DV Pure Storage 208
>> Thank you, sir. All right, you ready to roll? >> Ready. >> All right, we'll go ahead and go in five, four, three, two. >> Okay, let's summarize the convergence of file and object. First, I want to thank our guests, Matt Burr, Scott Sinclair, Garrett Belsner, and CB Bonne. I'm your host, Dave Vellante, and please allow me to briefly share some of the key takeaways from today's program. So first, as Scott Sinclair of ESG stated surprise, surprise, data's growing. And Matt Burr, he helped us understand the growth of unstructured data. I mean, estimates indicate that the vast majority of data will be considered unstructured by mid decade, 80% or so. And obviously, unstructured data is growing very, very rapidly. Now, of course, your definition of unstructured data, now that may vary across a wide spectrum. I mean, there's video, there's audio, there's documents, there's spreadsheets, there's chat. I mean, these are generally considered unstructured data but of course they all have some type of structure to them. You know, perhaps it's not as strict as a relational database, but there's certainly metadata and certain structure to these types of use cases that I just mentioned. Now, the key to what Pure is promoting is this idea of unified fast file and object, U-F-F-O. Look, object is great, it's inexpensive, it's simple, but historically, it's been less performant, so good for archiving, or cheap and deep types of examples. Organizations often use file for higher performance workloads and let's face it, most of the world's data lives in file formats. What Pure is doing is bringing together file and object by, for example, supporting multiple protocols, ie, NFS, SMB, and S3. S3, of course, has really given a new life to object over the past decade. Now, the key here is to essentially enable customers to have the best of both worlds, not having to trade off performance for object simplicity. And a key discussion point that we've had in the program has been the impact of Flash on the long, slow, death of spinning disk. Look, hard disk drives, they had a great run, but HDD volumes, they peaked in 2010, and Flash, as you well know, has seen tremendous volume growth thanks to the consumption of Flash in mobile devices and then of course, its application into the enterprise. And as volume is just going to keep growing and growing, and growing. the price declines of Flash are coming down faster than those of HDD. So it's, the writing's on the wall. It's just a matter of time. So Flash is riding down that cost curve very, very aggressively and HDD has essentially become a managed decline business. Now, by bringing Flash to object as part of the FlashBlade portfolio and allowing for multiple protocols, Pure hopes to eliminate the dissonance between file and object and simplify the choice. In other words, let the workload decide. If you have data in a file format, no problem. Pure can still bring the benefits of simplicity of object at scale to the table. So again, let the workload inform what the right strategy is not the technical infrastructure. Now Pure, of course, is not alone. There are others supporting this multi-protocol strategy. And so we asked Matt Burr why Pure, what's so special about you? And not surprisingly, in addition to the product innovation, he went right to Pure's business model advantages. I mean, for example, with its Evergreen support model which was very disruptive in the marketplace. You know, frankly, Pure's entire business disrupted the traditional disk array model which was, fundamentally, it was flawed. Pure forced the industry to respond. And when it achieved escape velocity and Pure went public, the entire industry had to react. And a big part of the Pure value prop in addition to this business model innovation that we just discussed is simplicity. Pure's keep it simple approach coincided perfectly with the ascendancy of cloud where technology organizations needed cloud-like simplicity for certain workloads that were never going to move into the cloud. They were going to stay on-prem. Now I'm going to come back to this but allow me to bring in another concept that Garrett and CB really highlighted, and that is the complexity of the data pipeline. And what do I mean, what do I mean by that, and why is this important? So Scott Sinclair articulated or he implied that the big challenge is organizations, they're data full, but insights are scarce; a lot of data, not as much insights, and it takes time, too much time to get to those insights. So we heard from our guests that the complexity of the data pipeline was a barrier to getting to faster insights. Now, CB Bonne shared how he streamlined his data architecture using Vertica's Eon Mode which allowed him to scale, compute, independently of storage, so that brought critical flexibility and improved economics at scale. And FlashBlade, of course, was the backend storage for his data warehouse efforts. Now, the reason I think this is so important is that organizations are struggling to get insights from data and the complexity associated with the data pipeline and data lifecycles, let's face it, it's overwhelming organizations. And there, the answer to this problem is a much longer and different discussion than unifying object and file. That's, you know, I could spend all day talking about that, but let's focus narrowly on the part of the issue that is related to file and object. So the situation here is the technology has not been serving the business the way it should. Rather, the formula is twisted in the world of data and big data, and data architectures. The data team is mired in complex technical issues that impact the time to insights. Now, part of the answer is to abstract the underlying infrastructure complexity and create a layer with which the business can interact that accelerates instead of impedes innovation. And unifying file and object is a simple example of this where the business team is not blocked by infrastructure nuance, like does this data reside in the file or object format? Can I get to it quickly and inexpensively in a logical way or is the infrastructure in a stovepipe and blocking me? So if you think about the prevailing sentiment of how the cloud is evolving to incorporate on premises, workloads that are hybrid, and configurations that are working across clouds, and now out to the edge, this idea of an abstraction layer that essentially hides the underlying infrastructure is a trend we're going to see evolve this decade. Now, is UFFO the be-all end-all answer to solving all of our data pipeline challenges? No, no, of course not. But by bringing the simplicity and economics of object together with the ubiquity and performance of file, UFFO makes it a lot easier. It simplifies a life organizations that are evolving into digital businesses, which by the way, is every business. So, we see this as an evolutionary trend that further simplifies the underlying technology infrastructure and does a better job supporting the data flows for organizations so they didn't have to spend so much time worrying about the technology details that add little value to the business. Okay, so thanks for watching the convergence of file and object and thanks to Pure Storage for making this program possible. This is Dave Vellante for theCUBE. We'll see you next time.
SUMMARY :
All right, you ready to roll? in five, four, three, two. that impact the time to insights.
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