 Well good morning everybody Thank you. Glad to see people are awake Given my sleeping patterns I may pass out during the Presentation someplace here, but hopefully you guys can prop me back up and we can make it through it I'm gonna switch over now to to the presentation We've just sort of been scrolling through some of the IBM sessions that you can come and see during the track today We had a nice video for you, but I'm not gonna trust going through the network to actually play it right now So I'm Todd Moore IBM's Board of Director member here at the OpenStack Foundation I've sort of been with it since the beginning here having worked with Jonathan and Jim Curry and others to shape where we were going with the foundation aspects I'm based in Austin, so I did quite a bit of consulting to put together what the foundation would look like and Help write the bylaws those things OpenStack has been just a phenomenal Undertaking with just rapid growth that you we never would have expected the You know last conference In Atlanta was you know extremely well attended, but if you look at what we're doing here in In Paris, obviously it's a great venue people want to come But we you know we had 4,500 online registrations will have over 5,000 people by the end of The summit just incredible growth and only two years and I think it speaks a lot to the quality of the community and The exciting work that's going on here in cloud If you look at the the voice that we have the foundation collects up marketing information It's it's really a discussion now in the media around OpenStack and and Amazon And I think that really attests to how rapidly people have decided to come in and Adopt and use OpenStack and these days our customers come to us and they say hey We've decided to go with OpenStack And therefore can you help us? Can you show us what to go and do so a lot of what we'll do in the IBM track today? We'll be to talk a little bit about how we're doing it helping customers along the way So with me is is Dave Lindquist Dave lunch and stand up and say hi Dave is our CTO for our cloud and smarter infrastructure work and an IBM fellow and He'll be helping me here today with the presentation so Why don't we get get started? Clicker So OpenStack, you know that this phenomenon that we have here right if you saw the the kickoff that The key note Jim Zemlin did from the Linux Foundation, right Jim Jim highlighted the Impact that open source was having but it's not a new phenomenon All right, this is something that you could trace your roots back say to the HTTP server that Really became the fundamental building block that you know businesses like IBM's web sphere application server built around and every Other industry player who built application service, etc around I grew up around and and it was because at one point We had many many different implementations all of us were doing something different and we realized that Gee, there's a piece of plumbing here that we really need to share and use to Get to commonality that as a result of that will allow everybody to interoperate Make the experience much better for the user and as a result of that a big marketplace build up around it And you see that time and time again as we've progressed through time, right? And along that large arrow there. There's many other open source projects that we see having a real impact now on the industry Whether it's mobile social big data or cloud Open source projects are are playing an ever-increasing dominant role of setting essentially the de facto standard We're not out in some de jure standard body sitting arguing over parentheses and dots and you know What we're going to do in structure in the architecture We're in here working on real code that works for people that as a result of that is a Layer that everybody can count on and and then build a business around it's it's it's a different way of getting to the same end point It's very quick It moves, you know at lightning pace with all of us involved and it's it's that change to that model that is has really turned things around So as we look at At open stack We see open stack as a fundamental technology, but we see other technologies around it that are also having You know a major impact on the cloud environment There's essentially a cloud open cloud platform that is coming about As a result of first the work that we see an open stack, but then bringing in technologies like docker Whether it's docker as a service on top of open stack or docker underneath open stack Providing a way of of getting to you know rapid high performance Infrastructure underneath it not having to start up a VM every time you want to take something down and move it Those types of things that that docker can provide That will you know give us different usage patterns that will enable Our customers And all of you to to get to the kind of experience that you need for the application that you're running And of course We're seeing a layering and we'll talk about that a little later In more detail, but at the paths layer above open stack projects like cloud foundry just have Communities that are exciting to work with that have Attracted a large base what we found when we're working with With any open source project. It's a community that matters more than anything and You know, I thank all the folks in open stack for how well they work together And how much energy they put into the community because that's really what makes the difference here And in the paths space if you're looking for an exciting community to go and work with cloud foundry Is that community and they're getting very close to actually standing up their foundation much as as open stack is So it's an exciting time to be using open technologies in cloud So no matter where you're coming into this picture, whether you're off-prem on-prem how you're trying to integrate There's a set of open technologies underneath that that can be used so that you get the flexibility you want You don't get locked into a vendor and you can come and be part of that community and and add to What's happening and I think You know from our point of view that's that's the exciting thing to do so as You know founding sort of platinum sponsors here in in open stack We've had a long history of being involved with you know the variety of projects Some people call us the adults in the room sometimes because we work really in Primarily in core projects at least at first we've expanded that that out but You know our emphasis always comes down to what are the things that are either, you know enterprise customers or service provider customers are asking for Oftentimes that's resilience hardening work that we go and do in security that The result end result of that is people can count on the infrastructure so For instance, you know as we got going and in the release as I'll say Grizzly, right We we worked there to really stabilize apis we work to improve what was going on in the infrastructure for security Add services like olof that people were looking for In You know projects like nova You know we came up with 21 percent of the design enhancements really To help people see the value be able to extend it more quickly Uh And as a result of that Stability started to happen And we continued that through Havana our contributions there again included things like sammel and The basic support for federated identity You know we had to do staging around that. I think people who watch the keynotes Saw cern in in that activity come up and talk about the federated identity. Well back in Havana We were laying the Building blocks of that into there in order to be able to go and do that and We'll talk more about the the project and collaboration that we've had with seren in there And of course as we moved on into ice house now IBM has had a significant role been one of the top contributors into the The code base and of course, you know, we continue to improve the quality of the code improve the test case coverages Do the internationalization work do a lot of the heavy lifting underneath in Building that uh that functional base that everybody can depend on So it as we've gone through this time IBM contributors have continued to grow and uh, I think in the last release we had led a hundred and nine 109 in in the last release cycle of IBMers who were, you know directly contributing Into the projects, but of course we have a much bigger group of folks Who's sitting back at the ranch working on the products that that we go and produce Um in total, I think we've got a community of about 1200 folks who actively are Participating in an open stack in some way shape or form. So it's it's a big deal for us And uh, we're very happy and proud of what we're doing here Okay So on did you know one of the The key use cases that that continue to come back to us as our customers are looking To be able to do hybrid Cloud right and and that's not always easy Especially when it comes to making sure that what you're doing is secure Right, you want to be able to essentially have single sign on between the instance that you have In your enterprise and the instance that you have out in your your cloud say you want to have Something that spans out into the cloud So the work that's been done in security, especially brad tople here and the team see martin elli others To help bring that support into into keystone has is just Enabling that use case that our customers have told us time and time again. They want to have and You know often the cases Enterprises would love to have something on site But then they want to have that ability to either flex out into the cloud Or they want to be able to do some work out in a development environment in the cloud and then be able to easily move that back on Prem and and that Work is is essentially Making that happen So we've been the number one contributor in cinder across all releases I think we were 33 of the cinder work here for this last release We've added of course some Additional work on cinder storage volumes Uh next chart. We'll talk a little bit more about cinder But you know ibm has had a consistent influence in the cinder project moving that along making it Useful for for everybody Again, it goes back to our central team hardening the core making it What our customers are asking for There's been a lot of upgrades into horizon I don't know how many people use the horizon dashboard anybody using horizon Good, okay Having a consistent dashboard and experience is something that's really important And making it perform it is very important And with the work that's been going on in horizon We're allowing you know quite a bit of more work to now be done down in the client So the experience is much faster. We're not doing server side rendering In compute Now there's been a lot of work in nova to Help Enable of the future right to to be able to then quickly add new extensions into the apis And and that work has has really been going on here in juno and that will set the future for us as we go forward and then of course Interoperability is is really key The work that's going on in ref stack and def core if you haven't been paying attention to that Is is just essential for our future because that's what's going to allow customers to be able to pick and choose and move between clouds And having that consistent interface across them is is going to be so so important So in in ref stack IBM has been the top contributor in there 75 of the code that is is in ref stack has come from IBM And uh, you know, it's it's it's something that will allow us as we move forward To be able to test in with everybody's instances that essentially they they will interoperate that they have the apis And they behave the way that you want them to so That Coupled with the def core work with defined sections of code that and capabilities that every vendor needs to to have Will essentially now start to enable that flexibility interoperability Lack of vendor lock-in that people want to have so Those are the types of contributions that ibm is trying to make into the organization I just wanted to there's lots and lots of of things that we've done I want to just sort of hit a couple in a little more more detail as As some of the team was around and and We thought they were kind of important for the use cases our customers have been talking about So, uh, we I said a little bit about keystone and the federation work Steve Martinelli, Steve here. No, Steve's not here Steve, uh, from my team, uh, worked, um Who was it from, uh, CERN? I'm sorry then Merrick Denny They partnered up to do the federation work that you heard about on the on stage That's that's where the code came from and That federation support is of course allowing CERN to then be able to link up instances and they're very excited about it They of course will be going off to the summit in vancouver They got a free trip and i'll make sure that steve makes it to vancouver as well too Because I think he deserves it for the the work that he was doing there Um So we work with a lot of of folks in regulated industries Um, especially uh, banking industries as an example Auditing is something that comes up All the time when you you talk to folks It was one of the first things that that customer set came back to us when we brought open stack out to them And uh, they said we need this. What are you going to do about it? Your IBM help us so We'd been involved out with DMTF working in the cat of standard and Saw the opportunity to take advantage of that work. So here's a example of a standard that was being developed actually coming into open stack And as a result of of that building that into The support that we've been doing in in keystone Our customers are very excited, especially in the regulated industries And I know those guys don't get excited very often That work has also been extended into what we're doing with federation so that You know the logging that's happening on authentication, etc is is now Being picked up as part of keystone as well too And that will again enable that hybrid use case across cloud In the dashboard Our team has been working with Very popular technologies like jquery and angular j s IBM's actually a founding sponsor of jquery And we've now gone and improved the horizon dashboard by including that support And as a result things render much more quickly on the client side And we think the experience has been greatly improved and it's much easier to now code and It make changes and do customizations the way you'd like to So I mentioned a little about cinder so we've got volume replication support now That means when you've got a problem when something fails and crashes you can reconnect into that You know remote backup that you've gone and made Seamlessly right at high speed so that when you do have a problem and you need to reconnect Cinder now is an enabler and doesn't get in your way We've also added NFS support into the elastic storage work that we've been doing there And and that's something if you're you're looking at Elastic storage you can should go and take a look now. There's some posic work Work that we've gone and done there In orchestration heat hot templates The you know We see you know, for instance, we've had a lot of discussions with giga spaces recently, right? brad here in the front and The demand for the sort of common template common model has come across very strongly and as a result of that We're seeing You know sort of an influx of people very very interested in toska Tosca is a standard that's out there in oasis another instance of a Standard being brought into what we're doing And as a result of the work that the team has gone and done with toska We're now able to you know Deploy on a template model And and we think this is is is really going to to take off as we move through time here Couple of things that we did we provided a translator now that will for instance allow us to translate To juju charms and we're doing some interoperability with that mark shuttleworth was in here in the previous Presentation we've been working with mark seam matt rickowski from from our group and and tomas spitzer and others have have been helping to go make that happen and We've also added in cli not very exciting having a command line interface, but for debugging it's exciting So now we can incrementally do debug and and and work with templates and not have to restart everything and And for the guys who have been working in heat and hot. That's that's been a great feature And of course, we've expanded that Metering work and the catf support right into salameter as well too. So You know a long laundry list of things up here continued effort by ourselves to go harden build up the qa Make the the projects better and of course Handle the enterprise use cases that that our customers have been asked for So at this time I I want to bring up dav linguist Dave I'll hand this over to you. You can go and advance it Thank you, Todd and thanks for the overview of The areas that we've been investing in Within within open stack as Todd went through this I hope you saw a lot of core contributions and what we consider The critical areas that do need advancements in an open stack in particular in the security space As well as an audit as well as in some of the things we'll see in compliance This is these are the areas that are continually being pushed on by enterprises And we've also contributed a lot of technology a lot of code with the community And really furthering how we build a highly distributed share nothing I as environment we pretty much look at all our investments And open stack as how can we Participate within the community to continue to drive open stack as the leading I as in the industry and and I think arguably Open stack Is a shining example in the cloud space of driving communities and driving and driving open technologies Um myself in partnership with angel Diaz and Todd have really been the primary sponsors in IBM For years now and driving our participation in open stack our participation in cloud foundry our participation in docker our participation In the oasis standards particularly around Uh topologies in toska as well as Critical advances in w3c and oasis and link data And in apis to support lifecycle federation of data things that'll keep emerging and importance As we start driving higher and higher in these levels of an api economy Now if you look if you step back and you look at what's going on in the industry You look at the way businesses and in particular application developers are starting to use Cloud to accelerate the delivery of new business processes new business models new business applications And then you look at how the it shops and how the clouds public clouds provider clouds are forming To make apis and services available And then you start looking at how it's being hosted on an infrastructure model You will have seen over the last few years a very natural architecture has been emerging An architecture that's been emerging and evolving and maturing at an api layer Often returned as an api economy at the top At an operating environment or a past layer To really accelerate with the composition of services And of course with this community at the infrastructure layer more in a software defined environment It is critical it is critical for the acceleration Of the creation of these applications The portability the ability to support hybrid clouds and for the many advances that we have Core growing vibrant communities at each of these layers So at the bottom obviously open stack is the center of a core vibrant community for the infrastructure as a service The middle layer We've teamed up with a number of companies On cloud foundry at a past layer At a platform as a service layer that community is growing very rapidly In the acceptance from developers the growth we're seeing with offerings like blue mix It's just phenomenal the developers love this environment If you haven't gone out there and used blue mix encourage you to give it a try You'll see what what the excitement is. Why are developers so excited? You'll see how fast and rapid you can compose An environment from run times to persistence data persistence to management to analytics to higher level Social cognitive services can come together in seconds And you can begin to construct your application You can begin to bring it out to market to the customers you want to use it test it iterate in a highly iterative dev ops manner Using dev ops services that are part of this offering that create a very collaborative development environment for you And at the highest layer in the apis we continue to drive towards open apis You're constantly seeing that many of these applications That are being developed are really A composition of services for the core run times, but also they're composing apis to build these applications They're leveraging services that are opened up as apis running all different places around the internet That's how many of these applications are created so rapidly So if you look at some of the core offerings That ibm has brought forward Recognize there are a lot of offerings and a lot of names. So let me see if I can start clarifying The core sets of technologies and how to think about it When you look at open stack open stack itself We deliver open stack as software Through a cloud manager with open stack It is basically how you get going very rapidly with an open stack four-year private environments within your data center it supports All it's basically juno horizon interfaces and it also supports multiple regions. So it's it's Really a great way to get started a great way to start delivering the value of open stack and bringing it into more of a hybrid construct That next layer We have an orchestrator Think of the orchestrator as the ability to deploy workloads Into the different cloud environments supporting open stack deployments So whether it's public shared environments private managed environments Or within your center. That's what the orchestrator is doing in conjunction with that deployment It is managing the policies. It's managing the integration with your it processes It's managing the automation to set up so you're monitoring events backup recovery all the Elements you need to manage the lifecycle as your applications roll through that progression Of early dev through various levels of tests pre-prod and into production. That's what's going on with the orchestrator Recently and we'll talk a little bit more about this in a number of sessions. We've announced a IBM cloud open stack services That is in the software environment a managed Open stack as a service. That's what it is For businesses, what's exciting in addition to having a managed open stack Is it's running in the dedicated A portion of open stack. So in other words, it is a private managed cloud For enterprises to get going very rapidly But also have 24 by 7 and sla's set up for that open stack environment So very exciting very new offering. You'll see a lot of add-ons Capabilities being added on that environment with best practices around workloads Extensions into the past areas extensions into the open api areas But this is this is something we're very excited about and with the pura system Think of that as a integrated system. You're integrating software and hardware This is all about workloads and workload optimizations And one of the core things we continue to evolve that code base with open stack One of the core things we're opening up inside there is support for the heat heat engine So you'll continue to see us push Heat with hot templates as a way to represent these patterns and deploy these patterns where they're deploying them With software with the cloud manager for open stack with the orchestrator and these hybrid environments in Managed environments with software or in integrated systems I know that's a lot a lot of options But those are the types of dynamics we see and the requirements coming in For enterprises to have that type of flexibility and that's how we're leveraging open stack through the breadth of our offerings Okay Looks like something died here Maybe the machine Beeping you'll go At the at the api layer a couple of things I want to want to note a lot of discussion Software economy a lot of discussion api economy When you go into business units and all industries around the world What you'll see in the excitement in these business units is how cloud is accelerating their strategies is accelerating their ability To go from ideas that they've envisioned Around new applications new business models new processes to instantiation. That's what's going on. That's what's creating all that excitement If you look at studies, you will see the companies that have embraced these types of open technologies and that have embraced in particular Cloud as a strategic part of their company. They are leaders in those industries They are disrupting those industries very rapidly. You can go through example after example What's happening To accelerate this instantiation. Of course, it's composition of the infrastructure. That's a core Of course, it's pulling the services together and how I compose the services the run times, etc But what's fundamentally accelerating it is this api economy when you look at just look at any typical Mobile application you will often see at least six if not a dozen apis being used for x from external systems You will see obviously payments. You'll see access into core data systems You'll see social Trending feeds coming into these applications typically you'll see them hooking into monitoring systems You'll see them hooking into security systems. What they're doing is composing Many aspects of that application through apis. That's why it's so critical to continue to keep these apis open And to continue to drive open technologies and open standards in this domain The platform layer The platform layer Is largely about an operating environment. It's largely about composition of services It's largely about creating an open ecosystem So when I say composition of services when you're developing an application, you're going to pick a runtime like node or ruby You're going to pick some data persistence like no sequel like like a mongo or cloudant You're going to pick maybe a relational A store depending on that application. You might need messaging requirements You're going to end up needing monitoring requirements log analytics security identity access control, etc The the platform layer what happens is the platform layer allows you to rapidly compose those services And in conjunction with the composition It integrates those services in the context of your project And with dev op services, you then have a collaborative development environment to manage Your versions or builds or deploys, etc in collaboration with other developers all integrated into this platform So folks can contribute to your application to your project In a collaborative manner all the tracking and governance that you need Into this project and then you can then make these capabilities this application available To the field to your customers subsets Broadset and you can start doing things like ab testing and start iterating towards your business outcome You couple that with an open set of apis and api management and integration with data sources And integration with other applications software as a service applications All of a sudden you're seeing why businesses are so excited and why there's so much momentum Around these open ecosystems in these open cloud environments and how cloud is changing their business how it is a fundamental part of their Of their business strategy excellent At the infrastructure layer preaching to the choir here obviously With the open stack community To me some of the things that are critical here are obviously the software defined environment the core compute storage networking What it's what it's affording us is the ability to rapidly compose The infrastructure in support of the needs of a workload And that will evolve over time over time we will develop more best practices more understanding of performance And workloads and backup recovery and security and you'll start seeing Best practices evolve with policies and patterns to support Certain types of workloads like a Hadoop workload like a transactional system like a mobile system Though that will start manifesting itself in patterns in support of these passes and then in support of this api economy We I think are at a very interesting point In the open stack community as Todd mentioned earlier a few years ago And i'm sure many of you are in this situation You are often asked by your customers your clients to start contrasting the different techniques proprietary stacks Open technology stacks different open technology cloud stacks And a lot of what we were leveraging was the architecture of open stack The design of open stack the community investing in open stack the growth that was occurring there at this point Over the last year the conversation to me has very much shifted to we strategically have chosen open stack Can you help us How and when to apply open stack to the different types of workloads that were that that were that were targeting So it's become very much How do how do we accelerate now the deployment and the use of open stack to these different workloads? And how does it help us in this hybrid emerging hybrid environment that that we're all See occurring with our with our workloads So that's to me why many of these core projects That us in the community are investing in are so important Many of them are very mature Some of them not as mature as it need to be the networking space We do need more focus in the networking space With neutron in particular Apis feel right the investment the community coming together feels right, but it does need maturity There's a few areas that we will find that start popping out and we'll have to nail that as as a community To really start accelerating the use of open stack at scale Okay, the cursor now Hybrid a couple of comments. I wanted to make on hybrid It is real it is happening today. It has been happening And it continues to evolve in a very rapid manner When I discussed these composition of apis or these services, these are running in multiple clouds around the internet When I work with customers my colleagues work with customers and I work with partners with customers What we see are a couple of requirements coming in over and over again. One is I want the ability To figure out where best to run my application. So I need a level of portability I need to support compliance. I maybe I have regulatory requirements on privacy or data Location, so I need the ability to place information and data or my workload in certain places I need to understand performance in slas for that placement I need to understand the finances. Maybe at some points, maybe in early development I'm looking for the for a cheaper less expensive place to host. Maybe as I accelerate this into production I start monetizing and running at scale. I'm zeroing in on slas I'm after the performance the backup the recovery the 24 by 7 So those are the kind of dimensions that you see in placement and the workloads themselves As mark discussed in his keynote. They are distributed heavily distributed You're constantly seeing what the industry likes to call system of engagements these new mobile social big data dashboards business processes being developed in a very rapid it model on cloud with this composition hooked into Core data systems and transactional systems more of a system of system of record model What that drives is not only placement. Where am I going to place this system of engagement? But how am I going to integrate these systems? How am I going to do the application and data integration? So sets of integration services are emerging and that's an area that we're investing heavily in is these integration services in this new model In addition to that you're seeing a push in brokerage brokering in management Not only brokering. How do I understand where is the best place to place my components elements in my workload? But how can I set up the policy? How can I set up what I need in events and monitoring and insecurity and backup and recovery? How can I hook this into my change my problem my incident systems? These are the things I need to run this workload in production in my environment to to have my business counting on it So these are the types of investments that when you go through any of our offerings You will see we are continually pushing the envelope on these hybrid capabilities How do you bring this two-speed it together around rapid iterations on the front ends? and optimizations deep optimizations of security workload management, etc on the back end and bringing analytics in to understand the Optimization so I can predict adages so I can optimize placement And so I can do extensive search and try to debug and figure what's going on That's what's happening in the hybrid space so a couple Couple offerings that I mentioned that I wanted to highlight And you'll see in our subsequent sessions or at our booth These these technologies and offerings The teams can take you through These capabilities can take you through the experience what you'll see the value that you get out of them as a user um, I'd mentioned the open cloud I mean the the cloud open stack services earlier again think of this as Managed open stack The dedicated portion so private of software very exciting offering Many many businesses Very interested in this capability The IBM cloud manager with open stack It's fully embracing open stack software distribution deployment configuration All the support you need with support for multiple regions the hybrid capabilities And one of the technologies I wanted to mention briefly before I introduce Brad Topol Is in the area of object stores a swift has been around for a while Swift is a very good object store And so one of the things we've done is brought the object store into the platform as a service layer So you will see this You will see this service as a composable service within the blue mix environment Within our platform as a service environment Which if I hadn't said earlier is at its core Based on the open community around cloud boundary So this is furthering the open ecosystem of services bringing swift in into a platform as a service layer And when you start thinking about the options that creates for us As an object store in a platform with some of the things I mentioned in software You'll start getting a feel for the types of investments we're making in the hybrid environment How I can begin to set up policies And begin to have my data persist In locations and regions where I'm comfortable or meets my regulatory requirements So you will see continued advances now In these data services and these integration services These compliance as well as management management services So with that I'd like to introduce Brad Topol. We'll take it quickly through a demonstration Of the uh swift service Thank you, Dave I'm gonna get it started. Yeah, just give me a second. No, I need to talk for No pressure Thank you Yep So this was really exciting, you know, we you know and Dave really touched upon this this this environment We call it blue mix. It's based on cloud foundry. Whereas a developer You're able to create an app and just push it out into this world where there's all these available services that you didn't have to Go configure. You didn't have to get set up. They're all born on the cloud ready to scale And um, you know, and we're not the only ones that saw this Catherine Spence from intel a couple days at the summit gave a cloud foundry presentation They're seeing the same things as well And so you you you as an you want to have all these wonderful rich services available And the one that we saw we needed was object storage Now conveniently, uh, we also had an object storage service available from software based on swift So really all we had to do was put the two together Um, tongue leaves here in the front row raise your hand tongue Tongue's the person that that pulled this off and so we're going to show you what this looks like So this is logging into blue mix again, uh, you're going to see an environment here Where I've pushed out my application into my blue mix environment Uh, after I sign in and you're going to also see the services that are available Um, again, the beauty of this is how quickly you can, uh, Dynamically bind your application to whatever services you want and then with blue mix The other thing that we're adding is just the huge list of services that you might need in a variety of Categories So here you can see we're logging into our blue mix dashboard. We've got our demo application to show off swift and object storage Um, you can look at the different instances that are available They are just positive for quicksack Um, so what's interesting is again, you know the application you can control how many instances are there Um, and what services are it using it's using our object storage service And any of these services in blue mix they they they know how to scale themselves So even though there's already one instance here, we're going to go ahead and add another instance And and that's what you're going to see in a second Uh, and one way you can do is we're going to go through the whole catalog And these are all the different services that are available today on blue mix just you know The beauty of this kind of environment is pull out your credit card and get going Compare that to using your local it and how long it's going to take them to get all this stuff up and running Um, we've got documentation available. So we tell you about the swift based object storage service and how you can get started as a developer Um, and here's the magic We're going to bind that object storage service to the application And say hey, we want to make it use this one There's a restaging where it basically restarts that application with a new service instance that was just added as you know as we saw there And so it's going to push on to production again, you know, like kathryn emphasized and dav emphasized You know, you you you push this application and the developer doesn't worry about necessarily where it's going to run It knows it's going to be pushed out into production and and you know, he doesn't he or she doesn't need to worry about all these details And once that that that application is up and running you're given a url to go get the application And I hope folks are familiar with open stack swift. It's object storage put and get objects in containers So we wrote a little application and here's tong longing in Uh, so he logs in uh to the little application that we wrote that's running on node j s And once he's logged into the application It's going to give him the ability to use the software swift that was provisioned for him He can go ahead and create containers So we're going to create a container called files And We can go ahead in the container Go ahead and browse and upload push up an object And so we're going to push that one up right here And once after it's uploaded, you know, you can you know, you know, Swift is a really nice simple API You can pull it back down and not surprisingly tongue. It's a Chinese text that I can't read but he could translate Um, and then of course other basic Swift operations are available deleting containers deleting objects and and what have you So that's uh pretty much the whole demo and if you needed to delete your object storage instance You can go ahead and delete it as well. And that's what we're doing here So so in summary We'll just stop that in summary you a great environment for developers to rapidly just do their small piece of the world Have all kinds of services at a variety of types of services available to hook into And then very quickly go from development environment to push to production and controlling the number of instances And having born on the cloud scalable services Okay Thank you brad So, yeah Swift, you know seeing Swift mature and the things that we can do with it now surfacing up as a service through blue mix Making of course use of all the other blue mix services that are out there and I know it's scrolled through the catalog very quickly It's something you need to just go and look at What we're seeing are you know our users in terms of the feedback through blue mix say is that You know, this is a just a tremendous environment. We can go we can get things rapidly prototyped We don't have to go back and try to get the services provisioned in an rit environment But we can we can take what we create out in blue mix and then deploy it back into what we're doing on prem And we love it. So it's something to really go and and take some time if you've got it Sign on get an account. It's a free 30 day trial and And give it a whirl Okay, so now that we have no keyboard i'm going to try to restart this Come on And we lost the page that we were on Yeah, it's it's not clicking though. There we go. There's our demo screen Brad, thank you So, you know, I wanted to again hit the def core ref stack topic just one more time. So, you know, I I don't think I can talk about this this too much Uh We've we've gone and we've done some definitions of capabilities and user defined sections of code That are out there for review right now The boards voted on uh in a previous board meeting A set of capabilities that we view are the advisory capabilities the ones that Our customers are asking for the most that are in production the most that we want to be dependable Obviously, we want to enable forwards and backwards compatibility as we go through time So, uh It's out there. It's in the public. You can go and pick it up from looking at the the wikis at the orc in the it's in the minutes as well in the governance wiki on open stack dot org And and take a look at it spend some time looking at what the The team has gone and done there because it's it's worthwhile and you can start planning what you're doing around it now And we're giving these advisory notices to the vendors So that when they want to use the trademark in the future and ref stack becomes a testing infrastructure that we use to go And verify that they know what they have to have you'll know what they have to have And and you can now take advantage to that interoperability that we're creating here So, you know, we're all in in terms of def core and ref stack We think this is one of the most important things that we can go and do for the organization and We're happy to have other people come and join us in in this this effort here IBM is also working now to donate some servers to help Stand up the infrastructure and keep it going as well too So you'll see that icos service that we were talking about that's been launched as A set of now servers that will will go in task to help with the ref stack implementation so So thank you We have some sessions that are coming up They were scrolling by quickly as you came in the room Uh starting at 11 50 over in 2 12 and 2 13 You can come and See a little bit about what we're doing Just a little bit beyond the code I'll get those sections as we maybe it's easier just to step through the pitch here So Manuel and Daniel who are here guys wave your hands I see you over there How you doing? Are gonna come in and talk about You know collaborating out in in the meetups Bringing together the community strengthening it helping others understand and learn what's going on there This is something that we do is give back into the community and if you're Interested in figuring out how to go create your own meetup and get started or or help others Or just where to join in please come and and spend some time with the guys Oh come on Here we go Uh then moe abdulla is is going to come in and give a little more in-depth tour of the ibm offerings Uh, whether it's you know on-prem or off-prem Talk about our ibm cloud orchestrator in a little more detail moe is very energetic and and up and He's a great speaker and hopefully you can come and learn a bit a little bit more about what we're doing inside And then at 1440 It it actually won't be andrew andrew had a family emergency and is flown back to Canada He's a canadian good friend of mine enjoy going out with andrew but unfortunately he won't be here But we'll have a substitute and we'll talk about deploying managed clouds and You know how to go and get your applications going in hybrid environments and and andrew Unfortunately won't be with us, but We'll we'll carry on and hopefully things go well for him So Just want to say thank you. Thanks for coming. Please come and join us in our sessions We'd love to collaborate and talk and Obviously open stack is is where it's at when you're in the clouds at the infrastructure layer So all of you have been been helping us and participating. Thank you so much And for those of you who are new and interested in open stack and Want to learn just how to set it up use it do anything Come and join us. IBM sponsors a lot of the education tracks out there as well as been participating In the education prior to the summit that's gone on here. It's something that we really Really think is important and hopefully We've been helping you guys that that needed as well too. So thank you very much