►
Description
State of the Unified Hybrid Cloud Vision with Julio Tapia (Red Hat)
The OpenShift Commons Gathering was held on Jan 29th, 2020 in London, UK, and featured guest speakers from local customers and users. The OpenShift Commons Gatherings brought together 300+ experts from all over the world to discuss container technologies, best practices for cloud native application developers and the open source software projects that underpin the OpenShift/Kubernetes ecosystem.
https://commons.openshift.org/gatherings/London_2020.html
A
Can
you
guys
see
me
okay,
okay,
Thank,
You
Diane,
so,
first
of
all,
welcome
welcome
to
London
for
those
of
you
that
have
come
in
from
out
of
town
and
welcome.
I
know
Diane,
said
to
the
third
Commons
event
here
in
London,
but
I'm
gonna
welcome
you
to
the
first
one
of
2020.
So
for
those
of
you
who
may
not
be
familiar,
we
have
had
Commons
gatherings
for
about
four
years
now.
The
first
one
was
in
2016.
A
We
had
our
first
one
in
Seattle
and
because
of
all
the
interest
and
the
momentum
and
everything
else
we've
been
increasing
from
then
on.
We
went
to
three
events
in
2017
up
to
five
and
18.
Last
year
we
had
seven
this
year,
we're
shooting
for
nine,
and
so
it's
really
an
amazing
vehicle
to
share
information
and
to
collaborate
as
a
community.
So
we
wouldn't
be
able
to
do
that
without
your
support
without
the
support
of
our
customers,
our
partners,
contributors
and
all
of
you.
So
thank
you
very
much.
A
Did
you
need
something
set
up
your
slides
here,
Thank
You
Troy,
for
reminding
me
so
now,
if
you
click
you'll
be
good
there
we
go,
so
let
me
go
ahead
and
get
right
into
it.
So
why
are
you
here?
Why
are
we
here?
Generally
speaking,
you
know
you
all
have
your
different
reasons
for
attending.
Some
of
you
are
here
to
learn
about
open
shift,
maybe
you're
not
familiar
with
it.
Some
of
you
want
to
understand
what
our
roadmaps
are
where
how
the
product
is
being
used.
A
Maybe
you
want
to
network,
maybe
you
want
to
know
how
other
customers
are
using
it.
All
of
these
are
valid
reasons,
but
beyond
that,
the
underlying
reason
that
many
of
you
often
approached
us
with
is
you're
looking
to
provide
some
value
to
your
company
and
what
that
means
inevitably
is
helping
your
companies
and
kind
of
strike,
the
right
balance,
optimize
between
reducing
costs
and
creating
growth
and
those
dynamics
are
often
pulling
at
each
other.
A
You
move
things
forward
in
these
areas,
so
I'm
moving
forward
I'm
going
to
talk
about
a
little
bit
about
our
vision
and
we're
doing
something
a
little
bit
different,
I
an
alluded
to
it
earlier
so
I'm
gonna
kick
things
off
and
give
you
kind
of
a
high
level
picture
and
then
I'm
going
to
introduce
Troy.
My
colleague
who'll
dive
in
and
show
you
a
little
bit
more
specifically
about
how
that
vision
is
being
realized
with
our
customers.
A
So
what
is
open
so
I'm
going
to
talk
about
three
building
blocks
of
our
vision,
open
and
then
hybrid
and
then
cloud
so
open
is
a
really
important
one
and
open.
As
many
of
you
know,
it
refers
to
be
an
open
source,
and
so
the
good
news
around
that
is
that
many
companies
are
now
embracing
open
source
all
around
the
world.
Brazil
Mexico
Sydney,
you
know
obviously
here
in
Europe
as
well
and
so
more
and
more
it's
becoming
an
accepted
way
of
developing
applications
of
contributing
upstream
and
so
forth.
A
So
that's
all
good
news,
but
not
so
great
news
is
that
because
it
is
so
popular,
not
everybody
embraces
it
in
the
same
way,
and
so
there's
a
lot
of
partial
embracement.
If
you
will
there's
open
core
models,
there's
an
open
source,
light
type
of
models,
there's
some
organizations
that
leverage
open
source
but
don't
necessarily
contribute
so
there's
a
lot
of
flavors
out
there.
So
from
our
perspective,
we're
all
in
on
open-
and
we
want
to
talk
to
you
about
what
that
means
to
us
and
so
for
us
it
is
more
than
a
development
model.
A
A
We
think
we
saw
some
of
the
slide
earlier.
So,
there's
all
sorts
of
open
source
projects
that
are
out
there
and
they're
getting
a
wide
range
of
support,
and
so
what
we're
here
to
do
is
to
help
engage
in
these.
We
obviously
participate
in
many
of
these.
We
contribute
to
many
of
these
and
we're
trying
to
help,
navigate
and
provide
some
value
to
you,
our
customers
and
our
users
to
understand
how
do
these
technologies
interact
with
each
other?
A
That
also
contribute
to
this
effort,
and
it
has
to
do
with
enablement
and
training,
offering
you
courses
to
learn
how
to
use
the
technology
and
how
to
deploy
it,
how
to
implement
how
to
support
it.
Working
with
our
partners
to
figure
out
how
to
integrate
it,
how
to
certify
their
workloads
and
their
applications
on
top
of
the
platform.
All
of
these
areas
we
consistently
and
continually
will
invest
in
beyond
that.
A
We
also
so
for
us
it's
about
the
technology,
it's
about
enabling
it's
about
the
community,
it's
also
about
the
culture,
and
so
recently
we've
introduced
the
innovation
labs
and
the
whole
point
of
that
is
to
not
just
talk
to
you
about
these
things,
but
to
actually
show
you
how
to
do
it
sit
side-by-side
and
try
to
create
teams
and
building
a
culture
of
openness
and
an
innovation,
and
so
again
it's
trying
to
set
the
right
culture
within
your
organizations
to
do
this,
so
technology,
culture,
community.
All
of
these
things
are
part
of
being
an
open.
A
The
second
important
pillar
is
hybrid
and
hybrid
is
there's
a
lot
of
debate
today
in
terms
of
what
does
that
mean
in
the
industry?
Does
it
mean
on-premise
versus
public
cloud?
Does
it
mean
multiple
public
clouds?
Does
it
mean
you
know,
there's
all
this
discussion
going
around
for
us.
We
talked
to
a
lot
of
our
customers
and
I'm,
going
to
give
you
kind
of
a
taxonomy
that
we
use
when
we
talk
about
hybrid.
A
So
when
we
talk
to
our
customers,
they
tell
us
how
they're
using
technology,
how
their
customers
are
buying
services
and
products
and
and
how
they
consume
all
of
these
things
and
at
the
end
of
the
day,
there's
there's
a
number
of
different
ways
that
these
things
get
brought
to
market
I'm.
Going
to
give
you
two
examples:
one
is
in
the
financial
industry
and
the
second
one
is
in
the
automotive
industry.
So
the
first
area
that
I
wanted
to
talk
about
is
on
the
far
left
or
your
far
left.
A
My
right
is
the
whole
concept
of
marketplaces.
Marketplaces
are
being
very
popular
across
a
number
of
different
industries,
so
in
the
financial
services
area,
there's
marketplaces
to
obviously
buy
and
sell
financial
vehicles,
stocks
and
bonds,
but
also
loans
and
other
things.
So
there's
a
number
of
those
marketplaces
that
we'd
be
that
customers
use
and
they
leverage
they
want
to
be
able
to
support
and
then
from
the
service
provider
perspective
to
be
able
to
participate
in
those
marketplaces
is
important.
A
The
second
is
really
the
traditional
vehicles,
so
physical
locations,
whether
it's
a
bank,
a
loan
office,
you
walk
into
a
place.
You
talk
to
an
agent,
you
provide
some
guidance
and
consulting
with
you
and
and
you
kind
of
make
your
decisions
and
so
forth.
So
there
is
a
traditional
model
that
we
still
need
to
support.
The
third
area
is
more
around
shared
resources,
so,
increasingly
we're
starting
to
see
shared
resources
across
the
industry.
It
could
be
an
ATM,
you
might
go
to
an
airport
and
there'll,
be
several
banks
represented
there.
A
You
might
go
to
website
and
start
to
look
at
loans
and
be
able
to
shop
for
loans
in
some
kind
of
shared
fashion,
and
then
the
last
area
there
in
the
far
near
far
right
are
mobile
platforms,
virtual
platforms,
digital
platforms.
So
increasingly
everyone
has
a
device
of
some
sort
and
they're
starting
to
transact
and
use
financial
services
in
that
fashion.
Whether
it's
mobile
banking
or
payment
services
and
so
forth,
so
this
taxonomy
applies
to
a
lot
of
different
industries.
A
The
next
example
I'll
use
is
in
the
automotive
space,
so
some
of
you
may
be
familiar
with
carvanha
to
be
able
to
buy
and
sell
vehicles.
There's
other
companies
there
as
well,
whether
it's
auto
trader
or
Edmunds
comm
I,
think
here
in
the
UK
there's
one
called
Auto
Volo
I'm
not
super
familiar
with,
but
there's
all
these
new
marketplaces
that
are
being
used
to
be
able
to
acquire
vehicles
in
this
case
and
there's.
Obviously,
traditional
reseller
dealerships
is
what
we
call
them.
The
u.s.
A
I'm
not
sure
what
they're
called
here,
but
physical
locations
where
you
go
and
you
know,
look
at
a
vehicle
ask
questions.
Maybe
test
drive
it
and
purchase
a
vehicle
there's.
Also
this
shared
resources
model,
so
number
of
us
who
travel
a
fair
amount,
you'll
go
and
rent
a
vehicle
for
a
day
or
for
the
week
could
be
an
enterprise.
It
could
be
any
number
of
companies
that
offer
vehicles
for
a
short
period
of
time
and
then
the
last
space
which
I
think
more
and
more
folks
are
using
are
the
really
the
right
sharing
services.
A
A
We
basically
are
acknowledging
that
the
world
is
hybrid
and
business
is
hybrid,
and
so
we
need
to
be
able
to
support
business
in
each
of
these
environments,
whether
it's
a
market
place,
dedicated
resources,
shared
resources
or
even
digital
and
virtual
environments,
and
because
this
is
the
way
that
business
is
done.
We
believe
it's
important
for
the
platform
to
support
that,
and
so
that's
what
we
try
to
do
with
open
ship
and
the
third
building
blocker.
A
We've
been
focused
on
this
with
the
openshift
team
for
the
last
five
years,
and
in
those
five
years
we've
learned
a
lot
about
what
the
cloud
means,
and
you
can
see
some
of
these
learnings
here
on
the
right.
No
public
clouds
are
really
the
same,
so
using
Amazon
versus
Google
was
versus
Asher
versus
you
know,
Telstra
or
tea
systems,
or
any
of
these
services
they're
all
very
different,
but
we
do
see
some
commonalities.
They
all
enable
a
broad
set
of
application.
They
all
enable
community
innovation
and
there
you
can
see
some
of
the
other
issues.
A
You
know
inconsistency
across
any
of
these
cloud.
Vendors
is
difficult
and
it
drives
up,
costs
integrations
are
costly
and
onboarding
needs
to
be
simple.
It's
not
always
the
case.
Everything
needs
to
be
secure
and,
and
you
can
see
the
rest-
and
this
applies
to
private
clouds.
It
also
applies
to
private,
to
public
clouds,
so
lots
going
on
in
the
cloud
space
beyond
what
we've
learned.
A
We
work
with
a
lot
of
you
in
the
market,
customers
and
analysts,
and
they
tell
us
about
what
are
the
expectations
around
cloud
and
some
of
those
are
listed
here
and
so
customers
are
looking
for.
Broad
applications
are
looking
for
security
they're.
Looking
for
all
of
these
things
that
are
listed
up
here,
you
know
interoperability
and
standards,
automated
operations
and
so
forth.
A
So
what
we've
done
is
we've
taken
the
things
that
we've
learned
we've
taken
the
expectations
that
you,
the
market
is
shared
with
us
and
we've
helped
build
that
in
two
OpenShift,
and
so
last
year
we
reap
lat
four
and
weari
architected
openshift
and
introduced
OpenShift
four.
We
bought
a
company
called
core
OS.
A
So
back
to
the
vision.
What
is
our
vision
again,
the
highest
level?
It's
to
be
the
de-facto
open,
hybrid
cloud
platform
for
the
enterprise,
so
for
the
enterprise
is
really
important
for
us.
We
take
all
of
these
projects,
we
curate
them.
We
test
them,
we
secure
them
and
we
want
to
be
able
to
make
them
bring
them
to
a
point
where
you
can
rely
and
put
your
deployments
in
production
and
mission-critical
environments
and
support
that.
So
that
is
our
vision.
A
We
do
this
because,
at
the
end
of
the
day,
we
want
to
help
and
support
you
with
the
right
platform
to
adapt
to
change,
support
today's
business
but,
more
importantly,
support
the
business
of
tomorrow.
So
as
things
change,
if
you
want
to
enter
a
new
market,
a
new
vertical
market
or
a
new
geographic
market
or
maybe
a
competitor,
makes
a
move
and
you
need
to
react
to
it
quickly.
We
went
to
provide
you
with
that
platform.
They
can
enable
you
to
see
those
opportunities
quickly.
A
B
Good
morning,
so
it's
one
thing
to
have
a
vision.
It's
another
one
to
see
our
customers.
Actually
you
realize
it,
and
so
one
of
the
things
that
I
get
to
do
in
my
work
is
to
you
curate
stories,
and
these
are
stories
from
customers
like
yourself,
and
so
one
of
the
things
that
we're
hearing
from
our
customers
is
they
love
our
flex.
Our
flexibility
I
would
say
that
we
are
the
only
vendor
in
the
market
of
with
our
enterprise
credentials
that
can
provide
a
platform
that
you
can
run
in
any
cloud.
B
Okay
and
our
customers
are
actually
loving
that
flexibility
and
actually
realizing
it.
So
one
customer
I'm
going
to
talk
to
you
about
is
Hilton
now
who
here
has
ever
used
the
digital
key
app
just
show
of
hands?
Okay,
so
the
hospitality
industry
is
very
competitive
industry
and
one
of
the
things
that
Hilton
was
facing
was
a
need
to
move
faster,
a
need
to
be
competitive,
and
here
is
one
of
the
areas
that
they
were
going
to
try
to
distinguish
themselves
as
using
a
digital
key.
B
One
of
the
things
that
I
love
about
Hilton
and
their
story
is
that
70%
of
the
compute
resources
they
are
using
worldwide
are
on
multiple
clouds:
okay,
so
70%
of
the
people
using
digital
key
and
the
other
Hilton
we
actually
are
underneath
the
the
Hilton
mobile
app
as
well,
are
being
used
across
multiple
clouds.
Now,
there's
a
lot
of
vendors
out
there
that
are
talking
about
multiple
cloud
and
hey
we're
going
to
be
bringing
something
to
mark
with
multiple
cloud:
here's
a
customer
that
is
actually
doing
it
right.
B
B
Simplicity
is
key.
Okay,
one
of
the
things
that
you
will
find
that
the
more
complex
a
technical
solution
is,
it
gives
you
more
widgets
but
effectively
it
will
slow
you
down,
and
so
this
is
an
example
of
a
customer.
That
said,
you
know
what,
when
we
looked
at
all
the
different
alternatives,
not
just
do
it
yourself,
but
just
many
other
vendors
as
well.
B
You
actually
had
a
simpler,
develop
experience
and
so
we're
wanting
to
ensure
that
your
developers
can
be
successful
right
and
if
you
know
anything
about
our
our
platform,
we,
the
the
number
of
languages.
We
support
the
ease
at
which
we
we
do
that
it
really
is
a
simpler
experience.
So
that
translates
so
one
of
the
areas
that
we're
investing
in
as
Red
Hat
is
OpenShift
pipelines.
So
this
is
not
a
do-it-yourself,
but
something
that
we
have
curated
and
again.
If
we
have
the
flexibility,
so
you
can
use
different
tools.
B
We
don't
have
to
use
our
tools.
I'm
gonna
make
sure
that
you're
we're
clear
on
that.
But
it's
an
area
that
we
are
investing
in
to
make
sure
that
you
can
streamline
a
CIC
D
pipeline
and
that
will
translate
into
it.
You
can
see
some
of
the
numbers
here
of
actually
what
customers
are
realizing
and
how
much
faster
they
can
run
when
you've
actually
standardized
on
a
kubernetes
in
a
containers
platform
that
is
allowing
them
to
respond
competitively.
B
We
use
Tecton,
but
again
we
we
can
support
other
versions,
so
we
are
very
open
and
how
you
can
integrate
with
tools
that
you're
using,
but
this
is
a
breakdown
of
how
the
pipelines
actually
are
architected.
Now
one
area
that
I
want
to
highlight
here
is
code
ready
workspaces.
This
is
another
area
of
investment
that
we're
making
and
again
we
are
trying
to
make
the
developer
experience
on
our
platform
as
simple
as
possible.
B
A
great
example
I
mean
we
are
really
trying
to
help.
You
guys
realize
what
you
were
trying
to
do
using
the
technology
we
have
available.
One
of
the
things
I
love
to
about
this
quote
is
effectively
that
from
POC
to
having
something
in
the
market
in
two
weeks,
that's
pretty
impressive,
and
so,
and
this
is
an
insurance
company
and
and
so
who
would
like
that
kind
of.
B
B
Speaking
of
innovation,
here's
a
bank
in
the
Middle
East
and
one
of
the
things
that
they
were
finding
was
that
they
were
not
capturing
the
Millennials
and
they
were
not
capturing
that
that
customer
base,
and
but
they
found
that
that
customer
base
was
on
whatsapp
all
the
time,
so
they
have
using
openshift
as
a
foundation.
They
actually
were
able
to
do
a
mobile
banking,
app
based
completely
on
whatsapp,
and
so
they
could,
you
know,
do
banking,
visa
vie
whatsapp
and
they
were
able
to
secure
a
farm
number
of
new
customers
again.
B
This
is
another
sort
of
quote
that
we
that
we
love,
but
if
you're
a
customer
you
would
want
to
realize
this,
which
is
if
I
have
a
concept.
I
can
actually
nintendon't
create
that
create
when
I
am
thinking
seize
the
opportunity,
because
everything
has
been
standardized
on
a
platform
and
there's
no
barriers.
Now,
there's
not
there's
not
tickets.
They're,
not
you
know,
there's
no,
there's
no
barriers.
You
can
just
go
from
concept
to
actually
meeting
the
need
for
a
customer
operations,
so
you
guys
are
going
to
hear
a
lot
about
operators.
B
B
B
And,
lastly,
let's
talk
about
scale.
So
if
you're,
you
do
not
scale
on
a
platform
that
is,
that
is
either
stitched
together
with
with
with
duct
tape
and
paper
clips,
and
a
lot
of
do-it-yourself
make
sure
that
you've
covered
all
your
bases.
Alright,
these
are
actually
customers
that
are
scaling
at
very,
very
large
numbers.
Some
of
you
are
actually
here,
and
you
can
see
sort
of
where
they're,
how
they're
designed
and
how
big
these
environments
are.
B
One
of
the
areas
that
we're
investing
in
with
our
platform
is
a
service
mesh.
When
you
start
getting
into
large-scale
container
connection
points,
making
sure
that
the
traffic
flows
that
there's
security
in
that
all
of
that
is
key
and
that's
what
service
mesh
provides-
and
here
would
be
another
examples
when
you
start
looking
at
these
numbers,
think
about
the
number
of
container
to
container
connections
and
you're
going
to
want
to
make
sure
that
your
policies
are
enforced
in
these
connections.
Security
is
unfortunate.
These
connections
and
optimization
is,
is,
is
designed
into
these
connections.