Dustin Kirkland, Google | CUBEConversation, June 2019
>> from our studios in the heart of Silicon Valley. HOLLOWAY ALTO, California It is a cube conversation. >> Welcome to this Special Cube conversation here in Palo Alto, California at the Cube Studios at the Cube headquarters. I'm John for the host, like you were a Dustin Kirkland product manager and Google friend of the Cuban. The community with Cooper Netease been on the Cube Cube alumni. Dustin. Welcome to the Cube conversation. >> Thanks. John's a beautiful studio. I've never been in the studio and on the show floor a few times, but this is This is fun. >> Great to have you on a great opportunity to chat about Cooper Netease yet of what you do out some product man's working Google. But really more importantly on this conversation is about the fifth anniversary, the birthday of Cuba Netease. Today we're celebrating the fifth birthday of Cooper Netease. Still, it's still a >> toddler, absolutely still growing. You think about how you know Lennox has been around for a long time. Open stack has been around these other big projects that have been around for, you know, going on decades and Lenox this case and Cooper nineties. It's going so fast, but It's only five years old, you know. >> You know, I remember Adam Open Stack event in Seattle many, many years ago. That was six years ago. Pubes on his 10th year. So many of these look backs moments. This is one of them. I was having a beer with Lou Tucker. J J Kiss Matic was like one of the first comes at the time didn't make it, But we were talking about open stagger like this Cooper Netease thing. This is really hot. This paper, this initiative this could really be the abstraction layer to kind of bring all this cloud Native wasn't part of the time, but it was like more of an open stack. Try and move up to stack. And it turned out it ended up happening. Cooper Netease then went on to change the landscape of what containers did. Dr. Got a lot of credit for pioneering that got the big VC funding became a unicorn, and then containers kind of went into a different direction because of Cooper duties. >> Very much so. I mean, the modernization of software infrastructure has been coming for a long time, and Cooper nutty sort of brings it all brings it all together at this point, but putting software into a container. We've been doing that different forest for for a lot of time, uh, for a long time, but But once you have a lot of containers, what do you do with that? Right? And that was the problem that Cooper Nettie solved so eloquently and has, you know, now for a couple of years, and it just keeps getting better. >> You know, you mentioned modernization. Let's talk about that because I think the modernization the theme is now pretty much prevalent in every vertical. I'll be in D. C. Next week for the Amazon Webster was public sector Summit, where modernization of governments and nations are being discussed. Education, modernization of it. We've seen it here. The media business that were participating in is about not where you store the code. It's how you code. How you build is a mindset shift. This has been the rial revelation around the Dev Ops Movement Infrastructures Code, now called Cloud Native. Share your thoughts on this modernization mindset because it really is how you build. >> Yeah, I think the cross pollination actually across industries and we even we see that even just in the word containers, right and all the imagery around shipping and shipping containers, we've applied these age old concepts that have been I don't have perfected but certainly optimized over decades of, actually centuries or millennia of moving things across water in containers. Right. But we apply that to software and boom. We have the step function difference in the way that we we manage and we orchestrated and administer code. That's one example of that cross pollination, and now you're talking about, like optimizing optimized governments or economies but being able to maybe then apply other concepts that we've come a long way in computer science do de bop set a good example? You know, applying Dev ops principles to non computer feels. Just think about that for a second. >> It's mind blowing. And if you think about also the step function you mentioned because I think this actually changed a lot of the entrepreneurial landscape as well and also has shaped open source and, you know, big news this this quarter is map are going to shut down due one of the biggest do players. Cloudera merge with Horton Works fired their CEO, the founder Michael. So has retired, Some say forced out. I don't think so. I think it's more of his time. I'm Rodel still there. Open source is a business model, you know. Can we be the red hat for her? Duped the red? Not really kind of the viable, but it's evolving. So open source has been impacted by this step function. There's a business impact. Talk about the dynamics with step function both on the business side and on how software's built specifically open source. >> You know, you and I have been around open source for a long, long time. I think it started when I was in college in the late nineties on then through my career at IBM. And it's It's interesting how on the fringe open source was for so long and such so so much of my BM career. And then early time spent onside it at Red Hat. It was it was something that was it was different, was weird. It was. It was very much fringe where the right uh, but now it's in mainstream and it's everywhere, and it's so mainstream that it's almost the defacto standard to just start with open source. But you know, there's some other news that's been happening lately that she didn't bring up. But it's a really touchy aspect of open source right now on that's on some of the licenses and how those licenses get applied by software, especially databases. When offered as a service in the cloud. That's one of the big problems. I think that that's that we're we're working within the open >> source, summarize the news and what it means. What's what's happening? What's the news and what's the really business? Our technical impact to the licensing? What's the issue? What's the core issue? >> Yeah, eso without taking judgment any any way, shape or form on this, the the the TL D are on. This is a number of open source database is most recently cockroach D. B. I have adopted a different licensing model that is nonstandard from an open source perspective. Uh, and from one perspective, they're they're adopting these different licensing models because other vendors can take that software and offered as a service, yes, and in some some cases, like Amazon like Sure, you said, uh, and offered as a as a service, uh, and maybe contribute. Maybe pay money to the smaller startup or the open source community behind it. But not necessarily. Uh, and it's in some ways is quite threatening to open source communities and open source companies on other cases, quite empowering. And it's going to be interesting to see how that plays out. The tension between open sourcing software and eventually making money off of it is something that we've we've seen for, you know, at least 25. >> And it continues to go on today, and this is, to me a real fascinating area that I think is going to be super important to keep an eye on because you want to encourage contribution and openness. Att the same time we look at the scale of just the Lenox foundations numbers. It's pretty massive in terms of now, the open source contribution. When you factor in even China and other nations, it's it's on exponential growth, right? So is it just open source? Is the model not necessarily a business? Yeah. So this is the big question. No one knows. >> I think we crossed that. And open source is the model. Um, and this is where me is a product manager. That's worked around open source. I've spent a lot of time thinking about how to create commercial offerings around open source. I spent 10 years at Economical, the first half of which, as an engineer, the second half of which, as a product manager around, uh, about building services, commercial services around 12 And I learned quite a few things that now apply absolutely to communities as well as to a number of open source startups. That that I've advised on DH kind of given them some perspective on maybe some successful and unsuccessful ways to monetize that that opens. >> Okay, so doesn't talk about Let's get back to Coburg. And so I think this is the next level Talk track is as Cooper Netease has established itself and landed in the industry and has adoption. It's now an expansion votes the land adopted expand. We've seen adoption. Now it's an expansion mode. Where does it go from here? Because you look at the tale signs things like service meshes server. Listen, you get some interesting trends that going to support this expansionary stage of uber netease. What is your view about the next expansion everyway what >> comes next? Yeah, I I think I think the next stage is really about democratizing communities for workloads that you know. It's quite obvious where when communities is the right answer at the scale of a Google or a Twitter or Netflix or, you know, some of these massive services that it is obviously and clearly the best answer to orchestrating containers. Now I think the next question is, how does that same thing that works at that massive scale Also worked for me as a developer at a very small scale helped me develop my software. My small team of five or 10 people. Do I need a coup? Burnett. He's If I'm ah five or 10 person startup. Well, I mean, not the original sort of borde vision of communities. It's probably overkill, but actually the tooling has really advanced, and we now >> have >> communities that makes sense on very small scales. You've got things like a three s from from Rancher. You've got micro Kates from from my colleagues at economical other ways of making shrinking communities down to something that fits, perhaps on devices perhaps at the edge, beyond just the traditional data center and into remote locations that need to deploy manage applications >> on the Cooper Netease clustering the some of the tech side. You know, we've seen some great tech trends as mentioned in Claudia Horton. Works and map Our Let's Take Claudia and Horton work. Remember back in the old days when it was booming? Oh, they were so proud to talk about their clusters. I stood up all these clusters and then I would ask them, Well, what do you doing with it? Well, we're storing data. I think so. That became kind of this use case where standing up the cluster was the use case and they're like, OK, now let's put some data in it. It's a question for you is Coburn. Eddie's a little bit different. I'm not seeing they were seeing real use cases. What are people standing up? Cuban is clusters for what specific Besides the same Besides saying I've done it. Yeah, What's the what's the main use case that you're seeing this that has real value? >> Yeah, actually, there's you just jog t mind of really funny memory. You know, back in those big data days, I was CEO of a startup. We were encrypting data, and we were helping encrypt healthcare data for health care companies and the number of health care companies that I worked with at that time who said they had a big data problem and they had all of I don't know, 33 terabytes worth of worth of data that they needed to encrypt. It was kind of humorous sometimes like, Is that really a big, big data problem? This fits on a single disc, you know, Uh, but yeah, I mean, it's interesting how >> that the hype of of the tech was preceding. The reality needs needs, says Cooper Nettie. So I have a Cuban Eddie's cluster for blank. Fill in the blank. What are people saying? >> Yeah, uh, it's It's largely about the modernization. So I need to modernize my infrastructure. I'm going to adopt the platform. That's probably not, er, the old er job, a Web WebSphere type platform or something like that. I'm investing in hardware investing in Software Middle, where I'm investing in people, and I want all of those things to line up with where industry is going from a software perspective, and that's where Cooper Nighties is sort of the cornerstone piece of that Lennox Of course, that's That's pretty well established >> canoes delivery in an integration piece of is that the pipeline in was, that was the fit on the low hanging fruit use cases of Cooper Netease just development >> process. Or it's the operations it's the operations of now got software that I need to deploy across multiple versions, perhaps multiple sites. Uh, I need to handle that upgrade ideally without downtime in a way that you said service mash in a way that meshes together makes sense. I've got a roll out new certificates I need to address the security, vulnerability, thes air, all the things that Cooper and I used to such a better job at then, what people were doing previously, which was a whole lot of four loops, shell strips and sshh pushing, uh, pushing tar balls around. Maybe Debs or rpm's around. That is what Cooper not he's actually really solves and does an elegant job of solving as just a starting point. And that's just the beginning and, you know, without getting ve injury here, you know, Anthros is the thing that we had at Google have built around Cooper Netease that brings it to enterprise >> here the other day did a tweet. I called Anthem. I just typing too fast. I got a lot of crap on Twitter for that mission. And those multi cloud has been a big part of where Cubans seems to fit. You mentioned some of the licensing changes. Cloud has been a great resource for a lot of the new Web scale applications from all kinds of companies. Now, with several issues seeing a lot more than capabilities, how do you see the next shift with data State coming in? Because God stateless date and you got state full data. Yeah, this has become a conversation point. >> Yeah, I think Kelsey Hightower has said it pretty eloquently, as he usually does around the sort of the serval ist movement and lets lets developers focus on just their code and literally just their code, perhaps even just their function in just their piece of code, without having to be an expert on all of the turtles all the way, all the way down. That's the big difference about service have having written a couple of those functions. I can I can really invest my time on the couple of 100 lines of code that matter and not choosing a destro choosing a cougar Nati is choosing, you know, all the stack underneath. I simply choose the platform where I'm gonna drop that that function, compile it, uploaded and then riff and rub. On that >> fifth anniversary, Cooper Netease were riffing on Cooper Netease. Dustin Circle here inside the Cube Cube Alumni you were recently at the coop con in overseas in Europe, Barcelona, Barcelona, great city. Keeps been there many times. Do was there covering for us. Couldn't make this trip, Unfortunately, had a couple daughter's graduating, so I didn't make the trip. Sorry, guys. Um, what was the summary? What was the takeaway? Was the big walk away from that event? What synthesized? The main stories were the most important stories being >> told. >> Big news, big observations. >> It was a huge event to start with. It was that fear of Barcelona. Um, didn't take over the whole space. But I've been there a number of times from Mobile World Congress. But, you know, this is this is cube con in the same building that hosts all of mobile world Congress. So I think 8,000 attendees was what we saw. It's quite celebratory. You know, I think we were doing some some pre fifth birthday bash celebrations, Key takeaways, hybrid hybrid, Cloud, multi Cloud. I think that's the world that we've evolved into. You know, there was a lot of tension. I think in the early days about must stay on. Prem must go to the cloud. Everything's there's gonna be a winner and a loser and everything's gonna go one direction or another. I think the chips have fallen, and it's pretty obvious now that the world will exist in a very hybrid, multi cloud state. Ultimately, there's gonna be some stuff on Prem that doesn't move. There's going to be some stuff better hosted in one arm or public clouds. That's the multi cloud aspect, Uh, and there will be stubborn stuff at the edge and remote locations and vehicles on oil rigs at restaurants and stores and >> so forth. What's most exciting from a trans statement? What do you what? What's what's getting you excited from what you see on the landscape out there? >> So the tying all of that to Cooper Netease, Cuban aunties, is the thing that basically normalizes all of that. You write your application put it in a container and expect to communities to be there to scale that toe. Operate that top grade that to migrate that over time. From that perspective, Cooper nineties has really ticked, ticked all the boxes, and you've got a lot of choices now about which companies here, you're going to use it and where >> beyond communities, a lot of variety of projects coop flow, you got service messes out there a lot of difference. Project. What's What's a dark horse? What's something that sets out there that people should be paying attention to? That you see emerging? That's notable. That should be paying attention. To >> think is a combination of two things. One is pretty obvious, and that's a ML is coming like a freight train and is sort of the next layer of excitement. I think after Cooper, Netease becomes boring, which hopefully if we've done our jobs well, that communities layer gets settled and we'll evolve. But the sort of the hockey stick hopefully settles down and it becomes something super stable. Uh, the application of machine learning to create artificial intelligence conclusions, trends from things that is sort of the next big trend on then I would say another one If you really want the dark horse. I think it's around communications. And I think it's around the difference in the way that we communicate with one another across all forms of media voice, video chat, writing, how we interact with people, how we interact with our our tools with our software and in fact, how our software in Iraq's with us in our software acts with with other software that communications industry is, it's ripe for some pretty radical disruption. And you know some of the organizations and they're doing that. It's early early days on those >> changes. Final point you mentioned earlier in our conversation here about how Dev Ops is influencing impacting non tech and computer science. Really? What did you mean by that? >> Uh, well, I think you brought up unexpectedly and that that you were looking at the way Uh, some other industries are changing, and I think that cross pollination is actually quite quite powerful when you take and apply a skill and expertise you have outside of your industry. But it adds something new and interesting, too, to your professional environment. That's where you get these provocative operations. He's really creative, innovative things that you know. No one really saw it coming. >> Dave Ops principles apply to other disciplines. Yeah, agility. That's that's pointing down waterfall based processes. That's >> one phenomenal example. Imagine that for governments, right to remove some of the like the pain that you and I know. I've got to go and renew my license. My birthday's coming up. I gotta go to renew my driver's license. You know much. I'm dreading going to the the DMV Root >> Canal driver's license on the same. Exactly >> how waterfall is that experience. And could we could we beam or Mohr Agile More Dev Autopsy and some of our government across >> the U. S. Government's procurement practices airbase upon 1990 standards they still want Request a manual, a physical manual for every product violent? Who does that? >> I know that there are organizations trying to apply some open source principles to government. But I mean, think about, you know, just democracy and how being a little bit more open and transparent in the way that we are in open source code, the ability to accept patches. I have a side project, a passion for brewing beer and I love applying open source practices to the industry of brewing. And that's an example of where use professional work, Tio. Compliment a hobby. >> All right, we got to bring some cubic private label, some Q beer. >> If you like sour beer, I'm in the sour beer. >> That's okay. We like to get the pus for us. Final question for you. Five years from now, Cooper needs to be 10 years old. What's the world gonna look like when we wake up five years from now with two Cuban aunties? >> Yeah, I think, uh, I don't think we're struggling with the Cooper nutties. Uh, the community's layer. At that point, I think that's settled science, inasmuch as Lennox is pretty settled. Science, Yes, there's a release, and it comes out with incremental features and bug fixes. I think Cuban aunties is settled. Science management of of those containers is pretty well settled. Uh, five years from now, I think we end up with software, some software that that's writing software. And I don't quite mean that in the way That sounds scary, uh, and that we're eliminating developers, but I think we're creating Mohr powerful, more robust software that actually creates that that software and that's all built on top of the really strong, robust systems we have underneath >> automation to take the heavy lifting. But the human creation still keeping one of the >> humans Aaron the look it's were We're many decades away from humans being out of the loop on creative processes. >> Dustin Kirkland, he a product manager of Google Uh, Cooper Netease guru also keep alumni here in the studio talking about the coup. Burnett. He's 50 year anniversary. Of course, the kid was president creation during the beginning of the wave of communities. We love the trend we love Cloud would left home a tec. I'm Sean for here in Palo Alto. Thanks for watching.
SUMMARY :
from our studios in the heart of Silicon Valley. I'm John for the host, like you were a Dustin Kirkland product manager and Google friend I've never been in the studio and on the show floor a few times, Great to have you on a great opportunity to chat about Cooper Netease yet of what you do out some product man's You think about how you know Lennox has been around that got the big VC funding became a unicorn, and then containers kind of went into a different direction I mean, the modernization of software infrastructure has been coming for a long time, This has been the rial revelation around the Dev Ops Movement Infrastructures We have the step function difference in the way that lot of the entrepreneurial landscape as well and also has shaped open source and, but now it's in mainstream and it's everywhere, and it's so mainstream that it's almost the defacto What's the news and what's the really that we've we've seen for, you know, at least 25. Att the same time we look at the scale And open source is the model. is as Cooper Netease has established itself and landed in the industry and has adoption. the scale of a Google or a Twitter or Netflix or, you know, some of these massive services that it edge, beyond just the traditional data center and into remote locations that need to deploy manage on the Cooper Netease clustering the some of the tech side. This fits on a single disc, you know, Uh, but yeah, I mean, it's interesting that the hype of of the tech was preceding. That's probably not, er, the old er And that's just the beginning and, you know, I got a lot of crap on Twitter for that mission. I simply choose the platform where I'm gonna drop that that function, Dustin Circle here inside the Cube Cube That's the multi cloud aspect, on the landscape out there? So the tying all of that to Cooper Netease, Cuban aunties, is the thing that basically normalizes all That you see emerging? Uh, the application of machine learning to create artificial What did you mean by that? at the way Uh, some other industries are changing, and I think that cross pollination Dave Ops principles apply to other disciplines. that you and I know. Canal driver's license on the same. And could we could we beam or Mohr Agile More Dev Autopsy the U. S. Government's procurement practices airbase upon 1990 standards they still want But I mean, think about, you know, just democracy and how being a little bit more open and transparent in What's the world gonna look like when we wake And I don't quite mean that in the way That sounds scary, But the human creation still keeping one of the humans Aaron the look it's were We're many decades away from humans being out of the loop on We love the trend we love Cloud would left home
SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :
ENTITIES
Entity | Category | Confidence |
---|---|---|
Michael | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Europe | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
Dustin Kirkland | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Barcelona | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
10 years | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Seattle | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
Sean | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Palo Alto | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
Dustin | PERSON | 0.99+ |
IBM | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
100 lines | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
John | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Silicon Valley | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
Lou Tucker | PERSON | 0.99+ |
ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ | |
Lenox | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Amazon | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Cooper | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Cooper Netease | PERSON | 0.99+ |
first half | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
five | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Coburg | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
Cooper Netease | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
DMV | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
two | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Iraq | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
second half | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
8,000 attendees | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Palo Alto, California | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
10th year | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
10 people | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Rodel | PERSON | 0.99+ |
June 2019 | DATE | 0.99+ |
Claudia Horton | PERSON | 0.99+ |
six years ago | DATE | 0.99+ |
33 terabytes | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Horton | PERSON | 0.99+ |
two things | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Claudia | PERSON | 0.99+ |
1990 | DATE | 0.99+ |
fifth anniversary | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Burnett | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Eddie | PERSON | 0.99+ |
D. C. | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
One | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
uber netease | ORGANIZATION | 0.98+ |
Aaron | PERSON | 0.98+ |
Netflix | ORGANIZATION | 0.98+ |
fifth birthday | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
Next week | DATE | 0.98+ |
Today | DATE | 0.98+ |
single disc | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
both | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
ORGANIZATION | 0.97+ | |
Red Hat | ORGANIZATION | 0.97+ |
Cube Cube | ORGANIZATION | 0.97+ |
five years | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
one | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
Kelsey Hightower | PERSON | 0.97+ |
Economical | ORGANIZATION | 0.97+ |
one perspective | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
Cubans | PERSON | 0.96+ |
U. S. Government | ORGANIZATION | 0.96+ |
many years ago | DATE | 0.96+ |
first | QUANTITY | 0.95+ |
late nineties | DATE | 0.95+ |
one example | QUANTITY | 0.95+ |
J J Kiss Matic | PERSON | 0.95+ |
Cooper Nettie | PERSON | 0.94+ |
50 year anniversary | QUANTITY | 0.94+ |
China | LOCATION | 0.93+ |
Mobile World Congress | EVENT | 0.93+ |
Cuban | OTHER | 0.93+ |
Dave Ops | PERSON | 0.93+ |
10 person | QUANTITY | 0.92+ |
couple | QUANTITY | 0.92+ |
Coburn | ORGANIZATION | 0.92+ |
Mike Evans, Red Hat | Google Cloud Next 2019
>> reply from San Francisco. It's the Cube covering Google Club next nineteen Tio by Google Cloud and its ecosystem partners. >> We're back at Google Cloud next twenty nineteen. You're watching the Cube, the leader in live tech coverage on Dave a lot with my co host to minimum John Farriers. Also here this day. Two of our coverage. Hash tag. Google Next nineteen. Mike Evans is here. He's the vice president of technical business development at Red Hat. Mike, good to see you. Thanks for coming back in the Cube. >> Right to be here. >> So, you know, we're talking hybrid cloud multi cloud. You guys have been on this open shift for half a decade. You know, there were a lot of deniers, and now it's a real tail one for you in the whole world is jumping on. That bandwagon is gonna make you feel good. >> Yeah. No, it's nice to see everybody echoing a similar message, which we believe is what the customers demand and interest is. So that's a great validation. >> So how does that tie into what's happening here? What's going on with the show? It's >> interesting. And let me take a step back for us because I've been working with Google on their cloud efforts for almost ten years now. And it started back when Google, when they were about to get in the cloud business, they had to decide where they're going to use caveat present as their hyper visor. And that was a time when we had just switched to made a big bet on K V M because of its alignment with the Lenox Colonel. But it was controversial and and we help them do that. And I look back on my email recently and that was two thousand nine. That was ten years ago, and that was that was early stages on DH then, since that time, you know, it's just, you know, cloud market is obviously boomed. I again I was sort of looking back ahead of this discussion and saying, you know, in two thousand six and two thousand seven is when we started working with Amazon with rail on their cloud and back when everyone thought there's no way of booksellers goingto make an impact in the world, etcetera. And as I just play sort of forward to today and looking at thirty thousand people here on DH you know what sort of evolved? Just fascinated by, you know, sort of that open sources now obviously fully mainstream. And there's no more doubters. And it's the engine for everything. >> Like maybe, you know, bring us inside. So you know KK Veum Thie underpinning we know well is, you know, core to the multi clouds tragedy Red hat. And there's a lot that you've built on top of it. Speak, speak a little bit of some of the engineering relationships going on joint customers that you have. Ah, and kind of the value of supposed to, you know, write Hatton. General is your agnostic toe where lives, but there's got to be special work that gets done in a lot of places. >> Ralph has a Google. Yeah, yeah, yeah. >> Through the years, >> we've really done a lot of work to make sure that relative foundation works really well on G C P. So that's been a that's been a really consistent effort and whether it's around optimization for performance security element so that that provides a nice base for anybody who wants to move any work loader application from on crime over there from another cloud. And that's been great. And then the other maid, You know, we've also worked with them. Obviously, the upstream community dynamics have been really productive between Red Hat and Google, and Google has been one of the most productive and positive contributors and participants and open source. And so we worked together on probably ten or fifteen different projects, and it's a constant interaction between our upstream developers where we share ideas. And do you agree with this kind of >> S O Obviously, Cooper Netease is a big one. You know, when you see the list, it's it's Google and Red Hat right there. Give us a couple of examples of some of the other ones. I >> mean again, it's K B M is also a foundation on one that people kind of forget about that these days. But it still is a very pervasive technology and continuing to gain ground. You know, there's all there's the native stuff. There's the studio stuff in the AML, which is a whole fascinating category in my mind as well. >> I like history of kind of a real student of industry history, and so I like that you talk to folks who have been there and try to get it right. But there was a sort of this gestation period from two thousand six to two thousand nine and cloud Yeah, well, like you said, it's a book seller. And then even in the down turn, a lot of CFO said, Hey, cap backstop ex boom! And then come out of the downturn. And it was shadow I t around that two thousand nine time frame. But it was like, you say, a hyper visor discussion, you know, we're going to put VM where in in In our cloud and homogeneity had a lot of a lot of traditional companies fumbling with their cloud strategies. And and And he had the big data craze. And obviously open source was a huge part of that. And then containers, which, of course, have been around since Lennox. Yeah, yeah, and I guess Doctor Boom started go crazy. And now it's like this curve is reshaping with a I and sort of a new era of data thoughts on sort of the accuracy of that little historical narrative and and why that big uptick with containers? >> Well, a couple of things there won the data, the whole data evolution and this is a fascinating one. For many, many years. I'm gonna be there right after nineteen years. So I've seen a lot of the elements of that history and one of the constant questions we would always get sometimes from investor. Why don't you guys buy a database company? You know, years ago and we would, you know, we didn't always look at it. Or why aren't you guys doing a dupe distribution When that became more spark, etcetera. And we always looked at it and said, You know, we're a platform company and if we were to pick anyone database, it would only cover some percentage and there's so many, and then it just kind of upsets the other. So we've we've decided we're going to focus, not on the data layer. We're going to focus on the infrastructure and the application layer and work down from it and support the things underneath. So it's consistent now with the AML explosion, which, you know, we're who was a pioneer of AML. They've got some of the best services and then we've been doing a lot of work within video in the last two years to make sure that all the GP use wherever they're run. Hybrid private cloud on multiple clouds that those air enabled and Raylan enabled in open shift. Because what we see happening and in video does also is right now all the applications being developed by free mlr are written by extremely technical people. When you write to tense airflow and things like that, you kind of got to be able to write a C compiler level, but so were working with them to bring open shift to become the sort of more mass mainstream tool to develop. A I aml enable app because the value of having rail underneath open shift and is every piece of hardware in the world is supported right for when that every cloud And then when we had that GPU enablement open shift and middleware and our storage, everything inherits it. So that's the That's the most valuable to me. That's the most valuable piece of ah, real estate that we own in the industry is actually Ralph and then everything build upon that and >> its interest. What you said about the database, Of course, we're a long discussion about that this morning. You're right, though. Mike, you either have to be, like, really good at one thing, like a data stacks or Cassandra or a mongo. And there's a zillion others that I'm not mentioning or you got to do everything you know, like the cloud guys were doing out there. You know, every one of them's an operational, you know, uh, analytics already of s no sequel. I mean, one of each, you know, and then you have to partner with them. So I would imagine you looked at that as well. I said, How're we going to do all that >> right? And there's only, you know, there's so many competitive dynamics coming at us and, you know, for we've always been in the mode where we've been the little guy battling against the big guys, whoever, maybe whether it was or, you know, son, IBM and HP. Unix is in the early days. Oracle was our friend for a while. Then they became. Then they became a nen ime, you know, are not enemy but a competitor on the Lennox side. And the Amazon was early friend, and then, though they did their own limits. So there's a competitive, so that's that's normal operating model for us to us to have this, you know, big competitive dynamic with a partnering >> dynamic. You gotta win it in the marketplace that the customers say. Come on, guys. >> Right. We'Ll figure it out >> together, Figured out we talked earlier about hybrid cloud. We talked about multi cloud and some people those of the same thing. But I think they actually you know, different. Yeah, hybrid. You think of, you know, on prim and public and and hopefully some kind of level of integration and common data. Plain and control plan and multi cloud is sort of evolved from multi vendor. How do you guys look at it? Is multi cloud a strategy? How do you look at hybrid? >> Yeah, I mean, it's it's it's a simple It's simple in my mind, but I know the words. The terms get used by a lot of different people in different ways. You know, hybrid Cloud to me is just is just that straightforward. Being able to run something on premise have been able to run something in any in a public cloud and have it be somewhat consistent or share a bowl or movable and then multi cloud has been able to do that same thing with with multiple public clouds. And then there's a third variation on that is, you know, wanting to do an application that runs in both and shares information, which I think the world's you know, You saw that in the Google Antos announcement, where they're talking about their service running on the other two major public cloud. That's the first of any sizable company. I think that's going to be the norm because it's become more normal wherever the infrastructure is that a customer's using. If Google has a great service, they want to be able to tell the user toe, run it on their data there at there of choice. So, >> yeah, so, like you brought up Antos and at the core, it's it's g k. So it's the community's we've been talking about and, he said, worked with eight of us work for danger. But it's geeky on top of those public clouds. Maybe give us a little bit of, you know, compare contrast of that open shift. Does open ship lives in all of these environments, too, But they're not fully compatible. And how does that work? So are >> you and those which was announced yesterday. Two high level comments. I guess one is as we talked about the beginning. It's a validation of what our message has been. Its hybrid cloud is a value multi clouds of values. That's a productive element of that to help promote that vision And that concept also macro. We talked about all of it. It it puts us in a competitive environment more with Google than it was yesterday or two days ago. But again, that's that's our normal world way partnered with IBM and HP and competed against them on unit. We partner with that was partnered with Microsoft and compete with them, So that's normal. That said, you know, we believe are with open shift, having five plus years in market and over a thousand customers and very wide deployments and already been running in Google, Amazon and Microsoft Cloud already already there and solid and people doing really things with that. Plus being from a position of an independent software vendor, we think is a more valuable position for multi cloud than a single cloud vendor. So that's, you know, we welcome to the party in the sense, you know, going on prom, I say, Welcome to the jungle For all these public called companies going on from its, you know, it's It's a lot of complexity when you have to deal with, You know, American Express is Infrastructure, Bank of Hong Kong's infrastructure, Ford Motors infrastructure and it's a it's a >> right right here. You know Google before only had to run on Google servers in Google Data Center. Everything's very clean environment, one temperature on >> DH Enterprise customers have it a little different demands in terms of version ality and when the upgrade and and how long they let things like there's a lot of differences. >> But actually, there was one of the things Cory Quinn will. It was doing some analysis with us on there. And Google, for the most part, is if we decide to pull something, you've got kind of a one year window to do, you know? How does Red Hot look at that? >> I mean, and >> I explained, My >> guess is they'LL evolve over time as they get deeper in it. Or maybe they won't. Maybe they have a model where they think they will gain enough share and theirs. But I mean, we were built on on enterprise DNA on DH. We've evolved to cloud and hybrid multi cloud, DNA way love again like we love when people say I'm going to the cloud because when they say they're going to the cloud, it means they're doing new APs or they're modifying old apse. And we have a great shot of landing that business when they say we're doing something new >> Well, right, right. Even whether it's on Prem or in the public cloud, right? They're saying when they say we'LL go to the club, they talk about the cloud experience, right? And that's really what your strategy is to bring that cloud experience to wherever your data lives. Exactly. So talking about that multi cloud or a Romney cloud when we sort of look at the horses on the track and you say Okay, you got a V M. We're going after that. You've got you know, IBM and Red Hat going after that Now, Google sort of huge cloud provider, you know, doing that wherever you look. There's red hat now. Course I know you can't talk much about the IBM, you know, certainly integration, but IBM Executive once said to me still that we're like a recovering alcoholic. We learned our lesson from mainframe. We are open. We're committed to open, so we'LL see. But Red hat is everywhere, and your strategy presumably has to stay that sort of open new tia going last year >> I give to a couple examples of long ago. I mean, probably five. Six years ago when the college stuff was still more early. I had a to seo conference calls in one day, and one was with a big graphics, you know, Hollywood Graphics company, the CEO. After we explained all of our cloud stuff, you know, we had nine people on the call explaining all our cloud, and the guy said, Okay, because let me just tell you, right, that guy, something the biggest value bring to me is having relish my single point of sanity that I can move this stuff wherever I want. I just attach all my applications. I attached third party APS and everything, and then I could move it wherever we want. So realize that you're big, and I still think that's true. And then there was another large gaming company who was trying to decide to move forty thousand observers, from from their own cloud to a public cloud and how they were going to do it. And they had. They had to Do you know, the head of servers, a head of security, the head of databases, the head of network in the head of nine different functions there. And they're all in disagreement at the end. And the CEO said at the end of day, said, Mike, I've got like, a headache. I need some vodka and Tylenol now. So give me one simple piece of advice. How do I navigate this? I said, if you just write every app Terrell, Andrzej, boss. And this was before open shift. No matter >> where you want >> to run him, Raylan J. Boss will be there, and he said, Excellent advice. That's what we're doing. So there's something really beautiful about the simplicity of that that a lot of people overlooked, with all the hand waving of uber Netease and containers and fifty versions of Cooper Netease certified and you know, etcetera. It's it's ah, it's so I think there's something really beautiful about that. We see a lot of value in that single point of sanity and allowing people flexibility at you know, it's a pretty low cost to use. Relish your foundation >> over. Source. Hybrid Cloud Multi Cloud Omni Cloud All tail wins for Red Hat Mike will give you the final world where bumper sticker on Google Cloud next or any other final thoughts. >> To me, it's It's great to see thirty thousand people at this event. It's great to see Google getting more and more invested in the cloud and more and more invested in the enterprise about. I think they've had great success in a lot of non enterprise accounts, probably more so than the other clowns. And now they're coming this way. They've got great technology. We've our engineers love working with their engineers, and now we've got a more competitive dynamic. And like I said, welcome to the jungle. >> We got Red Hat Summit coming up stew. Writerly May is >> absolutely back in Beantown data. >> It's nice. Okay, I'll be in London there, >> right at Summit in Boston And May >> could deal. Mike, Thanks very much for coming. Thank you. It's great to see you. >> Good to see you. >> All right, everybody keep right there. Stew and I would back John Furry is also in the house watching the cube Google Cloud next twenty nineteen we'LL be right back
SUMMARY :
It's the Cube covering Thanks for coming back in the Cube. So, you know, we're talking hybrid cloud multi cloud. So that's a great validation. you know, it's just, you know, cloud market is obviously boomed. Ah, and kind of the value of supposed to, you know, Yeah, yeah, yeah. And do you agree with this kind of You know, when you see the list, it's it's Google and Red Hat right there. There's the studio stuff in the AML, But it was like, you say, a hyper visor discussion, you know, we're going to put VM where in You know, years ago and we would, you know, we didn't always look at it. I mean, one of each, you know, and then you have to partner with them. And there's only, you know, there's so many competitive dynamics coming at us and, You gotta win it in the marketplace that the customers say. We'Ll figure it out But I think they actually you know, different. which I think the world's you know, You saw that in the Google Antos announcement, where they're you know, compare contrast of that open shift. you know, we welcome to the party in the sense, you know, going on prom, I say, Welcome to the jungle For You know Google before only had to run on Google servers in Google Data Center. and how long they let things like there's a lot of differences. And Google, for the most part, is if we decide to pull something, And we have a great shot of landing that business when they say we're doing something new talk much about the IBM, you know, certainly integration, but IBM Executive one day, and one was with a big graphics, you know, at you know, it's a pretty low cost to use. final world where bumper sticker on Google Cloud next or any other final thoughts. And now they're coming this way. Writerly May is It's nice. It's great to see you. Stew and I would back John Furry is also in the house watching the cube Google Cloud
SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :
ENTITIES
Entity | Category | Confidence |
---|---|---|
IBM | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Microsoft | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
HP | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Amazon | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ | |
Mike Evans | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Oracle | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
London | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
Mike | PERSON | 0.99+ |
American Express | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Ford Motors | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
San Francisco | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
five plus years | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
one year | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
ten | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Two | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
nine people | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
yesterday | DATE | 0.99+ |
Hollywood Graphics | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Red Hat | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
thirty thousand people | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
John Farriers | PERSON | 0.99+ |
eight | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
last year | DATE | 0.99+ |
Dave | PERSON | 0.99+ |
first | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Terrell | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Ralph | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Stew | PERSON | 0.99+ |
two thousand | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Six years ago | DATE | 0.99+ |
thirty thousand people | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
two days ago | DATE | 0.99+ |
Lenox | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Bank of Hong Kong | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Boston | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
one | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Cassandra | PERSON | 0.98+ |
John Furry | PERSON | 0.98+ |
both | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
today | DATE | 0.98+ |
ten years ago | DATE | 0.98+ |
Andrzej | PERSON | 0.98+ |
half a decade | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
over a thousand customers | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
Red Hot | ORGANIZATION | 0.98+ |
one day | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
forty thousand observers | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
Google Cloud | TITLE | 0.97+ |
Hatton | PERSON | 0.96+ |
third variation | QUANTITY | 0.96+ |
Cory Quinn | PERSON | 0.95+ |
one simple piece | QUANTITY | 0.95+ |
two thousand nine | QUANTITY | 0.95+ |
fifty versions | QUANTITY | 0.94+ |
Raylan J. Boss | PERSON | 0.93+ |
single point | QUANTITY | 0.93+ |
next twenty nineteen | DATE | 0.93+ |
Lennox | ORGANIZATION | 0.92+ |
Unix | ORGANIZATION | 0.92+ |
KK Veum Thie | PERSON | 0.92+ |
two thousand seven | QUANTITY | 0.92+ |
stew | PERSON | 0.91+ |
Thomas Kurian Keynote Analysis | Google Cloud Next 2019
>> fly from San Francisco. It's the Cube covering Google Cloud next nineteen Tio by Google Cloud and its ecosystem partners. >> Run. Welcome to the Cube here, live in San Francisco on Mosconi South were on the floor at Google. Next twenty nineteen. Hashtag Google Next nineteen. I'm John for my co host this week for three days and wall to wall coverage of Google's cloud conference is with Dave. Alonso Has too many men. Guys day one of three days of wall to wall coverage. We got Thomas Curry in the new CEO on the job for ten weeks. Took the realm from Diane Green. Thirty five thousand attendees. It's packed. It's definitely a developer crowd. It feels a lot like a WS, not a corporate show like Microsoft or IBM or others or Oracle. It's really more about developers. We just heard the Kino. Google's making some moves. The new CEO is gonna put on a show. He saw two customers you see in the positioning. Soon DARPA Kai, the CEO of Google, came out really kind of. Ah, interesting keynote Feels like Thomas's that's gonna shake that Oracle off, but he's guns blaring. Some new announcements. Guys, let's do a round upon the keynote. >> Yeah. So, John, as you said, a great energy here that this place is bustling sitting here where we are, we could see everybody is going through the Expo Hall. As you said. Is Google serious about this? This whole cloud activity? Absolutely. There's no better way than to have your CEO up. There we go, The Amazon show. You don't see Jeff Bezos there into the Microsoft shows? You know, you don't usually see you know their CEO. There you have the Cloud Group does the cloud thing, but absolutely. Cloud is a critical piece of what Google is doing. And it's interesting because I actually didn't feel as geeky and his developer focused as I would expect to see at a Google show. Maybe they've heard that feedback for years that, you know, Google makes great stuff, but they're too smart in there, too geeky When you go to the Amazon show, they're announcing all of the different, you know, puting storage pieces and everybody's hooting and hollering. Here it was a little bit more business. It was high level. They had all these partners out on stage and customers out on stage. Many of them, you know, you talk about retail and health care and all these other ones where you say, Okay, Amazons, a major competitor there. So, you know, can Google stake their claim as to how they're going to move up from the number three position and gain more market share? You know, as they fit into the multi cloud, which we know we're going to spend a lot of time on, wears their position in this cloud space today. >> What your thoughts. >> Well, first of all, there's a big show. I mean, it's we're here at IBM thick in February. This feels like a much, much larger event, Number one Stew said. It's really much more developer heavy, I think. John, there's no question people don't question Googles Global Cloud Presence. Soon Dar talked about two hundred countries, ninety cloud regions fifty eight plus two new data centers. So no question there. But there are questions as to whether or not Google could move beyond search and maps and Gmail and really be a big cloud player for Enterprise Cloud that really is to the elephant in the room. Can Google innovate and attractive CEOs? They showed a number of customers, not nearly, of course, as many as what Amazon or even Microsoft would show. They're talking about ecosystem. To me, that ecosystem slide. It's got a cord truthful this year to really show some progress. But you've got new leadership as we talked about last year, John and love to get your thoughts on this. Google's playing the long game. They've got the best tech and you know they've got great data. Great. Aye, aye. I want to take >> into the new rebranding of the Google Cloud platform, which is now called Antos, which is a Greek word for flour. We kind of had visibility into This would kind of start coming. But before we get into that, I want to just kind of point out something that we've reported on looking angle, some that we've been saying on Twitter on DH about Diane Greene. It's been reported that she was fired from Google for missing on red hat. All these rumors, but interesting Thomas Koreans first words, a CEO on stage. It was a direct shout out to Diane Greene. I think this validates our reporting and our analysis that Diane Green absolutely helped hire curry and work with the boy workers Sundar And essentially, because she was the architect of rebuilding Google Clouds Enterprise chops the team there that she recruited we've been following and covering. Diane Green built that foundation. She passed the torch. Thomas Curry. This was not a Diane Green firing, so I think I think Thomas Carrion nice gesture on Diane Green kind of sets the table and validates and preserves her legacy as the rebuilder re architect of Google Cloud. >> Pretty interesting. Yeah. I mean, you know, I think this where there's some smoke, there's fire that don't think Diana Corning court fired. I think you know that she was under a lot of pressure. She was here for seven years. I think they probably felt like Okay, now it's time to really bring somebody in. Who wants to take this to the next level? And I'll die unnecessarily had the stomach for that >> John Really great points there. But it does talk about you know what is the culture of Google? You know, the elephant The room is what is Google? Google makes you know most of their money on advertising. That's not what Google Cloud is. It doesn't fit into the additional model. You know, Google's culture is not geared for the enterprise. As you know that the critique on Google for years has been We make really great stuff and you need to be Google E. And you need to do things the way we do Thomas Koreans out there. We need to meet customers where they are today. That's very much what we hear in the Enterprise. That that's what you hear. You know when you talk about Amazon or Microsoft, they're listening to their customers. They're meeting them at their business applications there, helping them build new environment. So, you know, will Google be a little less googly on DH? Therefore, you know, meet customers and help work them, and that leads to the multi clouding the anthros discussed. >> We heard a lot about that today. I mean, John, you've pointed out many, many times that Cooper Netease is the linchpin to Google strategy. It's really you know, that was the kind of like a Hail Mary relative Tae Ws and that's what we heard today. Multi cloud, multi cloud, multi cloud, where is with a W s. And certainly to a lesser extent, Oracle. It's Unit Cloud Multi Cloud is more expensive is what they tell us. Multi cloud is less secure. A multi cloud is more complex. Google's messaging is exactly the opposite of >> that. So, Dave, just to poke it that a little bit, is great to see Sanjay *** Inn up on stage with VM wear. But where we last cvm were to cloud show. It's an Amazon. They've got a deep partnership here. Cooper Netease is not a differentiator for Google. Everybody's doing it. Even Amazon is being, you know, forced to be involved in it. Cisco was up on stage. This guy's got a deep partnership with Amazon and a ks. So you know, Cooper Netease is not a magic layers. Good job, Ada said on the Cube. Q. Khan. It is something that you know Google, that management layer and how I live in a multi cloud environment. Yes, Google might be further along with multi cloud messaging, then say Amazon is, But you know, Amazons, the leader in this space and everybody that has multiple clouds, Amazons, one of them, even the keynote >> This morning aboard Air Force right eight, I was forced into Cooper days you're not CNW s run demos that show, you know, a target of the Google clouded the Microsoft. You saw that today from Google >> while we see how the Amazon demos with our oracle. But that's the result. Let's let's hold off on the partisan saying, Let's go through the Kino So the Diane Green comment also AOL came out. Who runs VP of Engineer. He's the architect. One. This Antos product. Last year, they announced on G. C. P s basically a hybrid solution G a general availability of Antos, which has security built in out of the box. Multi cloud security integrated for continues integration, confused development, CCD pipeline ing very key news and that was really interesting. This is such a their new platform that they've rebranded called Antos. This is a way for them to essentially start posturing from just hybrid to multi cloud. This is the shift of of Google. They want to be the on premise cloud solution and on any cloud, your thoughts. >> You know, the demo said it all. The ability to take V m movement two containers and move them anywhere right once and move anywhere and that, I think, is is the key differentiator right now. Relative to certainly eight of us. Lesser extent Microsoft, IBM right there with red hat. That's to me The interesting angle >> Here. Look, Google has a strong history with Ken Containers. If you if you scroll back to the early days of doctor twenty fourteen, twenty, fifty, Google's out there as to how many you know, it just so many containers that they're building up and tearing down. However you go to the Microsoft. So you go to the Amazon show. We're starting to talk a lot more about server list. We're gonna have the product lead for surveillance on today. I'm excited to dig into that because on a little bit concerned that Google is so deep in the containers and how you Burnett eases, they're looking for, like a native to connect the pieces, but that they are a little bit behind in some of the next generation architectures built on journalists for death. >> I want to make a point here if you're not the leader in cloud which, you know in Enterprise Cloud, which Google is not, you know, IBM is not or, you know, Oracle is not okay, fine, but if you don't have a cloud like Cisco or Dell or VM, where you have to go after multi cloud. Amazon's not in a rush to go after multi cloud. There's no reason down the road. Amazon can't go after that opportunity. To the extent that it's a real tam, it's There's a long way to go. Talk about early innings were like having started the game of Outpost >> hasn't even been spect out. Yes, sir, there has not been relieved. So we're seeing what Amazon's got knowing they are the clouds. So they're the incumbent. Interesting enough on Jennifer Lin. You mention the demo. Jennifer Lin Cube alumni. We gonna interview her later. She introduced on those migrate Kind of reminds me of some of the best shows we have the migration tools and that migrates work clothes from PM wears into containers running in containers. As you mentioned. A. This is an end and no modified co changes. That's a big deal, >> John. Exactly on Twitter, people are going. Is this the next emotion? You know, those of us who've been in the industry while remember how powerful that was able to seamlessly migrate? You know, the EMS and containers at, You know, I shouldn't have to think about Colin building it where it lives. That was the promise of has for all those years and absolutely things like uber Netease what Google's doing, chipping away at that. They're partnering with Cisco, there partner with pivotal parting with lots of companies so that that portability of code isa lot of >> Master Jack is a cloud of emotion. I mean, we know what the motion did in the Enterprise. >> To me, that's the star. The keynote is actually the rebranding associate positioning thing. But the star of the show is the Jennifer Lin demo, because if anthems migrate actually works, that's going to tell. Sign to me on how fast Google can take territory now. What's interesting also with the announcements, was, I want to get you guys thoughts on this because we cover ecosystems, we cover how Cloud and Enterprise have been pardoning over the years. Enterprise is not that easy. Google has found out the hard way Microsoft is done really well. They've installed base. Google had stand this up from the beginning again. Diane Greene did a great job, but now it's hard. It's a hard nut to crack. So you see Cisco on stage. Cisco has huge enterprise. Cloud the em Where comes on stage? David Gettler Gettler, the VP of engineering of Cisco, one of their top executives on stage. And he has Sanjay *** and keep alumni came on. Sanjay had more time. Francisco. So you have two companies who kind of compete? NSX. We have suffered a fine Cisco both on stage. Cisco, absolutely integrating into We covered on silicon angle dot com just posted it live where Cisco is actually laying down their container platform and integrating directly into Google's container platform to offer a program ability End to end. I think that's something that didn't get teased out on the keynotes doing, because this allows for Google to quickly move into the enterprise and offer true program ability of infrastructure. This is the nirvana of infrastructure is code. This is what Dev Ops has been waiting for. Still your thoughts on this because this could be a game changer. Hydro, what's an A C I. This could put pressure on VM, where with the containers running in platform and the Cisco relationship your thoughts. >> So John Cisco has a broad portfolio. When you talk about multi cloud, it's not just the networking components, it's the eyes, absolutely apiece. But that multi cloud management, uh, is a layer that Cisco has, you know, been adding two and working on for a lot of years, and they've got very key partnerships. So making sure, you know, seeing right seeing David vehicular onstage here. Proof, Cisco, lot of enterprise customers him where, Of course, six hundred thousand customers. They're So Google wants to get into these accounts. You look at, you know, Microsoft strength of their enterprise agreements that they have. So how will Google get into some of these big accounts? Get into the procurement, get into the environment? And there's lots of different methods and partnerships We said our credit >> David vehicular undersold the opportunity here. I mean, when it comes to he did at working Inter Cloud. Sisko is in the poll possession position to basically say we got the best network, the highest performance networks, the most secure networks, and we're in a position to connect all these clouds. And to me, that didn't come out today. So when you think about multi cloud, each of these companies is coming at it from a position of strength. Cisco. Very clearly dominant networking VM wear in virtual ization and I think that came through. And Sanjay *** ins, you know, keynote. I think again Gettler undersold it, but it's a great opportunity for Cisco and Google. >> Well, I think Google has a huge opportunity. It Cisco because if they have a go to market joint sales together, that could really catapult Google sails again. If I get really was kind of copy, we're we're Cisco. But Cisco look, a bm was on stage with them. I thought that was going to be a Hail Mary for for Sisko to kind of have bring that back. But then watching Sanjay Putin come on saying, Hey, we're okay, it's going to be a V m World And Pat Kelsey has been on the record saying, Coo Burnett eases the dial tone of the Internet stew. This is an interesting matchup between Cisco and BM, where your thoughts >> Yeah, so so right. There's so many pieces here, a cz to where their play way. No, there's competitive competition and, you know, partnerships. In a lot of these environments, Google actually has a long history of partnering. You know, I can't even think how many years ago, the Google and GM or Partnership and Cisco. If I can't actually, Dave, there's There's something I know you've got a strong viewpoint on. You know, Thomas Kurian left Oracle and it was before he had this job. Every he says, you know, is T. K going to come in here and bring, you know, oracles, you know, sales methodology into Google. You know, What does he bring? What's his skill set on? You know >> what exact community? I think it's the opposite, right? I think that's why you left Oracle because he didn't want every database to run in the Oracle, Cloudy realised is a huge opportunity out there. I think the messaging that I heard today is again it's completely I saw something on Twitter like, Oh, this is just like organ. It's nothing like Oracle. It's the It's the polar opposite opposite of what Oracle is doing. >> I think I think curry and can really define his career. This could be a nice swan song for him. As he takes Google with Diane Greene did builds it out, does the right deals if he can build on ecosystem and bring the tech chops in with a clear go to market. He's not going to hire the salespeople and the SCS fast enough. In my opinion, that's gonna be a really slow boat. Teo promised land. He's got to do some deals. He's gotta put Some Corp Devin Place has gotta make some acquisitions will be very in the sin. DARPA Kai, the CEO, said. We are investing heavily in cloud. If I'm Amazon, I'm worried about Google. I think they are dark horse. They have a lot of they have a clean sheet of paper. Microsoft, although has legacy install base. Google's got, I think, a lot more powder, if you will. Dave, >> what One little sign? I agree without John, I think you're absolutely right. The clean sheet of paper and deep pockets, you know, and the long game in the great tech. Uh, you have a son should be worried about Google. One little side note, it's still you. And I talked about this. Did you hear? Uh uh, Thomas asked Sanjay Putin about Dell, Dell Technologies, and Sunday is an executive. Dell was talking about the whole Del Technologies portfolio. I thought it was a very interesting nuance that we had previously seen from VM wear when they were owned by himself. >> Dave, you know, we see Delon Veum where are almost the same company these days that they're working together? But John, as you said, I actually like that. You know, we didn't have some big announcement today on an acquisition. Thomas Kurian says. He's got a big pocket book. He's going to be inquisitive, and it'LL be interesting to see, do they? By some company that has a big enterprise sales force. It can't just be old legacy sales trying to go into the cloud market. That won't work, but absolutely the lot of opportunities for them to go out. They didn't get get, huh? They didn't get red hat. So who will? Google Page? You >> guys are right on man. Sales Force is still a big question mark, And how can they hire that fast? That's a >> And again, he's only been on the job for ten weeks. I think is going to get his sea legs. I think it's him. He's going to come in. He's gonna ingratiating with culture. It'Ll be a quick decision. I think Google culture will accept or reject Thomas Curry and based upon his first year in operations, he's going to get into the team, and I think the Wall Street Journal kind of comment on that. Will he bring that Oracle? I thought that was kind of not a fair assessment, but I think he's got the engineering chops toe hang with Google. He kind of gets the enterprise mark one hundred percent been there, done that. So I think he's got a good shot. I think you could make the right moves. Of course we're here making the moves on the Cube here live for day, one of three days of wall to wall coverage. I'm sorry, David. Lock These two minute men here in Google, next in Mosconi in San Francisco Live will be back with more coverage after this short break.
SUMMARY :
It's the Cube covering He saw two customers you see in the positioning. Many of them, you know, you talk about retail and health care and all these other ones where you They've got the best tech and you know they've got great data. of rebuilding Google Clouds Enterprise chops the team there that she recruited we've I think you know that she was under a lot of pressure. You know, the elephant The room is what is Google? It's really you know, that was the kind of like a Hail Mary relative Tae Ws It is something that you know Google, s run demos that show, you know, a target of the Google clouded the Microsoft. This is the shift of of Google. You know, the demo said it all. deep in the containers and how you Burnett eases, they're looking for, like a native to connect the pieces, which Google is not, you know, IBM is not or, you know, Oracle is not okay, me of some of the best shows we have the migration tools and that migrates work clothes from You know, the EMS and containers at, I mean, we know what the motion did in the Enterprise. This is the nirvana of infrastructure is code. So making sure, you know, seeing right seeing David vehicular onstage here. Sisko is in the poll possession position to basically say we got the best network, This is an interesting matchup between Cisco and BM, where your thoughts you know, is T. K going to come in here and bring, you know, oracles, you know, sales methodology into I think that's why you left Oracle because he didn't want every I think, a lot more powder, if you will. pockets, you know, and the long game in the great tech. Dave, you know, we see Delon Veum where are almost the same company these days that they're working together? Sales Force is still a big question mark, And how can they hire that fast? I think you could make the right moves.
SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :
ENTITIES
Entity | Category | Confidence |
---|---|---|
John | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Diane Green | PERSON | 0.99+ |
ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ | |
Diane Greene | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Amazon | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Cisco | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Thomas | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Microsoft | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
IBM | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Sanjay | PERSON | 0.99+ |
David | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Dave | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Sanjay Putin | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Thomas Kurian | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Thomas Carrion | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Thomas Curry | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Jennifer Lin | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Dell | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
seven years | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
San Francisco | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
Mosconi | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
Ada | PERSON | 0.99+ |
Jeff Bezos | PERSON | 0.99+ |
two | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Oracle | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Dell Technologies | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Last year | DATE | 0.99+ |
ten weeks | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
February | DATE | 0.99+ |
last year | DATE | 0.99+ |
Arvind Krishna, IBM | IBM Think 2019
>> Live from San Francisco. It's the cue covering IBM thing twenty nineteen brought to you by IBM. >> Clever and welcome to the live coverage here. The Cube in San Francisco for IBM. Think twenty nineteen day Volonte where he with Urban Krishna, senior vice president of cloud and cognitive software at IBM. Man in charge of all the cloud products cloud everywhere. Aye, aye. Anywhere are great to see you. Thanks for spending time. Know you're super busy. Thanks for spending time. >> I'm ready to be here right >> now. So we talked at the Red Hat Summit last year. You essentially laid out the vision for micro Services. Coup Burnett is how this always kind of coming together than the redhead acquisition. And now you're seeing big news here at IBM. Think setting the stage here in San Francisco for a I anywhere, which is cognitive kind of all over the clouds, and then really clarity around cloud multi cloud strategy end to end workloads all kind of tied together on premise in the clouds. Super important for IBM. Explain and unpacked that force. What does it mean, >> Right? So I'm going to begin unpacking it from where actually I left off last year. So if I just for ten seconds, last year, we talked a lot about containerized platforms are going to become the future that'll be the fabric on which every enterprise is going to build their IT and their future. OK, we talked about that last year, and I think with the announced acquisition of Red Hat that gets cemented and that'll go further once that closes. Now you take that and now you take it to the next level of value. So take Watson. Watson runs as a containerized set of services. If it's a containerized set of services, it could run on what we call Cloud Private. Cloud Private in turn runs on top of OpenShift. So then you say, wherever OpenShift runs, I can run this entire stack. Where does OpenShift run today? It runs on Amazon. It runs on the IBM cloud and runs on Azure. It runs on your premise. So on the simple simple. I always like things that are simple. So Watson runs on Cloud Private runs and OpenShift runs on all these infrastructures I just mentioned that gives you Watson anywhere. You want it close to your data run it on-prem. You want to run it on Azure, run it there. You want to run it on the IBM cloud you run it there. And hence that's the complete story. >> says it was more important for you to give customers choice >> than it was to keep Watson to yourself. To try to sell >> more cloud. >> I think that every company that survives a long term learns that choice to a customer is really important and forcing customers to do things only one way is jelly in the long term. A bad strategy. So >> from a customer statement, just get the facts right on the hard news. Watson. Anywhere. Now I can run Watson via containers. Asian Open ship Things you mentioned on a ws as sheer Microsoft azure and IBM cloud cloud private. All that >> on on premise >> and on premise, all cohesively enter end. >> Correct in an identical way. Which means even if you do things one place you build up more than one place, you could go deploy a moral in another place gives you that flexibility also. >> So I'm Akash Mercy over This sounds too crazy Is too hard to do that. I've tried all this multi cloud stuff. Got all this stuff. Why is it easier? How do how do you guys make this happen? What's the key secret sauce for pulling that end to end a I anywhere on multiple clouds, on premises and through the workloads. >> Two levels. One. We go to a container infrastructure as that common layer that isolates out what is the bottom infrastructure from everything that runs on top. So going to the common services on a Cuban Eddie's in a container layer that is common across all these environments, does the isolation off the bottom infrastructure? That's hard engineering, but we do that engineering. The second piece is you've taken the Watson set of capabilities and also put them into just three pieces. What's in studio? What's an ML from water machine learning and what's an open scale? And there you have the complete set that you go need to run everywhere. So we have done that engineering as well. >> Congratulations. Get the cloud anywhere. I mean, it's cloud. It's essentially everything's every anywhere. Now you got data everywhere you got cloud everywhere. Cloud operations. Where's the multi cloud and hybrid fit in? Because now, if I could do a I anywhere via container ization, shouldn't I built? Run any workload on premise and in multiple clouds. >> So we fundamentally believe that when I was here last time, we talked about the container fabrics. And I do believe that we need to get to the point where these can run anywhere. So you take the container fabric and you can go run that anywhere, right? So so that's one piece of it, the next part of is but I now need to integrate. So I now need to bring in all my pieces. How I integrate this application with another? It's the old problem of integration back again. So whether you want to use MQ or you want to use Kafka or you want to use one of these technologies? How do we get them to couple one work flow to another work flow? How do I get them to be secure? How do I get them to be resilient in the presence of crashes in the presence of latency and all that? So that's another big piece of announcements that we're making. You can take that complete set off integration technologies, and those can run anywhere on any cloud. Again, using the same partner describes. I'm not going to go into that again. And on premise. So you can knit all of those together. >> How can you talk about the rationale for the Red Hat acquisition? Specifically in the context of developers, IBM over the years has made you know many efforts took to court developers. Now, with the redhead acquisition, it's eight million developers and talk about specifically the importance of developers and how that's changed >> your strategy or enhance your >> strategy. I'm an enhancement. It's not really a change. I think we all acknowledge developers have always been important and will remain important. I mean, IBM has done a great job, I think, over the last twenty years and both helping create the whole developer ecosystem, for example, around Job. We were a very big piece of that, not the only participant in there. There were others, but we were a big piece of that. So you not take red hat on Lenox and Open shit and Open source and J. Boss and all of these technologies. There's a big ecosystem of developers. You mentioned eight million number. But why did that set of people come along? They come along because they get a lot of value from developing on top of something that in turn has so many other people on top. I think there's half a million pieces of software which use redhead as the primary infrastructure on which they develop. So it's the network effect really. Is that value andan Africa can only come from you, keep it open, You keep it running on the widest possible base, and then they get the value that if they develop on that digger access to that and US base on which Red Hat Franz >> are, we have >> evidence that >> totally makes sense. But I want to get one dig deeper that we cover a lot of developer, the business side of developers. Not so much, no ins and outs, so developer tools and stuff. There's a lot of stack overflow. Variety of sources do that, So developers want to things they want to be in the right wave. You laying out a great platform for that, then this monetization Amazon has seen massive growth on their partner network. You guys haven't ecosystem. You mentioned that. How does this anywhere philosophy impact ecosystem because they want to party with IBM? Where's the white spaces? What's the opportunity for partners? How should they evolve with IBM? What's your What's your direction on that? >> Okay, so two kinds of partners one there's a set of partners will bring a huge set of value to their clients because they actually provide the domain knowledge. The application specify acknowledged the management expertise, the operational expertise, printable technologies, perhaps that we provide. That's what a partner's is always gonna have. Value talked yesterday at a portable conference about what, cognizant? Who's a bigger part. They do. They built a self service application for patients off a medical provider to be able to get remote access to doctors when they couldn't get enough. And that was not life threatening immediately. Well, that's a huge sort of valley that they provide built on top of our technologies and products. A second kind of partner you went on developers is people who do open those packages. I think we've been quite good. We don't tend to cannibalize our partners, unlike some others we can talk about. So for those partners who have that value, we can put our investment in other places. But we could help maybe give access to the enterprise market for those developers, which I think opens up. A lot of you >> guys make the martyr for developers. That's right. I want to ask you a question. You guys are all sleep in all in on Cooper Netease. Red hat made a great bed on Cooper Netease on. Now that you're harvesting that with the requisition, huge growth there containers. Everyone saw containers. That was kind of a no brainer. Technical world developers are. What's the importance of uber Netease? As you see Kou Bernetti starting to shrink the abstraction software overlay. In the end, this new complexity where Cooper needs a running great value. What does that mean? This trend mean for CEOs CTO CSOs as enterprise start to think, you know, cohesive set of services across on Prem multiple clouds. Cooper Nettie seems to be a key point. What is the impact of it? What does it mean? >> I think I'll go to the business. Benefit Secure binaries. In the end is an orchestration. Later takes over management complexity. It takes away the cost of doing operations in a large cluster ofthe physical resource is, I think the value for the CIA level is the following today, on average, seventy percent of the total cost and people are tied up in maintaining what you have. Thirty percent is on new. That's rough rule of Tom Technologies like communities have taken to where we wanted to go and flipped out to thirty seventy. We need to spend only thirty percent maintaining what you have. And he could then go spend seventy percent on doing innovation, which is going to make inclined, happier and your business happier. Your team's had a couple of announcements today. One was hyper protect, and the other is a lot of services to facilitate. Hybrid. Can you talk about those brats up to date on a quick one, so hyper protect means. So where do you put your data in the cloud everybody gets worried about? Well, if it's in the clear, it could get stolen. C Togo to encryption. Typically, encryption is then down with the key. Well, who manages that cake? The hyper protect services are all about that key. Management is comin across. Both are getting hybrid world across both your premise and in the cloud. And nobody in the cloud, not even our deepest system administrator in the cloud, can get access to the key. That's pretty remarkable when you think about it, and so that provide the level of safety and encryption that should give you a lot of reassurance that nobody can get hold of that data that's hyper protect. And then if I go to all of the other services were doing, sometimes I see a lot of help. Someone advice. Look, in the three client meeting I just had every one of them was asking what should keep regarded watching I slightly more nice. What should I write knew? That means a whole lot of advice that you need and how to assess what you have in what should be a correct strategy. Then once you do that, somebody will say will help me move it. Others will say, Help me manage it So all the services to go do that is a big piece of what we're announcing it end and to end in addition to but into end. But also you can cover it up. Not only give me advice, I know I got buying strategy laid out, helping move it on Oprah's do boards for me or help you manage it after I move it except >> armor. When you sit in customer meetings. Big clients write me, and when they say we want to modernize, what does that mean to you? And how do you respond to that? >> Well, some organizes. Normally today it means that you've got to bring cloud technologies. You gotta bring air technologies. You got to bring what is called digital transformation all to bear. It's got to be in the service of either client intimacy, or it's got to be in terms ofthe doing straight through processing, as opposed to the old way of doing all the business processes that you have and then you get into always got to begin with some easy wind. So I always say, Begin with the easy stuff, not begin with the harder stuff. What started the architecture that let you do the hardest off later? It's not throw away, and those are all the discussions that we have, which are always a mixture of this people process technology. That world has not changed. We need to worry about. All >> three are thanks for spending your valuable time coming on the Q. Bree. We appreciate the insight. I know you're super busy. Final question. Take take a minute. To explain this year. Think What's the core theme? What's the most important story people should pay attention to this year and IBM think in San Francisco? >> I think this two things and the borders. That is the evolution that is giving greater business value for using the word that is Chapter two off the cloud journey. And it's Chapter two off a cognitive enterprise. Chapter two means that you're not getting into solving really mission critical workloads, and that's what is happening there. And that's enabled through the mixture of what we're calling hybrid on multi cloud strategies and then the cognitive enterprises all around. How can you bring air to power every workflow? It's not a little shiny Tonda. Besides, it's in the very heart off every confirmation. >> The word of the day. Here's anywhere cloud anywhere, data anywhere. Aye, aye, anywhere that's a cube were everywhere and anywhere we could go to get the signal from the noise. Arvin Krista, senior vice president, cloud and cognitive software's new title man Architect in the Red Hat Acquisition in the cloud Multi cloud DNA. Congratulations on your success. Looking forward to following your journey. Thanks for coming on, thanks Thanks. Safe. Okay. More live coverage after this short break state with the cube dot net is where you find the videos were in San Francisco. Live here in Mosconi, North and south, bringing the IBM think twenty nineteen. Stay with us.
SUMMARY :
It's the cue covering Man in charge of all the cloud products cloud everywhere. You essentially laid out the vision for So on the simple simple. than it was to keep Watson to yourself. I think that every company that survives a long term learns that choice to a customer is really important from a customer statement, just get the facts right on the hard news. Which means even if you do things one place you build up more than one place, for pulling that end to end a I anywhere on multiple clouds, on premises and through the workloads. So going to the common services on a Cuban Eddie's in a container layer that is common across Now you got data everywhere you got cloud everywhere. So so that's one piece of it, the next part of is IBM over the years has made you know many efforts took to court developers. So it's the network effect really. What's the opportunity for partners? the management expertise, the operational expertise, printable technologies, perhaps that we provide. enterprise start to think, you know, cohesive set of services across on Prem multiple clouds. seventy percent of the total cost and people are tied up in maintaining what you have. And how do you respond to that? What started the architecture that let you do the hardest off later? What's the most important story people should pay attention to this year and IBM think in San Francisco? That is the evolution that is giving greater business value for using the word More live coverage after this short break state with the cube dot net is where you find the
SENTIMENT ANALYSIS :
ENTITIES
Entity | Category | Confidence |
---|---|---|
Amazon | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
IBM | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Arvin Krista | PERSON | 0.99+ |
San Francisco | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
Arvind Krishna | PERSON | 0.99+ |
last year | DATE | 0.99+ |
Mosconi | LOCATION | 0.99+ |
seventy percent | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Urban Krishna | PERSON | 0.99+ |
second piece | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
ten seconds | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
yesterday | DATE | 0.99+ |
three pieces | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Thirty percent | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
CIA | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Tom Technologies | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
OpenShift | TITLE | 0.99+ |
Two levels | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
Lenox | ORGANIZATION | 0.99+ |
Red Hat Summit | EVENT | 0.99+ |
both | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
today | DATE | 0.99+ |
thirty seventy | QUANTITY | 0.99+ |
eight million | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
three client | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
one piece | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
One | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
more than one place | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
Both | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
Cloud Private | TITLE | 0.98+ |
one way | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
two things | QUANTITY | 0.98+ |
two kinds | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
Red Hat | ORGANIZATION | 0.97+ |
twenty | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
thirty percent | QUANTITY | 0.97+ |
US | LOCATION | 0.96+ |
three | QUANTITY | 0.96+ |
one | QUANTITY | 0.96+ |
Kou Bernetti | PERSON | 0.96+ |
Watson | TITLE | 0.96+ |
Coup Burnett | PERSON | 0.95+ |
Akash Mercy | PERSON | 0.94+ |
Azure | TITLE | 0.94+ |
this year | DATE | 0.94+ |
IBM think | ORGANIZATION | 0.93+ |
Kafka | TITLE | 0.93+ |
eight million developers | QUANTITY | 0.93+ |
half a million pieces | QUANTITY | 0.93+ |
Tonda | PERSON | 0.93+ |
J. Boss | ORGANIZATION | 0.93+ |
uber Netease | ORGANIZATION | 0.92+ |
2019 | DATE | 0.9+ |
Chapter two | OTHER | 0.89+ |
Open shit | ORGANIZATION | 0.85+ |
Cooper Netease | ORGANIZATION | 0.84+ |
Cuban | OTHER | 0.83+ |