 So first let me say thank you it's great to see a full house here especially day two at the end of the summit and I think it just is a testament to the excitement that's building up around this community and clearly an exciting action-packed two days a lot of a lot of things and I know many of you don't know me but I'm excited and I will show you the face of excitement that is the face of excitement but I am excited and I'll tell you why in a couple minutes all right and so that's me on Twitter so you know as we look at the world today more and more applications are being published and pushed to clouds the concept of the data center is fading into the past right on-premise data center client server we've now emerged into the world of cloud computing and mobile access to that right so more and more applications today and the growth of these applications are growing at double digits cloud native applications but there's this perception that all clouds are created equal and some customers and especially some of the early adopters are finding out that that may not necessarily be true in some cases they are and in many cases they're not so this notion of a cloud foundry is compelling and profound and critical to cloud native applications and it's critical for a multi-cloud world if the world devolves into a single cloud provider we don't need cloud foundry right because it's a single uniform homogeneous cloud but the world will be multi-cloud cloud foundry is a critical part of that and you here in this audience can help make the difference I'm convinced 133 percent then 140 percent confident in five years time we'll look back on this community here and say these folks here have changed the world so you can make the difference and as a result all cloud native applications can be deployed via a cloud foundry so a little you know quick background about myself started at AMC 1985 believe it or not engineer number five at the company and I've been in data storage development up until about seven eight months ago and I started at EMC when I was right out of preschool and have been doing product development and then I jumped I took the red pill I call it if you watch the movie the matrix so I took the red pill in October and it's been quite the ride and now I'm kind of looking at the world from a different side kind of from the platform down instead of the infrastructure off so I can look you in the eye and say I have seen clouds from both sides now so now I drew the cut line at 40 I know where you all are sitting although all the millennials are like what is he talking about so there's this if you're millennial there's Joni Mitchell back in the 70s and she sang about cloud illusions and there are illusions about cloud there are perceptions about clouds and customers experience are different than their perceptions the perceptions are that they're created equal and clouds never come down right I turn a cloud off on it and should never never ever come down and our data is safe in the cloud right I put it there don't have to worry about back up and things like that because when I put it there it's always there regardless of what my retention policies are and I can save money in the cloud right but customers are finding out hey that stove is hot and when I touch it I can burn my hand and sometimes it's painful once I'm into a cloud infrastructure it's hard to get out and that is a picture of me when I started at EMC I just brought it along just to prove the point so I asked this question about a month ago John Rose our CTO is here he held a summit technical leadership summit for all our distinguished engineers and fellows at EMC and I pose this question what differentiates a good cloud from a bad cloud and there's roughly about 150 people in the room and I got a lot of different answers and attributes of what does differentiate and it means different things to different people right I can run my workloads and it's predictable I got a great user experience I can meet my recovery time objectives I have great performance or good efficiency or ease of use it's easy for me to deploy my applications into the cloud I don't have to worry about security I get business value out of that so many things to many people and the answer is all of the above right these are the attributes that the customers and people that are publishing applications to clouds worry about and it's really the quality of service that you get out of the service and the service provider that you have quality not in the sense that it works right or availability quality in the sense of the quality in the value that you get in your experience and how you do business with your cloud service providers how many have written this command okay so a question when you push your app does you do you push it to a good cloud or a bad cloud or how do you know right how can I be confident that when I'm writing that command I'm pushing to the right cloud right based on my governance risk and compliance policies based on my business requirements you know whether be retention policies or whatever right so this is what I mean by the differentiation of good clouds and bad clouds so I have a dream I am sticking with this 60s and 70s theme here today so I have a dream when we look when I look at this community and the things that we hopefully are about to achieve and so what if we or you as customers could deploy and manage all IT applications and services on to any IS stack easily and consistently with confidence that it meets all your business objectives right so there's a lot of breakouts about what applications are good for cloud foundry right what applications are good to run on certain types of clouds whether they be on-premise or off-premise hybrid clouds right and so what if we could solve this problem holistically so we didn't have to care and we didn't have to differentiate and when we pushed in public applications we didn't have to worry about the fact that our business requirements may or may not be met and what if we could understand this upfront right instead of finding out the hard way and finding out that that stove is hot when we touch that so I have a wish list for 2015 for the community and part of that wish list I have like three three requests there's this challenge with non-12 factor applications and persistent data what if we could solve this problem holistically right and we can expand the set of applications that can be deployed to clouds not just stateless apps with stateful apps and do that in a holistic way more like a software defined way right what if I could solve that problem of persistent storage and provide persistent data services around that and do that in the DevOps lifecycle versus having to stand up persistent storage you know later you know later down the chain so what if we could solve that problem deploy it as software up front and I'll come back to that in a minute number two is what if we had an open industry marketplace for pass and I ask microservices and software the benefit of the marketplace is I can go into the marketplace and I can see that the chocolate is next to the peanut butter right and when I see the chocolate next to the peanut butter I can do different things with that versus today you know we have chocolate in one marketplace in peanut butter and another so what if we had an open marketplace approach to cloud foundry if there is only one cloud provider that starts with an a if you look at their marketplace it's one-stop shop for software right and the chocolate is next to the peanut butter right and we can do a lot better if we can start to look at what services and software that we can offer in a marketplace that's available to all right so some of the challenges that that that we have I think as an industry is getting to that right because we still are competitors partners in the industry we have our own different approaches things are different you know priorities but we also don't offer a place in which any independent software vendor can publish software into our marketplace per se whereas the public cloud does and what if that marketplace included not just pass but I ask and EMC being obviously a data storage and infrastructure company what if some of the services or microservices I guess it's an overused term but things that are kind of thinner deployed as software or stood up as a service what if we could deploy persistent storage services or microservices not just for block and volumes right but solve that problem holistically around file around object and if we know that we've got wonking blocks of flash that are closely that's a W boss for technical term but if we had lots of flash closely coupled with complete compute could we do some interesting things up front could we deploy in memory no sequel could we do that better having that knowledge what if we could integrate backup and deploy backup as a service much more efficiently and effectively or reduce some of the replication into a thinner set of services to either replicate a VM level or maybe even a container level what about data security things like data shredding if I'm moving my information my if I use cloud foundry for portability of my applications and content and I move that how can I be certain that I shred that data so data shredding we used to call that data corruption in the data storage industry but there are capabilities that we can bring to bear to ensure that you're meeting your compliance requirements for data what about mobility and access and things like active data or migration capabilities that were offered or data optimization right there's service providers often offering elastic block or elastic file on flash what if we optimize for that because we know that not all information is created equally and what if we provide data deduplication services on top of that and then finally what if we work better together with the open stack community if you look at the the two big open source barbells or the ends of the barbell in the industry with open stack at the is level cloud foundry at the platform level what if we work better together to provide a service catalog that could be offered up and we could do a better job of application workload placement based on the requirements of the application right and do that effectively to I ask clouds and if we did this could we further change the world I'm convinced we're going to look back five years from now and say wow you know look at what was done by this community it established a critical component of cloud architectures and it's called cloud foundry and I fundamentally believe that we can change the world with that so to help emcee in March mid-March it was roughly about two months after the formation of the cloud foundry foundation announced the first cloud foundry dojo this is going to be in Cambridge Massachusetts co-located with our team from our CTO office also in a great community right right next to MIT there's Google there's Microsoft nerds in the neighborhood so it's a lot of great innovation and incubation grounds so that opens mid-summer of this year we'll be able to bring developers in go through the six week program dojo program for paired programming and test-driven development and you can follow us at on Twitter at emcee cf dojo or email us at cf dojo at emcee dot com so in conclusion more and more applications are being pushed and published to clouds the model is off-premise the concept of the data center is fast becoming an artifact of the past so cloud foundry is transformational it is a critical component as we look forward this community is making the difference and as a result of that we will be able to change the world thank you for your participation here and going forward and also thanks for participating in the conference today thank you