Andrew Chavez, Indian Pueblo | VMworld 2018
>> Live, from Las Vegas, it's "The Cube" covering VMworld 2018, brought to you by VMware and its ecosystem partners. >> Welcome back. This is The Cube coverage of VM World 2018. Always love when we get to dig in with the practitioners here. I'm Stu Miniman. My cohost is Justin Warren. Welcome to the program first-time guest Andrew Chavez, who is a network and information technology manager with Indian Pueblo Cultural Center out of Albuquerque, New Mexico. >> Out of Albuquerque, New Mexico, that's correct. >> Excellent. Thanks so much for joining us. >> Well, thank you so much for having me. >> Alright, so first of all, tell us a little bit about your organization and your role. >> Well, the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center is kind of a touch point for all the 19 tribes in the state of New Mexico. It's actually one of the only places in the entire world, where 19 tribes, 19 different cultures, really, of Native American people have gotten together, built a cultural center and kind of have formed a gateway in Albuquerque, the largest city in New Mexico, and the gateways to the Pueblos. So it's kind of a cool place. There's just a mix of a lot of neat people, a lot of the different Pueblo people come in and out. It's culturally just a great place to be, just a wonderful, cool place. And on top of that, they at the Pueblo Cultural Center formed a development corporation. So not only do we have the cultural side, which is really neat, but we have this development side, which is developing the old Indian schools. I don't know if you remember the cultural background of the Indian schools throughout the United States of America. >> Yes. >> They've actually taken some of the land for the Cultural Center and the Indian school and are repurposing it, to really help out the Cultural Center and the 19 tribes as we give back to them. >> So is this nonprofit then? >> We have a nonprofit side and a for-profit side. >> OK, give us a little bit of the scope of the operation. You mentioned the tribes and everything, but is it multiple locations? And your scope of responsibilities. >> It's actually multiple locations, so we are actually housed in the Cultural Center itself, but directly across the street we're building up places like hotels, restaurants, office buildings, things of that nature, to kind of diversify the portfolio of things that we offer to the community at large. That money is given back to the stakeholders, who are are the 19 Pueblos. And I was brought in last year, to kind of take what they were as an IT department, and really improve on what they were doing, what they've already done, and just kind of take what's already been done and make it better, and really be able to not only serve the Pueblo Cultural Center, but I'm working to make a showcase there if we can. >> So, Andrew, maybe you could give us a bit of an idea of how IT supports the mission of the Cultural Center. A lot of people are worried that IT is just a cost center and it sits off on the end there and it's something that you have to pay for. So what are some of the things that IT enables the Cultural Center to do, that they wouldn't be able to do otherwise? >> Well, some of the things that we do is... cultural preservation is really one of the big things that we do. Because we do represent all the 19 tribes of New Mexico, different aspects of each of those tribes, in terms of pottery, paintings, all the very rich nature of the hand-crafted pieces that the Pueblos take care of, are all representative of the Cultural Center. So it's not only putting those, but it's cataloging, archiving them, and help with the preservation and dissemination of that information, right? So, when you walk through our museum, all the things are automated. You can go in and press buttons and hear the different languages, see how the pottery is made, see how a lot of these arts and crafts come together, see the history of the Pueblo people and kind of what happened, and how, really, other cultures have interdispersed themselves and interweaved themselves within the rich history of the Pueblo people of New Mexico. And how this overarching culture has really made a difference in the state. Those preservations and on top of that, it's using technology to be able to, again, disseminate it and show how those things work going forward. >> Great stuff, Andrew. Alright, so all the people that visit probably don't understand all the stuff that's behind the scenes. So, it's like all of us that have worked in IT, people are like "Oh, you do computer stuff, right?" So, take us a little bit behind the curtain and tell us a little bit about what technologies you are using to help enable all of those great things you talked about. >> Well, currently what we're using is, we kind of started really green field. The folks that were there before me had worked in more of a single server, hot closet environment (laughs), some of the ways it used to be. There were a lot of consultants, and the decision was made that, to match a lot of the technology initiatives that are going on with the other Pueblos, the Cultural Center needs to catch up. So that's one of the reasons why I was brought in. So one of the first things we did, is say, what can we start doing? And so, when you pull the curtain back one of the things we really decided on was going to a full virtual environment, and finding the right technology and the right player to help us put together a virtual environment, help us build out a data center, and do some of those things. So that's kind of where we started. We started with a five year plan on that build-out and how to maximize not only the budgets that we have, but push those budgets through proper depreciation. So it was really kind of neat to be able to go to a place that I could kind of just pick and choose the things I needed to move forward, and kind of set the course for us moving forward. >> Alright, so could you tell us about some of the decisions you actually made there? So, what did you choose, and what led you to make that particular choice of technology provider? >> Well, initially I started out, because I had worked in a previous endeavor using a UCS, you know, the three in one solution, you have your OS, you have the host, and then you have the navs that's presented to the host, and that's what originally I was going to do because that's what I knew. But I went out to a conference called TribalNet, and was introduced to Nutanix. And I was aware of Nutanix, but I hadn't delved into it. So I kind of talked to one of the reps out there, Justin, and he kind of talked me through Nutanix. When I got back, I searched out a place in Albuquerque called Ardham Technologies, who sells Nutanix, and sat with them. Now, the old UCS was less expensive, cause it's a little older technology, and we didn't think we could get into a hyperconverged solution, but working with the Nutanix rep and my rep from Ardham, they really found a way to make it affordable for us and get us into the hyperconverged technology, which is where I wanted to go. So it was really, kind of... That was the first big decision I made, and I've been very happy with it. >> Excellent. So, having made that deciison and put it in, what are ome of the things that you've now been able to do, given that this is where you wanted to go, and thought maybe it wasn't going to be possible, but now it is. So what's that enabled you to do, that you were looking forward to being able to do? >> Well, it's been abled for us to consolidate a lot of what we have. We haven't used it to its fullest potential because the implementation's only been in about five months. >> Right. >> But what we've been able to do is take those different single servers and move them into a virtualized environment, and then be able to build out a storage area and place user files, and group files, and all the disparate storage areas that were siloed throughout the environment, put it on one single piece of equipment that we can watch. >> Right. >> It's been able to allow us to move to a backup solution that goes to the cloud and isn't fractured, right? So it puts it all in one single area that we can watch, and gives us a single pane of glass for all our servers, which we didn't have before. It's just made us better at what we do, really, and be able to watch what we're doing a lot better. >> Andrew, it's interesting. We talked for years about hyperconvergence. It's not just about converging into the footprint, but it changes the model, because it's really more of a distributed architecture. I think you've got some geographic locations. Maybe help discuss how that fits together, between multiple locations, multi-cloud. It's not just about taking a couple of servers and putting them down to a smaller footprint, it's giving you more flexibility. >> And you've really hit the nail on the head, for the five year plan, right? So year one, it's like choose the vendor, choose the course, but the five year plan is to be able to geographically disperse what we're doing. Because we're using Nutanix, it allows us to put a three-note cluster over here in a single box, we take another single box and put a two-note cluster over here and geographically disperse it. It also allows us, I talked about depreciation, and this is something that I worked on in other places. What we did, is we bought the Nutanix node that we have now for today, right. We plan on using that and buying a secondary node, and using that for the next three years. As we build up, remember I talked about having the development across the road, as we're building new buildings, we're going to build an alternate data center there, and the third year, we're going to take that piece of equipment and move that to the data center and build out a disaster recovery center. So when we buy the new Nutanix node, those two will now be joined. So, not only are we sharing information between the two locations, and have backups geographically dispersed, but we also have been able to use SRM a lot of different ways, to keep the geographical locations up, keep business continuity, but the other portion that is really interesting to us, is that most technology is about a three year depreciation schedule, right. >> Yeah. >> We've been able to take that three year depreciation schedule, and because we're using the older technology as our backup business continuity center, that takes it out to six year depreciation, which extends the life of what we have and be able, when we buy new equipment, it's the newest, greatest, we have the business continuity equipment. And then of course the nodes talk to each other, so we're doing data duplication across two locations. So really when we're all done, we can have up to four to six sets of backups throughout any portion of the day, so it really protects our data and gives us a continuity that we wouldn't have before. >> As someone who really likes a good financial model and spends a lot of time in spreadsheets, mucking around with that, it's really good to hear someone from an IT arena talking about some of the financial impacts on this, some of the business impacts on this. It shows that what is possible when IT takes an interest in the business issues, and shows, we were talking about this earlier on The Cube, about IT people getting a seat at the table, being able to have that conversation about the five year plan, about what makes IT strategically important to the organization. And it's really great hearing a customer actually talk about IT in that context. >> Well, that's one of the things that I think IT gets lost in and as you know, with CIOs, CFOs, CEOs, IT is always seen as a cost center. And we'd eventually like to not be a cost center. (laughs) We'd like to make money, but we have to be fiscally responsible. We have to be fiscally responsible for a number of reasons where I come from at the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center, because we do have a responsibility to our shareholders. We have a responsibility to the Native American people that are taking care of us. We need to take care of them. So if we can find the technology that we need, that we can be a showcase, not only in the technological realm, but also how we budget and take care of money, that shows huge commitment to what we're doing. You know, you can't be a showcase unless you're going to be fiscally responsible as well as technologically responsible, so that's what we're trying to do. >> Yeah, and Andrew, the other thing that strikes me from your conversation, you talk about this five year plan. Sometimes we come to the shows and it's like oh wait, I'm worried about lock-in and enterprise license agreement. Talk about what you look for in choosing partners that will be strategic, that will be with you for this kind of engagement. >> Well, I'm looking for, everybody's always looking for cutting edge, right? But you need to have cutting edge with a background, with a roadmap, right? So what I look for in not only a partner that services me locally, but also in the larger vendor partners, for instance Nutanix. I look for somebody who has a roadmap of what they're doing. Here's what we started with. You know, if I have a five year plan, what's your five year plan? What was your five year plan? Where did you come from? Where are you going to? Can you show me what's going to go on over here? And that's one thing that I really liked about Nutanix, is they had here's what got us here, here's how it's changing, here's what we can show you moving forward, and here's how it can help you. And then, you know, my vendor in Albuquerque, I want the same things. Are you growing? Are you stagnant? What's your customer list? And then the last portion of that is really a relationship sell. There are people out there that will go buy from any vendor because that's what the price ensues, but I can't buy on just price because I need pricing and support and be able to, you know, one call (laughs) We used to say one throat to choke, but I don't like using that any more. But you know, somebody you can drive to and have a conversation with. And that's one thing I've really respected about my vendors, and I like from a customer perspective, is people that are real, they come and see you, and then I can reach out to not only my local vendor, but the folks that support them. I do have to say, with Nutanix, I met Justin who is the rep from Nutanix. He got me involved with the sales engineer at that point and they were on site, they worked directly with me and built just a great relationship around this brand new purchase, something I'm not familiar with but it's a foray into a wider world. And it made me really comfortable with my decision. >> Alright. What's the most exciting thing that you're looking forward to? So you've seen the roadmap, you've spoken to the vendors and you have an idea of what your five year plan is. What's the most exciting thing that's going to be coming up in the next few years? >> The biggest thing for me, and it's probably not even a new thing for Nutanix, but it's what Nutanix is built on. It's what you talked about, the geographical separation, the node building and how we can, Okay, you need more compute? We can give you more compute. You need more storage? We can give you more storage. You need to add something over here? We can do that. It's the flexibility it gives me to stick within budget, we don't have to do this huge budget every year, to be able to prop up what we need. We can buy piece by piece and build it out. And again part of that fiscal responsibility is being forward looking and working with a company that's saying hey, we can get you this today. We're going to take care of you, we're going to listen to your needs, we're going to get you what you need, and here's the bolt-on pieces as we move forward. So I think that's the most exciting piece, is being able to grow within that framework. I like to use a word called platforms for what (laughs) we're doing, right? And I think, from an IT perspective, that's what we're doing and from a cultural perspective, the Indian Pueblo cultural perspective, it's having that platform. So if we say from a museum standpoint, we found the latest and greatest software that's going to allow people to do virtual reality, but we need a back end to support it, I can say I got that. (laughs) We've been able to build the platform to put that on. So it's putting that platform in place, building on that platform, us growing into it and then that company growing with us. And that's been something that's been just transformative for us. >> Well, Andrew, you talked about authentic conversations. We really appreciate you sharing your story with us. Be sure to check out IndianPueblo.org for all that they have to offer. I want to check out the museum. You've got a great list of cultural activities there, so thanks so much for joining us. >> Yes, come see us at the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center. The best time to come is the first week in October for the Albuquerque Balloon Fiesta. We'd love to have you all. >> Alright, for Justin Warren, I'm Stu Miniman. We still have lots more coverage here from Vmworld 2018. Thanks for watching The Cube. (upbeat techno music)
SUMMARY :
covering VMworld 2018, brought to you by VMware Welcome to the program first-time guest Andrew Chavez, Thanks so much for joining us. Alright, so first of all, tell us a little bit about and the gateways to the Pueblos. and the 19 tribes as we give back to them. You mentioned the tribes and everything, and make it better, and really be able to and it's something that you have to pay for. Well, some of the things that we do is... and tell us a little bit about what technologies and kind of set the course for us moving forward. So I kind of talked to one of the reps out there, Justin, given that this is where you wanted to go, because the implementation's only been in about five months. and all the disparate storage areas and be able to watch what we're doing a lot better. but it changes the model, and move that to the data center and gives us a continuity that we wouldn't have before. and shows, we were talking about this earlier on The Cube, that shows huge commitment to what we're doing. Yeah, and Andrew, the other thing that strikes me and then I can reach out to not only my local vendor, and you have an idea of what your five year plan is. and here's the bolt-on pieces as we move forward. for all that they have to offer. We'd love to have you all. We still have lots more coverage here from Vmworld 2018.
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Calline Sanchez, IBM | VMworld 2018
>> (Announcer) Live, from Las Vegas it's the Cube. Covering VM World 2018. Brought to you by VM Ware and it's ecosystem partners. >> Welcome back to the Cube's continuing coverage of VM World 2018, I'm Lisa Marin, with Dave Vellante >> Hey, Lisa. >> Dave, day three, we have had tremendous guests the last couple of days. And we're- a lot of alumni, a lot of new guests, another alumni joining us, Calline Sanchez, vice president of IMB Enterprise System Storage. Welcome back, Calline, it's great to have you here. >> No, thank you very much for letting me be here. >> And I want to congratulate Calline, because she was just named for the Tucson Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, 2018 Businesswoman of the Year. Just a few weeks ago. Amazing. >> Lovin' Tucson, by the way. >> Thank you. >> U of A. >> Yes. >> Bear Down. >> I appreciate the Wildcats reference, so, >> Haha. >> No doubt. And so, this Saturday, oh, I'm sorry. This Saturday, the first game, so- >> My daughter is a freshman at U of A, Hi, Pilar, I love you, baby. Good luck. You're going to crush it, I know you are. >> Haha. >> Dad of the year going on here. So, just before we get into all the storage stuff- >> Yeah. >> They're doing a, they're honoring you, just in about a month and a half or so, with this- >> Yeah. Yes, and I'm very excited about that. Just like you were saying with the community aspect, it's a high-touch award, and I was very thankful for it, because they gave me specific examples of, what I've done in Southern Arizona, in Tucson in particular, that they'll name. For instance, Excite for Girls, and things like that. >> That's awesome. >> Girls in STEM, right? >> Congratulations, that's fantastic. >> We need more inspiration, so, it's great that we, >> Ah, thank you. >> Now count you as one of our distinguished alumni. So, let's talk about what going on at IMB. Here we are at VM World 2018, we're hearing Dave, numbers of upwards of 21,000 people that have been here the last few days. 100,000 more engaging with, expecting to engage with the live streaming and the on demand experiences. What's going on with IBM, you know, from a revenue perspective, a growth perspective? What is exciting you about where you are today? >> So, I will talk in particular about storage. I'm really, really proud about this, being that we work in partnership with, like, Ed Walsh, and then also Eric Herzog. They've inspired me to get closer to building solutions with our end users. So we meet and work with our clients to build up cloud deployment solutions, in partnership with VM Ware, and we enable things like, okay, so there's tape, and then there's cloud-to-tier, so there's fundamental solutions out there in the marketplace that we as developers want to go and play with. It's almost like a great big sandbox. So to speak. >> So, I've got to ask you, because, I mean, everybody in storage says, well, Tape, tape is dead. And every time I see you we talk about tape. We talk about FLAPE. We talk about innovations that are coming to tape. You're a technologist. Right, you just said, as a developer we love to- dot-dot-dot. So, what is it about things like tape, things like mainframe, DS8000, these technologies that have, tried, true, running businesses, what is about those that excite you as a developer? >> Everything old is new again, >> Yeah, right. >> If we just go back to the basics of like, table stakes, right? Security is table stakes, right? Delivering on-time quality releases with optimizers like, tier-to-cloud, things like that. That's fundamental for us. Now, as it relates to tape, so, everything old is new again, like I mentioned a moment ago. Tape was the first device to fully encrypt. So every drive, if it fell off the truck, it was fully encrypted. So, tape is actually training the rest of our portfolio in similar skills, on how we do the end-to-end encryption elements. So, right now with DS8000, we're working in partnership with system Z, to deliver pervasive encryption. >> I got to ask you, so as a development executive, I see you at a lot of these shows. You like coming here? A lot of times, development execs want to, sort of, stay in the lab. But you're out and about, talking to customers. What are you learning? What is that about you that draws you to these shows? >> I was afraid that WE as a lab team would not be relevant unless we have conversations with end users, partners. You know, to really substantiate what's possible from being innovative. So, I would say, number one is relevance, and I felt like, I wanted to more social, because, I'm definitely in some cases, an introvert, though I'm looking above my shoes. That's I'm wearing- >> That's the definition, of an introvert and an extrovert in the tech world. You know that the difference is, right? >> I don't. >> An introvert looks at his or her own shoes, an extrovert looks at your shoes. >> Well, there you go. I've been looking at some shoes- >> Alright, so you're, you're extrovert oriented out here, what are you learning at VM World? what are the customers saying? What are they asking you for? What are you going to take back to the lab? >> A single pane of glass associated with what we intend with like, v-stream, or some of the aspects of automation, with regards to cloud deployment, to make it, like, completely- connected. If that, so to speak. And what I think is really great about all of that is I hate to put it this way, it's very iTunes like. Where it's like, sticky, and it's easy to use, or and, by the way, it's not so expensive, at least to start up. So, a lot of the discussions we've been having are with the various vendors on the expo floor, that they want to build solutions. IBM solutions associate with the cloud, and then the AWS guys, we meet with them. And they're like, well, how are, how can we ensure that we live in an interconnected data-centric world? And so that's what I think is very exciting is that, it's this idea of coopetition. Let's all be well connected, and do it well. >> Let's talk about the customer collaboration, as you mentioned, everything old is new again, we see that, in every aspect of life. Tape, mainframe, but you talked about we need to be relevant, but also need to developing solutions that you end user customers need to solve their business problems. How are you collaborating with customers to stay relevant, and to ensure that their businesses are able to take advantage of the super powers that Pat Gelsinger talked about on Monday, AI, machine learning, emerging technologies, what's that collaboration like? >> I would say the biggest collaborations that I've been participating recently is with cloud servers providers. And they appreciate the economics of physical media, or tape. And so, they think to themselves or they know the data, it's like, okay, less than a half-cent per gig, that's a big deal, right? So, and then we have discussions about total cost of ownership, aspects like that. So the partnership is also, how do we serve the data? And really having discussions about the data. And then, if evaluating the various work streams where, we would want to serve appropriately based on whatever specific cloud infrastructure. And then, also, taking a step back, we have to be interconnected. There's no question. So, I would say the number one set of skills our end users are working with right now happen to be the cloud service providers. >> What are some of the big business benefits that they're achieving, we think, new business models, new revenue streams, market expansion. What are some of the things that you're proud of that IBM storage solutions are helping your customers to deliver? >> Going to tape, it's the economics, yes. It's the security based on encryption, yes. And then also, the other aspect of, is, we're serving big data. I mean, it's like we're having discussions about they're going to grow to, zettabytes by 2020, things like that. I never thought in my life, especially as an engineering student, or in computer science, I would ever be talking about this big of data. And now we're here. And so, we're learning how to enable in partnership with clients, what would be the right, or appropriate solution. >> So, I'm searching our video library, because somebody said this week something that was really interesting to me and I wanted to get your perspective from a development mind, someone who's technical. We're hearing a lot about migrating to the cloud. And how easy that is. And then, I think it was Pat Gelsinger said, there's three laws. There's the law of physics, the laws of a company, and the law of the land. And, those are immutable, generally. But I want to ask you about the laws of physics. So, in terms of just moving data into the cloud, we talk about petabyte, exabytes, there's so much data. How feasible is it for a customer to move data, and just stuff it all into the cloud, and what are you doing to either help them do that, or bring the cloud experience to their data? >> Depending on the client interests of on-prem, off-prem, or hybrid, right? We work to evaluate APIs in collaborations, so we enable a streamline, so it's not only just understanding the components of the cloud deployment, but it's also partnering with all elements of the entire ecosystem's stack. So, it depends but we really start with the client's end use case. What do you want? What kind of security do you want? Are you okay with off-prem, public clouds? Or, maybe it's specific data, how do we go about managing the data so we secure it, like, we bucket-ize it. So those are some of the discussions we've been having on the floor, here, at VM world, but also, within our labs, and also with the clients directly. >> You know what I love about that answer? I'll translate it. It's not a biz- it's not a technical problem, Dave, it's a business problem, >> Yes. >> Is really what you're tell me. >> And that's a fundament- you asked the question before. That's fundamentally why I am here. >> Right. >> I don't believe we can live in this world anymore, where it's like, we build it, and then they come. >> Field of Dreams does not exist anymore. >> Yeah. And so, now we've got to have conversations with our end users, to develop, what we've going to put on the roadmap. And so I always felt like, okay, well, when I'd see the roadmap in the lab, I'm like, okay, well, who wants this? Who asked for this, right? And those ended up becoming some of my fundamental questions. So then, I started to come here, or conferences like this, because I could have those conversations with the end users and partners. >> That's interesting, who wants this? Who needs this? What problems does it solve? Why us, why now? Those are the kinds of things you're asking. >> Let's talk about why us? IBM has been around for a very long time. What do you think, again, in this got to be relevant, we need it to be really defined by customer needs and uses. Everything old is new again. What, in your opinion, makes, why should a customer go, in my VM environment, IBM. >> I'm going to start with why I even personally want to remain with IBM. It's a great big candy store. >> Haha. >> And what I have to remind myself is, just don't eat too much, right? And, by the way, I still eat way too much. But what's great about it is, it's a sandbox, so, I can talk to you software engineers one day, who are telling me about certain APIs they're building in Python. Then, oh, by the way, I meet with a mechanical set of engineers, cuz they want to enable robot arms. Oh, and by the way, should we have a discussion on microcode and firmware for the entire stack. So I take a step back, and I'm thinking, Wow- the only set of conversation I really prior was not having, is about services. And to me, services is like the wrapping paper, for a present that you're about to receive. And really understanding the overall, end-to-end stack infrastructure. So, I believe from an IBM perspective, it's the ecosystem. It's a great big candy store. Just don't eat too much. >> Haha. So, how do you spend your time? Do you spend your time thinking, collaborating with team on, architecture, on, vision, on, northstar, writing code. How do you spend your time day-to-day? >> Can I say, all of the above? And, the vast majority, right now, really just making sure we're relevant in the marketplace, so that we re-fresh the right amount of cycles. So, right now, what we're going to be doing in 2019, we're going to be talking about it right now. Architecting what the future looks like. And that's part of the reason why I'm here at VM World 2018, is I'm wanting to verify my roadmap. Am I taking the right approach with the extended team? Cuz it is team, and I work with them. These engineers and scientists are so right, and have great ideas. Let's just make sure they're great ideas that will keep us relevant and keep us paid. >> So, have you gotten that validation, in the last few days at VM World? >> Give me one more day. >> Haha. Well, Calline, thanks so much for stopping by and sharing. Not only what IBM is doing to continue to innovate and stay relevant, but also what's exciting to you- >> Yeah. >> About working for IBM, and again, Congrats on getting the award. >> Yes, and thank you very much for highlighting that, cuz it's, I'm very excited as just an individual, it's like, it was unexpected. >> Well, you're representing women in tech, women in STEM, it's awesome, congratulations. >> Thank you very much. >> We're really happy. >> And, by the way, I'll definitely reach out to your daughter at some point. >> Oh, great. >> Say, hey, let's go to a tailgate. >> Love it. >> I won't corrupt. >> Haha. Fantastic, Calline, thank you so much for your time. I'm Lisa Martin with Dave Vellante. We want to thank you for watching the Cube, we are in day three of our continue coverage from VM World 2018. Stick around, we'll be right back with our next guest.
SUMMARY :
Brought to you by VM Ware it's great to have you here. No, thank you very much 2018 Businesswoman of the Year. This Saturday, the first game, so- You're going to crush it, I know you are. Dad of the year going on here. Just like you were saying What's going on with IBM, you know, So to speak. So, I've got to ask So every drive, if it fell off the truck, What is that about you that You know, to really substantiate You know that the difference is, right? looks at your shoes. Well, there you go. So, a lot of the discussions Let's talk about the And so, they think to themselves What are some of the things that you're It's the security based into the cloud, and what are you doing So, it depends but we really start with You know what I love about that answer? you asked the question before. I don't believe we can in the lab, I'm like, Those are the kinds of got to be relevant, we need it to be I'm going to start it's a sandbox, so, I can talk to you How do you spend your time day-to-day? And that's part of the reason to continue to innovate and stay relevant, Congrats on getting the award. Yes, and thank you very much Well, you're And, by the way, I'll definitely We want to thank you
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Andrew Chavez, Indian Pueblo | VMworld 2018
>> Live, from Las Vegas, it's "The Cube" covering VMworld 2018, brought to you by VMware and its ecosystem partners. >> Welcome back. This is The Cube coverage of VM World 2018. Always love when we get to dig in with the practitioners here. I'm Stu Miniman. My cohost is Justin Warren. Welcome to the program first-time guest Andrew Chavez, who is a network and information technology manager with Indian Pueblo Cultural Center out of Albuquerque, New Mexico. >> Out of Albuquerque, New Mexico, that's correct. >> Excellent. Thanks so much for joining us. >> Well, thank you so much for having me. >> Alright, so first of all, tell us a little bit about your organization and your role. >> Well, the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center is kind of a touch point for all the 19 tribes in the state of New Mexico. It's actually one of the only places in the entire world, where 19 tribes, 19 different cultures, really, of Native American people have gotten together, built a cultural center and kind of have formed a gateway in Albuquerque, the largest city in New Mexico, and the gateways to the Pueblos. So it's kind of a cool place. There's just a mix of a lot of neat people, a lot of the different Pueblo people come in and out. It's culturally just a great place to be, just a wonderful, cool place. And on top of that, they at the Pueblo Cultural Center formed a development corporation. So not only do we have the cultural side, which is really neat, but we have this development side, which is developing the old Indian schools. I don't know if you remember the cultural background of the Indian schools throughout the United States of America. >> Yes. >> They've actually taken some of the land for the Cultural Center and the Indian school and are repurposing it, to really help out the Cultural Center and the 19 tribes as we give back to them. >> So is this nonprofit then? >> We have a nonprofit side and a for-profit side. >> OK, give us a little bit of the scope of the operation. You mentioned the tribes and everything, but is it multiple locations? And your scope of responsibilities. >> It's actually multiple locations, so we are actually housed in the Cultural Center itself, but directly across the street we're building up places like hotels, restaurants, office buildings, things of that nature, to kind of diversify the portfolio of things that we offer to the community at large. That money is given back to the stakeholders, who are are the 19 Pueblos. And I was brought in last year, to kind of take what they were as an IT department, and really improve on what they were doing, what they've already done, and just kind of take what's already been done and make it better, and really be able to not only serve the Pueblo Cultural Center, but I'm working to make a showcase there if we can. >> So, Andrew, maybe you could give us a bit of an idea of how IT supports the mission of the Cultural Center. A lot of people are worried that IT is just a cost center and it sits off on the end there and it's something that you have to pay for. So what are some of the things that IT enables the Cultural Center to do, that they wouldn't be able to do otherwise? >> Well, some of the things that we do is... cultural preservation is really one of the big things that we do. Because we do represent all the 19 tribes of New Mexico, different aspects of each of those tribes, in terms of pottery, paintings, all the very rich nature of the hand-crafted pieces that the Pueblos take care of, are all representative of the Cultural Center. So it's not only putting those, but it's cataloging, archiving them, and help with the preservation and dissemination of that information, right? So, when you walk through our museum, all the things are automated. You can go in and press buttons and hear the different languages, see how the pottery is made, see how a lot of these arts and crafts come together, see the history of the Pueblo people and kind of what happened, and how, really, other cultures have interdispersed themselves and interweaved themselves within the rich history of the Pueblo people of New Mexico. And how this overarching culture has really made a difference in the state. Those preservations and on top of that, it's using technology to be able to, again, disseminate it and show how those things work going forward. >> Great stuff, Andrew. Alright, so all the people that visit probably don't understand all the stuff that's behind the scenes. So, it's like all of us that have worked in IT, people are like "Oh, you do computer stuff, right?" So, take us a little bit behind the curtain and tell us a little bit about what technologies you are using to help enable all of those great things you talked about. >> Well, currently what we're using is, we kind of started really green field. The folks that were there before me had worked in more of a single server, hot closet environment (laughs), some of the ways it used to be. There were a lot of consultants, and the decision was made that, to match a lot of the technology initiatives that are going on with the other Pueblos, the Cultural Center needs to catch up. So that's one of the reasons why I was brought in. So one of the first things we did, is say, what can we start doing? And so, when you pull the curtain back one of the things we really decided on was going to a full virtual environment, and finding the right technology and the right player to help us put together a virtual environment, help us build out a data center, and do some of those things. So that's kind of where we started. We started with a five year plan on that build-out and how to maximize not only the budgets that we have, but push those budgets through proper depreciation. So it was really kind of neat to be able to go to a place that I could kind of just pick and choose the things I needed to move forward, and kind of set the course for us moving forward. >> Alright, so could you tell us about some of the decisions you actually made there? So, what did you choose, and what led you to make that particular choice of technology provider? >> Well, initially I started out, because I had worked in a previous endeavor using a UCS, you know, the three in one solution, you have your OS, you have the host, and then you have the navs that's presented to the host, and that's what originally I was going to do because that's what I knew. But I went out to a conference called TribalNet, and was introduced to Nutanix. And I was aware of Nutanix, but I hadn't delved into it. So I kind of talked to one of the reps out there, Justin, and he kind of talked me through Nutanix. When I got back, I searched out a place in Albuquerque called Ardham Technologies, who sells Nutanix, and sat with them. Now, the old UCS was less expensive, cause it's a little older technology, and we didn't think we could get into a hyperconverged solution, but working with the Nutanix rep and my rep from Ardham, they really found a way to make it affordable for us and get us into the hyperconverged technology, which is where I wanted to go. So it was really, kind of... That was the first big decision I made, and I've been very happy with it. >> Excellent. So, having made that deciison and put it in, what are ome of the things that you've now been able to do, given that this is where you wanted to go, and thought maybe it wasn't going to be possible, but now it is. So what's that enabled you to do, that you were looking forward to being able to do? >> Well, it's been abled for us to consolidate a lot of what we have. We haven't used it to its fullest potential because the implementation's only been in about five months. >> Right. >> But what we've been able to do is take those different single servers and move them into a virtualized environment, and then be able to build out a storage area and place user files, and group files, and all the disparate storage areas that were siloed throughout the environment, put it on one single piece of equipment that we can watch. >> Right. >> It's been able to allow us to move to a backup solution that goes to the cloud and isn't fractured, right? So it puts it all in one single area that we can watch, and gives us a single pane of glass for all our servers, which we didn't have before. It's just made us better at what we do, really, and be able to watch what we're doing a lot better. >> Andrew, it's interesting. We talked for years about hyperconvergence. It's not just about converging into the footprint, but it changes the model, because it's really more of a distributed architecture. I think you've got some geographic locations. Maybe help discuss how that fits together, between multiple locations, multi-cloud. It's not just about taking a couple of servers and putting them down to a smaller footprint, it's giving you more flexibility. >> And you've really hit the nail on the head, for the five year plan, right? So year one, it's like choose the vendor, choose the course, but the five year plan is to be able to geographically disperse what we're doing. Because we're using Nutanix, it allows us to put a three-note cluster over here in a single box, we take another single box and put a two-note cluster over here and geographically disperse it. It also allows us, I talked about depreciation, and this is something that I worked on in other places. What we did, is we bought the Nutanix node that we have now for today, right. We plan on using that and buying a secondary node, and using that for the next three years. As we build up, remember I talked about having the development across the road, as we're building new buildings, we're going to build an alternate data center there, and the third year, we're going to take that piece of equipment and move that to the data center and build out a disaster recovery center. So when we buy the new Nutanix node, those two will now be joined. So, not only are we sharing information between the two locations, and have backups geographically dispersed, but we also have been able to use SRM a lot of different ways, to keep the geographical locations up, keep business continuity, but the other portion that is really interesting to us, is that most technology is about a three year depreciation schedule, right. >> Yeah. >> We've been able to take that three year depreciation schedule, and because we're using the older technology as our backup business continuity center, that takes it out to six year depreciation, which extends the life of what we have and be able, when we buy new equipment, it's the newest, greatest, we have the business continuity equipment. And then of course the nodes talk to each other, so we're doing data duplication across two locations. So really when we're all done, we can have up to four to six sets of backups throughout any portion of the day, so it really protects our data and gives us a continuity that we wouldn't have before. >> As someone who really likes a good financial model and spends a lot of time in spreadsheets, mucking around with that, it's really good to hear someone from an IT arena talking about some of the financial impacts on this, some of the business impacts on this. It shows that what is possible when IT takes an interest in the business issues, and shows, we were talking about this earlier on The Cube, about IT people getting a seat at the table, being able to have that conversation about the five year plan, about what makes IT strategically important to the organization. And it's really great hearing a customer actually talk about IT in that context. >> Well, that's one of the things that I think IT gets lost in and as you know, with CIOs, CFOs, CEOs, IT is always seen as a cost center. And we'd eventually like to not be a cost center. (laughs) We'd like to make money, but we have to be fiscally responsible. We have to be fiscally responsible for a number of reasons where I come from at the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center, because we do have a responsibility to our shareholders. We have a responsibility to the Native American people that are taking care of us. We need to take care of them. So if we can find the technology that we need, that we can be a showcase, not only in the technological realm, but also how we budget and take care of money, that shows huge commitment to what we're doing. You know, you can't be a showcase unless you're going to be fiscally responsible as well as technologically responsible, so that's what we're trying to do. >> Yeah, and Andrew, the other thing that strikes me from your conversation, you talk about this five year plan. Sometimes we come to the shows and it's like oh wait, I'm worried about lock-in and enterprise license agreement. Talk about what you look for in choosing partners that will be strategic, that will be with you for this kind of engagement. >> Well, I'm looking for, everybody's always looking for cutting edge, right? But you need to have cutting edge with a background, with a roadmap, right? So what I look for in not only a partner that services me locally, but also in the larger vendor partners, for instance Nutanix. I look for somebody who has a roadmap of what they're doing. Here's what we started with. You know, if I have a five year plan, what's your five year plan? What was your five year plan? Where did you come from? Where are you going to? Can you show me what's going to go on over here? And that's one thing that I really liked about Nutanix, is they had here's what got us here, here's how it's changing, here's what we can show you moving forward, and here's how it can help you. And then, you know, my vendor in Albuquerque, I want the same things. Are you growing? Are you stagnant? What's your customer list? And then the last portion of that is really a relationship sell. There are people out there that will go buy from any vendor because that's what the price ensues, but I can't buy on just price because I need pricing and support and be able to, you know, one call (laughs) We used to say one throat to choke, but I don't like using that any more. But you know, somebody you can drive to and have a conversation with. And that's one thing I've really respected about my vendors, and I like from a customer perspective, is people that are real, they come and see you, and then I can reach out to not only my local vendor, but the folks that support them. I do have to say, with Nutanix, I met Justin who is the rep from Nutanix. He got me involved with the sales engineer at that point and they were on site, they worked directly with me and built just a great relationship around this brand new purchase, something I'm not familiar with but it's a foray into a wider world. And it made me really comfortable with my decision. >> Alright. What's the most exciting thing that you're looking forward to? So you've seen the roadmap, you've spoken to the vendors and you have an idea of what your five year plan is. What's the most exciting thing that's going to be coming up in the next few years? >> The biggest thing for me, and it's probably not even a new thing for Nutanix, but it's what Nutanix is built on. It's what you talked about, the geographical separation, the node building and how we can, Okay, you need more compute? We can give you more compute. You need more storage? We can give you more storage. You need to add something over here? We can do that. It's the flexibility it gives me to stick within budget, we don't have to do this huge budget every year, to be able to prop up what we need. We can buy piece by piece and build it out. And again part of that fiscal responsibility is being forward looking and working with a company that's saying hey, we can get you this today. We're going to take care of you, we're going to listen to your needs, we're going to get you what you need, and here's the bolt-on pieces as we move forward. So I think that's the most exciting piece, is being able to grow within that framework. I like to use a word called platforms for what (laughs) we're doing, right? And I think, from an IT perspective, that's what we're doing and from a cultural perspective, the Indian Pueblo cultural perspective, it's having that platform. So if we say from a museum standpoint, we found the latest and greatest software that's going to allow people to do virtual reality, but we need a back end to support it, I can say I got that. (laughs) We've been able to build the platform to put that on. So it's putting that platform in place, building on that platform, us growing into it and then that company growing with us. And that's been something that's been just transformative for us. >> Well, Andrew, you talked about authentic conversations. We really appreciate you sharing your story with us. Be sure to check out IndianPueblo.org for all that they have to offer. I want to check out the museum. You've got a great list of cultural activities there, so thanks so much for joining us. >> Yes, come see us at the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center. The best time to come is the first week in October for the Albuquerque Balloon Fiesta. We'd love to have you all. >> Alright, for Justin Warren, I'm Stu Miniman. We still have lots more coverage here from Vmworld 2018. Thanks for watching The Cube. (upbeat techno music)
SUMMARY :
brought to you by VMware Welcome to the program Out of Albuquerque, New so much for joining us. tell us a little bit about and the gateways to the Pueblos. and the 19 tribes as we give back to them. We have a nonprofit of the scope of the operation. and make it better, and really be able to that IT enables the Cultural Center to do, and hear the different languages, that's behind the scenes. and kind of set the course So I kind of talked to one of given that this is where you wanted to go, because the implementation's and all the disparate storage areas and be able to watch what but it changes the model, and move that to the data center it's the newest, greatest, about the five year plan, Well, that's one of the things Yeah, and Andrew, the and then I can reach out to and you have an idea of and here's the bolt-on for all that they have to offer. We'd love to have you all. Alright, for Justin
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Jacob Broido & Neville Yates, INFINIDAT | VMworld 2018
>> Live from Las Vegas. It's theCUBE. Covering VM World 2018. Brought to you by VMware and Adziko System partners. >> Welcome back to the Mandalay Bay everybody in Las Vegas. My name is Dave Vellante, I'm here with David Floyer. This is day three of our wall to wall coverage of VMworld 2018. We've got two sets here in the VM Village. 94 guests this week. It's a record for the CUBE. Thanks so much for watching. I've been in this business as long as Pat Gelsinger and ever since I've been in this business people have said, "oh infrastructure's dying", and you know what, storage is the gift that keeps on giving. And I just, we love the conversations. Guys from Infinidat are here. Jacob Broido is the Chief Product Officer and Neville Yates is the Senior Director of Data Protection Solutions at Infinidat. Gentlemen, welcome to theCUBE. Happy VMworld 2018. >> Thank you >> Thank you >> All right Jacob, I'm going to start with you. >> Okay. >> So we have seen Infinidat come in. You're basically competing with all flash arrays, you're faster than Flash, and that's your sort of tag line. So you have this system designed for primary storage and then all of a sudden, you know last summer, around last summer, maybe it was the fall. We see you guys entering the data protection market with essentially the same architecture. How is it that you can take a system that's designed for primary storage faster than Flash, and then point it at data protection. Help us understand. >> That's a great question. So, it all starts with the fact that we designed our system to work with mixed workloads. And primary storage being our first keypoint, but the design and architecture supposed to work with any type of workload. And what we started seeing in the field is that our customers first displaced a lot of incumbent primary storage on us. And then we started seeing them putting backup workloads as well, and data protection workloads on our systems as well, and coming back and saying that this works amazingly led to more of that. This basically led us to a point of expanding on that strategy and introducing additional products and services. The key point for us in this was that it was remarkably easy for us to introduce additional capabilities because of the solid technical and architectural foundation. We're very fast. Our financial model enables us to do and go after the data protection market efficiently, and we're seeing this in the field. >> So Neville help us, paint a picture for us. You've got a long history in the data protection market. You were involved in disrupting tape, you've been a consultant in this space working with customers. What's the market sort of look like, the sort of available market for you guys? >> So when Jacob refers to the expansion into data protection, we took this technology as Jacob describes the InfiniBox, and we didn't just expand in one direction. We expanded in two directions, multi-direct, with the introduction of of InfiniSync, which is a means by which critical applications can enable a recovery point of zero, Jacob will go into more details on that. And then at the other end of the spectrum, we deliver a deploying InfiniGuard. Based on the same technology that Jacob described as the core, we're now able to be the target of factual re-enter, the typical grandfather/father/son, every 24-hours you do a backup, you do an incremental. And with deduplication as a front end to the core storage, now we've got a coverage across a data protection spectrum that nobody else can match. Recovery point of zero, leveraging replication technologies that Jacob will expand upon in a minute, Snap technology internal to InfiniBox, integrated with backup applications such as the dash-board management is all consistent, and then further down the spectrum, the InfiniGuard itself, dealing with the traditional kind of data protection schemes. A complete spectrum coverage. Nobody else can deliver it. Built on that technology core to the InfinityBox storage itself. >> So you got the full pyramid covered with the same fundamental architecture. But Jacob, you can't just throw the Box at data protection, you have to bring in other features, you got to be best of breed. So maybe you can talk a little bit about, double-click on some of those. >> Sure. So it all starts with kind of base foundation for our data protection that is InfiniSnaps. It's our snapshot core engine which from day one, we designed to work at multi-petabyte scale, and for us what that means is that you need to support hundred-thousands of snapshots and up to multiple millions. That's by design how we designed the system. But not only that, you have to have zero impact on performance. If you look at our systems in the field, our customers are doing thousands of snapshots per day. Some are doing tens of thousands or more per day with no performance impact, that's not even measurable on any of their performance graphs. This is the foundational technology on which we have built our forward looking additional data protection technologies. So, if we look upper in the pyramid of overall solutions for data protection, after that we introduce our asynchronous replication which is based on that snapshot technology for us. The reason we had such an efficient and groundbreaking snapshot technology, enables us to do the lowest RPO protection for async replication when comparing to any storage product on the market. We're talking about four seconds RPO, and this is something that no other vendor was able to do, because snapshots break at that pace. It's very hard to create and delete snapshots at scale at a such a short interval. >> Without performance degradation. >> Exactly, exactly. We were able to do this. And this is kind of one example of how our early days architectural planning and investment in our product architecture pays off year after year with every new feature. That's why it seems easy for now when we release features quickly, because we have such a solid technical foundation. >> One of the things that I was really fascinated by, was your purchase of Axxana. And how have you been able to use that to get this RTO zero, that you're claiming on that? I mean if you look at the marketplace at the moment, it seems to be that the storage vendors in general are owning this whole space of RTO, lower-RTO's, et cetera. >> That's a great question, but before we get into details about that I want to cover a kind of foundational technology for that, that enabled us to do this. And that is our synchronous replication within InfiniBox already. Which is also built on top of our async, which in turn, built on top of our snapshots. With our synchronous replication within InfiniBox, we're delivering the lowest possible latency for sync replication today. Just to give you an example of how low and how efficient that is, systems that are running synchronous replication on top of InfiniBox are having lower latency than a single all-flash array writing locally. Just imagine what it means. We're able to do the round trip right to another array, and complete the whole work faster than you'll have an all-flash array, a typical all-flash array doing. Now that foundational technology also is a key part of our InfiniSync implementation. Because what we did, we took a great product which comes from Axxana, which is the hardened black box, capable of withstanding any type of disaster, fire, floods, earthquake, whatever. And we essentially integrated it very closely with InfiniBox sync replication, where we're writing this very efficient low-latency sync operations to our InfiniSync appliance, and essentially enabling RPO zero over in the distance. So if you look at it from the heart things perspective which is the data path, we had existing capability, which is our sync replication within the array. We just had to integrate it with another great product, Axxana, and that essentially was more than anything an integration work rather than from scratch development. Because again, this is part of our philosophy, we plan ahead as far a our product, road map, and strategy, and when you lay out the foundation early on, you get to the point where some things look easy, because they were pre-made and prepared early on. >> So that's the tip of the pyramid. For those mission critical applications where you need RPO zero, you've now enabled customers to do that for much lower cost than let's say for instance, the three site data center. >> Yep. >> What about the sort of fat middle, Neville, of data protection, I think you guys call it InfiniGuard. Right? That's kind of your solution there. >> So InfiniGuard simply is InfiniBox storage, with all of it's resiliency and performance, and algorithms that outperform typical arrays, and in front of that we've integrated deduplication engines. These deduplication engines present themselves as targets to the traditional backup ecosystem, receive data, de-duplicate it, and use the resources of InfiniBox storage integrated into the InfiniGuard. And, it's been received well, because its ability to deliver aggressive recovery time objectives, because of its performance in terms of resource speeds. The traditional systems that have been designed ten or fifteen years ago were okay at doing backups, they were purposely built for backup processes. They suffer greatly as a byproduct of the process of deduplication, and the IO profile that that generates. InfiniGuard breaks through that, because of its performance in the underlying storage, in order to drive RTO's, for the recovery of those files that are under the 24-hour sort of data protection cycle. And the customers are receiving it well. They are amazed at the performance, the reliability, and the simplicity within which that fits into the existing ecosystem. So it completes. InfiniSync, InfiniGuard, with InfiniBox at the core in the middle. >> And so you partner with the backup software vendors. >> Of course. >> You're not writing your own backup software, right? >> No no no. So integration, Veeam, the ConVals, the Veritas OST's, et cetera. A little further integration when it comes to InfiniBox Snap technology. That is integrated into backup applications such as ConVal or Veeam. Specifically, you can use their dashboard and their scheduling scheme to trigger the snap that then is taken care of in InfiniBox. So, it's quite a comprehensive deliverable against the whole data protection paradigm. >> And have you made a cloud of that now? With your new service? >> Not yet, but as Jacob said, there's the vision, we are always building strategically, slightly ahead of the curve. So you can imagine that that's not lost on the radar screen. >> Right. >> I see this as a return on asset play. In other words, I've got the architecture, I've got my processes and procedures in place, I don't have to go out and buy a purpose built appliance for data protection now, I can use the asset that's on my floor, that people are trained on, what are your thoughts? >> Absolutely, it seems to me that you have, uh simplified tremendously, all of those previous steps, that took one to another to another, and put them all in the same box, and used the same technologies, to achieve much better end to end results. I think it's excellent. >> You're absolutely correct, and it's deliverable in a timely fashion, because the foundation is so strong. The investment that we made from day one, to make sure that that storage architecture was able to deliver the storage services at the right cost point, at the right resiliency, at the right performance levels, is the means by which we're able to accomplish that. No one else can do it. >> And there's another arc to this story. That we're constantly, we're continually investing into that foundation. Every, our customers, the one unique thing that they experience with us, is that their systems get better every time, every release that we have, every month they get better. Not only on performance, which is obvious, in that our systems are improving all the time. >> As opposed to the normal expectation is that >> Yes. >> as you fill it up it gets worse. >> Yeah. We are actually delivering the opposite. Our customers that are buying the system today, know that, the ones that experienced InfiniBox, know that it will become better over time. And that expands the whole spectrum. It's performance, it's reliability, but it also futures it. All of the things that we discussed here, were delivered free of charge through our software upgrade to our existing InfiniBox customers. And, without disclosing something specific looking forward, there are many more things in that area coming up pretty soon from us. >> Very innovative. You guys always solve problems differently, cutting against the conventional wisdom. You see, VMworld, a lot of glam. A lot of big market. And you guys, I was at your customer dinner the other night. A lot of happy customers. A very intimate event. And a lot of good belly to belly conversations. So congratulations. Final thoughts from each of you on VMworld 2018, the future of Infinidat, anything you want to share with us? Go ahead, Neville. >> Good show, the clients, the prospects that I've spoken to here, they get to open their minds in terms of our solution-offering, and it's generated a lot of interest, and it's going to be a good remainder of the year and a good 2019. >> Great, Jacob, final words from you. >> I agree as well. And we're, I'm seeing customers that are actually reaching out to new prospects for us, and telling the story of Infinidat, and that's catching on. And it's great to see that. >> Jacob, Neville, thanks very much for coming to theCUBE. Bringing you all the action from VMworld 2018, I'm Dave Vellante, for David Floyer. You're watching theCUBE, and we'll be right back after this short break. (light electronic music)
SUMMARY :
Brought to you by VMware and Neville Yates is the Senior Director going to start with you. How is it that you can take and go after the data the sort of available market for you guys? of factual re-enter, the the Box at data protection, This is the foundational and investment in our product architecture One of the things that and complete the whole work So that's the tip of the pyramid. What about the sort and in front of that we've the backup software vendors. So integration, Veeam, the ConVals, not lost on the radar screen. I don't have to go out and buy to me that you have, uh is the means by which we're the one unique thing that And that expands the whole spectrum. of you on VMworld 2018, and it's going to be a and telling the story of Infinidat, and we'll be right back
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Ed Walsh, IBM | VMworld 2018
For Las Vegas, it's the cube covering vm world 2018, brought to you by vm ware and its ecosystem partners. Hello everyone. Welcome back to the cubes exclusive coverage live coverage here in Las Vegas for Vm world 2018. I'm John furrier with Dave Volante cohost of the cube. Our next guest ed walls. Cube alumni is also the general manager of storage and software defined infrastructure for IBM. Great to see you. Yeah, likewise. So we just were talking to Michael Dell earlier and again, the open ecosystem of vm world again, continues to be a little bit more better vibes this year. It seems to be an uplift around, hey, on premise as is working now, it seems to have some visibility. It's not gloom and doom for all this data center, but certainly some work going on. You guys were out front and software defined infrastructure and storage from so leader. Yep. What's the update? What's going on? Well, I think the, uh, the upbeat here that we're seeing from vm world is the same. We're seeing across the industry there You don't wear a boom happening and being data driven, is a, almost a renaissance. which plays a storage heavily. You do have to have right infrastructure to pull this off either on premises or in a hybrid or a multicloud at ECC. I like Lvm, we're kind of clear, you know the nomenclature around hybrid is homogeneous across the cloud and multicloud is all different types, which we see both so I think it's helping our business. You're seeing us grow since I've been You're seeing a large explosion and what we're doing on flash mostly because the here a growing pretty consistently above market. performance does matter. We did a major new and non. So you've seen our, our innovation pipelines alive and really kicking in and it really plays what clients are trying to really be more data driven of the drivers of your growth suddenly successes. What are the key drivers? Yeah, so I think it has to come down to offerings if you don't have the right offerings to help people to get. We use the term, you know, during the cloud, but it's really turning more of a journey to being data driven and it has to be in a cloud context and that is all about having the right offerings. We do focus in different areas for innovation, what we're doing, our flash, and it's not just flashed for individual raise, but where that's going as far as how you're going to access the data, you know, it's very different and modernizing the cognitive infrastructure or what you're going to do in these new cloud apps, data center compared to what you can do on ai infrastructure, but they need different things. But it's all about being more data driven, being more agile, but also really taking the complexity down. So, and I think when we're doing the exact same thing, all the announcements this week, we're all about making it easier to be data driven regardless of where you're at, which is what we're seeing and security to continues to pound this at the core, which is you're going to see the same thing from ibm. We're going to talk about technology innovation. We talked about the industry context, but it has to be the trust and security at the core and that's where I think that's why ibm has been doing so well. You know, it's interesting when I've been in this business a long time, you've been in the storage business awhile. Me, me a little longer than you guys, but John and I were talking about this the other day, the stores, everybody's been saying infrastructure is dead. I've been hearing that for 35 years. Tommy Rosen believe infrastructure matters, but it's consistently a growth market and a 60 percent plus gross margin product. Now you've got so many people don't understand that. I hear people that well, how come the VC's are putting so much money into storage? Backup is now data particular booming. Yep. Lot of companies say, well, we're going to divest of this or that or get out. You know, you've seen some companies say, oh well you're going to go here. It's just a consistent performer. Your thoughts. So I agree and and decided just storage, but I would say in most stores plays into that, right? It's all about being data driven and eventually it has to land someplace for performance, but it's the agility piece is that you're seeing us in the other industry. Leaders really drive that you can You mentioned backup, you know, actually leverage this data in different ways. so we'll talk about storage rays need to be flexible and fast, but backup ends up really turning into an interesting segment which you're seeing us lead in is how do you get more effective? All those copies of data instead of being some, you know, insurance policy, you hope you never get to and it might take you a long time to get the data back. Now these instantaneous copies for recovery, but also for how do you leverage that for being data driven. So all of a sudden if you're trying to be doing digital transformation, you have to deal with the infrastructure on prem or in the cloud. You're looking for ways to do that easier. We use it on a journey to cloud. It seems more and more it's a journey to being data driven, but it has to be in cloud context, but it plays in a storage or ugly it. You need the right infrastructure to build on to be honest. Sure. Yeah. The data driven thing and you're pounding that Mr Hardy, which I love by the way, it's not new for you guys, but one of the things we've been talking about from day one, you know our wrap data's at the center of the value proposition, but we were talking early on years ago about data being a real part of the development process now apps, so one of things gelsinger kind of talked about apps are now the new networks or something around networking networks and they also sent security. NSX has putting security of around the apps. Decoupling that from say network security. She's starting to see data in the APP component. Highly coupled with the application, new models around how that's stored and retrieved. Yep. Service Meshes and things going on around the application. How has that changed or have you been vectoring to that place where IBM. So one of the investment themes is how to do that and there's a couple different reasons. How do you become more data driven, so all that data, how do you use it to get better insights, right? Uh, and then all the data is typically on, you know, in your infrastructure, a lot of this on prem or in the cloud. So one is getting more insights, right? So you need to flexibly go after those copies. And then, uh, the other thing is how to use it to do better APP development. So you want to do Dev ops, which is how do you just get better quality, faster delivery for a pipeline. But a lot of times if you can't bring the data, bringing, like even if you do a test of a mobile app, you need to test it with the production data sets. So how do you do that? Flexibility and data is a hardest part of all this stuff. So we're doing on ai, how do you get application driven to go after it and the right performance. But we see Dev ops, you can see across our entire product line an API layer, yes, we have apis across all of our storage for our products and software, but a separate API layer to allow you to do a lot of these things with, not to replace any devops tools put to enable those devops tools or Coobernetti's or whatever orchestration engine to drive the flexibility of your will. I'll say mission critical, either primary storage or secondary storage cause. So programmability is critical through the apis infrastructure's code. If you don't have the right API layer and we play grandma will. That's exactly okay. And it's in place across our entire portfolio today. So you don't have to have an API for this device or that device or that backup? No, it's an API layer that covers them all. Voices you guys perfectly for the growth of containers, Coobernetti's and service measures. So as Dev ops starts to move up the stack, you need to have an under the hood programmable model and that is the software defined. So you guys are saying you have that today. Okay. So let's go. It was a big. We had major investments to get there and also do it in such a way that it's a consistent api layer that is abstracted away from the infrastructure you never want to give in general, you don't want get developers access to lower end technology and your system of record data, but you do need to give them access and have the rights, you know, security rounded access control. But it has to be api driven because sometimes there's not a human. It's, it's Dev ops. Okay, so let's stay on that for a secretary we made because I had. You're known as a business whiz kid. Oh, okay. But, but people don't realize how technical you are, which probably drives a lot of the people that work for you crazy. But when you think about the ascendancy of virtualization, it changed the way in which, for example, you had to do data protection and then one of your old companies, you know, you're popularize a source side district location, which made a lot of sense because you were taking 10 servers down to one. Right? As you go into this world of cloud and multicloud. Yep. You were just touching upon architecturally some of the things you What are the key components sort of architecturally that you've been driving have to do with microservices, etc. in your r and d pipeline, which we've noticed over the last two years that you've accelerated at ibm? So we talked about this data driven multi cloud architecture and the only reason for it, it's not a how do you go across a very broad portfolio that ibm storage has and how do you have a way to say we're going to be able to give you a modern, agile and flexible infrastructure that allows you to participate in modernizing your existing environment or allow you to ai, you know, lilly industry leading type, the ai technologies or these new apps. But hoW do you give clients a way to say this portfolio allows you to do that across your entire portfolio? So one is this api layers. You need to not only have rich apis around the storage self, but a lot of times you don't want to give those to developers or other people. So we need a separate api layer, which we put across both our primary storage and secondary storage. That was one that gives you the agility to do almost anything and it, and it doesn't compete with all these orchestration or dev ops tools. It enables them, it's the last mile if you would a second thing, you need to be software defined that gives you a way to api but also literally be able to move things, a flexibility but also investment protection and then you need some core innovation, right? So we still make it a lot of hardware, so we're making flash technologies that keep the low latency at workload with encryption on the card, at line speed with ddup, etc. All the things on the card. So you'll see us innovating on the technology side, but it's also having the agility and a and a flexibility. So you'll see that as a theme and we can have it in. We see clients adopting it in three areas. It's either modernizing traditional, I would say this is all about modernizing nutritional application more agile mode, private cloud or multi cloud. infrastructure and how to make it faster, The other thing is ai in it. It is huge right now. Getting insights right? So how did you machine learning deep learning, true ai on prem or in the cloud and this different technologies to get that insight. So you saw what we did. The largest ai supercomputer in the world was designed to use 100 percent ibm storage, actually ibm systems with a power, a power ai environments. That's a great point about this community is really an it footprint kind of app and its operation. So ai maybe ai ops but they're not. ai is not a core competency like tensor flow. So they need simplicity tools to do that easier. Right. So and I think that's what vm ware is doing with a lot of their announcements, just making it easier to deploy, but that's where ibm's been doing. Driving that pretty aggressively with our software side, our cloud side, but also what we're doing in infrastructure itself aliens and I was saying I think ai is not core comps in this community. essentially in this ai. So we just had an argument, not argument and discussion on the cube yesterday with jim colby, And he had brought up a good point about ai operations. Ai's going to automate a lot of things, but I was saying that's under the hood is a general purpose. Ai tensor flows, all these cools that developers want. Those are the guys who want programmable infrastructure. The guys who want ai ops is going to be Infrastructure guys. So really both are very important. under the hood, making things work faster. A very important. But there's different personas at the mechanic fix the engine. We do you get your ai, is it, is it sort of homegrown and your where's it come from? division is a little bit from the watson group, So, uh, we like our clusters. So we have obviously watson, which is very high end of what we do on a cognitive and since you're very deep learning, but we'll use all the open source tools. different than normal ai or machine learning, So what you're seeing, what we're doing in our, um, we did the latest product launch our flashlights from 9,100, which is granted hardware, innovation and vme through and through. We talk about ai infused, so it allows you to have better service and support. So what are we using machine learning, you know, we say deep learning of all the coal home data allows you to do a lot of analysis. Yes. It's an ibm's cloud. Yes. We use some of the things that we're using in watson, but it's all the tools you also see in our power ai for systems or what we're doing. Icp, ibm will go all the way to say here's all the open source tools you want to but you're wrestling with all the open source will help you put together a tool use mr. Customer, without limiting it, but allows you to kind of move forward Let's move forward to. You'd be data driven, and said, are wrestling with that technology. will make it easier to deploy. So you see that in our storage but in systems and really kind of an ibm theme if you would. So cloud, native compute foundation, I already asked you a question on the customer impact and you know, we cover the linux foundation heavily, cncf, you know, doing all this coobernetti's so it's been great being there from the beginning. So, but a lot of, I've noticed a pattern, there's a lot of talking about new players seeing their software defined infrastructure that would find storage. you mentioned earlier here that you guys made a significant investment. So the question is how do customers, potential buyers of this journey of going digital data, data driven, how do they determine the people who are saying it and actually doing it? What's required? I mean because that's ultimately the trying to squint through the noise as dave says, what, who's got what? So you've got multiple years doing this. If someone says hey, I got them to solidify storage. I just launched last week. Yeah, they might not have the trajectory. So how do customers test? Who's got the real deal? It's actually a real. You can. I'm looking at the floor across the way. So you have to get past the hype, right? So, so this is where I like being ibm, so why didn't I do the ceo the next gig or why did they come? and I thInk I think storage or infrastructure is a, I use the term Big boy, big girl gaMe. I think it's more than just building the next era is how to bring all this together and make it easier for clients, deliberate in the way they want. So I think the will see a lot of these point products people come up and say, I am the leader of this or a leader at that. And you saw a couple of stores guy say I'm the best ai, look the my benchmark within video, right? Um, but then you'll look at like an ibm, maybe not aS aggressive and the marketing of the infrastructure, but we're building the largest, you know, super cues, ai in the world. And we can take the exact same technology and give you a quarter rack or half rack or full rack of the exact same technology knowing you can scale it. So sometimes you have to say is, you know, it's not just a, the point, hey, um, you kind of get dig under the, I would say the, uh, culture of question you could customer what's the investment you've made? I mean, going ask like how many years you've been doing it, how does the customer and truly know someone's really going to be software defined and positioned for that data driven integration, that holistic package. Is there a, well, why don't we be, you know, so software defined, you know, the easy thing is, and this gets a little technical, but just, okay, show me your proposal and tell me how I can run the exact same infrastructure in a cloud of my choice. And you know, either on prem or not or on software is that software to find. And there's a lot of [inaudible] then Now that is self is not maybe the biggest thing, you know, that not suffered a fine. but who can you partner with, um, that can help you. Not only, okay, I'm going to get your next array. That's kind of a tactical, but who can I partner with to kind of go forward and you can't partner with 20 different firms. Who can you partner with to kind of get you from where you are to kind of where you want to get to. So I guess my questions are, I would start asking him how can you help me in a broader scope? And that's where ibm does well. The cloud is a good one. Can you run the storage on premise and on any cloud seamlessly route? What we did in the last launches flashes now you 100. We also say it's multi cloud enabled and what we did is we put all the software in the bundle. We have these validated designs that show you how to exactly do all the major use cases in any cloud and allow you to actually show you test environments. You do this cookbook at works but also the software go try it. But it's kinda how do you make it real compared to put a bunch of clouds and a configuration. But then it's the use cases. So we do a lot with the leaders and laggards, I mean we're with our leaders, but then we have some people that are really struggling to keep up and some of it is just showing the way forward and it's a, you gotta have a broad enough portfolio Otherwise you end up with a point product here and that point park there to get them over time, the right location. and I think that's where no one has enough team to keep up. But you also look at the developers and our developers abstracted away and does the storage to the performance and versatile for developers without even touching it back to your infrastructure as code comment. Oh well now the next one. So can I run, you know, you know, tell me whatever technology you ansible, if you're gonna run a whatever a workflow you got to use for your pipeline, will it work for the api? Should write without opening up the whole storage api. You can, you can drive the car, not even look at the engine. That's the key storage. Right? And it has to be that way. And then can I get all the key abilities in the same function? So it's a good question. I'll think about it more. well, I didn't mean to put you on the spot there. It's just good. It's good. Question number one question we get from people is how do you tell the pretenders when the players, that's ultimately what customers are. And they do bake offs when you see bake off. We had to, we had an auto nation earlier. Listen less, right? But what's the new bakeoff just run code on it. Right? So the world's changing and thanks for. Come on real quick. What's your thoughts on vm world 2018 this year? What's the vibe that you're feeling? What's the overall sentiment? What's your view? I think it's overall very positive. You mentioned early on it feels like an uplifting. I think you're seeing that across infrastructure and infrastructure does matter. I think uh, you know, there's big data economy, you, you hear a boom and it's going pretty well. So I think it's exciting and I think you feel among the ecosystem, any predictions for next year? What we'll see because we like to roll the predictions from next year, predictions for 2018 next year at vm world. What? What's going to happen? Oh geez. I think more of the same. I think you're gonna see even more and more how to be data driven. Yeah. The clouds have given during the cloud, but how to be more data driven and we're going to make it even easier and easier for our clients to do that and the ecosystems driving that and I think you can see more and more of that. Here he goes. This is robin. Thanks for coming on this cubes. Coverage here live in las vegas. I'm john furrier. dave. A lot. They stayed with us. We're on only day two. We've got three days of wall to wall coverage, two sets, tons of interviews, a lot of great people, a lot of great content. A lot of data we've got that data was sharing with you here. We're data driven on the cube. Stay with us. We'll be back after this short break. Okay.
SUMMARY :
but it's all the tools you also see in
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VMworld Day 1 General Session | VMworld 2018
For Las Vegas, it's the cube covering vm world 2018, brought to you by vm ware and its ecosystem partners. Ladies and gentlemen, Vm ware would like to thank it's global diamond sponsors and it's platinum sponsors for vm world 2018 with over 125,000 members globally. The vm ware User Group connects via vmware customers, partners and employees to vm ware, information resources, knowledge sharing, and networking. To learn more, visit the [inaudible] booth in the solutions exchange or the hemoglobin gene vm village become a part of the community today. This presentation includes forward looking statements that are subject to risks and uncertainties. Actual results may differ materially as a result of various risk factors including those described in the 10 k's 10 q's and k's vm ware. Files with the SEC. Ladies and Gentlemen, please welcome Pat Gelsinger. Welcome to vm world. Good morning. Let's try that again. Good morning and I'll just say it is great to be here with you today. I'm excited about the sixth year of being CEO. When it was on this stage six years ago were Paul Maritz handed me the clicker and that's the last he was seen. We have 20,000 plus here on site in Vegas and uh, you know, on behalf of everyone at Vm ware, you know, we're just thrilled that you would be with us and it's a joy and a thrill to be able to lead such a community. We have a lot to share with you today and we really think about it as a community. You know, it's my 23,000 plus employees, the souls that I'm responsible for, but it's our partners, the thousands and we kicked off our partner day yesterday, but most importantly, the vm ware community is centered on you. You know, we're very aware of this event would be nothing without you and our community and the role that we play at vm wares to build these cool breakthrough innovations that enable you to do incredible things. You're the ones who take our stuff and do amazing things. You altogether. We have truly changed the world over the last two decades and it is two decades. You know, it's our anniversary in 1998, the five people that started a vm ware, right. You know, it was, it was exactly 20 years ago and we're just thrilled and I was thinking about this over the weekend and it struck me, you know, anniversary, that's like old people, you know, we're here, we're having our birthday and it's a party, right? We can't have a drink yet, but next year. Yeah. We're 20 years old. Right. We can do that now. And I'll just say the culture of this community is something that truly is amazing and in my 38 years, 38 years in tech, that sort of sounds like I'm getting old or something, but the passion, the loyalty, almost a cult like behavior that we see in this team of people to us is simply thrilling. And you know, we put together a little video to sort of summarize the 20 years and some of that history and some of the unique and quirky aspects of our culture. Let's watch that now. We knew we had something unique and then we demonstrated that what was unique was also some reasons that we love vm ware, you know, like the community out there. So great. The technology I love it. Ware is solid and much needed. Literally. I do love Vmr. It's awesome. Super Awesome. Pardon? There's always someone that wants to listen and learn from us and we've learned so much from them as well. And we reached out to vm ware to help us start building. What's that future world look like? Since we're doing really cutting edge stuff, there's really no better people to call and Bmr has been known for continuous innovation. There's no better way to learn how to do new things in it than being with a company that's at the forefront of technology. What do you think? Don't you love that commitment? Hey Ashley, you know, but in the prep sessions for this, I thought, boy, what can I do to take my commitment to the next level? And uh, so, uh, you know, coming in a couple days early, I went to down the street to bad ass tattoo. So it's time for all of us to take our commitment up level and sometimes what happens in Vegas, you take home. Thank you. Vm Ware has had this unique role in the industry over these 20 years, you know, and for that we've seen just incredible things that have happened over this period of time and it's truly extraordinary what we've accomplished together. And you know, as we think back, you know, what vm ware has uniquely been able to do is I'll say bridge across know and we've seen time and again that we see these areas of innovation emerging and rapidly move forward. But then as they become utilized by our customers, they create this natural tension of what business wants us flexibility to use across these silos of innovation. And from the start of our history, we have collectively had this uncanny ability to bridge across these cycles of innovation. You know, an act one was clearly the server generation. You know, it may seem a little bit, uh, ancient memory now, but you remember you used to walk into your data center and it looked like the loove the museum of it passed right? You know, and you had your old p series and your z series in your sparks and your pas and your x86 cluster and Yo, it had to decide, well, which architecture or am I going to deploy and run this on? And we bridged across and that was the magic of Esx. You don't want to just changed the industry when that occurred. And I sort of called the early days of Esx and vsphere. It was like the intelligence test. If you weren't using it, you fail because Yup. Servers, 10 servers become one months, become minutes. I still have people today who come up to me and they reflect on their first experience of vsphere or be motion and it was like a holy moment in their life and in their careers. Amazing and act to the Byo d, You know, can we bridge across these devices and users wanted to be able to come in and say, I have my device and I'm productive on it. I don't want to be forced to use the corporate standard. And maybe more than anything was the power of the iphone that was introduced, the two, seven, and suddenly every employee said this is exciting and compelling. I want to use it so I can be more productive when I'm here. Bye. Jody was the rage and again it was a tough challenge and once again vm ware helped to bridge across the surmountable challenge. And clearly our workspace one community today is clearly bridging across these silos and not just about managing devices but truly enabling employee engagement and productivity. Maybe act three was the network and you know, we think about the network, you know, for 30 years we were bound to this physical view of what the network would be an in that network. We are bound to specific protocols. We had to wait months for network upgrades and firewall rules. Once every two weeks we'd upgrade them. If you had a new application that needed a firewall rule, sorry, you know, come back next month we'll put, you know, deep frustration among developers and ceos. Everyone was ready to break the chains. And that's exactly what we did. An NSX and Nice Sierra. The day we acquired it, Cisco stock drops and the industry realizes the networking has changed in a fundamental way. It will never be the same again. Maybe act for was this idea of cloud migration. And if we were here three years ago, it was student body, right to the public cloud. Everything is going there. And I remember I was meeting with a cio of federal cio and he comes up to me and he says, I tried for the last two years to replatform my 200 applications I got to done, you know, and all of a sudden that was this. How do I do cloud migration and the effective and powerful way. Once again, we bridged across, we brought these two worlds together and eliminated this, uh, you know, this gap between private and public cloud. And we'll talk a lot more about that today. You know, maybe our next act is what we'll call the multicloud era. You know, because today in a recent survey by Deloitte said that the average business today is using eight public clouds and expected to become 10 plus public clouds. And you know, as you're managing different tools, different teams, different architectures, those solution, how do you, again bridge across, and this is what we will do in the multicloud era, we will help our community to bridge across and take advantage of these powerful cycles of innovation that are going on, but be able to use them across a consistent infrastructure and operational environment. And we'll have a lot more to talk about on this topic today. You know, and maybe the last item to bridge across maybe the most important, you know, people who are profit. You know, too often we think about this as an either or question. And as a business leader, I'm are worried about the people or the And Milton Friedman probably set us up for this issue decades ago when he said, planet, right? the sole purpose of a business is to make profits. You want to create a multi-decade dilemma, right? For business leaders, could I have both people and profits? Could I do well and do good? And particularly for technology, I think we don't have a choice to think about these separately. We are permeating every aspect of business. And Society, we have the responsibility to do both and have all the things that vm ware has accomplished. I think this might be the one that I'm most proud of over, you know, w we have demonstrated by vsphere and the hypervisor alone that we have saved over 540 million tons of co two emissions. That is what you have done. Can you believe that? Five hundred 40 million tons is enough to have 68 percent of all households for a year. Wow. Thank you for what you have done. Thank you. Or another translation of that. Is that safe enough to drive a trillion miles and the average car or you could go to and from Jupiter just in case that was in your itinerary a thousand times. Right? He was just incredible. What we have done and as a result of that, and I'll say we were thrilled to accept this recognition on behalf of you and what you have done. You know, vm were recognized as number 17 in the fortune. Change the world list last week. And we really view it as accepting this honor on behalf of what you have done with our products and technology tech as a force for good. We believe that fundamentally that is our opportunity, if not our obligation, you know, fundamentally tech is neutral, you know, we together must shape it for good. You know, the printing press by Gutenberg in 1440, right? It was used to create mass education and learning materials also can be used for extremist propaganda. The technology itself is neutral. Our ecosystem has a critical role to play in shaping technology as a force for good. You know, and as we think about that tomorrow, we'll have a opportunity to have a very special guest and I really encourage you to be here, be on time tomorrow morning on the stage and you know, Sanjay's a session, we'll have Malala, Nobel Peace Prize winner and fourth will be a bit of extra security as you come in and you understand that. And I just encourage you not to be late because we see this tech being a force for good in everything that we do at vm ware. And I hope you'll enjoy, I'm quite looking forward to the session tomorrow. Now as we think about the future. I like to put it in this context, the superpowers of tech know and you know, 38 years in the industry, you know, I am so excited because I think everything that we've done over the last four decades is creating a foundation that allows us to do more and go faster together. We're unlocking game, changing opportunities that have not been available to any people in the history of humanity. And we have these opportunities now and I, and I think about these four cloud, you have unimaginable scale. You'll literally with your Amex card, you can go rent, you know, 10,000 cores for $100 per hour. Or if you have Michael's am ex card, we can rent a million cores for $10,000 an hour. Thanks Michael. But we also know that we're in many ways just getting started and we have tremendous issues to bridge across and compatible clouds, mobile unprecedented scale. Literally, your application can reach half the humans on the planet today. But we also know that five percent, the lowest five percent of humanity or the other half of humanity, they're still in the lower income brackets, less than five percent penetrated. And we know that we have customer examples that are using mobile phones to raise impoverished farmers in Africa, out of poverty just by having a smart phone with proper crop, the information field and whether a guidance that one tool alone lifting them out of poverty. Ai knows, you know, I really love the topic of ai in 1986. I'm the chief architect of the 80 46. Some of you remember what that was. Yeah, I, you know, you're, you're my folk, right? Right. And for those of you who don't, it was a real important chip at the time. And my marketing manager comes running into my office and he says, Pat, pat, we must make the 46 a great ai chip. This is 1986. What happened? Nothing an AI is today, a 30 year overnight success because the algorithms, the data have gotten so much bigger that we can produce results, that we can bring intelligence to everything. And we're seeing dramatic breakthroughs in areas like healthcare, radiology, you know, new drugs, diagnosis tools, and designer treatments. We're just scratching the surface, but ai has so many gaps, yet we don't even in many cases know why it works. Right? And we'll call that explainable ai and edge and Iot. We're connecting the physical and the digital worlds was never before possible. We're bridging technology into every dimension of human progress. And today we're largely hooking up things, right? We have so much to do yet to make them intelligent. Network secured, automated, the patch, bringing world class it to Iot, but it's not just that these are super powers. We really see that each and each one of them is a super power in and have their own right, but they're making each other more powerful as well. Cloud enables mobile conductivity. Mobile creates more data, more data makes the AI better. Ai Enables more edge use cases and more edge requires more cloud to store the data and do the computing right? They're reinforcing each other. And with that, we know that we are speeding up and these superpowers are reshaping every aspect of society from healthcare to education, the transportation, financial institutions. This is how it all comes together. Now, just a simple example, how many of you have ever worn a hardhat? Yeah, Yo. Pretty boring thing. And it has one purpose, right? You know, keep things from smacking me in the here's the modern hardhat. It's a complete heads up display with ar head. Well, vr capabilities that give the worker safety or workers or factory workers or supply people the ability to see through walls to understand what's going on inside of the equipment. I always wondered when I was a kid to have x Ray Vision, you know, some of my thoughts weren't good about why I wanted it, but you know, I wanted to. Well now you can have it, you know, but imagine in this environment, the complex application that sits behind it. You know, you're accessing maybe 50 year old building plants, right? You're accessing HVAC systems, but modern ar and vr capabilities and new containerized displays. You'll think about that application. You know, John Gage famously said the network is the computer pat today says the application is now a network and pretty typically a complicated one, you know, and this is the vm ware vision is to make that kind of environment realizable in every aspect of our business and community and we simply have been on this journey, any device, any application, any cloud with intrinsic security. And this vision has been consistent for those of you who have been joining us for a number of years. You've seen this picture, but it's been slowly evolving as we've worked in piece by piece to refine and extend this vision, you know, and for it, we're going to walk through and use this as the compass for our discussion today as we walk through our conversation. And you know, we're going to start by a focus on any cloud. And as we think about this cloud topic, you know, we see it as a multicloud world hybrid cloud, public cloud, but increasingly seeing edge and telco becoming clouds in and have their own right. And we're not gonna spend time on it today, but this area of Telco to the is an enormous opportunity for us in our community. You know, data centers and cloud today are over 80 percent virtualized. The Telco network is less than 10 percent virtualized. Wow. An industry that's almost as big as our industry entirely unvirtualized, although the technologies we've created here can be applied over here and Telco and we have an enormous buildout coming with five g and environments emerging. What an opportunity for us, a virgin market right next to us and we're getting some early mega winds in this area using the technologies that you have helped us cure rate than the So we're quite excited about this topic area as well. market. So let's look at this full view of the multicloud. Any cloud journey. And we see that businesses are on a multicloud journey, you know, and today we see this fundamentally in these two paths, a hybrid cloud and a public cloud. And these paths are complimentary and coexisting, but today, each is being driven by unique requirements and unique teams. Largely the hybrid cloud is being driven by it. And operations, the public cloud being driven more by developers and line of business requirements and as some multicloud environment. So how do we deliver upon that and for that, let's start by digging in on the hybrid cloud aspect of this and as we think about the hybrid cloud, we've been talking about this subject for a number of years and I want to give a very specific and crisp definition. You're the hybrid cloud is the public cloud and the private cloud cooperating with consistent infrastructure and consistent operations simply put seamless path to and from the cloud that my workloads don't care if it's here or there. I'm able to run them in a agile, scalable, flexible, efficient manner across those two environments, whether it's my data center or someone else's, I can bring them together to make that work is the magic of the Vm ware Cloud Foundation. The vm ware Cloud Foundation brings together computer vsphere and the core of why we are here, but combines with that networking storage delivered through a layer of management and automation. The rule of the cloud is ruthlessly automate everything. We laid out this vision of the software defined data center seven years ago and we've been steadfastly working on this vision and vm ware. Cloud Foundation provides this consistent infrastructure and operations with integrated lifecycle management automation. Patching the m ware cloud foundation is the simplest path to the hybrid cloud and the fastest way to get vm ware cloud foundation is hyperconverged infrastructure, you know, and with this we've combined integrated then validated hardware and as a building block inside of this we have validated hardware, the v Sand ready environments. We have integrated appliances and cloud delivered infrastructure, three ways that we deliver that integrate integrated hyperconverged infrastructure solution. And we have by far the broadest ecosystem of partners to do it. A broad set of the sand ready nodes from essentially everybody in the industry. Secondly, we have integrated appliances, the extract of vxrail that we have co engineered with our partners at Dell technology and today in fact Dell is releasing the power edge servers, a major step in blade servers that again are going to be powering vxrail and vxrack systems and we deliver hyperconverged infrastructure through a broader set of Vm ware cloud partners as well. At the heart of the hyperconverged infrastructure is v San and simply put, you know, be San has been the engine that's just been moving rapidly to take over the entire integration of compute and storage and expand to more and more areas. We have incredible momentum over 15,000 customers for v San Today and for those of you who joined us, we say thank you for what you have done with this product today. Really amazing you with 50 percent of the global 2000 using it know vm ware. V San Vxrail are clearly becoming the standard for how hyperconverge is done in the industry. Our cloud partner programs over 500 cloud partners are using ulv sand in their solution, you know, and finally the largest in Hci software revenue. Simply put the sand is the software defined storage technology of choice for the industry and we're seeing that customers are putting this to work in amazing ways. Vm Ware and Dell technologies believe in tech as a force for good and that it can have a major impact on the quality of life for every human on the planet and particularly for the most underdeveloped parts of the world. Those that live on less than $2 per day. In fact that this moment 5 billion people worldwide do not have access to modern affordable surgery. Mercy ships is working hard to change the global surgery crisis with greater than 400 volunteers. Mercy ships operates the largest NGO hospital ship delivering free medical care to the poorest of the poor in Africa. Let's see from them now. When the ship shows up to port, literally people line up for days to receive state of the art life, sane changing life saving surgeries, tumor site limbs, disease blindness, birth defects, but not only that, the personnel are educating and training the local healthcare providers with new skills and infrastructure so they can care for their own. After the ship has left, mercy ships runs on Vm ware, a dell technology with VX rail, Dell Isilon data protection. We are the it platform for mercy ships. Mercy ships is now building their next generation ship called global mercy, which were more than double. It's lifesaving capacity. It's the largest charity hospital ever. It will go live in 20 slash 20 serving Africa and I personally plan on being there for its launch. It is truly amazing what they are doing with our technology. Thanks. So we see this picture of the hybrid cloud. We've talked about how we do that for the private cloud. So let's look over at the public cloud and let's dig into this a little bit more deeply. You know, we're taking this incredible power of the Vm ware Cloud Foundation and making it available for the leading cloud providers in the world and with that, the partnership that we announced almost two years ago with Amazon and on the stage last year, we announced their first generation of products, no better example of the hybrid cloud. And for that it's my pleasure to bring to stage my friend, my partner, the CEO of aws. Please welcome Andy Jassy. Thank you andy. You know, you honor us with your presence, you know, and it really is a pleasure to be able to come in front of this audience and talk about what our teams have accomplished together over the last, uh, year. Yo, can you give us some perspective on that, Andy and what customers are doing with it? Well, first of all, thanks for having me. I really appreciate it. It's great to be here with all of you. Uh, you know, the offering that we have together customers because it allows them to use the same software they've been using to again, where cloud and aws is very appealing to manage their infrastructure for years to be able to deploy it an aws and we see a lot of customer momentum and a lot of customers using it. You see it in every imaginable vertical business segment in transportation. You see it with stagecoach and media and entertainment. You see it with discovery communications in education, Mit and Caltech and consulting and accenture and cognizant and dxc you see in every imaginable vertical business segment and the number of customers using the offering is doubling every quarter. So people were really excited about it and I think that probably the number one use case we see so far, although there are a lot of them, is customers who are looking to migrate on premises applications to the cloud. And a good example of that is mit. We're there right now in the process of migrating. In fact, they just did migrate 3000 vms from their data centers to Vm ware cloud native us. And this would have taken years before to do in the past, but they did it in just three months. It was really spectacular and they're just a fun company to work with and the team there. But we're also seeing other use cases as well. And you're probably the second most common example is we'll say on demand capabilities for things like disaster recovery. We have great examples of customers you that one in particular, his brakes, right? Urban in those. The brings security trucks and they all armored trucks coming by and they had a critical need to retire a secondary data center that they were using, you know, for Dr. so we quickly built to Dr Protection Environment for $600. Bdms know they migrated their mission critical workloads and Wallah stable and consistent Dr and now they're eliminating that site and looking for other migrations as well. The rate of 10 to 15 percent. It was just a great deal. One of the things I believe Andy, he'll customers should never spend capital, uh, Dr ever again with this kind of capability in place. That is just that game changing, you know, and you know, obviously we've been working on expanding our reach, you know, we promised to make the service available a year ago with the global footprint of Amazon and now we've delivered on that promise and in fact today or yesterday if you're an ozzie right down under, we announced in Sydney, uh, as well. And uh, now we're in US Europe and in APJ. Yeah. It's really, I mean it's very exciting. Of course Australia is one of the most virtualized places in the world and, and it's pretty remarkable how fast European customers have started using the offering to and just the quarter that's been out there and probably have the many requests customers has had. And you've had a, probably the number one request has been that we make the offering available in all the regions. The aws has regions and I can tell you by the end of 2019 will largely be there including with golf clubs and golf clap. You guys have been, that's been huge for you guys. Yeah. It's a government only region that we have that a lot of federal government workloads live in and we are pretty close together having the offering a fedramp authority to operate, which is a big deal on a game changer for governments because then there'll be able to use the familiar tools they use and vm ware not just to run their workloads on premises but also in the cloud as well with the data privacy requirements, security requirements they need. So it's a real game changer for government too. Yeah. And this you can see by the picture here basically before the end of next year, everywhere that you are and have an availability zone. We're going to be there running on data. Yup. Yeah. Let's get with it. Okay. We're a team go faster. Okay. You'll and you know, it's not just making it available, but this pace of innovation and you know, you guys have really taught us a few things in this respect and since we went live in the Oregon region, you know, we've been on a quarterly cadence of major releases and two was really about mission critical at scale and we added our second region. We added our hybrid cloud extension with m three. We moved the global rollout and we launched in Europe with m four. We really add a lot of these mission critical governance aspects started to attack all of the industry certifications and today we're announcing and five right. And uh, you know, with that, uh, I think we have this little cool thing you know, two of the most important priorities for that we're doing with ebs and storage. Yeah, we'll take, customers, our cost and performance. And so we have a couple of things to talk about today that we're bringing to you that I think hit both of those on a storage side. We've combined the elasticity of Amazon Elastic Block store or ebs with ware is Va v San and we've provided now a storage option that you'll be able to use that as much. It's very high capacity and much more cost effective and you'll start to see this initially on the Vm ware cloud. Native us are five instances which are compute instances, their memory optimized and so this will change the cost equation. You'll be able to use ebs by default and it'll be much more cost effective for storage or memory intensive workloads. Um, it's something that you guys have asked for. It's been very frequently requested it, it hits preview today. And then the other thing is that we've worked really hard together to integrate vm ware's Nsx along with aws direct neck to have a private even higher performance conductivity between on premises and the cloud. So very, very exciting new capabilities to show deep integration between the companies. Yeah. You know, in that aspect of the deep integration. So it's really been the thing that we committed to, you know, we have large engineering teams that are working literally every day. Right on bringing together and how do we fuse these platforms together at a deep and intimate way so that we can deliver new services just like elastic drs and the c and ebs really powerful, uh, capabilities and that pace of innovation continue. So next maybe. Um, maybe six. I don't know. We'll see. All right. You know, but we're continuing this toward pace of innovation, you know, completing all of the capabilities of Nsx. You'll full integration for all of the direct connect to capabilities. Really expanding that. You're only improving licensed capabilities on the platform. We'll be adding pks on top of for expanded developer a capabilities. So just. Oh, thank you. I, I think that was formerly known as Right, and y'all were continuing this pace of storage Chad. So anyway. innovation going forward, but I think we also have a few other things to talk about today. Andy. Yeah, I think we have some news that hopefully people here will be pretty excited about. We know we have a pretty big database business and aws and it's. It's both on the relational and on the nonrelational side and the business is billions of dollars in revenue for us and on the relational side. We have a service called Amazon relational database service or Amazon rds that we have hundreds of thousands of customers using because it makes it much easier for them to set up, operate and scale their databases and so many companies now are operating in hybrid mode and will be for a while and a lot of those customers have asked us, can you give us the ease of manageability of those databases but on premises. And so we talked about it and we thought about and we work with our partners at Vm ware and I'm excited to announce today, right now Amazon rds on Vm ware and so that will bring all the capabilities of Amazon rds to vm ware's customers for their on premises environments. And so what you'll be able to do is you'll be able to provision databases. You'll be able to scale the compute or the memory or the storage for those database instances. You'll be able to patch the operating system or database engines. You'll be able to create, read replicas to scale your database reads and you can deploy this rep because either on premises or an aws, you'll be able to deploy and high high availability configuration by replicating the data to different vm ware clusters. You'll be able to create online backups that either live on premises or an aws and then you'll be able to take all those databases and if you eventually want to move them to aws, you'll be able to do so rather easily. You have a pretty smooth path. This is going to be available in a few months. It will be available on Oracle sql server, sql postgresql and Maria DB. I think it's very exciting for our customers and I think it's also a good example of where we're continuing to deepen the partnership and listen to what customers want and then innovate on their behalf. Absolutely. Thank you andy. It is thrilling to see this and as we said, when we began the partnership, it was a deep integration of our offerings and our go to market, but also building this bi-directional hybrid highway to give customers the capabilities where they wanted cloud on premise, on premise to the cloud. It really is a unique partnership that we've built, the momentum we're feeling to our customer base and the cool innovations that we're doing. Andy, thank you so much for you Jordan Young, rural 20th. You guys appreciate it. Yeah, we really have just seen incredible momentum and as you might have heard from our earnings call that we just finished this. We finished the last quarter. We just really saw customer momentum here. Accelerating. Really exciting to see how customers are starting to really do the hybrid cloud at scale and with this we're just seeing that this vm ware cloud foundation available on Amazon available on premise. Very powerful, but it's not just the partnership with Amazon. We are thrilled to see the momentum of our Vm ware cloud provider program and this idea of the vm ware cloud providers has continued to gain momentum in the industry and go over five years. Right. This program has now accumulated more than 4,200 cloud partners in over 120 countries around the globe. It gives you choice, your local provider specialty offerings, some of your local trusted partners that you would have in giving you the greatest flexibility to choose from and cloud providers that meet your unique business requirements. And we launched last year a program called Vm ware cloud verified and this was saying you're the most complete embodiment of the Vm ware Cloud Foundation offering by our cloud partners in this program and this logo you know, allows you to that this provider has achieved the highest standard for cloud infrastructure and that you can scale and deliver your hybrid cloud and partnering with them. It know a particular. We've been thrilled to see the momentum that we've had with IBM as a huge partner and our business with them has grown extraordinarily rapidly and triple digits, but not just the customer count, which is now over 1700, but also in the depth of customers moving large portions of the workload. And as you see by the picture, we're very proud of the scope of our partnerships in a global basis. The highest standard of hybrid cloud for you, the Vm ware cloud verified partners. Now when we come back to this picture, you know we, you know, we're, we're growing in our definition of what the hybrid cloud means and through Vm Ware Cloud Foundation, we've been able to unify the private and the public cloud together as never before, but we're also seeing that many of you are interested in how do I extend that infrastructure further and farther and will simply call that the edge right? And how do we move data closer to where? How do we move data center resources and capacity closer to where the data's being generated at the operations need to be performed? Simply the edge and we'll dig into that a little bit more, but as we do that, what are the things that we offer today with what we just talked about with Amazon and our VCP p partners is that they can consume as a service this full vm ware Cloud Foundation, but today we're only offering that in the public cloud until project dimension of project dimension allows us to extend delivered as a service, private, public, and to the edge. Today we're announcing the tech preview, a project dimension Vm ware cloud foundation in a hyperconverged appliance. We're partnered deeply with Dell EMC, Lenovo for the first partners to bring this to the marketplace, built on that same proven infrastructure, a hybrid cloud control plane, so literally just like we're managing the Vm ware cloud today, we're able to do that for your on premise. You're small or remote office or your edge infrastructure through that exact same as a service management and control plane, a complete vm ware operated end to end environment. This is project dimension. Taking the vcf stack, the full vm ware cloud foundation stack, making an available in the cloud to the edge and on premise as well, a powerful solution operated by BM ware. This project dimension and project dimension allows us to have a fundamental building block in our approach to making customers even more agile, flexible, scalable, and a key component of our strategy as well. So let's click into that edge a little bit more and we think about the edge in the following layers, the compute edge, how do we get the data and operations and applications closer to where they need to be. If you remember last year I talked about this pendulum swinging of centralization and decentralization edge is a decentralization force. We're also excited that we're moving the edge of the devices as well and we're doing that in two ways. One with workspace, one for human optimized devices and the second is project pulse or Vm ware pulse. And today we're announcing pulse two point zero where you can consume it now as a service as well as with integrated security. And we've now scaled pulse to support 500 million devices. Isn't that incredible, right? I mean this is getting a scale. Billions and billions and finally networking is a key component. You all that. We're stretching the networking platform, right? And evolving how that edge operates in a more cloud and that's a service white and this is where Nsx St with Velo cloud is such a key component of delivering the edge of network services as well. Taken together the device side, the compute edge and rethinking and evolving the networking layer together is the vm ware edge strategy summary. We see businesses are on this multicloud journey, right? How do we then do that for their private of public coming together, the hybrid cloud, but they're also on a journey for how they work and operate it across the public cloud and the public cloud we have this torrid innovation, you'll want Andy's here, challenges. You know, he's announcing 1500 new services or were extraordinary innovation and you'll same for azure or Google Ibm cloud, but it also creates the same complexity as we said. Businesses are using multiple public clouds and how do I operate them? How do I make them work? You know, how do I keep track of my accounts and users that creates a set of cloud operations problems as well in the complexity of doing that. How do you make it work? Right? And your for that. We'll just see that there's this idea cloud cost compliance, analytics as these common themes that of, you know, keep coming up and we're seeing in our customers that are new role is emerging. The cloud operations role. You're the person who's figuring out how to make these multicloud environments work and keep track of who's using what and which data is landing where today I'm thrilled to tell you that the, um, where is acquiring the leader in this space? Cloudhealth technologies. Thank you. Cloudhealth technologies supports today, Amazon, azure and Google. They have some 3,500 customers, some of the largest and most respected brands in the, as a service industry. And Sasa business today rapidly span expanding feature sets. We will take cloudhealth and we're going to make it a fundamental platform and branded offering from the um, where we will add many of the other vm ware components into this platform, such as our wavefront analytics, our cloud, choreo compliance, and many of the other vm ware products will become part of the cloudhealth suite of services. We will be enabling that through our enterprise channels as well as through our MSP and BCPP partners as well know. Simply put, we will make cloudhealth the cloud operations platform of choice for the industry. I'm thrilled today to have Joe Consella, the CTO and founder. Joe, please stand up. Thank you joe to your team of a couple hundred, you know, mostly in Boston. Welcome to the Vm ware family, the Vm ware community. It is a thrill to have you part of our team. Thank you joe. Thank you. We're also announcing today, and you can think of this, much like we had v realize operations and v realize automation, the compliment to the cloudhealth operations, vm ware, cloud automation, and some of you might've heard of this in the past, this project tango. Well, today we're announcing the initial availability of Vm ware, cloud automation, assemble, manage complex applications, automate their provisioning and cloud services, and manage them through a brokerage the initial availability of cloud automation services, service. Your today, the acquisition of cloudhealth as a platform, the aware of the most complete set of multicloud management tools in the industry, and we're going to do so much more so we've seen this picture of this multicloud journey that our customers are on and you know, we're working hard to say we are going to bridge across these worlds of innovation, the multicloud world. We're doing many other things. You're gonna hear a lot at the show today about this year. We're also giving the tech preview of the Vm ware cloud marketplace for our partners and customers. Also today, Dell technologies is announcing their cloud marketplace to provide a self service, a portfolio of a Dell emc technologies. We're fundamentally in a unique position to accelerate your multicloud journey. So we've built out this any cloud piece, but right in the middle of that any cloud is the network. And when we think about the network, we're just so excited about what we have done and what we're seeing in the industry. So let's click into this a little bit further. We've gotten a lot done over the last five years. Networking. Look at these numbers. 80 million switch ports have been shipped. We are now 10 x larger than number two and software defined networking. We have over 7,500 customers running on Nsx and maybe the stat that I'm most proud of is 82 percent of the fortune 100 has now adopted nsx. You have made nsx these standard and software defined networking. Thank you very much. Thank you. When we think about this journey that we're on, we started. You're saying, Hey, we've got to break the chains inside of the data center as we said. And then Nsx became the software defined networking platform. We started to do it through our cloud provider partners. Ibm made a huge commitment to partner with us and deliver this to their customers. We then said, boy, we're going to make a fundamental to all of our cloud services including aws. We built this bridge called the hybrid cloud extension. We said we're going to build it natively into what we're doing with Telcos, with Azure and Amazon as a service. We acquired the St Wagon, right, and a Velo cloud at the hottest product of Vm ware's portfolio today. The opportunity to fundamentally transform branch and wide area networking and we're extending it to the edge. You're literally, the world has become this complex network. We have seen the world go from the old defined by rigid boundaries, simply put in a distributed world. Hardware cannot possibly work. We're empowering customers to secure their applications and the data regardless of where they sit and when we think of the virtual cloud network, we say it's these three fundamental things, a cloud centric networking fabric with intrinsic security and all of it delivered in software. The world is moving from data centers to centers of data and they need to be connected and Nsx is the way that we will do that. So you'll be aware of is well known for this idea of talking but also showing. So no vm world keynote is okay without great demonstrations of it because you shouldn't believe me only what we can actually show and to do that know I'm going to have our CTL come onstage and CTL y'all. I used to be a cto and the CTO is the certified smart guy. He's also known as the chief talking officer and today he's my demo partner. Please walk, um, Vm ware, cto ray to the stage. Right morning pat. How you doing? Oh, it's great ray, and thanks so much for joining us. Know I promised that we're going to show off some pretty cool stuff here. We've covered a lot already, but are you up to the task? We're going to try and run through a lot of demos. We're going to do it fast and you're going to have to keep me on time to ask an awkward question. Slow me down. Okay. That's my fault if you run along. Okay, I got it. I got it. Let's jump right in here. So I'm a CTO. I get to meet lots of customers that. A few weeks ago I met a cio of a large distribution company and she described her it infrastructure as consisting of a number of data centers troll to us, which he also spoke of a large number of warehouses globally, and each of these had local hyperconverged compute and storage, primarily running surveillance and warehouse management applications, and she pulls me four questions. The first question she asked me, she says, how do I migrate one of these data centers to Vm ware cloud on aws? I want to get out of one of these data centers. Okay. Sounds like something andy and I were just talking exactly, exactly what you just spoke to a few moments ago. She also wanted to simplify the management of the infrastructure in the warehouse as themselves. Okay. He's age and smaller data centers that you've had out there. Her application at the warehouses that needed to run locally, butter developers wanted to develop using cloud infrastructure. Cloud API is a little bit late. The rds we spoken with her in. Her final question was looking to the future, make all this complicated management go away. I want to be able to focus on my application, so that's what my business is about. So give me some new ways of how to automate all of this infrastructure from the edge to the cloud. Sounds pretty clear. Can we do it? Yes we can. So we're going to dive right in right now into one of these demos. And the first demo we're going to look at it is vm ware cloud on aws. This is the best solution for accelerating this public cloud journey. So can we start the demo please? So what you were looking at here is one of those data centers and you should be familiar with this product. It's a familiar vsphere client. You see it's got a bunch of virtual machines running in there. These are the virtual machines that we now want to be able to migrate and move the VMC on aws. So we're going to go through that migration right now. And to do that we use a product that you've seen already atx, however it's the x has been, has got some new cool features since the last time we download it. Probably on this stage here last year, I wanted those in particular is how do we do bulk migration and there's a new cool thing, right? Whole thing we want to move the data center en mass and his concept here is cloud motion with vsphere replication. What this does is it replicates the underlying storage of the virtual machines using vsphere replication. So if and when you want to now do the final migration, it actually becomes a vmotion. So this is what you see going on right here. The replication is in place. Now when you want to touch you move those virtual machines. What you'll do is a vmotion and the key thing to think about here is this is an actual vmotion. Those the ends as room as they're moving a hustler, migrating remained life just as you would in a v motion across one particular infrastructure. Did you feel complete application or data center migration with no dying town? It's a Standard v motion kind of appearance. Wow. That is really impressive. That's correct. Wow. You. So one of the other things we want to talk about here is as we are moving these virtual machines from the on prem infrastructure to the VMC on aws infrastructure, unfortunately when we set up the cloud on VMC and aws, we only set up for hosts, uh, that might not be, that'd be enough because she is going to move the whole infrastructure of that this was something you guys, you and Andy referred to briefly data center. Now, earlier, this concept of elastic drs. what elastic drs does, it allows the VMC on aws to react to the workloads as they're being created and pulled in onto that infrastructure and automatically pull in new hosts into the VMC infrastructure along the way. So what you're seeing here is essentially the MC growing the infrastructure to meet the needs of the workloads themselves. Very cool. So overseeing that elastic drs. we also see the ebs capabilities as well. Again, you guys spoke about this too. This is the ability to be able to take the huge amount of stories that Amazon have, an ebs and then front that by visa you get the same experience of v Sign, but you get this enormous amount of storage capabilities behind it. Wow. That's incredible. That's incredible. I'm excited about this. This is going to enable customers to migrate faster and larger than ever before. Correct. Now she had a series of little questions. Okay. The second question was around what about all those data centers and those age applications that I did not move, and this is where we introduce the project which you've heard of already tonight called project dementia. What this does, it gives you the simplicity of Vm ware cloud, but bringing that out to the age, you know what's basically going on here, vmc on aws is a service which manages your infrastructure in aws. We know stretch that service out into your infrastructure, in your data center and at the age, allowing us to be able to manage that infrastructure in the same way. Once again, let's dive down into a demo and take a look at what this looks like. So what you've got here is a familiar series of services available to you, one of them, which is project dimension. When you enter project dimension, you first get a view of all of the different infrastructure that you have available to you, your data centers, your edge locations. You can then dive deeply into one of these to get a closer look at what's going on here. We're diving into one of these The problem is there's a networking problem going on in this warehouse. warehouses and we see it as a problem here. How do we know? We know because vm ware is running this as a managed service. We are directly managing or sorry, monitoring your infrastructure or we discover there's something going wrong here. We automatically create the ASR, so somebody is dealing with this. You have visibility to what's going on, but the vm ware managed service is already chasing the problem for you. Oh, very good. So now we're seeing this dispersed infrastructure with project dementia, but what's running on it so well before we get with running out, you've got another problem and the problem is of course, if you're managing a lot of infrastructure like this, you need to keep it up to date. And so once again, this is where the vm ware managed service kicks in. We manage that infrastructure in terms of patching it and updating it for you. And as an example, when we released a security patch, here's one for the recent l, one terminal fault, the Vmr managed service is already on that and making sure that your on prem and edge infrastructure is up to date. Very good. Now, what's running? Okay. So what's running, uh, so we mentioned this case of this software running at the edge infrastructure itself, and these are workloads which are running locally in those age, uh, those edge locations. This is a surveillance application. You can see it here at the bottom it says warehouse safety monitor. So this is an application which gathers images and then stores those images He said my sql database on top there, now this is where we leverage the somewhere and it puts them in a database. technology you just learned about when Andy and pat spoke about disability to take rds and run that on your on prem infrastructure. The block of virtual machines in the moment are the rds components from Amazon running in your infrastructure or in your edge location, and this gives you the ability to allow your developers to be able to leverage and operate against those Apis, but now the actual database, the infrastructure is running on prem and you might be doing just for performance reasons because of latency, you might be doing it simply because this data center is not always connected to the cloud. When you take a look into under the hood and see what's going on here, what you actually see this is vsphere, a modified version of vsphere. You see this new concept of my custom availability zone. That is the availability zone running on your infrastructure which supports or ds. What's more interesting is you flip back to the Amazon portal. This is typically what your developers are going to do. Once again, you see an availability zone in your Amazon portal. This is the availability zone running on your equipment in your data center. So we've truly taken that already as infrastructure and moved it to the edge so the developer sees what they're comfortable with and the infrastructure sees what they're comfortable with bridging those two worlds. Fabulous. Right. So the final question of course that we got here was what's next? How do I begin to look to the future and say I am going to, I want to be able to see all of my infrastructure just handled in an automated fashion. And so when you think about that, one of the questions there is how do we leverage new technologies such as ai and ml to do that? So what you've got here is, sorry we've got a little bit later. What you've got here is how do I blend ai in a male and the power of what's in the data center itself. Okay. And we could do that. We're bringing you the AI and ml, right? And fusing them together as never before to truly change how the data center operates. Correct. And it is this introduction is this merging of these things together, which is extremely powerful in my mind. This is a little bit like a self driving vehicle, so thinking about a car driving down the street is self driving vehicle, it is consuming information from all of the environment around it, other vehicles, what's happening, everything from the wetter, but it also has a lot of built in knowledge which is built up to to self learning and training along the way in the kids collecting lots of that data for decades. Exactly. And we've got all that from all the infrastructure that we have. We can now bring that to bear. So what we're focusing on here is a project called project magna and project. Magna leverage is all of this infrastructure. What it does here is it helps connect the dots across huge datasets and again a deep insight across the stack, all the way from the application hardware, the infrastructure to the public cloud, and even the age and what it does, it leverages hundreds of control points to optimize your infrastructure on Kpis of cost performance, even user specified policies. This is the use of machine language in order to fundamentally transform. I'm sorry, machine learning. I'm going back to some. Very early was here, right? This is the use of machine learning and ai, which will automatically transform. How do you actually automate these data centers? The goal is true automation of your infrastructure, so you get to focus on the applications which really served needs of your business. Yeah, and you know, maybe you could think about that as in the past we would have described the software defined data center, but in the future we're calling it the self driving data center. Here we are taking that same acronym and redefining it, right? Because the self driving data center, the steep infusion of ai and machine learning into the management and automation into the storage, into the networking, into vsphere, redefining the self driving data center and with that we believe fundamentally is to be an enormous advance and how they can take advantage of new capabilities from bm ware. Correct. And you're already seeing some of this in pieces of projects such as some of the stuff we do in wavefront and so already this is how do we take this to a new level and that's what project magnet will do. So let's summarize what we've seen in a few demos here as we work in true each of these very quickly going through these demos. First of all, you saw the n word cloud on aws. How do I migrate an entire data center to the cloud with no downtime? Check, we saw project dementia, get the simplicity of Vm ware cloud in the data center and manage it at the age as a managed service check. Amazon rds and Vm ware. Cool Demo, seamlessly deploy a cloud service to an on premises environment. In this case already. Yes, we got that one coming in are in m five. And then finally project magna. What happens when you're looking to the future? How do we leverage ai and ml to self optimize to virtual infrastructure? Well, how did ray do as our demo guy? Thank you. Thanks. Thanks. Right. Thank you. So coming back to this picture, our gps for the day, we've covered any cloud, let's click into now any application, and as we think about any application, we really view it as this breadth of the traditional cloud native and Sas Coobernetti is quickly maybe spectacularly becoming seen as the consensus way that containers will be managed and automate as the framework for how modern APP teams are looking at their next generation environment, quickly emerging as a key to how enterprises build and deploy their applications today. And containers are efficient, lightweight, portable. They have lots of values for developers, but they need to also be run and operate and have many infrastructure challenges as well. Managing automation while patch lifecycle updates, efficient move of new application services, know can be accelerated with containers. We also have these infrastructure problems and you know, one thing we want to make clear is that the best way to run a container environment is on a virtual machine. You know, in fact, every leader in public cloud runs their containers and virtual machines. Google the creator and arguably the world leader in containers. They runs them all in containers. Both their internal it and what they run as well as G K, e for external users as well. They just announced gke on premise on vm ware for their container environments. Google and all major clouds run their containers and vms and simply put it's the best way to run containers. And we have solved through what we have done collectively the infrastructure problems and as we saw earlier, cool new container apps are also typically some ugly combination of cool new and legacy and existing environments as well. How do we bridge those two worlds? And today as people are rapidly moving forward with containers and Coobernetti's, we're seeing a certain set of problems emerge. And Dan cone, right, the director of CNCF, the Coobernetti, uh, the cloud native computing foundation, the body for Coobernetti's collaboration and that, the group that sort of stewards the standardization of this capability and he points out these four challenges. How do you secure them? How do you network and you know, how do you monitor and what do you do for the storage underneath them? Simply put, vm ware is out to be, is working to be is on our way to be the dial tone for Coobernetti's. Now, some of you who were in your twenties might not know what that means, so we know over to a gray hair or come and see me afterward. We'll explain what dial tone means to you or maybe stated differently. Enterprise grade standard for Cooper netties and for that we are working together with our partners at Google as well as pivotal to deliver Vm ware, pks, Cooper netties as an enterprise capability. It builds on Bosh. The lifecycle engine that's foundational to the pivotal have offerings today, uh, builds on and is committed to stay current with the latest Coobernetti's releases. It builds on Nsx, the SDN container, networking and additional contributions that were making like harbor the Vm ware open source contribution for the container registry. It packages those together makes them available on a hybrid cloud as well as public cloud environments with pks operators can efficiently deploy, run, upgrade their coopernetties environments on SDDC or on all public clouds. While developers have the freedom to embrace and run their applications rapidly and efficiently, simply put, pks, the standard for Coobernetti's in the enterprise and underneath that Nsx you'll is emerging as the standard for software defined networking. But when we think about and we saw that quote on the challenges of Kubernetes today, we see that networking is one of the huge challenge is underneath that and in a containerized world, things are changing even more rapidly. My network environment is moving more quickly. NSX provides the environment's easily automate networking and security for rapid deployment of containerized environments that fully supports the MRP chaos, fully supports pivotal's application service, and we're also committed to fully support all of the major kubernetes distribution such as red hat, heptio and docker as well Nsx, the only platform on the planet that can address the complexity and scale of container deployments taken together Vm Ware, pks, the production grade computer for the enterprise available on hybrid cloud, available on major public clouds. Now, let's not just talk about it again. Let's see it in action and please walk up to the stage. When di Carter with Ray, the senior director of cloud native marketing for Vm ware. Thank you. Hi everybody. So we're going to talk about pks because more and more new applications are built using kubernetes and using containers with vm ware pts. We get to simplify the deploying and the operation of Kubernetes at scale. When the. You're the experts on all of this, right? So can you take as true the scenario of how pks or vm ware pts can really help a developer operating the Kubernedes environment, developed great applications, but also from an administrator point of view, I can really handle things like networking, security and those configurations. Sounds great. I love to dive into the demo here. Okay. Our Demo is. Yeah, more pks running coubernetties vsphere. Now pks has a lot of cool functions built in, one of which is Nsx. And today what I'm going to show you is how NSX will automatically bring up network objects as quick Coobernetti's name spaces are spun up. So we're going to start with the fees per client, which has been extended to Ron pks, deployed cooper clusters. We're going to go into pks instance one, and we see that there are five clusters running. We're going to select one other clusters, call application production, and we see that it is running nsx. Now a cluster typically has multiple users and users are assigned namespaces, and these namespaces are essentially a way to provide isolation and dedicated resources to the users in that cluster. So we're going to check how many namespaces are running in this cluster and more brought up the Kubernetes Ui. We're going to click on namespace and we see that this cluster currently has four namespaces running wire. We're going to do next is bringing up a new name space and show that Nsx will automatically bring up the network objects required for that name space. So to do that, we're going to upload a Yammel file and your developer may actually use Ku Kata command to do this as well. We're going to check the namespace and there it is. We have a new name space called pks rocks. Yeah. Okay. Now why is that guy now? It's great. We have a new name space and now we want to make sure it has the network elements assigned to us, so we're going to go to the NSX manager and hit refresh and there it is. PKS rocks has a logical robber and a logical switch automatically assigned to it and it's up and running. So I want to interrupt here because you made this look so easy, right? I'm not sure people realize the power of what happened here. The developer, winton using Kubernetes, is api infrastructure to familiar with added a new namespace and behind the scenes pks and tardy took care of the networking. It combination of Nsx, a combination of what we do at pks to truly automate this function. Absolutely. So this means that if you are on the infrastructure operation, you don't need to worry about your developer springing up namespaces because Nsx will take care of bringing the networking up and then bringing them back down when the namespace is not used. So rate, but that's not it. Now, I was in operations before and I know how hard it is for enterprises to roll out a new product without visibility. Right, so pks took care of those dates, you operational needs as well, so while it's running your clusters, it's also exporting Meta data so that your developers and operators can use wavefront to gain deep visibility into the health of the cluster as well as resources consumed by the cluster. So here you see the wavefront Ui and it's showing you the number of nodes running, active parts, inactive pause, et cetera. You can also dive deeper into the analytics and take a look at information site, Georgia namespace, so you see pks rocks there and you see the number of active nodes running as well as the CPU utilization and memory consumption of that nice space. So now pks rocks is ready to run containerized applications and microservices. So you just get us a very highlight of a demo here to see a little bit what pks pks says, where can we learn more? So we'd love to show you more. Please come by the booth and we have more cool functions running on pks and we'd love to have you come by. Excellent. Thank you, Lindy. Thank you. Yeah, so when we look at these types of workloads now running on vsphere containers, Kubernedes, we also see a new type of workload beginning to appear and these are workloads which are basically machine learning and ai and in many cases they leverage a new type of infrastructure, hardware accelerators, typically gps. What we're going to talk about here is how in video and Vm ware have worked together to give you flexibility to run sophisticated Vdi workloads, but also to leverage those same gpu for deep learning inference workloads also on vsphere. So let's dive right into a demo here. Again, what you're seeing here is again, you're looking at here, you're looking at your standard view realized operations product, and you see we've got two sets of applications here, a Vdi desktop workload and machine learning, and the graph is showing what's happening with the Vdi desktops. These are office workers leveraging these desktops everyday, so of course the infrastructure is super busy during the daytime when they're in the office, but the green area shows this is not been used very heavily outside of those times. So let's take a look. What happens to the machine learning application in this case, this organization leverages those available gpu to run the machine learning operations outside the normal working hours. Let's take a little bit of a deeper dive into what the application it is before we see what we can do from an infrastructure and configuration point of view. So this machine learning application processes a vast number of images and it clarify or sorry, it categorizes these images and as it's doing so, it is moving forward and putting each of these in a database and you can see it's operating here relatively fast and it's leveraging some gps to do that. So typical image processing type of machine learning problem. Now let's take a dive in and look at the infrastructure which is making this happen. First of all, we're going to look only at the Vdi employee Dvt, a Vdi infrastructure here. So I've got a bunch of these applications running Vdi applications. What I want to do is I want to move these so that I can make this image processing out a application run a lot faster. Now normally you wouldn't do this, but pot insisted that we do this demo at 10:30 in the morning when the office workers are in there, so we're going to move older Vdi workloads over to the other cluster and that's what you're seeing is going on right now. So as they move over to this other cluster, what we are now doing is freeing up all of the infrastructure. The GPU that Vdi workload was using here. We see them moving across and now you've freed up that infrastructure. So now we want to take a look at this application itself, the machine learning application and see how we can make use of that. Now freed up infrastructure we've got here is the application is running using one gpu in a vsphere cluster, but I've got three more gpu is available now because I've moved the Vdi workloads. We simply modify the application, let it know that these are available and you suddenly see an increase in the processing capabilities because of what we've done here in terms of making the flexibility of accessing those gps. So what you see here is the same gps that youth for Vdi, which you probably have in your infrastructure today, can also be used to run sophisticated machine learning and ai type of applications on your vsphere infrastructure. So let's summarize what we've seen in the various demos here in this section. First of all, we saw how the MRPS simplifies the deployment and operating operation of Kubernetes at scale. What we've also seen is that leveraging the Nvidia Gpu, we can now run the most demanding workloads on vsphere. When we think about all of these applications and these new types of workloads that people are running. I want to take one second to speak to another workload that we're seeing beginning to appear in the data center. And this is of course blockchain. We're seeing an increasing number of organizations evaluating blockchains for smart contract and digital consensus solutions. So this tech, this technology is really becoming or potentially becoming a critical role in how businesses will interact each other, how they will work together. We'd project concord, which is an open source project that we're releasing today. You get the choice, performance and scale of verifiable trust, which you can then bring to bear and run in the enterprise, but this is not just another blockchain implementation. We have focused very squarely on making sure that this is good for enterprises. It focuses on performance, it focuses on scalability. We have seen examples where running consensus algorithms have taken over 80 days on some of the most common and widely used infrastructure in blockchain and we project conquered. You can do that in two and a half hours. So I encourage you to check out this project on get hub today. You'll also see lots of activity around the whole conference. Speaking about this. Now we're going to dive into another section which is the anti device section. And for that I need to welcome pat back up there. Thank you pat. Thanks right. So diving into any device piece of the puzzle, you and as we think about the superpowers that we have, maybe there are no more area that they are more visible than in the any device aspect of our picture. You know, and as we think about this, the superpowers, you know, think about mobility, right? You know, and how it's enabling new things like desktop as a service in the mobile area, these breadth of smartphones and devices, ai and machine learning allow us to manage them, secure them and this expanding envelope of devices in the edge that need to be connected and wearables and three d printers and so on. We've also seen increasing research that says engaged employees are at the center of business success. Engaged employees are the critical ingredient for digital transformation. And frankly this is how I run vm ware, right? You know, I have my device and my work, all my applications, every one of my 23,000 employees is running on our transformed workspace one environment. Research shows that companies that, that give employees ready anytime access are nearly three x more likely to be leaders in digital transformation. That employees spend 20 percent of their time today on manual processes that can be automated. The way team collaboration and speed of division decisions increases by 16 percent with engaged employees with modern devices. Simply put this as a critical aspect to enabling your business, but you remember this picture from the silos that we started with and each of these environments has their own tribal communities of management, security automation associated with them, and the complexity associated with these is mind boggling and we start to think about these. Remember the I'm a pc and I'm a Mac. Well now you have. I'm an Ios. I'm a droid and other bdi and I'm now a connected printer and I'm a connected watch. You remember citrix manager and good is now bad and sccm a failed model and vpns and Xanax. The chaos is now over at the center of that is vm ware, workspace one, get it out of the business of managing devices, automate them from the cloud, but still have the mentor price. Secure cloud based analytics that brings new capabilities to this critical topic. You'll focus your energy on creating employee and customer experiences. You know, new capabilities to allow like our airlift, the new capability to help customers migrate from their sccm environment to a modern management, expanding the use of workspace intelligence. Last year we announced the chromebook and a partnership with HP and today I'm happy to announce the next step in our partnerships with Dell. And uh, today we're announcing that Dell provisioning for Vm ware, workspace one as part of Dell's ready to work solutions Dallas, taking the next leap and bringing workspace one into the core of their client to offerings. And the way you can think about this as Literally a dell drop ship, lap pops showing up to new employee. day one, productivity. You give them their credential and everything else is delivered by workspace one, your image, your software, everything patched and upgraded, transforming your business, right beginning at that device experience that you give to your customer. And again, we don't want to talk about it. We want to show you how this works. Please walk to the stage with re renew the head of our desktop products marketing. Thank you. So we just heard from pat about how workspace one integrated with Dell laptops is really set up to manage windows devices. What we're broadly focused on here is how do we get a truly modern management system for these devices, but one that has an intelligence behind it to make sure that we're kept with a good understanding of how to keep these devices always up to date and secure. Can we start the demo please? So what we're seeing here is to be the the front screen that you see of workspace one and you see you've got multiple devices a little bit like that demo that patch assured. I've got Ios, android, and of course I've got windows renewal. Can you please take us through how workspace one really changes the ability of somebody an it administrator to update and manage windows into our environment? Absolutely. With windows 10, Microsoft has finally joined the modern management body and we are really excited about that. Now. The good news about modern management is the frequency of ostp updates and how quickly they come out because you can address all those security issues that are hitting our radar on a daily basis, but the bad news about modern management is the frequency of those updates because all of us in it admins, we have to test each and every one of our applications would that latest version because we don't want to roll out that update in case of causes any problems with workspace one, we saw that we simply automate and provide you with the APP compatibility information right out of the box so you can now automate that update process. Let's take a quick look. Let's drill down here further into the windows devices. What we'll see is that only a small percentage of those devices are on that latest version of operating system. Now, that's not a good thing because it might have an important security fix. Let's scroll down further and see what the issue is. We find that it's related to app compatibility. In fact, 38 percent of our devices are blocked from being upgraded and the issue is app compatibility. Now we were able to find that not by asking the admins to test each and every one of those, but we combined windows analytics data with APP intelligent out of the box and be provided that information right here inside of the console. Let's dig down further and see what those devices and apps look like. So knew this is the part that I find most interesting. If I am a system administrator at this point I'm looking at workspace one is giving me a key piece of information. It says if you proceed with this update, it's going to fail 84, 85 percent at a time. So that's an important piece of information here, but not alone. Is it telling me that? It is telling me roughly speaking why it thinks it's going to fail. We've got a number of apps which are not ready to work with this new version, particularly the Mondo card sales lead tracker APP. So what we need to do is get engineering to tackle the problems with this app and make sure that it's updated. So let's get fixing it in order to fix it. What we'll do is create an automation and we can do this right out of the box in this automation will open up a Jira ticket right from within the console to inform the engineers about the problem, not just that we can also flag and send a notification to that engineering manager so that it's top of mine and they can get working on this fixed right away. Let's go ahead and save that automation right here, ray UC. There's the automation that we just So what's happening here is essentially this update is now scheduled meeting. saved. We can go and update oldest windows devices, but workspace one is holding the process of proceeding with that update, waiting for the engineers to update the APP, which is going to cause the problem. That's going to take them some time, right? So the engineers have been working on this, they have a fixed and let's go back and see what's happened to our devices. So going back into the ios updates, what we'll find is now we've unblocked those devices from being upgraded. The 38 percent has drastically dropped down. It can rest in peace that all of the devices are compliant and on that latest version of operating system. And again, this is just a snapshot of the power of workspace one to learn more and see more. I invite you all to join our EOC showcase keynote later this evening. Okay. So we've spoken about the presence of these new devices that it needs to be able to manage and operate across everything that they do. But what we're also seeing is the emergence of a whole new class of computing device. And these are devices which are we commonly speak to have been at the age or embedded devices or Iot. And in many cases these will be in factories. They'll be in your automobiles, there'll be in the building, controlling, controlling, uh, the building itself, air conditioning, etc. Are quite often in some form of industrial environment. There's something like this where you've got A wind farm under embedded in each of these turbines. This is a new class of computing which needs to be managed, secured, or we think virtualization can do a pretty good job of that in new virtualization frontier, right at the edge for iot and iot gateways, and that's gonna. That's gonna, open up a whole new realm of innovation in that space. Let's dive down and taking the demo. This spaces. Well, let's do that. What we're seeing here is a wind turbine farm, a very different than a data center than what we're used to and all the compute infrastructure is being managed by v center and we see to edge gateway hose and they're running a very mission critical safety watchdog vm right on there. Now the safety watchdog vm is an fte mode because it's collecting a lot of the important sensor data and running the mission critical operations for the turbine, so fte mode or full tolerance mode, that's a pretty sophisticated virtualization feature allowing to applications to essentially run in lockstep. So if there's a failure, wouldn't that gets to take over immediately? So this no sophisticated virtualization feature can be brought out all the way to the edge. Exactly. So just like in the data center, we want to perform an update, so as we performed that update, the first thing we'll do is we'll suspend ft on that safety watchdog. Next, we'll put two. Oh, five into maintenance mode. Once that's done, we'll see the power of emotion that we're all familiar with. We'll start to see all the virtual machines vmotion over to the second backup host. Again, all the maintenance, all the update without skipping a heartbeat without taking down any daily operations. So what we're seeing here is the basic power of virtualization being brought out to the age v motion maintenance mode, et cetera. Great. What's the big deal? We've been doing that for years. What's the, you know, come on. What's the big deal? So what you're on the edge. So when you get to the age pack, you're dealing with a whole new class of infrastructure. You're dealing with embedded systems and new types of cpu hours and process. This whole demo has been done on an arm 64. Virtualization brought to arm 64 for embedded devices. So we're doing this on arm on the edge, correct. Specifically focused for embedded for age oems. Okay. Now that's good. Okay. Thank you ray. Actually, we've got a summary here. Pat, just a second before you disappear. A lot to rattle off what we've just seen, right? We've seen workspace one cross platform management. What we've also seen, of course esx for arm to bring the power of vfx to edge on 64, but are in platforms will go no. Okay. Okay. Thank you. Thanks. Now we've seen a look at a customer who is taking advantage of everything that we just saw and again, a story of a customer that is just changing lives in a fundamental way. Let's see. Make a wish. So when a family gets the news that a child is sick and it's a critical illness, it could be a life threatening illness. The whole family has turned upside down. Imagine somebody comes to you and they say, what's the one thing you want that's in your heart? You tell us and then we make that happen. So I was just calling to give you the good news that we're going to be able to grant jackson a wish make, which is the largest wish granting organizations in the United States. English was featured in the cbs 60 minutes episode. Interestingly, it got a lot of hits, but uh, unfortunately for the it team, the whole website crashed make a wish is going through a program right now where we're centralizing technology and putting certain security standards in place at our chapters. So what you're seeing here, we're configuring certain cloud services to make sure that they always are able to deliver on the mission whether they have a local problem or not is we continue to grow the partnership and work with vm ware. It's enabling us to become more efficient in our processes and allows us to grant more wishes. It was a little girl. She had a two year old brother. She just wanted a puppy and she was forthright and I want to name the puppy in my name so my brother would always have me to list them off a five year old. It's something we can't change their medical outcome, but we can change their spiritual outcome and we can transform their lives. Thank you. Working together with you truly making wishes come true. The last topic I want to touch on today, and maybe the most important to me personally is security. You got to fundamentally, when we think about this topic of security, I'll say it's broken today and you know, we would just say that the industry got it wrong that we're trying to bolt on or chasing bad, and when we think about our security spend, we're spending more and we're losing more, right? Every day we're investing more in this aspect of our infrastructure and we're falling more behind. We believe that we have to have much less security products and much more security. You know, fundamentally, you know, if you think about the problem, we build infrastructure, right? Generic infrastructure, we then deploy applications, all kinds of applications, and we're seeing all sorts of threats launched that as daily tens of millions. You're simple virus scanner, right? Is having tens of millions of rules running and changing many times a day. We simply believe the security model needs to change. We need to move from bolted on and chasing bad to an environment that has intrinsic security and is built to ensure good. This idea of built in security. We are taking every one of the core vm ware products and we are building security directly into it. We believe with this, we can eliminate much of the complexity. Many of the sensors and agents and boxes. Instead, they'll directly leverage the mechanisms in the infrastructure and we're using that infrastructure to lock it down to behave as we intended it to ensure good, right on the user side with workspace one on the network side with nsx and microsegmentation and storage with native encryption and on the compute with app defense, we are building in security. We're not chasing threats or adding on, but radically reducing the attack surface. When we look at our applications in the data center, you see this collection of machines running inside of it, right? You know, typically running on vsphere and those machines are increasingly connected. Through nsx and last year we introduced the breakthrough security solution called app defense and app defense. Leverages the unique insight we get into the application so that we can understand the application and map it into the infrastructure and then you can lock down, you could take that understanding, that manifest of its behavior and then lock those vms to that intended behavior and we do that without the operational and performance burden of agents and other rear looking use of attack detection. We're shrinking the attack surface, not chasing the latest attack vector, you know, and this idea of bolt on versus chasing bad. You sort of see it right in the network. Machines have lots of conductivity, lots of applications running and something bad happens. It basically has unfettered access to move horizontally through the data center and most of our security is north, south. MosT of the attacks are eastwest. We introduced this idea of microsegmentation five years ago, and by it we're enabling organizations to secure some networks and separate sensitive applications and services as never before. This idea isn't new, that just was never practical before nsx, but we're not standing still. Our teams are innovating to leap beyond 12. What's next beyond microsegmentation, and we see this in three simple words, learn, imagine a system that can look into the applications and understand their behavior and how they should operate. we're using machine learning and ai instead of chasing were to be able to ensure good where that that system can then locked down its behavior so the system consistently operates that way, but finally we know we have a world of increasing dynamic applications and as we move to more containerize the microservices, we know this world is changing, so we need to adapt. We need to have more automation to adapt to the current behavior. Today I'm very excited to have two major announcements that are delivering on this vision. The first of those vsphere platinum, our flagship vm ware vsphere product now has app defense built right in platinum will enable virtualization teams. Yeah, go ahead. Yeah, let's use it. Platinum will enable virtualization teams you to give an enormous contribution to the security profile of your enterprise. You could see whatever vm is for its purpose, its behavior until the system. That's what it's allowed to do. Dramatically reducing the attack surface without impact. On operations or performance, the capability is so powerful, so profound. We want you to be able to leverage it everywhere, and that's why we're building it directly into vsphere, vsphere platinum. I call it the burger and fries. You know, nobody leaves the restaurant without the fries who would possibly run a vm in the future without turning security on. That's how we want this to work going forward. Vsphere platinum and as powerful as microsegmentation has been as an idea. We're taking the next step with what we call adaptive microsegmentation. We are fusing Together app defense and vsphere with nsx to allow us to align the policies of the application through vsphere and the network. We can then lock down the network and the compute and enable this automation of the microsegment formation taken together adaptive microsegmentation. But again, we don't want to just tell you about it. We want to show you. Please welcome to the stage vj dante, who heads our machine learning team for app dispense. Vj a very good vj. Thanks for joining us. So, you know, I talked about this idea right, of being able to learn, lock and adapt. Uh, can you show it to us? Great. Yeah. Thank you. With vc a platinum, what we have done is we have put in everything you need to learn, lock and adapt, right with the infrastructure. The next time you bring up your wifi at line, you'll actually see a difference right in there. Let's go with that demo. There you go. And when you look at our defense there, what you see is that all your guests, virtual machines and all your host, hundreds of them and thousands of virtual machines enabling for that difference. It's in there. And what that does is immediately gets you visibility into the processes running on those virtual machines and the risk for the first time. Think about it for the first time. You're looking at the infrastructure through the lens of an application. Here, for example, the ecommerce application, you can see the components that make up that application, how they interact with each other, the specific process, a specific ip address on a specific board. That's what you get, but so we're learning the behavior. Yes. Yeah, that's very good. But how do you make sure you only learn good behavior? Exactly. How do we make sure that it's not bad? We actually verify me insured. It's all good. We ensured that everybody these reputation is verified. We ensured that the haven is verified. Let's go to svc host, for example. This process can exhibit hundreds of behaviors across numerous. Realize what we do here is we actually verify that failure saw us. It's actually a machine learning models that had been trained on millions of instances of good, bad at you said, and then automatically verify that for okay, so we said, you. We learned simply, learn now, lock. How does that work? Well, once you learned the application, locking it is as simple as clicking on that verify and protect button and then you can lock both the compute and network and it's done. So we've pushed those policies into nsx and microsegmentation has been established actually locked down the compute. What is the operating system is exactly. Let's first look at compute, protected the processes and the behaviors are locked down to exactly what is allowed for that application. And we have bacon policies and program your firewall. This is nsx being configured automatically for you, laurie, with one single click. Very good. So we said learn lock. Now, how does this adapt thing work? Well, a bad change is the only constant, but modern applications applications change on a continuous basis. What we do is actually pretty simple. We look at every change as it comes in determinant is good or bad. If it's good, we say allow it, update the policies. That's bad. We denied. Let's look at an example as asco dxc. It's exhibiting a behavior that they've not seen getting the learning period. Okay? So this machine has never behave this This hasn't been that way. But. way. But again, our machine learning models had seen thousands of instances of this process. They know this is normal. It talks on three 89 all the time. So what it's done to the few things, it's lowered the criticality of the alarm. Okay, so false positive. Exactly. The bane of security operations, false positives, and it has gone and updated. Jane does locks on compute and network to allow for that behavior. Applications continues to work on this project. Okay, so we can learn and adapt and action right through the compute and the network. What about the client? Well, we do with workplace one, intelligence protect and manage end user endpoint, but what's one intelligence? Nsx and actually work together to protect your entire data center infrastructure, but don't believe me. You can watch it for yourself tomorrow tom cornu keynote. You want to be there, at 1:00 PM, be there or be nowhere. I love you. Thank you veejay. Great job. Thank you so much. So the idea of intrinsic security and ensuring good, we believe fundamentally changing how security will be delivered in the enterprise in the future and changing the entire security industry. We've covered a lot today. I'm thrilled as I stand on stage to stand before this community that truly has been at the center of changing the world of technology over the last couple of decades. In it. We've talked about this idea of the super powers of technology and as they accelerate the huge demand for what you do, you know in the same way we together created this idea of the virtual infrastructure admin. You'll think about all the jobs that we are spawning in the discussion that we had today, the new skills, the new opportunities for each one of us in this room today, quantum program, machine learning engineer, iot and edge expert. We're on the cusp of so many new capabilities and we need you and your skills to do that. The skills that you possess, the abilities that you have to work across these silos of technology and enabled tomorrow. I'll tell you, I am now 38 years in the industry and I've never been more excited because together we have the opportunity to build on the things that collective we have done over the last four decades and truly have a positive global impact. These are hard problems, but I believe together we can successfully extend the lifespan of every human being. I believe together we can eradicate chronic diseases that have plagued mankind for centuries. I believe we can lift the remaining 10 percent of humanity out of extreme poverty. I believe that we can reschedule every worker in the age of the superpowers. I believe that we can give modern ever education to every child on the planet, even in the of slums. I believe that together we could reverse the impact of climate change. I believe that together we have the opportunity to make these a reality. I believe this possibility is only possible together with you. I asked you have a please have a wonderful vm world. Thanks for listening. Happy 20th birthday. Have a great topic.
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