 27 was fun. A lot of activity. We had a great day one, great day two, a ton of interviews. We had Rack Space on, we had Morantis, we had Service Mesh, we had Hortonworks, Red Hat. I mean, all the players, the start-up we had on. Last night was full swing parties going on, so we got some reports there. Day three, so we have a big agenda here today. We're going to talk with Martín Casado at 3 o'clock. We're going to hear from Jim Curry from Rack Space. MetaCloud started up out of Pasadena. Saltstack Cloud by a bunch of start-ups, and of course, the head guy at HP for Cloud, Sarge Lane, Westall last night. Exciting lineup, Jeff. Day three is really rocking. It is, it is pretty amazing. A lot of these shows, there's a lot of stuff going on in the sessions. Again, if you're looking at the Twitter stream and you can join the conversation at OpenStack, hashtag OpenStack. All the rooms are busy, they're filled, they're overflowing. People can't get enough information from a lot of the people that are here. But of course, like you said, at these shows there's the parties, and there was a really good vibe at the parties last night, sponsored by a number of the people. HP is the one that I was at, was very well attended in. Again, it is, you know, it's a long show. We've done a lot of interviews, but we'll get through. And the people here are still excited. People were here bright and early this morning at 8 a.m., waiting to get into the vendor area, to the sponsor area, waiting to get past the poor security lady who was trying to keep them all into the keynote wrapped up. But yeah, another great day. You know, I listened a little bit to some of the interviews yesterday to pull out some of the content, and they're just chock-full of tremendous information. Yeah, go to SiliconAngle.com for all the coverage. Go to Wikibon.org for the research. This is Silicon Angle, Wikibon's theCUBE. Day three, exclusive coverage at OpenStack Summit. I'm John Furrier with Jeff Frick. Breaking down, and just kicking off day three here, Jeff, things we want to continue to hear from folks is what is infrastructure as code? What is going on with the cloud? Obviously, this tipping point, we talked about that yesterday, a flash point where cloud is now coming into the enterprise in a big way and serves providers. This complete transformation is on an accelerated rate, and all the players involved are all doing it with scale-out open source. Scale-out open source is the preferred method, technologies, and communities, and these platforms are significant. Now, what we didn't talk about yesterday that's interesting we're going to dive in today is this is the same open source community that overlaps with OSCON. OSCON is an O'Reilly event, and I saw the O'Reilly folks here earlier talking about OSCON, an event that happens here in July, and that's kind of where OpenStack was born. We heard some of the references to, yeah, I remember back on the day we were a part of OSCON. So what you're seeing here is this OpenStack community is now shifting as a popular open source community, but it blends well. It overlaps with OSCON. It overlaps with the Hadoop community we had Hortonworks on yesterday. So these blending of communities are kind of coming together, Jeff, to bring these new solutions to the marketplace. And it really is interesting because open source has always been kind of a fickle market and it's always been great, we've always been in support of it, but you had almost like pure play communities. Now you're seeing integration, open source is maturing, maturing in real time, and now it's going to be really, really enterprise ready as these guys bring new solutions to the market. Yeah, and I think one of our guests yesterday talked about how OpenStack potentially is the foundation and the framework to pull all those other open source technologies together with the databases and the networking, and it really seems to be getting a critical mass. I'm reminded of the old fax machine days, right? The fax got valuable and everybody had one, and it seems like the open source components within the infrastructure stack are all coming together. I'm not sure I called it the fax machine, but I see the metaphor. You see, I think it's the metaphor. It's the metaphor. I'm reaching back to old metaphors here, showing my agent Gray here amongst the excitement that's here. It's the people aspect too, Jeff, that's interesting. I mean, it's really an engaging community. Last night I was at the parties, we went and saw the first one was Co-Raid, Big Switch, and Miranda's had an event, all their top customers and partners were up there. Great to get some insight into some of the things that they're thinking about. We then went to the HP party. That was interesting. Those top dogs at HP got to hear their story, and they're clear. Hey, this is not even the first inning. They're looking at this as a value play, not as a volume play for cloud, and so their customers and their users are builders of cloud enterprises. So HP actually is a really coherent strategy. It's a complicated thing for HP to do. They're such a huge company. We're going to hear from Sargile three o'clock here, who oversees that. He reports right up into the COO, and they meet with Meg Whitman, basically weekly to review cloud. Meg Whitman is obviously into the cloud as part of their transformation. So don't count HP out. HP's real player. And then finally at the end of the night went to the Puppet Labs party, and Puppet is based in Portland at their office. And that was where everyone was letting loose. The developers, a lot of good crowd there. So again, so a red hat there and a bunch of other folks. So again, part of these events is to go face to face and meet the folks in person. And last night we had an amazing set of conversations. That's right. And that is a big piece of it. Here at theCUBE you get to, we talk about the technology and we have a lot of technology conversations. But I think really one of the interesting things is the stories of the people and how these people came together to solve problems and who kind of the personalities are and the driving force behind these things to really make it happen. Because it just doesn't happen in the vacuum. It doesn't happen by itself. I think OpenStack's a disruption right now. I think it's disrupting some of the open source dynamics. It's interesting. I mean the rabid developers are here going crazy and they're bringing real code to the table. Obviously a contribution model is the open source protocol. Contribute with code. That's the message here. So OpenStack will disrupt the communities of open source. It's also going to disrupt the enterprise market and the service provider market because now that's going to be the journey for the next ten years, next decade is a flourish of growth. And one of the things that we pointed out in day one and we talked about yesterday is everything that's driving these mega trends is that there's a demand for investments in IT. And IT is not just for large enterprises having data centers. It's also the service providers. So that investment is on the table. People are mandated. Build out this modern infrastructure. Now the problem with IT is is that they got to change their mindset to a DevOps mindset. Infrastructure as code. And completely retool their the way they do things. And over the past 15 years, IT has not been a growth industry. It's been more operational, older practices. And so a lot of the talent in the enterprise just isn't there. And that's why Marantis is doing so well because they have the services. So one of the big underlying messages that we're going to follow here on SiliconANGLE.com and Wikibon is is IT ready for open source scale out? How do they do it? How do they get the personnel and resources to do it? And that fundamentally is the golden opportunity for all involved from startups to the communities themselves, the developers of the software, and then ultimately the incumbent players like IBM, EMC, HP, VMware. They're all got a huge stake in this. And again, they got plenty of time. Yeah, the other kind of interesting theme I think is how these really innovative consumer facing companies that were first to get on the cloud were first to use really rapid development techniques to roll out features and functionality very quickly to have really rapid search. Those types of experiences are driving the expectations that people have with their IT. So now the guys at work are going, hey, I'm expecting the same type of access, the same type of speed of development, the same type of roll out of new features and functionality as I get with all the other applications that I interact with every day. And it's a challenge, you know, because all these new companies, they're not encumbered by the infrastructure and really the heterogeneity of the systems that most of these big enterprises have kind of behind the cover. So it's exciting times and we're excited for day three here at OpusTech Summit. So go to SiliconANGLE.com. All the top stories in tech are there. SiliconANGLE is a reference point for tech innovation. We've been very active in the Hadoop, big data space, as well as converged infrastructure, but as we call software-led infrastructure. And go to SiliconANGLE, and you have all the news there. You've got stories there and you've got, you know, our main blogging. But also go to Wikibon.org. Wikibon.org is where the research is. That's where David Floyer posts. That's where Dave Vellante posts. Do Miniman, Jeff Kelly, among all the other analysts in our team. That's free research. And you can go sample big data reports on all the big data activities. Go to Wikibon.org slash big data and look at some of the work. It's all free content. So we are about open source content here in SiliconANGLE. The Cube is our broadcast. We go out to the events. Extract a signal from the noise. Not a lot of noise here, Jeff. It's a lot of signal. We need more guys. David Floyer is out on the ground in sessions again today. We'll expect to hear from him later. But again, big story here as OpenStack has hit the tipping point. It's going mainstream. The developers are endorsing it with their code. As they say, they're voting with their feet. As the expression goes here, they're voting with their code. And you've seen some serious user examples here. And that ultimately means this is a real deal. Enterprises should be serious about this, and they are. Should be a great day. Okay. So that's day three kicking off here at The Cube. We've got some, again, great interviews coming up today. Just to kind of run down, we're going to have Ross Turk on from Ink Tank. And obviously we're going to hear from those guys. Obviously, Seth has been a big trend that a lot of IT guys are interested in. We're going to hear from them. We're going to also hear from Rackspace right after here. We want to rerun that sequence because that's a really good sequence of Rackspace. And again, great example of Rackspace being a leader here, leveraging the open-source business model. Then we got Sargele at one o'clock from HP. Hear from him. He's the top dog at HP. And it's going to hear what he has to say. And then we got Startup at two o'clock. We've got CloudBite, SaltStack. And then three o'clock, Martin Casado, who is with VMware, but he still has on his badge Nacera. So he is a real candid, solid guy. Just put out a great blog post. I'm reading it now about what Nacera is doing. And obviously they were involved in OpenStack in their position, so that should be a fun interview at three o'clock. And then 3.30, Jim Curry, and then Metacloud, and then we'll close it out. Day three here. This is exclusive coverage from SiliconANGLE here. Day three, OpenStack Summit. Do you want to tweet us? I'm at Furrier. I used the hashtag OpenSource on the OpenStack. And we'll look for that. Any questions, send them our way. And we'll address them. We'll try to get those questions into the guests. So we'll be right back with more footage here live on the ground at OpenStack Summit. We'll be right back at the short break.