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Geoff Tudor, Panzura | VMworld 2019


 

>> Announcer: Live from San Francisco, celebrating 10 years of high tech coverage, it's theCUBE, covering VMworld 2019. Brought to you by VMware and its ecosystem partners. >> Welcome back, this is theCUBE at VMworld 2019. I'm Stu Miniman, my cohost is John Troyer. It's our 10th year at the show, we've been going three days, wall to wall, on two sets and really happy to welcome to the program, a first time guest, Geoff Tudor is the vice president, general manager of Vision.AI, inside Panzura. Thanks so much for joining us. >> Yes, you best suit things John. >> All right, so, we've known Panzura for quite a number of years, the founder of the company's someone we've talked to a bit. I believe this is the first time we've talked about Vision.ai, so maybe set the table with us, of Panzura Today, and the value of the sharing app. >> Sure, absolutely, so, Panzura is known predominantly for its file services, of which we can provide a global collaborative name space, across multiple different locations. So, entities that are in the design, engineering, manufacturing, anything where you're working with a lot of distributed groups that need access to the same kind of working set files, and big data files have been using Panzura for file services for a number of years. We're in 33 countries, 7,000 deployments, and largely in the Fortune 100. And that's kind of where we started to see that the growth of data is not only in user-generated content like PowerPoints or data-based backups, but it's the machine-generated data, and that's what brought us to Vision.ai. >> Okay, so great. The layout, that was an internally created product. How long has it been available, what's the key IP in there that differentiates from others in the marketplace? >> So, great question. Well, the thing with machine-generated data is there's a lot of it, right? And as you know, it's growing at 60% compounding growth rate, all these great statistics, but in order to drive value of machine data, especially when you're looking at ML and AI, the larger the data set, the larger the training data set, the better the prediction models, and one of the problems with today's storage platforms for machine data, is that you're taking data, you're indexing it, then you're putting it on Flash, which is a phenomenal storage platform, but if you're looking for petabytes of Flash for just retaining a couple months worth of data, it becomes very expensive, very fast so a couple of years ago, we took some of the core IP that we had and creating file to object mapping, and said, look, let's build a new cloud native architecture to manage cloud native digital machine-generated data, and be able to transfer that not only for the block storage to put in the object storage. So we created something called VBOS, Vision Block Object Storage, that allows us to take, index this data, and then write it to object but still, while it's an object, have it still searchable, and that really unlocks a value of these very large data sets, so you no longer have to push this off on a tape, or push it off into object storage where it's no longer available, it sits in object storage, but it's always on, it's always available. >> And is this a software offering, does it sit in my bucket somewhere, or does it sit in yours, and then actually are we, machine-generated data, that's a pretty wide term. Are we talking log files, or? >> Well, certainly log files is a core starting point because that's something everyone here at VMWorld, you know, has in common, right? As our systems and records are creating and running virtual machines, it's generating digital data about who accessed what, when, where, when and how, for IP address security information, dashboards, et cetera. So, we've created this as a service because, in a multicloud world, you need one platform where you can ingest these data feeds and these log feeds, and then store that and search it. People have been generating and deploying on-site log files for some time, but we've seen a large interest among our customer base, in a hosted service that can securely store and make their logs accessible. >> All right, Geoff, bring us inside a customer. What is some of the typical use cases, outcomes, that customers, if you have any example that might illustrate it, I'd love that. >> Sure, so we'll take a customer that is in the publishing business and as you know, in the publishing busines, we were going from paper into digital right? So it's just digital transformation and as their industry changed, they became now a web hoster, so the sites and their papers that used to advertise and their classifieds and by-print ads, they're now managing their digital experience, well, as they were doing that, they came into a situation where some of their sites were having unpredictable performance lows, and they're just sophisticated enough to have one IT person managing, you know, 50 different, to about 50 different servers, virtual machines, running these, hosting these sites. So they needed help, like is there a platform that can come help me create dashboards so I can visualize this log data that came in to us so our partner, one of our key partners here is phoenixNAP at the show, and Intel's demonstrating our Octane Accelerated Technology, so we went into this particular customer, onboarded him in five minutes, created the dashboards for him, and now their logs are coming in a number of gigabytes per day, and that can visualize and find out any points of their operations that are creating problems and slow access time for their customers. >> You know, I love the storage data aspect of it, right? The searchable object store sounds very neat, I bet there's some very cool computer science there, storage and data geeks love that. It's also got AI in the name, and we talked about ML and AI, so where does that come into the picture? >> Absolutely, sir, great question. The AI and ML aspect of this is because as you get primarily the large data set sizes, then you can start putting machine generated algorithms on top of it, right, so creating large data stores, and then the first machine generated analytics that we've run on top of it, are things such as storage prediction costs, it's actually one where we've saved one of our customers in financial services, tens of thousands of dollars a month, because we can look at their bucket, their bucket sizes and the access times to their S3 buckets and say look, you know, you're actually not accessing it. You can drop it down in the infrequent access and you're not going to get a higher bill, so we can run these analytics for them, provide that data to them. >> Geoff, we're here at VMWorld. >> Yes. >> VMworld's talking a lot about multicloud, and microservices, cloud native, VMware cloud pieces, help us understand the intersection between what you're doing, and how that ties into VMware and their customers. >> Absolutely, well, in a multicloud world, VMware is obviously one very important component of it. But there's also components that are non-Vsphere based, right, and so, we have to be cognizant of this, and need a platform that can support any data feed from any data source, so that's certainly one of them. But number two, as you mention it, microservice. Traditional log platforms or machine data platforms such as Elastix, or Archer Splunk or things like that, is where you go and you create your architecture, and your infrastructure, and you manage that infrastructure as you're putting that data into it so it puts operational burden on the customer to go manage all this. In our view of the world, it needs to be completely serverless. You need to be able to consume machine data, log data, as a microservice in a complete service mythology, so you send your data into this URL, it goes into your bucket, it's encrypted, it's dropped into your object service where it's searchable. >> Yeah, it's funny, I've been looking at the serverless space for a couple of years now, functions, really interesting stuff, Kelsey Hightower actually put out, he said, isn't most of networking serverless by definition? Maybe just clarify that for us. >> Yeah, so serverless is just like the cloud. It's just somebody else's data center, okay? >> I actually have the T-shirt for serverless, it updates that there is no cloud, it's a computer, it's just a microservice that you pay a little bit for when you need it, things like that. >> Right, when you need it, but really, it gets into if I want to spin up elastic searches, talk about that, because that is one of the key workloads that's running in our platform, when you talk about elastic search service, if you want to spin that up, you need to go literally spin up virtual machines, assign block storage to those virtual machines, and hope that you assign enough storage for your data ingestion, otherwise your performance is going to go down, your data is going to become blocked, then you're going to need to assign storage. So, you're still managing stuff, even though it's in the cloud, in our world, we're kind of trying to turn machine generated data and democratize it into simple as a Gmail account right? I create, I request a microservice endpoint, then you write to that endpoint. Now, of course, we're managing servers, and we're managing clusters and virtual machines, and all that funness, but it's transparent to you, and most importantly, you're not hit with any cost for the infrastructure. You're only charged for what you're consuming, and that means it's a complete consumable base bottle from that standpoint, which saves customers a lot money from otherwise having to buy and host a lot of infrastructure. >> So, Geoff, you have a big presence here at the show, A nice booth, I hope it's been a good week, I'm curious about what you thought the energy was, I think you all had an announcement, talk a little about that and how that works with the ecosystem in the audience here. >> Yeah, we actually have two announcements, and let's take the first from the file services, because from our file service platform, we're announcing Vsense certification, which is coming in the fall, we've gone through that process, so that anywhere you're running VMware, on any of the cloud providers on top of SAN, vSAN, you now have a file services platform on top of that that can expand beyond just your NVMe, and also leverage that object storage for this kind of infinite filer, if you will, for that, but the other announcement we have is the log analytics service. >> All right, yeah, tell us a little bit about customer meetings you're having. What are the things that are bringing customers to you, is there a certain thing that, you know, when you hear it, you're like ah, this is a perfect Panzura customer. >> Well, yeah, certainly, I would think that any data and storage is just a universal problem, and people can't get enough of it, and ultimately they want to get out of the business of managing storage a lot, in this case so in that particular instance, being able to offer them a software defined file system platform for our traditional filer environment, is something that's going to, it's just a evergreen forest, right, it's going to continue to grow, you know, the performance of file and flash at the price of object, that's a pretty clear value proposition. In the machine generated data analytics space with Vision.ai, it is how do I make sense of my data? I need to take all of these data streams, and actually put some intelligence on it, and create alerts, visualize this data, so our big proposition here is five minutes to visualize your data, and that resonates. I can walk these customers that are traditionally having to go build their own log service environments, and I'm saying here, let me onboard you. We can actually start sending their data up and having visualizations and alerts in five minutes, and that's revolutionary to them, right? The simplicity of it is key, and I think that's making IT simple to consume and democratizing is something we're focused on doing. >> Geoff, last thing I have, tell us a little bit about what we should expect going forward. Obviously, the AI and ML stuff is continuing to grow, what should customers be looking for from Panzura in the near future? >> No matter how sophisticated a customer in an enterprise is, they don't have enough smart people, right? And data scientists are very expensive, and they're very scarce so what we're doing and focused on doing and we will be doing more of, is we've built a marketplace, a marketplace where data applications, data analytics applications, can be created by the community, can be published into and be consumed by an enterprise, so that they have their account, they add in this application, they can immediately start utilizing and experiencing and unlocking the power of their data. >> Geoff Tudor, really appreciate the update on Panzura. Congrats on the progress of Vision.ai, and hope to catch up with you in the near future. >> Great, thanks so much, I look forward to next year. >> For John Troyer, I'm Stu Miniman, getting towards the end of our coverage from Vmworld 2019, but as always, thanks for watching theCUBE. (gentle music)

Published Date : Aug 29 2019

SUMMARY :

Brought to you by VMware and its ecosystem partners. Welcome back, this is theCUBE at VMworld 2019. and the value of the sharing app. So, entities that are in the design, engineering, from others in the marketplace? for the block storage to put in the object storage. and then actually are we, multicloud world, you need one platform where you can that customers, if you have any example log data that came in to us so our partner, one of our It's also got AI in the name, and we talked about ML and AI, and say look, you know, you're actually not accessing it. help us understand the intersection between what you're burden on the customer to go manage all this. Yeah, it's funny, I've been looking at the serverless Yeah, so serverless is just like the cloud. it's just a microservice that you pay a little bit because that is one of the key workloads that's running ecosystem in the audience here. and let's take the first from the file services, that, you know, when you hear it, you're like right, it's going to continue to grow, you know, Obviously, the AI and ML stuff is continuing to grow, the power of their data. and hope to catch up with you in the near future. the end of our coverage from Vmworld 2019,

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