 Okay welcome back to the final wrap-up of day three, wrapping up of the OpenStack Summit. I'm John Furrier, I'm joined Jeff Frick, my co-host this week, Dave Vellante is back at the ranch at wikibon.org and doing all his research and business that we have going on there and this is our wrap-up of day three and wrapping up the conference. Our thoughts, our final thoughts from Silicon Angle and Wikibon about what this event is all about. Jeff I want to say that one of the things that really impressed me about this event was on a personal level, seeing open source moving into the enterprise at such a large scale is cool and so I feel like that's a good thing and then from a business standpoint I just see massive opportunity and growth at all levels, it's the perfect storm. Every theater of innovations booming, the business models, the technology and then the demand on the customer side so all those things are essentially all on fire and exploding in a great way so that's positive. But kind of the funny thing is that theCUBE is new to this community so one kind of interesting reaction was seeing the reaction from folks here about theCUBE and questions why aren't you at the other shows and I think why we're here is we want to highlight this growth because we see this at an inflection point and we want to shine the cameras on the people behind the scenes and we talked to Jim Curry from Rackspace who's really humble and Brad Himeyam, Mark Collier, Lou Mormon, the other folks, the unsung heroes, these guys really did a great job and deserve props. We have some startups, we had MetaCloud, just an amazing scale background, we have other emerging startups, we have the big guys, IBM, HP, HP here, basically laying out, look at Meg Whitman, this is her thing, the cloud will be one of the centerpieces of HP's comeback, their turnaround strategy so just really, really amazing and then obviously the successful formula of the OpenStack Foundation and how they managed it, how they got through that potential first chasm of challenge which was the hype factor, they've crossed that and just in general a great show, David Floyer said it's the best analyst money's ever been to, a lot of user-centric stuff, really, really great event. Yeah, I think the thing that struck me, two things, one is just the passion and I'm sure within the development community of all the contributors they feel that passion every day because they're living it in code and hopefully we here at the Cube were able to bring some of that passion to you, the viewers, that was really all over this conference and as you could see it within the folks that visited the Cube. The other thing that fascinates me is really building a business on open source and not just the traditional way that people did it before where you added services or training or this or that around open source but like Rackspace is an example of really transforming kind of the juju of that company because it was nothing like that, it did not have a passionate community of people out in the world that really cared about whether Rackspace was important or not and now they've got behind this initiative and changed the direction of the ship, like one of the guests said, that's why he loves working there, they're not afraid to change the direction of the ship and now build off this really almost rabid community that's developing all this new technology, taking it to the enterprise and you know there's passion in a traditional startup around a core group of people but this really leverages a passion on a much greater scale, it's like the Egyptian Spring, I mean these people are really excited and they're changing their companies and building their companies in different ways around open source, I really like that. And the passion thing, just to highlight we had Anita Kunoh here from the Genome Project about getting women involved in programming, you know that's the kind of passion you're seeing, obviously you know it's getting contributed from women, just key, some notes I have here just as key themes, infrastructure as code, that's to amplify the DevOps movement, you know see more of that networking services in software, this modern data center, this modern infrastructure, agile based software based models and then obviously interoperability and this is something that we didn't get to talk much about because it's still early in being debated, Jim Curry talked about he's on the board of that big debate, the big thing happening in OpenStack right now beyond the fact of its success is this one major threshold issue and that's interoperability and I'm really glad to see HP involved in this because to tell you why, HP has a lot of experience in interoperability, they've seen that movie before with client server and the PC revolution where industry standard interfaces, industry standard stuff, multi-vendor support is critical and HP has a lot of leadership there so making that interoperability work will be the next big challenge and we're going to be watching that. Other things that we heard that I was interested, I took a note on bare metal as a service, that was a term I heard, a lot of telco discussions and also we heard from MetaCloud and Mirantis is the service models are changing and we heard a comment, I forget who made it, that we don't know, it was Martín Casada, we don't know which one's going to work, there's going to be some failures, there's going to be some successes. How are people going to scale the services piece? Are you going to co-locate a public cloud inside a data center? That sounds interesting. Will it work? Yeah, will open source work. This is some of the trends that are orbiting around here. Yep, and the other one I think is, I think it was, we've had a lot of guests, it was SAR I think, that talked about the smart phone analogy and we brought it up a couple more times, but at the end of the day, we just want what we want and we want it delivered and we want it to work. So whether that's delivered by a private cloud, a public cloud, a hybrid cloud, some application that's drawing from multiple sources doesn't really matter. And again, I think it's interesting how the kind of consumer internet and the expectations and the behavior of the applications that we interact with every day are driving the change and the adoption of the enterprise and on one hand, it's crazy times for all these CIOs trying to keep track of all this stuff, but on the other hand, the transformative impact of these technologies both on efficiency and scale and costs are really phenomenal. It is really a new wave and you do really feel that here at the show and hopefully you've got a feel for that out in the audience. Well, I think one of the exciting things is can they cross the barrier over and get the SLAs, get those kind of requirements for the enterprise, obviously the service provider. It's really, really exciting. I just want to say thanks to everyone watching out there. I want to thank Mick and Kenny for doing a great job here on the ground. I want to thank the OpenStack Foundation. We wish we could have had them on. They just got an email, but we're going to be breaking down. We're exhausted. We probably could have squeezed them in, but they did want to come on theCUBE. They're just so busy. It's such a successful show. We will have follow-up blog posts and remote calls with those guys and continue to follow them. We'll certainly get the next show. We will not miss the OpenStack Summit. Not sure we'll be at Hong Kong, but we'll certainly be here if it's in North America, but I want to thank those guys. They allowed us to get here and of course I want to thank ServiceMesh because they stepped up with the sponsorship to support us. They really said, we love theCUBE so much. We want to help support that and want to thank them for their donation for helping us. Thank you, ServiceMesh. You guys are great. Learned a lot about your company. I met the co-founder last night and of course, Sean Douglas knows about theCUBE. He's from XEMC. We had him on. Thanks to ServiceMesh and thanks for everyone for watching. OpenStack is hitting the mainstream. Is that an inflection point? A lot of signal, not a lot of noise. Let's see if we can keep that up here in this community and a lot of great experiences. Great conversations. Jeff, thanks for stepping in for Dave Vellante. You did a great job and that's a wrap here at OpenStack Summit. SiliconANGLE's exclusive coverage for the OpenStack Summit 2013 from Portland, Oregon. Good night and keep watching SiliconANGLE.com.