filmov
tv
Final Wrap Up | VMworld 2015

Показать описание
01. John Furrier, Dave Vellante, Stu Miniman, and Brian Gracely Final Wrap Up. (00:15)
02. What's Happening with VMware in Building an Ecosystem?. (01:36)
03. Can VMware Scale?. (03:20)
04. VMware is Moving into the Developer Space. (04:45)
05. Dave Vellante - Do Customers See Value in the Federation?. (07:47)
06. Will VMware Buy EMC?. (11:33)
07. New Opportunities from VMworld. (14:56)
08. How Much of a Force is Amazon Web Services?. (16:28)
--- ---
VMworld 2015 leaves the industry guessing | #VMworld
by Marlene Den Bleyker | Sep 2, 2015
As VMworld 2015 came to a close today, John Furrier, Dave Vellante, Stu Miniman and Brian Gracely of theCUBE, from the SiliconANGLE Media team, went around the table to discuss the important takeaways from VMworld 2015.
Rumors, intrigue and no answers
Much of the conversation centered on the future of VMware, Inc. and the storage industry in general. The conference began with anticipation of an announcement that never came. There was much speculation about the fate of VMware at the hands of Elliot Management, but the show closed leaving the industry still guessing.
The panel voiced many opinions regarding the Federation vs. standalone issue. Who is buying who? Who will lead? Rumors popped up about leaks involving reports from tech blog Re/code and talk of a “tiger team” comprised of the company elite looking at the customer consumption of the Federation. Overall, there was a great deal of behind-the-scenes gossip, but at the end of the day, VMware’s future is just a mysterious today as it was on Day 1 of the show.
The good, the bad and the non-committed
Vellante remarked that VMware is strong and although it is fighting battles on many fronts, it is a winning company. He believes that scale is the linchpin of the company’s future. Gracely and Miniman both feel that the company still needs to put all the pieces together. They both failed to see a commitment on the part of VMware to invest in scale. Gracely said, “They keep saying here’s our market and there is huge opportunity, but they need to articulate it better.”
Industry outlook
Furrier considers this a huge opportunity for startups. Vellante wondered if the industry really needed another storage company. (His answer was yes.) Miniman believes that there were good innovations unveiled this week, and Gracely sees the industry starting to take baby steps in the area of DevOps.
Furrier closed the show with these two thoughts:
Re VMware: “VMware was flexing its muscles. The show proved this is a proud company going to the next level, no matter who is running it.”
Re the industry: In reference to VMware CIO Bask Iyer’s analogy involving surfers, cloud and mobile, he said, “Ye,s there is another wave coming, but someone has to clean the beach, then surf.”
@theCUBE
#VMworld
02. What's Happening with VMware in Building an Ecosystem?. (01:36)
03. Can VMware Scale?. (03:20)
04. VMware is Moving into the Developer Space. (04:45)
05. Dave Vellante - Do Customers See Value in the Federation?. (07:47)
06. Will VMware Buy EMC?. (11:33)
07. New Opportunities from VMworld. (14:56)
08. How Much of a Force is Amazon Web Services?. (16:28)
--- ---
VMworld 2015 leaves the industry guessing | #VMworld
by Marlene Den Bleyker | Sep 2, 2015
As VMworld 2015 came to a close today, John Furrier, Dave Vellante, Stu Miniman and Brian Gracely of theCUBE, from the SiliconANGLE Media team, went around the table to discuss the important takeaways from VMworld 2015.
Rumors, intrigue and no answers
Much of the conversation centered on the future of VMware, Inc. and the storage industry in general. The conference began with anticipation of an announcement that never came. There was much speculation about the fate of VMware at the hands of Elliot Management, but the show closed leaving the industry still guessing.
The panel voiced many opinions regarding the Federation vs. standalone issue. Who is buying who? Who will lead? Rumors popped up about leaks involving reports from tech blog Re/code and talk of a “tiger team” comprised of the company elite looking at the customer consumption of the Federation. Overall, there was a great deal of behind-the-scenes gossip, but at the end of the day, VMware’s future is just a mysterious today as it was on Day 1 of the show.
The good, the bad and the non-committed
Vellante remarked that VMware is strong and although it is fighting battles on many fronts, it is a winning company. He believes that scale is the linchpin of the company’s future. Gracely and Miniman both feel that the company still needs to put all the pieces together. They both failed to see a commitment on the part of VMware to invest in scale. Gracely said, “They keep saying here’s our market and there is huge opportunity, but they need to articulate it better.”
Industry outlook
Furrier considers this a huge opportunity for startups. Vellante wondered if the industry really needed another storage company. (His answer was yes.) Miniman believes that there were good innovations unveiled this week, and Gracely sees the industry starting to take baby steps in the area of DevOps.
Furrier closed the show with these two thoughts:
Re VMware: “VMware was flexing its muscles. The show proved this is a proud company going to the next level, no matter who is running it.”
Re the industry: In reference to VMware CIO Bask Iyer’s analogy involving surfers, cloud and mobile, he said, “Ye,s there is another wave coming, but someone has to clean the beach, then surf.”
@theCUBE
#VMworld