 Welcome back to SuperCloud 3. I'm John Furrier, Dave Vellante, wrapping up our day one of two days of live in studio coverage. We're mixing in some senior lives with folks who couldn't make it a year. Again, we'll do whatever it takes to get the stories for SuperCloud. This is SuperCloud 3, Dave, security plus AI, kind of wrap up. We've got a few minutes, short minutes to wrap up. I just want to say before we go, we've got SuperCloud 4 coming, which is going to be dedicated to only the AI proposition. So LLMs, large language model foundation models from computer vision to text and LLMs and how it's being deployed. So that's going to be an AI specific, all things generative AI in October. SuperCloud 4, market calendars for that day. SuperCloud 3, success. We've got more tomorrow, live hits. We've got the ecosystem speech rolling out now. This is a real big thing. Data is a problem opportunity for security. It's a problem that creates great opportunities if you're on the right side of this. And obviously generative AI is going to accelerate it. Some skeptical positions now because it's got to be accurate, as we heard from Jay Perk from Lacework. And ironically, he comes from Facebook. So he knows data. Everyone will have a data scale like Amazon, like Facebook, like Google. If they don't, they won't have a competitive advantage. You know, John, the impetus behind SuperCloud was always to attack complexity and with multi-cloud complexity. Now with LLMs and of course security, we're hearing a lot of chaos. And I wrote a piece a couple of years ago, chaos is cash. And so it's cash for attackers and it's cash for defending companies that can become multi-billion, tens of billion dollars in valuation, hundreds of billions even. I think your point about speed is right on. I mean, it's just compressed. And it's interesting, I think Rob Hofe and the editorial team have been asking this question, who is going to benefit more from AI? Attackers or defenders? And I had expected that a lot of folks in the technology world would say, oh no, we're going to fight. Generally the consensus I would say, I'd have to say 60, 40, at least maybe 75, 25 is for the attackers, right? So that's kind of scary. And I think the other thing that I heard in your hearing, you'll hear it from the ecosystem speaks, is initially the defenders had the advantage is they had most of the AI in the technology factories. And now it's flipped. It's pretty a dramatic advantage right now for the attackers. And it's going to take some time for them to figure out where to apply LLMs. We're hearing LLM diversity and we're also hearing to your point that it's inconsistent and it's maybe not the best application across the board. I think it's an important area to watch. I think the fundamental acceleration of super cloud as well as the generative AI wave that's going to just take machine learning from the past decade and put it into a whole nother gear is going to come now in security, the pace of play like Pro Ball is different speed than say college or high school sports. If you want to use a sports analogy, that means that impact means you can't fake it till you make it. You can't iterate, provide DevOps principles at that scale, need accuracy, the speed of the game. The defense has to be strong and keep skating through where the puck is going to be as we've been hearing. And that's going to impact the capital markets. It's going to impact growth rates. It's also going to impact this platform versus tools. You brought the best of breed. I thought it was very interesting point and we're hearing more and more that you need to be accurate, factual. You can't have a bad product in security. So you can't just say we're a platform with only a few good things. You got to have a platform with everything strong. So this is going to change the conversation space for us a little bit Dave in terms as we squint through platform versus tools which starters will make it. It's going to be very interesting and I think it's going to probably spawn a huge M&A market. We'll talk more about this tomorrow. Many, many years ago you started using the term extract the signal from the noise. It kind of became the tagline of the cube. And when you talk about zero trust it really is the buzzword of the industry. David Strom wrote a piece, one of our journalists about the challenges of zero trust. It was kind of a skeptical piece basically saying, hey, squint through, extract the signal from the marketing noise. People are struggling with zero trust practitioners. We heard it today. It's partial zero trust. This is a long journey. Hopefully, VP of security basically threw in the bus by saying, you take the laptop, SAML token, that breaks down zero trust right there. So, you know. You can't trust anything. It was interesting what he was saying about our early days of ML and how that's flipped. And I think that's, I think I appreciated his forthrightness because I think initially most companies were like that. Yeah, yeah, yeah, another ML play but now it's like lean in, we got to go. Great names this morning, Matthew Prince, Doug Merrick kicked us off coming out of retirement from Splunk, taking over AVatrix. Matthew Prince, co-founder, CEO of Cloudflare. George Kurt, CEO of CrowdStrike. Jay Schradbury, founder of Zscaler and CEO, Kit Colbert. John Rowe, CTO of Dell Technology, G2 Patel. Tom Gillis, from Cisco. Mario Duarte, SVP of Securities Snowflake. Akta Jay Perik, CEO of Lacework, former league Acomife and Facebook. Great pedigree. What a great list of names all weighing in with vision and also pragmatic advice and anecdotes around how to be on the right side of history. I think we're going to continue to explore that conversation around what side of the street is going to get killed because I really see this coming where if you're not on the right side of history on this one, the super cloud wave as this genre of AI comes at next gen scale, the super cloud scale with AI now, just going to put it turbo boost the action. And I think the pace of play in this industry is going to be at levels we've never seen before, catching people off guard from VCs, investors, buyers, and people themselves who think they might have a good product one day and literally next week be out of business. You're pro sports analogies right on. I mean, this is not the JV. This is a big time. And of course, the super cloud quarterly event series is going gangbusters tomorrow. We got another great day. We got VMware kicking it off. We got Jay Cuthrell coming in Victoria. Gringo, he's from VMware. He was the first one to see this as one of the vendors and commercial players out there saw super cloud and props to Victoria. Victoria saw what this was turning into with the momentum around it. Great vision at VMware for Victoria or for your Ingo. And of course, Merritt Bear, the newly field CISO for Laceworth's coming in as well. We got great people coming in. Matt Garmin is going to have exclusive video. He's a sales chief at AWS former EC2 knows this stuff there. A lot of action from the Silicon to the app stage. Shout out for some of your supporters. We crowd strike, enterprise web, hammer space, net app. Who am I missing here? vicinity and VMware all supporting super cloud. So thank you. The vicinity story is amazing. They're like, we'll move data around. So this whole notion of don't move your data. Check out the vicinity interview. I thought that was strong. A lot of great stuff. Day one in the books, enjoy the ecosystem speak. These are the people in the ecosystem, in the trenches, like our leaders, their leaders as well. Enjoy the videos and thanks for watching super cloud. Day one, super cloud three.