 Live from Las Vegas, it's theCUBE, covering AWS re-invent 2017, presented by AWS, Intel and our ecosystem of partners. Hey, welcome back to theCUBE, continuing live coverage on day three of AWS re-invent 2017. We have had three days of great coverage, 44,000 or plus people at this event, lots of great announcements from AWS, from their partners, and we're very excited to be joined by our next guest, Kristoff Fister, the executive vice president of products from SolarWinds. Thanks for stopping by and chatting with Justin and me today. Thank you for having me. So tell us, what's going on at SolarWinds? What are some of the cool things that you're here to announce? Right, so first of all, great show, isn't it? Amazing. Very amazing, yes. And it's a great show for us because we've announced a few new products and initiatives, and amongst them, the first product that provides both powerful and affordable full stack monitoring for DevOps people. And so we'll talk hopefully a little bit more about that in a few minutes, but that's really the heritage of SolarWinds. We provide software that's simple, yet powerful and affordable, and we've been doing that since about 1999 when the company was founded in Austin, Texas. And the big thing about this is that we build software that IT professionals love, and they love it because it's simple, approachable, affordable, yet powerful. And that has propelled us to a leadership position in network management, network monitoring. So SolarWinds is the number one by market share in that space, and we're now aiming to bring that simplicity, that power to cloud monitoring as well. So you have a great community of people who love SolarWinds, massive community, the whole THWACK community, and everything that people talk about online. You know the company well. I know the company well. I've been to Austin many times, I've been to the campus, it's a great company. So people know those tools really well, as you say, you're very, very strong in network monitoring. So tell us a bit more about this full stack monitoring that you're doing. What do you mean by full stack? Yes. So, if you think about some of the key trends we see in the market, let's go top to bottom. AWS announcing all these services here at the event. Machine learning services, analytics services, new database stuff, amazing. And so all of these services going to make their way eventually into applications, into apps. So there's going to be more and more apps. And these apps going to deliver value to businesses, to consumers, and therefore need to run pretty much flawlessly, right? Yet, behind this usually simple user experience of these apps, these apps have become massively complex. So back in the day, and I'm going to date myself a little bit now. When I started in monitoring, it was pretty simpler. It was like a, you know, client server, three tiers, and the app was pretty static, right? So nowadays, it's all about microservices. All these dependencies that exist, which means that if there's a failure, it may be cascading, a cascading failure. And so it's much, much more difficult to figure out if your app is doing well or not. And so monitoring becomes so much more important in that context. And by the way here at the show, you know, people talk about monitoring a lot. And maybe the other proof point I would have is that in the marketplace, one of the top eight categories that Dave McCann mentioned on stage at the partner event was, you know, monitoring is the one thing in the marketplace that people just, you know, need. And so monitoring is important. And so what we're announcing here at, what we've announced here at the show is brand new product called AppOptics. And AppOptics converges traditional infrastructure and application performance management. And provides coverage for what we call three layers of observability, which are metrics, logs, and then traces, transaction traces. Because we think that without transaction traces in these microservices type architectures, very, very difficult to get to the root cause of issues. And so, you know, we aim to cover the three layers of, or the three pillars of observability, metrics, logs, and traces with AppOptics. And do it in a way that is simple and approachable. What do you mean by, I think it was a press article that you were put in about democratizing monitoring. What is, what do you mean by? Do you like that term? It's very cool. But what does it mean? What does it mean? So, you know, if you think about companies with application portfolios, right? So, you know, larger companies may have between 500 and 800 apps. But there's studies out there that say only about 10 to 15% are being monitored. And so, why is that? It's for two reasons in our view. One is that application performance monitoring has not been very affordable. So it's a question of, you know, if I need to buy, you know, if you need to pay a hundred bucks a host to get application performance monitoring, then, you know, many companies are not going to do it. And the second reason is approachability and simplicity. Meaning, if you have to instrument your app manually, and I know you guys had a guest the other day who talked about the importance of instrumenting apps, and that's, you know, totally true. But you have to make it approachable. Meaning, the instrumentation has to be automatic. And that's exactly what we provide. We provide automatic, one single line installation instrumentation for all these microservices languages. So we cover seven languages. We cover PHP, Python, Java, .NET, and I'm Go, and I'm forgetting a few, of course. And so making your application performance and infrastructure monitoring number one cheaper. So we start with AppOptics at $7.50 a host a month. If you compare it to the hundreds of bucks a host a month that are kind of, you know, common game in the industry right now, that's pretty disruptive. And we make it much, much quicker to instrument these apps. So that's what we mean by democratizing application performance and infrastructure management. Because we think many more companies will be able to afford it, and many more companies will be able to actually deploy this stuff in a timely manner. So once you've instrumented it, who is it targeted for? So, because developers love to live in code land and do everything through APIs, but operators do actually like to be able to see things in charts. And for me, I like living on the command line absolutely, but I enjoy a good picture as well. And sometimes it's much, much easier to see what's happening if I just draw a graph, rather than sitting there looking at streams of code flying by. So do you have both of those options available in a DevOps model or who are the people you're targeting? We totally do. So we target the DevOps persona, the DevOps engineer, sometimes called system reliability engineer. And so we provide dashboards, like the metrics of course, that you would traditionally want to see and see how things are going over time. We provide the traces and also that's very graphical. So you see how much time a transaction spends in each of the layers of the app and each of the microservices. And that's very visual as well. And then of course we provide the API, Respace API as well to a lot of developers to do stuff with it. So a couple of things that I heard you say in terms of the value proposition that SolarWinds brings is being able to facilitate from 15% to hopefully 100% of applications being monitored, that price has really been- 80% would be great. 80% would be great. You said that price has been a really big inhibitor. So you guys do it for a lot less and faster. Can you give us an example of a customer that you've really helped transform so that they get much more visibility into upwards of 80% of their applications? Yeah, so I mean, AppOptics is just coming out. So we've announced it. It's a new product. And so we've had tons of customers in beta. The first thing I would say is that all of them were up and running and actually getting metrics into the dashboard in between three and five minutes. So very, very fast. So there's one line, auto instrumentation really clicks. And so there's universities. There's smaller IT shops. There's big companies who are interested in that kind of stuff. In general, one of the things that people don't necessarily know about the SolarWinds portfolio is we've started to invest in Cloud in roughly 2014. We've acquired some premier products and franchises, one of them being Pingdom for digital experience monitoring. Another one being Paypal Shwell, which is an amazing hosted log management solution. And between these solutions, we have about slightly short of a million users already. So significant, significant footprint in the marketplace. And so customers, we have customers that are sort of this cloud native born in the cloud companies like GitHub, Spotify, Airbnb, and so Uber as an example. And we have the traditional companies, New York Times, BBC, packaging companies, I mean, it's really running the gamut of the space out there. What is digital experience monitoring and how are you doing that? That's a great question. So we look at digital experience monitoring from two facets really. The first facet is, so I talked a lot about observability and sort of this white box monitoring where you got to drill down into the code and the transaction and so on. But typically one goal of monitoring is to be ahead of your consumers in terms of noticing problems. And so for that, the best way is really to have synthetic transactions that simulate user behavior hitting your app. And so that's one, synthetic monitoring is one dimension of digital experience. But beyond that, and that's where we're investing very heavily with Pingdom is this notion of, yeah, we talk a lot about apps, but there's lots of companies out there that are putting their stuff out on websites, right? So nowadays, if I go to the doctor and later on I want to see my test results, it's on a website. If I go to take my car to the garage, they make appointments on a website. And many times these people have no idea how their site is doing, what the response time is, all that kind of stuff. And so that's what Pingdom provides. But what we're doing, taking it beyond the simple uptime and performance, is we're marrying business metrics, like bounce rates, like what's the bounce rate of the site? What's the revenue that's the site driving right now if it's a revenue generating site? And correlating that with the performance aspects of the site, like how are the transactions doing? How long does it take from the first click to the shopping cart? And so that's what we think of as digital experience. And there's much, much more to do, because really what you want to do at the end is to see how users flow through your web page. And where they probably disengage, where they move somewhere else. You want to detect these spots and see if it has to do anything with the performance or the way you lay it out the site. And so digital experience monitoring, we think is going to be huge. Absolutely, well thank you so much for stopping by Chris Stoppin speaking with Justin and me. We could keep going, but unfortunately, we are out of time, exactly. Well, we look forward to having you back on the show next time. I'd be delighted. And we want to thank you for watching. I'm Lisa Martin from my co-host, Justin Warren. You're watching theCUBE live from day three at AWS re-invent 2017. Stick around, we'll be right back.