 Hi, good afternoon everybody. I'm Deep Paracharji, head of product at Zero Stack. And with me is Shatapa, director of product management at Zero Stack. Today we're going to talk about some things that we've done in the past year and what's new and upcoming. But before that, a brief announcement. If you go down to booth D3, we're actually giving out some fabulous, exciting prizes, some instant rewards. Go talk to our sales guys and hear more about our story and get some gifts. OK. So as you can see, we've recently gone announce the Gartner Cool vendor. So at Zero Stack, we essentially do cloud slightly differently from everybody else in this shop floor. Essentially, you have the notion of public cloud where it's easy to use, less operational headaches, you kind of pay as you grow. But you have less control. It's inconsistent in all compliance and security issues, all that stuff. In private cloud, it's very complex. Often you need an army of professional services to kind of deploy your private cloud. What Zero Stack does is kind of somewhere in between. Essentially, we give you the public cloud experience with the control and compliance of a private cloud. So how do we do it? Essentially, if you look at, if you break down a cloud, it's got four pieces. You got user workflows, operations, management apps, and data. In the case of public cloud, it lives in the public cloud vendor's premises. In the case of private cloud, it lives in your premises. What Zero Stack does is we've broken it up into two pieces. The management, the applications, and data, the things that you really care about as a customer, that stays on your premises. And the user workflows, the operations, those are things that we can constantly innovate. Those are delivered via SAS portal. So you get the control, visibility, the data location, no noisy neighbors. You get great performance. You get all of that. Then you also get the feature agility, the real time insides, dashboards, all of that stuff together. So breaking it down even further, what are the pieces that you get? So on your premise, we ship with our own hardware. So these are, we call them Zblocks. These are hyperconverged servers. And the architecture is very different from everybody else. Essentially, controller less, symmetrics, scale out architecture. And it is self-healing. It's HA by default. So you do not have to configure HA separately. And it comes with, obviously, software-defined storage. You got multiple pool types, depending on the type of workload you want to set up. It's got SDN. And on the SAS side, you have the multi-site management. It's designed to be multi-site from the ground up. It's got capacity planning, monitoring, analytics, approval, self-service workflows. You've got the app store, you've got all of that. And looking a little bit more into the Zblock, it comes in multiple flavors, standard, compute-heavy, storage-heavy, varied flavor, depending on your needs. And it is 100% pure open stack, the API that you get. So why would something like Zero Stack be useful to you? Well, the focus is on apps and not on infrastructure. The idea is to get your infrastructure done quickly so that you can start building your apps, because that's where you make the money. It's a self-healing open stack, HA by default. So you save a lot of time money in your regular operational costs. The upgrades are seamless. You do not need dedicated open stack experts to kind of set up, build, operate your cloud. And the controller-less architecture means you need less hardware. OK, but that was 1.0. Those are the things that we essentially shipped last year and our customers are enjoying that. But we are also adding new stuff. We'd like to give a sneak preview of what we're doing. So first thing, we're adding support for Liberty. So open stack Liberty support. I think it's not very good. So what are the feature highlights? So first of all, zero stack is going hybrid and adding support for app portability. And we'll talk more about that. We now have a very rich app store. We've added support for placement policies, intelligent placement policies, adding support for basic data protection and object store. So let's look at each of them and then we'll do some demos. So essentially, zero stack now offers an app porter. What it does is it lets you migrate workloads back and forth from VMware, migrate workloads from AWS, view workloads in AWS. You view an existing workloads, you deploy workloads, you migrate workloads from zero stack to other public clouds. So the Z app store, as you can see, this is a screenshot of an actual app store. The goal here is to make it possible for customers to deploy applications very easily, very quickly. And these are not the only list. You've got all kinds of applications. We provide application templates, image templates. Customers can upload their own templates. They can selectively download a few from our public app store. We support all types of application templates, whether you want to build a multi-node Cassandra cluster, a multi-node Elk stack, or a MongoDB, or just as simple as WordPress, or create your own dev box. We provide all of those. Right. We've also added support for placement of policy. Let's say you have a pretty large enterprise and you have some departments that have certain special needs or chiming in, chipping in with a lot of money and need gold and silver type of workloads, whereas others are running test dev. You can create policies where certain VMs land on a certain type, get a specialized type of resources, SSD hardware storage, let's say. We've made it very simple. You create policies, you allocate them to business units, you connect them to projects, VMs, and then you sit back and let the policy take effect. So essentially, whenever somebody creates a VM in a given project or in a business unit, these land in the right place. So this lets you do all kinds of things. When you have all the zero stack hardware, you can dedicate hardware to certain groups by creating policies that place workloads on those groups. You can do affinity, anti-affinity rules, things like that, you can do all of that. We also realized that customers would want to protect their data outside of the zero stack system, so we provide data protection by allowing customers to connect, mount external storage via NFS and then we can back up and restore from external storage that is mounted by NFS and you can restore from there as well. So now let's go through a little bit of a demo. So this is live, bear with us. So what Sudabha is showing out here is a workspace, a project dashboard and we're going in and creating a new project. And as you can see, you can set quotas, you have templates, you can also specify whether a project is gonna be short lived, long lived, all that stuff, but here she's just created a project and let's go inside that project and right now there aren't any apps but she's got an app and she just wants to deploy a dev box and what is a dev box? It's a very simple system, I'm a developer, I want to create an environment which is loaded with my features and I'm a Python developer, I want to deploy my stuff in Ubuntu, I pick a setting, I choose a few things here and there. Let her go through them actually. Go ahead, go down and let's see. And let's say I'm a Python developer, I'm selecting the Python runtime, I want to select Django and I have some work to do with a Python LDAP package so I'm gonna list that and I said deploy so voila, I kind of get a dev box very quickly and I can move on, right? So I was telling you it's live, whenever it's live it doesn't work. Looks like we've hit a bug, anyway. Let's go to the next one, that's okay. Are you gonna do WordPress? All right, the demo gods are not with us today, partially at least. So here you can deploy a WordPress template and when you kind of run it, at the end of it you get a complete WordPress server installed. All right, so this is getting deployed. Let's try and do add some cloud providers now, right? As we go to business unit, I can add an external cloud provider. So let's try to add AWS provider. So it shows we're successfully connected so we've created the provider. Right now we don't have any VMs there from AWS so let's go down and select you, I think US West One would work. So we have these VMs that are running in US West in Amazon and we can select and we can decide to migrate. So essentially migrates the workload. First of all, it lets you provide other details that you may have to select from this thing. So what does T2 MicroMap to your world? You can provide those details and then you say confirm migration and then it starts the process of migration. Well, go to the next one. Let's go to add external cloud provider. Let's add AWS vSphere as the provider. Go to another one, you can go there and add VMware as the provider, provide the details. So you're able to connect to the VMware environment and then you can see the data stores and folders in VMware and kind of migrate them one by one. So that gives you an idea of the fact that we make it very simple to select an external cloud whether it's an internal virtualized environment or AWS and migrate from there. So that's kind of the demo that things are still in work and these are a sneak preview of what's coming in 2.0. So what we have, you can actually try ZeroStack out for free. Give it a try, zerostack.com, try my cloud for 30 days. We will create a business unit for you. You have full access to it, run your workloads. If you have any questions, we come down to boot D3 and if you take a demo with us, we're happy to give you some exciting prizes as well. Thank you. Questions, anybody?