 Well, good morning everybody everybody up ready excited Folks go and meet with the board this morning have breakfast with the board anybody do that Yeah, few okay good. Thank you. I was not there. I apologize for my absence Todd Moore IBM's director for open technologies and partnerships what that really means is I have a lot of folks who work for me Who do open source code who are working in open stack Cloud Foundry Cordova other projects out around around the industry and And I also get to go out and work with folks who are looking to go and start things up as well, too To build other communities to build partnerships to help go continue to build out the open ecosystem All right, it's all about the partnerships and the the ecosystems that we build these days Bit of background I guess one of my employees probably framed it really well recently She called me a nerd with cowboy boots So yes, I have my cowboy boots on again. I put on a clean pair of jeans to go with today as well, too so I I come from Austin, Texas and And I work out of there, but I spend most of my time. It seems these days either on one coast or the other We're not going to talk to you a little bit about today is sort of set up the tracks that will follow from various IBMers who are here in the room who'll be speaking and We're very engaged in the community and like to Get out and spend time with the rest of the folks who are working with us in the in the community as well As with our users so hopefully we've got a good mix of both users and Folks participating with us here So where did all this start? You know where we've been out painting this picture this landscape of open and and what really attracted us here into open stack was the fact that And and it stopped working Okay in the beginning there was a green light that went to red really started with You know customer and user needs We liked what was happening here in the community We liked the involvement that the user community had the feedback that we were getting out of it The you know the fact that people will come here to this conference and spend their time and be alongside the various Developers who are here designing the next version of open stack is just exciting to us That's I think the way to build a good ecosystem and have tight feedback and have real involvement And a lot of our users actually contribute code now as well, too So it's exciting to see that come together and and the reason it's exciting We'll try to hit the enter button this time and make it go forward Nope is that we we survey Large companies very often in IBM to see what's on the minds of their CEOs We've been doing this very consistently for a number of years So we've got real data that goes back in time with consistent questions and and the thing that we've seen through the years is that Technology was sort of before and after side people didn't really think of it as anything more than you do utility You had to keep it up and running don't worry about it, right? And as time has gone on and people have started to adopt agile techniques to adopt cloud technologies What we've seen is progressively the rate and pace of change is happening to the point where the CEO has taken notice He realizes that his entire business is now dependent on his IT infrastructure his future offerings that he's out placing into the marketplace that his competitors are of course, you know moving at the speed of light around and with are also dependent on it and Suddenly technology factors are now the thing that are most likely to be on this radar screen And and what we've seen is this the successful enterprises the ones who are out there making way faster then their competitors are depending on Strategic reinvention using Technology such as the cloud and open stack right and they're far more likely far more likely you can look at the stats to be using those leading edge technologies if they're successful, so This is something that of course let us all to start looking at technology such as open stack because Just hit the button since it takes so long Because we need innovation right to fuel that to meet the rate and pace the change that's happening innovations required You know the old days it would take us a Tremendous amount of time to first requisition a server then get it set up then provision it get your applications over on it Get going right weeks months sometimes spent in that cycle of begging the IT department on how do I go and get something going? And in that infrastructure was of course costly and expensive and in tightly controlled by the gatekeepers But to meet the rate and pace what we've adopted is really a cloud architecture, right? One that enables dev ops allows developers to move much faster breaks down the walls the silos that exist between design and Operations and move things along so as we've looked at it As we've listened to what our users and our customers have said we've sort of stratified it into three areas of focus And we've developed what we believe is an open cloud architecture because consistently what we've heard is that we want flexibility We don't want vendor lock-in. We want interoperability across the clouds. We want to be able to burst workloads out there Sometimes we want to have it all on-premise, you know, we're maybe a financial institution who's very conservative and sometimes we want to make use of Just compute Know to exist someplace because we need to satisfy some analytical workload so For us looking at those layers looking at infrastructure first open stack was the first logical choice out there Not that it necessarily had the better technology at that time But it had the better ecosystem it had the users the community and as you'll see in some of the further charts It had folks who were willing to really put an effort into it commit Make it better and and build up partnerships So open stack is really dominated that infrastructure as a service layer and and I'll show that a little more Then at the platform as a service layer at the layer where you want application developers To be able to build an app without knowing anything really about what's down underneath it for the infrastructure There's a few options that are building out there We've placed a bed on on cloud foundry a number of our partners around the open stack community are doing that with us And we're pretty excited about the opportunity that goes and brings so cloud foundry has you know again Sort of hit the radar screens and we see moving its way up into the open world Of course at the top layer at the application layer where the API economy is building these days IBM invests in lots of technologies whether it's you know in json or html 5 where we co-chair that working group at the W3C Or technology G's like a lot for authentication You know these are just moving the web along and we're out there working and building and part of those communities as well too So together you sort of have this constellation of technologies open technologies They can sort of fuel the web and move it along of course these communities need to move with real velocity And it's it's surprising when you see something move with real velocity, right? They've got to keep up with the rate and pay the pace of business, right? So what about our own little community here open stack? Open stack has just been a phenomenon. I don't think we've seen a Community move along as fast as the open stack community has so this is sort of tracing the lines of code As they've they've moved up and I think the last release on there was the Havana release of course ice houses here you know we're Millions of lines of code From a humble beginning of 44,000 lines ago in just a few years here through a six-month cycle release cycles no other community has has gone and built something as quickly and As cohesively as we we have here. We're a very friendly community. You come you participate We you know we take everybody's input If your patch isn't quite up to standards people will help you along generally with it We're not a community that Just bashes the folks who come and and want to contribute And I think that in itself has also been one of the contributing factors to to moving things along We're over a thousand countries now all those red dots on the map. I think is your thousand cities. I'm sorry Just phenomenal and growth three hundred and fifty-five companies almost ten percent of The traffic that's coming into us now is coming in out of India as an example So in Jonathan talked about a lot of these stats But it's just phenomenal right so we have a community that can keep up with business speed rate and pace it can deliver on six-month cycles and each release consistently gets better and better and better and Working with our friends. We're doing that We're all in this together and we're putting in significant contributions as as that moves along and I'll talk about that so So ice house right April 17th ice house delivery And visitors are welcome right I like this picture because of that You know as I said the community is friendly our website is is very active They're in just one quarter a million million visitors to our website That's the kind of traffic that we're doing here in one quarter Very substantial So, you know, how does how is this actually delivering now? Okay Well, 32% more contributors Since our last release Billy significant 2,900 bucks fixed 16 languages now Just just amazing by the way IBM contributed nine of those translations out there of the top top tier ones So, you know places where we find gaps or that needs work or you'll find our team in there working helping contributing 288% growth in individual members. We're over 16,000 members here in the community And I am just so proud of that. I've been around since you know, we started building this foundation and putting it together I worked with the rack space team To identify how we could build out the foundation Learn from other organizations that we've been part of over the years and then just go and and make it happen So, you know, I'm on the board. I'm kind of known as the adult in the room I've had the history help shape the discussion and head us in where we go And and I'm just incredibly proud of what has happened here as a result of that And I don't think there's any question anymore Get back to the record theme right That that we've gone platinum with our membership and our commits and the work that we do Open stack is the top blue line on all of these And what we've done is we've looked at community activity right objective things that you can go out and see By looking at the forums and looking what's happening out there with contributions, right? Our population our accumulated community population through the roof Our developer population through the roof over 2000 Our contributing organizations through the roof What happens on a monthly basis through the roof, right? This is the kind of activity that You who have all come together to be part of the community are helping us go and drive and contribute to and and I can't thank you much enough on this it just just astounding okay, so the IBM Commitment the IBM contributions into this what's important to us. There's a lot of things listed here but you know, let me let me pick on things that that I'm interested in high availability, right? one of the things that always worried me when I was out building clusters was the Problem of having one of the hosts sort of just become damaged You know not that he was dropped dead and stopped working that he you know It was a little kid with crayons scribbling all over the paper, right? And it was scribbling all over storage or scribbling all over memory, right? So, you know, how do you fix that? Well you put in you know mechanisms to go and identify and stop and access to things like storage and you then Create the new instance and get it up and going and moving so you know You look at ha those are the kinds of technologies that IBM is putting in here Let's see security granularity for host aggregation. What is that? Sometimes people like the group posts and they don't want to have all the permissions to be exactly the same around those tests production development, right? We don't necessarily want to have everybody have the same privileges around that do we? Those kinds of functions are things that we're out putting into there Of course, I'll let Brad talk about some of the things that we've done with a loss and enhancements into Keystone But you know security availability High availability Making the lives of our operators easier. Those are the kinds of things that we're contributing and putting into the open Stack community with real IBM contributions Okay The IBM open cloud and I think we're doing okay on time. We're maybe a little bit late Up and down that stack. We're living that open Message that I showed at the beginning, right? We have open technologies at the lowest layers both for on-prem and off-prem In the middle layers where we're deploying applications Orchestrating those applications making sure that very complex things like an SAP installation can be delivered onto a platform Through technologies like Tosca And we're using that work that we've done out in standards with others A lot of the folks who are also part of the open-stack community to make sure that we have a consistent way of doing things like that on our platforms and across platforms and as we move up the layers we're again infusing, you know, open technologies At each level to go and make sure there's interoperability in depth Okay, so I'm gonna ask Brad Topol will come up and Talk a bit about a demo that he gave earlier just because I liked it It's only a couple of minutes it'll be real short and then I'll continue with the other topics that IBM is gonna talk about today So Brad come on up here So cloud honoring Hopefully y'all saw during one of the keynotes when we had Glenn Ferguson from Wells Fargo and he mentioned the need for compliance One of the ways you you get compliance is having a very solid auditing support Auditing, you know enterprises expect you to have auditing support your customers expect to be able to audit and Verify that unauthorized access to to their data and resources is not occurring So putting that all together one of the things we've driven into open stack And it's available in ice house for everyone is a Standard-based auditing Support and how we do Our standards these days is is is pretty pretty pretty cool What we do is we take the standard to the open stack community They throw a lot of tomatoes at it The standards guys go off and cry for a while and get their Kleenex Then they come back and they iterate on the standard and they get it to the point where the open stack community likes it And then the result of that is a very relevant standard and so when you have something like standard auditing you can now start using standard tools and Tools that'll work and your stuff will now work in any open stack environment there's no vendor lock-in when it comes to auditing when you do hybrid cloud and You're using different environments. It'll all use the standard audit format, which is tremendous benefit to our customers And so one of the things we're going to show today is a tool that can take these audit events that are coming out of open stack just configure it and they start generating it and It is a security tool to help you track when bad things are happening And so the bad thing that's going to happen is you've got a disgruntled person who's going to go off in a very short amount of time and Rapidly kill a lot of application instances. So I wanted to thank you Todd start the demo. I pray that it works So this is the open stack dashboard Yeah, please go ahead Okay, so there's open stack dashboard and somebody's going to log in and They're going to very rapidly start finding these application instances because they had access on their last day of work and start destroying them leaving their mark and While this is happening Events are being generated by open stack these cadf standard events very easy to parse and very easy to do Analysis on they're all flowing to an IBM product called Q radar It's a security event information Tool and here all the events you're seeing it in Q radar a lot of these events are you know server was Delete a specified server was succeeded And so you can take a look at these events And very quickly here. We're going to go off to the dashboard for Q radar If you look at Q radar, you'll see that There are the notifications Hey, these are the events that happen specified server and You'll see that these are a severe offense We have a trigger in the product that says if you see this happening That's considered a moderately severe offense and you can go click on the offense So give a minute here to go ahead and click on the offense and here you can see the severity of the offense You scroll down a little bit you can also see which user was the jerk, right? there's the list of the events as well and You know What will happen here is this basically it but you're you're able to see what's happening in your environment You have it all tracked and that's our demo Thank you, Brad Let me see if I can get out of this now Okay, so, you know, I wanted folks to see that to see the power of the type of You know investments that that are being made into the infrastructure now And I think you know notifications, you know weren't there It was something that you know We saw the need to go and do and build in and and now we're all able to take advantage of it You know I use the example with Q radar obviously our product tied together with it But you know this will apply to anybody who now who wants to take advantage of standard notifications that are there So it's one of the exciting things that actually are in the monitoring You know in in the types of tools that we're putting together to make available to you Okay Wish the clicker worked, okay So we're gonna have a few sessions at 950 not too long from now doing great on time You guys will get a little break in between maybe Tammy van Holven one of our distinguished engineers Tammy say hi. Hi there's Tammy We'll talk to us about work that that we're doing out of our system and technology Group stg on various technologies and how open stack plays a role across our product set Something that IBM has made a very large significant investment is open stack everywhere We have a common set of code that all of the IBM teams get to Pick up and use that we develop together with you know the community code that's being done with was that stack then being hardened and Given to our teams to work on hardened in the sense that it you know meets the IBM Sort of standards around how we we have software distributed inside and then you know She'll talk about things that are going on in compute storage and network some of the extensions and rest API work that's going on there as well as automation work that that we've got going on in process automation, so please hang around for Tammy and Some of the exciting news of course was a boom to on power 8 that We we announced I don't know if you've been to the boost to see the hardware and talk a little bit with the folks there That in our in our booth has been the most exciting and popular Demonstration that we have going on and it's really just hardware and a discussion that you can have but very excited with that Yes, the different things. Yeah, we'll talk about it Okay, so actually Andrew will be talking about smart cloud orchestrator and we'll get to that No, come on. Okay, so with this chart what the hell is going on so Andrew trussman our distinguished engineer in the back here Andrew Andrew will be smart talking about smart cloud orchestrator So, you know in the past You know our systems were like pets Right we knew them. We loved them. They fell over. We cared for them We made sure they were pampered and fed and everything was wonderful And you never wanted your you know pretty little kitty system to die on you, right? It was you had to keep it available and up all the time and you know that those were the important things You really took care of your poor pet, you know So the analogy these days is that systems are like cattle, right? We we in the cloud world you can stand things up in such short order that Availability no longer depends on keeping the poor little kitty alive and well all the time, right? It really depends on how fast you can go and stop and restart things So, you know systems are more like cattle You can have lots and lots of them Doesn't matter. They're no longer pets No care in feeding you you need and you know another one you just add it and grow it You don't like it you shoot it and you know it it's gone. It kind of goes with the cowboy theme, I guess So within IBM we have technology that we place around open stack our orchestrator product is one of those With it you obviously can do you know deployments And take advantage of of course the the open stack API is in the work that's been done there but then you know sometimes you really need to manage and manage the installation in a way with orchestration and Do it with tools that visually allow you to understand what's happening in the flows and in the timing in the events and and Andrew will talk to you about how the orchestrator product then goes and work. So obviously he's very creative in his charts I asked everybody to you know, give me a chart and Andrew was clearly the most creative. Thank you Andrew So Michael for worry Michael, I knew you were here. I saw you there. He is Michael for so at 1150 Michael's going to talk to you a little bit about what we're doing with software and open stack You know, where's the future going? How are the things that we've we've done and launched into the software environment working? Are you going to talk at all about cloud foundry on top of? Open stack at all or not in this time Not in any depth. Okay Great. Thank you so if you're very interested in what we're doing in our own public clouds and Are around at 1150 you'll get a chance to to hear quite a bit more detail and give some questions into Michael Okay, so, you know our band has been growing I'll give a little plug the cloud foundry at this point, too We're seeing the same kind of trajectory as the early days now of open stack Where people got behind the project and decided to put commitment into it and code and people and partners we did our initial oh You know announcement that we had our platinum partners together That we're going to go and build out cloud foundry since then we filled all the gold seats And we've got a whole pile of gold members a couple more I don't think they're even listed on here yet and and there's another class of Silver members by the time I think we get to the point where we have our foundations that up We'll have 30 or 40 more silver members in behind this very exciting to see people come together understand the value at the path layer and Start to invest there So our expectation is you know This is the next space to really go watch as as we go and build up infrastructure around open stack Individual contributions here just like an open stack growing very quickly So what's it do for us IBM has built a product we call blue mix. It's in beta and You know the idea here is that Your developer doesn't need to know anything about what's going on down underneath right that they're able to With Lightning speed, you know in a day Take services that are there use the build packs that are there to essentially go and quickly hook together an application and get things moving And be able to then expand and scale in that same space So if you haven't seen the demo you can come down to the booth to look at that But also I you know as I look at this the best way to get involved is to go actually participate in the trial The beta is out there For those of you in the room who are interested in mobile technologies The the blue mix environment contains also a set of mobile SDKs that allow you to then build up your mobile applications So there's Server site code, you know JavaScript as well as client site JavaScript. It uses again open technologies at its root In the product. It's based on the Cordova work that's done out at Apache And that allows you to essentially code up and take advantage of the platform native platform capabilities of iOS devices of Android devices of Blackberry devices of Microsoft devices palm devices right all those things Maintained in one community and as the operating systems improve change patch that community As a group keeps up with that makes it available to everybody so again open technologies are in behind even our mobile work That's going on here in blue mix. So go to blue mix net you can join Join the beta and get involved and try it for yourself If not, if you want to just take a look, please come down to the booth You can also go down there and sign up for the beta as well too So let's see a couple more things Almost done IBM sessions and demos so there's been many sessions and demos and things that we've done. There's a whole timetable of demos down at the booth You can please just come down and visit take a look and if there's something there that you'd like to see you You're not going to be able to be there at some time slot ask one of the booth personnel And they can range a demo for you as well too We try to be flexible The Oculus Rift is also down there. So if you put it on and see Chris left, I was gonna make fun of them There's a there's a few games in there that you can look at and see you're immersed in this 3d environment Chris Ferris one of our deez here. He put it on and he was going up in a roller coaster He leaned back and he fell down on the ground. It was quite funny to go and watch so and we have video of it We're gonna place it out on YouTube But so come down join it take a look at it. It's a lot of fun and And get to see so There are some more technical sessions that are still left in for the week at the top one of the things that We've seen is people, you know pick up open-stack code and and then they can't quite figure out how to put it together in Something large and complex and highly available You know usually what you see out there in the web and you know looking Searching through Google our instructions really how to build a small developer cluster right nothing nothing huge So the technical team is taking a look at that. How do we go off and build highly available? You know really performance system. So so that's going to be on here is one of our technical things Federated identity federated service provider work Brad I believe you'll be in and part of that as well policy abstractions and neutron Again, these are on Thursday hybrid clouds with open-stack bridging the two worlds And of course, we're doing a lot of work in the heat project Working with another open-standard Tosca that comes out of Oasis to then use that drive interoperability across multiple communities whether it's Heat or juju or other frameworks that come around So it's kind of exciting to see what's happening in heat in a translator project is one of the ways we're doing that so Thank you very much. There's I appreciate your time Again stop by say hi to us all Many of the team are here right now, but we'll have more folks at the booth if you're looking for more information on some of these technologies I talked about Open stack org obviously all know right cloud foundry.org of course IBM's Smart cloud technologies our orchestrator technology Etc. These charts will be available so be able to use the shortened link and go and find out more information and behind it So so that was what I had Where sessions will start in just a little bit here give everybody a chance to stand up take a stretch Look around invite some friends over Twitter a little bit. I know you all get your devices out We're all set and and we'll get right back to it in just a little bit here So thank you about 10 minutes guys