awareness with that covert 19 in the pandemic has kind of created, which is an accelerant of the value. And one >>of the >>things that's a parent is when you have this software driven and software defined kind of environment, whether it's in space or on premise or in the cloud. Um, it's the software that's driving everything, but you have to kind of components. You have the how do you operate something, And then how does the software works? So you know, it's the hand in the glove operators and software in the cloud really is becoming kind of the key things. You guys have been very successful as a company with I t operations, and now you're moving into the cloud. Can you share your thoughts on how VM Ware cloud on AWS takes that next level for your customers? So I think that's a key point that needs to be called that. What's your What's your thoughts on that? >>Yeah, I think you hit the nail on the head, and I think, you know, look, every company is on a journey to transform the level of capability they're able to offer to their customers and their employees, right? And a big part of that is how do they modernize their application environment? How do they how do they deliver new applications and services? And so this has been underway for for a while now. But if if anything, I think Cove, it has only accelerated. Um, the need for customers to be able to continue to go down that path. And so, you know, between VM ware in AWS, um, you know, we're looking to provide those customers a platform that allows them to accelerate their path to application, modernization and new services and capabilities. And, um, you know, Dave talked about the ecosystem and the importance of the ecosystem that AWS and I think you know, together. What we've been able to do if you sort of think about it, is, you know, bringing together this rich set of VM Ware services and capabilities. Um, that we've talked about before, as well as new VM Ware capabilities, for example, the ability to enable kubernetes based applications and services on top of this Corby, um or platform with Tan Xue. Right. So customers can get access to all of that is they go down this modernization path. But, you know, right next door in the same ese is 375 native AWS services that they can use together in conjunction, uh, with that environment. And so if you think about accelerating that journey right Being ableto rapidly migrate those VM ware based workloads into the AWS cloud. When you're in the AWS cloud, be able to modernize that environment using the VM Ware Tansu capability, the native AWS services and then the infrastructure that needs to come together to make that possible, for example, the network connectivity that needs to be enabled, um, to take advantage of some of those services together. Um, you know, we're really we're trying to accelerate our delivery of those capabilities so that we can help our customers accelerate the delivery of that application value thio to their customers. >>David want to get your thoughts on the trends If you speak to the customers out there at VM Ware, customers that are on the cloud because you know the sphere, for instance, very popular on the Ws Cloud with VM Ware Cloud as well as these new modern application trends like Tan Xue, Project Monterey is coming around the corner that was announced that VM world what trends do you see from the two perspective that you could share to the VM ware eight of his customers? What's the key wave right now that they should be riding on. >>Yeah, I think a few things, you know, we definitely are seeing an acceleration in customers Looking Thio looking to utilize humor on AWS You know, there was a lot of interest early on, really, over the last year, I think we've seen 140% growth in the service, which has been incredibly exciting for both of us and really shows that we we're providing customers with the service that works. You know, I think one of the key things that Mark called out just talking previously was just how simple it is for customers to move. You know, often moving to the cloud gets muddled with modernization, and it takes a long time because customers to kind of think about how do they actually make this move? Or are they stuck within their own facility on data center or they need to modernize? We moved to a different hyper visor with PM on AWS. You literally get that same environment on AWS, and so whether it's a a migration because you want to move out of your on premise facility, whether it's a migration because you want to grow and expand your facility without needing to. You know, build more data centers yourself Whether you're looking to build a d. R site on AWS on whether you looking just, you know, maybe build a new applications tank that you wanna build in a modern way, you know, using PMR in Tanzania and all the AWS services, all of those a positive we're seeing from customers. Um, you know, I think I think as the customers grow, the demand for features on being were in AWS grows as well. And we put out a number of important features to support customers that really, really large scale. And that's something that's being exciting. It's just some of the scale that we're seeing from very, very large being, we customers moving over to AWS. And so I think you know a key messages. If you have a Vienna installation today and you're thinking about moving to the cloud, it's really a little that needs to stop you in starting to move. It is is very simple to set up, and very little you have to do to your application stack to actually move it over. >>Mark, that's a great point. I want to get your thoughts on that in reaction toe. What? Dave just said Because this is kind of what you guys had said many years ago and also a VM world when we were chatting, disrupting operations just to stand up the clubs shouldn't be in place. It should be easy on you. Heard what Dave said. It's like you got >>a >>lot of cultures that are operating large infrastructure and they want to move to the cloud. But they got a mandate toe make everything. Is a services more cloud native coming. So, yeah, you gotta check off the VM where boxes and keep things running. But you gotta add more modern tooling mawr application pressure there. So there's a lot of pressure from the business units and the business models to say We gotta take advantage of the modern applications. How do you How do you look at that? >>Yeah, yeah, I mean, I think Look, making this a simple is possible is obviously a really important aspect of what we're trying Thio enable for our customers. Also, I think the speed is important, right? How you know, how can we enable them? Thio accelerate their ability to move to the cloud, but then also accelerate their ability Thio, um, deliver new services and capabilities that will differentiate their business. And then how do we, uh, kind of take some of the heavy lifting off the customers plate in terms of what it actually takes to operate and run the infrastructure and do so in a highly available way that they could depend upon for their business? And of course, delivering that full capabilities of service is a big part of that. You know, one of my when my favorite customer examples eyes a company called Stage Coach, uh, European based transportation company. And they run a network of Busses and trains, etcetera, and they actually decided to use VM. Tosto run one of their most mission critical applications, which is involved with basically scheduling, scheduling those systems right in the people that they know, the bus drivers in the train conductors etcetera. And so if you think about that application right, its's a mission critical application for them. It's also one that they need to be able to iterate involved and improve very quickly, and they were able to take advantage of a number of fairly unique capabilities of the joint service we built together to make that possible. Um, you know, the first thing that they did is they took advantage of something called stretch clusters. The M we're cloud on AWS stretch clusters Where, uh, we basically take that VM Ware environment and we stretch it. We stretch the network across to aws availability zones in the same region, Onda. Then they could basically run their applications on top of that that environment. And this is a really powerful capability because it ensures the highest levels of s L. A. For that application for four nines. In this case, if anything happens, Thio fail in one of those, uh, Aziz, we can automatically fail over and restart the application in the second ese on DSO provides this high level of availability, but they're also able to take advantage of that without on day one. Talk about keeping it simple without on day one, requiring any changes to the application of myself because that application knew how to work in the sphere. And so you know that I work in the sphere in the cloud and it can fail over on the sphere in the cloud on dso they were able to get there quickly. They're able Thio enable that application and now they're taking the next step. Which is how do I enhance and make that application even better, you know, leveraging some of the VM or capabilities also looking to take advantage of some of the native AWS capabilities. So I think that sort of speed, um you know that simplicity that helps helps customers down that path to delivering more value to their employees and their customers. That and we're really excited that were ableto offer that your customers >>just love the philosophy that both companies work back from the customer customer driven kind of mentality certainly key here to this partnership, and you can see the performance. But I think one of the differentiations that I love is that join integration thing engineering that you guys were doing together. I think that's a super valuable, differentiated VM where Dave, this is a key part of the relationship. You know, when I talked to Pat Gelsinger and and again back three years ago and he had Raghu from VM, Ware was like, This is different engineering together. What's your perspective from the West side when someone says, Yeah. Is that Riel? You know, it is easy to really kind of tied in there and his Amazon really doing joint engineering. What do you say to that? >>Oh, absolutely. Yeah, it's very real. I mean, it's been an incredible, incredible journey together, Right? Right, Right from the start, we were trying to work out how to do this back in 2016. You know, we were using some very new technology back then that we hadn't honestly released yet. Uh, the nitrous system, right? We started working with family and the nitrous system back in late 2016, and we only launched our first nitrous system enabled instance that reinvent 2017. And so we were, you know, for a year having being a run on the nitrous system, internally making sure that, you know, we would support their application and that VM Ware ran well on BC around. Well, on aws on, that's been ongoing. And, you know, the other thing I really enjoy about the relationship is learning how to best support each other's customers on on AWS and being where, and Mark is talking about stretch clusters and are being whereas, you know, utilizing the availability zones. We've done other things in terms of optimizing placement with across, you know, physical reaction in data centers. You know, Mark and the team have put forward requirements around, you know, different instance types and how they should perform invest in the Beamer environment. We've taken that back into our instance type definition and what we've released there. So it happens in a very, very low level. And I think it's both teams working together frequently, lots of meetings and then, you know, pushing each other. You know, honestly. And I think for the best experience or at the end of the day, for our joint customers. So it's been a great relationship. >>It helps when both companies are very fluent technically and pushing the envelope with technology. Both cultures, I know personally, are very strong technically, but they also customer centric. Uhm, Mark, I gotta put you on the spot on this question because this comes up every year this year more than ever. Um, is the question around VM ware on A W S and VM ware in general, and it's more of a general industry theme. But I wanna ask you because I think it relates to the US Um vm ware cloud on aws. Um, the number one question we get is how can I automate my I t operations? Because it's kind of a no brainer. Now it's kind of the genes out of the bottle. That's a mandate. But it's not always easy. Easy as it sounds to dio, you still got a lot to dio. Automation gets you level set to take advantage of some of these higher level services, and all customers want to get there fast. Ai i o t a lot of goodness in the cloud that you kinda gotta get there through kinda automating the based up first. So how did how are your customers? How are you guys helping customers automate their infrastructure operations? >>Yeah, I mean, Askew articulated right? This is a huge demand. The requirement from our customer base, right? Uh, long gone are the days that you wanna manually go into a u I and click around here, click there to make things happen, right? And so, um, you know, obviously, in addition to the core benefit of hey, we're delivering this whole thing is a service, and you don't have to worry about the hardware, the software, the life cycle all of that, Um you know, at a higher level of the stack, we're doing a lot of work to basically expose a very rich set of AP eyes. We actually have enabled that through something called the VM, or Cloud Developer center, where you can go and customer could go and understand all of the a p i s that we make available to that they can use to build on top of to effectively automated orchestrate their entire VM or cloud on AWS based infrastructure. And so that's an area we've we've invested a lot in. And at the end of the day, you know we want Thio. Both enable our customers to take their existing automation tooling that they might have been using on their VM ware based environment in their own data center. Obviously, all of that should continue to work is they bring that into the emcee aws. Um but now, once we're in AWS and we're delivering, this is a service in AWS. There's actually a higher level of automation, um that we can enable, and so you know everything that you can do through the VM or cloud console. Um, you can do through a P. I s So we've exposed roughly a piece that allow you to add or remove instance capacity ap eyes that allow you to configure the network FBI's that allow you toe effectively. Um, automate all aspects of sort of how you want Thio configure and pull together that infrastructure. Onda. You know, as Dave said, a lot of this, you know, came from some of those early just customer discussions where that was a very, very clear expectations. So, you know, we've we've been working hard. Thio make that possible. >>So can customers integrate native Cloud native technologies from AWS into APS running on VM ware cloud on any of us? >>Yeah. I mean, I'll give you one example for so we you know, we've been able to support for cloud formation right on top of the M C. Mehta best. And so that's, you know, one way that you can leverage these 80 best tools on top of on top of the m. C at best. Um and you know, as we talked about before, uh, you know everything on the VM ware in the VM ware service. We're exposing through those AP eyes. And then, of course, everything it best does has been built that way from the start. And so customers can work. Um, you know, seamlessly across those two environments. >>Great stuff. Great update. Final question for both of you. Uh, Dave will start with you. What's the unique advantages? When you people watching? That's gonna say, OK, I get it. I see the momentum. I've now got a thing about post pandemic growth strategies. I gotta fund the projects, so I'm either gonna retool while I'm waiting for the world to open up. Two. I got a tail wind. This is good for my business. I'm gonna take advantage of this. How do they modernize our application? What? The unique things with VM Ware Cloud on AWS. What's unique? What would you say? I >>mean, I think the big thing for me eyes the consistency, um, the other way that were built This between the the sphere on prime environment and the the sphere that you get on aws with BMC on aws. Um you know, when I think about modernization and honestly, any project that I do, we do it Amazon I don't like projects that required enormous amount of planning and then tooling. And then, you know, you've this massive waterfall stock project before you do anything meaningful. And what's so great about what we built here is you can start that migration almost immediately, start bringing a few applications over. And when you do that, you can start saying, Okay, where do we want to make improvements? But just by moving over to aws NBN were on AWS, you start to reap the benefits of being in the child right from day one. Many of the things Mark called out about infrastructure management and that sort of thing. But then you get to modernize off to that as well. And so just the richness in terms of, you know, being where a tan xue and then the you know, I think it's more than 200 AWS services. Now you get to bring all that into your application stack, but at a time at a at a at a cadence or time that really matters to you. But you could get going immediately, and I think that's the thing that customers ready need to do if you find yourself in a situation you know, with just how much the world's changed in the last year. Looking Thio. Modernize your applications deck, Looking for the cost benefits. Looking to maybe get out of the data center. Um, it's a relatively easy both forward and just put in a couple of engineers a couple of technicians on to actually starting to do the process. I think you'll be very surprised at how much progress you can actually make in a short amount of time. >>Mark, you're in charge of the Cloud Services business unit at VM Ware CPM. Where cloud on AWS successful more to do a lot of action kubernetes cloud native automation and the list goes on and on. What are the most unique advantages that you guys have? What would you say? >>Yeah, I mean, I would maybe just build on Dave's comments a bit. I think you know, if you look at it through the customer lens three ability to reiterate and the ability to move quickly and not being forced into sort of a one size fits all model, right? And so there may be certain applications that they run into VM, and they want to run into VM forever. Great. We could enable that there might be other applications that they want to move from a VM into a container, remove into kubernetes and do that in a very seamless way. And we can enable that with, uh, with Tan Xue, right? By the way, they may wanna actually many applications. They're gonna require, uh, complex composite applications that have some aspects of it running in communities, other aspects running on VMS. You know, other aspects connecting to some native AWS services. And so, you know, we could enable those types of, you know, incremental value that's delivered very, very quickly that allows them at the end of the day to move, move fast on behalf of their own customers and deliver more about it to them. So I think this this sort of philosophy, right that Dave talked about I think is is one of the really important things we've tried to focus on, um, together. But, you know, on behalf of our joint customers and you know that that sort of capabilities just gets richer and richer. Overtime right. Both of us are continuing to innovate, and both of us will continue to think about how we bring those services together as we innovate in our respective areas and how they need to link together as part of this This intense solution. Um, so, uh, you know that I think that you're gonna see us continue to invest, continue to move quickly. Um, continue to respond to what our customers together are asking us. Thio enable for them. >>Well, really appreciate the insight. Thanks for coming on this cube virtual, um, segment. Um, virtualization has hit the cube where we have multiple virtual stages out there at reinvent on the site. Obviously, it's a virtual event over three weeks, so it's a little bit not four days or three days. It's three weeks. So, um, if you're watching this, check out the site. Tons of good V o D. The executive leaderships Check out the keynotes that air there. It's awesome. Big news. Of course. Check out the cube coverage, but I have one final final question is you guys are leaders in the industry and within your companies, and we're virtual this year. You gotta manage your teams. You still gotta go to work every day. You gotta operate your business is a swell as work with customers. What have you guys learned? And can you share any, um, advice or observations of how to be effective as a leader, a za manager, and as a customer interface point for your companies? >>Well, I I think, uh, let me go first, then Mark Mark and had some things, you know, I think we're moving to certainly in the last year, specifically with covert. You know, we've we've we've just passed out. I think we just passed out seven months off, being remote now on, obviously doing reinvent as well. Um, it zits certainly taken some adjusting. I think we've done relatively well, um, with, you know, going virtual. We were well prepared at Amazon to go virtual, but from a leadership point of view, you know, making sure that you have been some positives, right? So for one, I have I have teams all over the world, and, uh, being virtually actually helped a lot with that. You know, everybody is virtually all on the same stage. It's not like we have a group of us in Seattle and a few others scattered around the world. Everybody's on the same cold now. on that has the same you know, be able to listen to in the same way. But I better think a lot about sort of just my own time. Personally, in the time that my team spends, I think it's been very easy for us. Thio run a little too hot waken start a little too early and run a little too late in the evenings on DSO, making sure that we protect that time. And then, obviously, from a customer point of view, you know, we found that customers are very willing to engage virtually as well around the world s Oh, that's something we've been able to utilize very well to continue to have. You know what we call our executive briefing center and do those sorts of things customer meetings on in some ways. You know, without the plane trip on either side to the other side of the world, you're able to do more of those and stay even more in contact with your customers. So it's been it's been a lot of adjustment for us. I think we've done well. I think you know, a zay said. We've had a look at Are we keeping it balanced because I think it's very easy to get out of balance and just from a time point of view. But I think I'm sure it'll show. It'll change again as the world goes back to normal. But in many ways, I think we've learned a lot of valuable lessons that I hope in some cases don't go away. I think well will probably be more virtual going forward. So that's what a bit of from my side >>creating. Yeah. Confronting hot people run hard. You can, you know, miss misfire on that and burnout gonna stay, Stay tuned. Mark your thoughts. Is leader customers defeating employees? Customers? >>Yeah. I mean, in many ways, I would say similar experience. I think, uh, I mean, if you sort of think back, right, uh, it's in many ways amazing that within the course of literally a week, right, I think about some of the BMR experience we went from, uh, you know, 90 95% of our employees, at least in the US, working in an office right to immediately all working from home. And, uh, you know, I think having the technology is available to make that possible and really? For the most part, without skipping a beat. Um, it is pretty pretty amazing, right? Um and then, you know, I think from a productivity perspective, in many ways, you know, it z increased productivity. Right? Um, they have mentioned the ability engage customers much more easily you think about in the past, you would have taken a flight to Europe to maybe meet with, you know, 5 to 10 customers and spent an entire week. And now you can do that in, you know, in the morning, right? Um, and the way we sort of engaged our teams, I think in many ways, um, sort of online, uh, can create a very, very rich experience, right? In a way to bring people together across many locations in a much more seamless way than if maybe part of the team is there in the office. And some other part of the team is trying toe connect in through resume or something else. A little bit of a fragmented experience. But if everyone's on the same platform, regardless of where you are e think we've seen some benefits from that. >>It's interesting. You see virtualization. What that did to the servers created cloud, you know. Hey, Productivity. >>You also have to be careful. You don't run those servers too hot. You >>gotta have a cooling. You got the cooling Eso I You know, this is really an interesting, you know, social, uh, equation Global phenomenon of productivity Cloud. Combined with this notion of virtual changes, the workloads, the work flows, the workplace and the workforce, right, The future work. So I think, you know, we're watching this closely. I know you guys have both had great success from the pandemic with this new pressure on the cloud, because it's a new model, a new way to do things, So we'll keep watching it. Thanks for the insight. Thanks for coming on and and enjoy the rest of reinvent. >>Great. Thank >>you. Great to be here. >>Okay, this the cubes coverage. I'm John for your host of Cuban, remember? Go to the reinvent site. Three weeks of great virtual content over this month, Of course. Cube coverage for three weeks. Stay tuned off. All the analysis and a lot of great thought leadership in the industry commentary. Stay with us throughout the month. Thank you. Yeah,
SUMMARY :
It's the Cube with digital coverage of AWS great to see you guys. Good to be back. Great to be back. So you know, Dave, we love having you on because ec2 obviously is the core building block of a device. and the best of, you know, the entire AWS. This is the trend you guys are enabling so you know, we we partner with many, many, many, many companies, and so it's a high priority for us. Mark, I want to get your thoughts on this because I was just riffing with Day Volonte about this. You have the how do you operate something, and I think you know, together. customers that are on the cloud because you know the sphere, for instance, very popular on the Ws Yeah, I think a few things, you know, we definitely are seeing an acceleration in customers Dave just said Because this is kind of what you guys had said many years ago and also a VM world when we were chatting, How do you How do you look Which is how do I enhance and make that application even better, you know, certainly key here to this partnership, and you can see the performance. And so we were, you know, for a year having being a run on the nitrous system, a lot of goodness in the cloud that you kinda gotta get there through kinda automating hardware, the software, the life cycle all of that, Um you know, at a higher level of the stack, And so that's, you know, one way that you can leverage these 80 best tools on top of on top What would you say? And so just the richness in terms of, you know, being where a tan xue and then that you guys have? I think you know, And can you share any, um, advice or observations on that has the same you know, be able You can, you know, miss misfire on that and But if everyone's on the same platform, regardless of where you are e cloud, you know. You also have to be careful. So I think, you know, we're watching this closely. Great. Great to be here. All the analysis and a lot of great thought leadership in the industry commentary.
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Teresa Carlson, AWS | AWS Public Sector Summit 2019
>> live from Washington, D. C. It's the Cube covering a ws public sector summit brought to you by Amazon Web services. >> Welcome back, everyone to the Cubes Live coverage of a ws Public sector summit here in Washington D. C. Our nation's capital. I'm your host, Rebecca Knight co hosting alongside John Farrier wear welcoming Back to the Cuba, Cuba and esteemed Cube veteran Teresa Carlson, vice president Worldwide public Sector A W s. >> Thank you really appreciate always being on the key, But I appreciate you being here and our public sector. Sandy, >> Thank you for having us. So give up. Give us the numbers. How many people are in this room? How many people are here? >> Well, we have now today. Well, for this time that we're here, there's probably about 13,000 people here will expect a couple of 1,000 more. I think by the time it's all said Dan, we'll have about 15,000 at the conference. Of course, you had my keynote today with whole Benson sessions. They're all packed, and tomorrow you'll have Andy, jazzy herewith made ing a fireside chat at 11 o'clock on Wednesday, so I think that room will be overflowing with Andy Kelly as well, Because everybody loves him >> and Andy just coming back from a conference for the Silicon Valley elites on the west coast, where he put a big plug in for public sector, which is awesome. Yes. Now there you guys are kicking some serious butt. Congratulations. >> Thank you. Yeah. Thank you. >> I mean, what's it like for you? You're the leader. You're the chief of the public sector business. You've grown it. It's now cruising altitude that seem so cruising. >> Yeah, it. Well, first of all, this Nana, this would've been possible without Andy Jassy actually kind of believing and the mission of public sector when he hired me in 2010. And you're right, John. We started. You've hurt, covered the story. We started with two people in 2010 at the end of 2010. And now we have thousands of people around the world and, you know, over 35 countries, customers and 100 72 2 countries. And the business is growing at more than 41% every year date of yes, and we're $31,000,000,000. Business with public sector ban important component in that business. So for s here today. It is very meaningful. And the reason it is so meaningful. It is about our customers. And this is This is a testament to that. Our customers left what a TBS provides. And in the public sector business, it is a game changer to their mission way >> We're talking on our insure this morning. Rebecca and I around this new generation of workers, and that's almost like a revolution of red tape. Why's it in the way you gotta do better ways to be management cloud health care you named the vertical isn't a capacity to disrupt, create value. So you have this kind of shift happening. But you guys are also technology leaders. So when when you see things like space, >> Yeah, these were kind >> of tell signs that the CIA adopting the d o d. Look at the big contracts are coming in. People are working it hard. These air tell signs that the growth Israel >> Yeah, grab reaction to that gross Israel and I and I like to talk to my leaders about while we've had phenomenal growth, and that's fantastic. Way really are only getting started because now, in 2018 I really saw our customers doing unbelievable work leads very hard mission. Critical work was that they were meeting from it from it's kind of old environment, moving it on day to be asked, migrating and totally optimizing it. Now what's changing within the intelligence community and D o d is that you know, in 2013 when the icy made this decision made, it started changing even enterprise views of moving to the cloud from a security perspective. But you have that shift has happened. Now you see d o d moving for Jet I, which will be announced hopefully in July or August. Hope hopefully scene. But even without Jed, I. D o. D is making massive mate to cloud. I mean, and by the way, there no blockers now, like a year ago when we talked here, there were still some blockers for them. Today, really pretty much every blocker has been remade so that they can move a lot faster. So even outside of Jed, I we see our d o. D customers moving. You heard Kenny Bow and our debt today on stage, Who's the CEO of the special access program? Talk about what they're doing and why Cloud became an important element of their mission. And I could tell you, Kenny works on some very challenging and difficult mission programs for D. O. D. So that these air kind examples. On the flip side, I met with some CIA's yesterday from the state and local government. Now that has been a super surprising market for me where I'm seeing them. Actually, 2018 was a true change of year for them. Massive workloads in the state Medicaid systems that are moving off of legacy systems on a TVs, justice and public safety systems moving off on TBS. So that's where you're seeing moves. But you know what they shared with me yesterday, and my theme, as you saw today, was removing barriers. But they talked about acquisition barrier still, that states still don't know how to buy cloud, and they were asking for help. Can you help kind of educate and work with their acquisition officials? So it's nice when they're asking us for help in areas that they see their own walkers. >> So what accounts for the fact that these blockers air sort of disappearing as you set up on the main stage this morning? cloud is the new normal, right? Everyone is really adopting this cloud first approach. And what accounts for the fact that these challenges ey're sort of slowly dissipating? Well, there, you know, some of >> the blockers had been very legacy, and I'd like to tell you already that kind of old guard helped create a lot of these models. And most of these models, as an example of acquisition, were created so that governments had to pay at friend. So these models were like, pay me a lot of many a friend and then let's hope I will use them all that technology. So now we come along and say, Actually, no, you don't need to pay us anything up front. You could try it and pay as you use it and then scale that and they're like, Wait, wait a minute. We don't know how to do that model. So part of these things have been created because of all systems that what's changing those systems is that you can't you again if you can't change gravity, and we're at the point where it is the new normal, and you cannot change gravity, and they're seeing security. If you think about security is the number one reason they're moving to the cloud. Once you start having security issues, they on their own start removing blockers because they're like we've got it made faster because we wanted our secure. >> I know you've got a lot of things going on. You got customer visits. Your time's very tight. Appreciate you coming on. But I got to get and I want to talk about check for good programs you launched what happened at the breakfast of the stories. We could go for an hour on that, but I really want to dig into this ground station thing. And one of the coolest thing I saw reinvent when it kind of got launch. This is literally it reminds me the old Christopher Columbus days is the world flat is flat. We'll know the world is round. You have space? Yeah, space and data. It's gonna change the coyote edge to be the world. Right? So this is a game changer. I see this game changer way had your GM on earlier. Brett, what's what's going on with ground? So how is that going to help? Because it's almost provisioning back haul. It's gonna help. Certainly. Rural area st >> Yeah, way ahead of Earth and Space Day yesterday. So we kicked off with that with two amazing speakers. And the reason ground station is so important. By the way, it was a customer of ours in the US intelligence community that told us about six years ago we needed to create this. So you know where I said 95% of our services or customer driven? It was a customer that said, Why doesn't a TVs have a ground station and we really listen to them? Work backwards? And then we launch a ground station. I became general availability in May, and that is really about creating a ubiquitous environment for everyone, for space, for the space and satellite communications. So you can downlink an uplink data. But then the element of utilizing the cloud the process and analyze that data in real time and be ableto have that wherever you are is really I mean, it truly is going to be an opportunity for best commercial enterprises and public sector customers. And you know, John, right now, the pipeline that we have seen already for ground station, even I'm surprised at how Many of our customers and partners are so interested with acid ate a >> government thing about, like traffic lights, bio sensors Now back hauling all that into a global, >> you know, many different way. And now start. If he saw the announced with the Cloud Innovation Center at Cal Poly, we're gonna be doing some research with them on space communications and programs around ground station. Chile is another location You've heard me talk about that has missed tell escapes in the world. And we're gonna be working in Chile doing some work on ground station there in the Middle East. So this is, by the way, global. While the Qena it kind of came. Tosto, >> go to Cal Poly together way. We're gonna go to Chile. >> Chile next. Yeah, chili is great. So you could get two best locations with me. I would love that line here. Next. Exactly 11. Yes. >> Thank you so much for >> back. And make sure we get all those other days. >> Yes, because next time I've got to tell you that tape for good. There's too much not to talk about. So we have to convene again. >> Come to your office in the next couple months of summer. I'll make a trip down. We'll come to >> thank you all for being here. Thank you so much. Thank you. >> Thanks so much, Theresa. I'm Rebecca Knight for John Furrier. Stay tuned. You are watching the Cube.
SUMMARY :
a ws public sector summit brought to you by Amazon Web services. Welcome back, everyone to the Cubes Live coverage of a ws Public sector summit here in Washington Thank you really appreciate always being on the key, But I appreciate you being here and our public Thank you for having us. Of course, you had my keynote today with whole Benson sessions. Now there you guys are kicking some serious butt. Thank you. You're the chief of the public sector business. the world and, you know, over 35 countries, customers and 100 72 2 countries. Why's it in the way you gotta do better ways of tell signs that the CIA adopting the d o d. d is that you know, in 2013 when the icy made this decision made, So what accounts for the fact that these blockers air sort of disappearing as you set up on the main stage this morning? the blockers had been very legacy, and I'd like to tell you already that kind of old guard But I got to get and I want to talk about check for good programs you launched what happened And you know, John, right now, the pipeline that we have seen You've heard me talk about that has missed tell escapes in the world. We're gonna go to Chile. So you could get two best locations with me. And make sure we get all those other days. Yes, because next time I've got to tell you that tape for good. Come to your office in the next couple months of summer. Thank you so much. I'm Rebecca Knight for John Furrier.
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