 Live from San Francisco, it's theCUBE. Covering Red Hat Summit 2016. Brought to you by Red Hat. Now, here are your hosts, Stu Miniman and Brian Graceley. Welcome back to theCUBE. SiliconANGLE Media's flagship program. We go out to all the great enterprise technology shows, help extract the signal from the nice. I'm Stu Miniman, joined with my co-host, Louis Brian Graceley. As I mentioned, we've got three days of coverage. This is the day two kickoff. We're gonna have Paul Carmiere, who's the president and keynote speaker this morning, joining us shortly. But just wanna kinda set the stage. Yesterday, we had some great segments from the executives and customers and some of the partners here. Red Hat is over $2 billion worth of revenue. Still got some strong growth rate in their standard product lines and they've got some great emerging products that are growing there. Our take on the announcement so far is, I think Brian, containers, containers, more containers. So, what's your take on the morning keynote so far? So, there was three big pieces to me. One was, Paul talked about, it feels like everything's changing at the same time. Things are not only becoming software. We've got public cloud, we've got private cloud. He talked about open hybrid cloud. In essence, the core piece of that was when everything's going crazy like that, you can't expect one company to sort of be able to innovate, harness it and do everything. You've got to build on community. Paul highlighted that. Spent a lot of time highlighting the breadth of the portfolio. It's no longer just RHEL and JBoss. It's containers, it's platforms, it's storage, it's application developer tools. So, spent a lot of time on that. And then they did a really nice job, although it took a while to get to, but really kind of showcasing a demonstration that says these are how all the components play together. This is what it looks like when you've got modern applications, when you're making changes to modern applications based on feedback. So, they did a very nice job, I think, of sort of highlighting when you've got this kind of chaos, how do you have to deal with it? Kind of reinforces Jim's thing. And then showing the technology breadth and showing it in action. Yeah, it reminds me, I think back to Paul Merritt said, that you need open source and you need those communities to really help accelerate both the innovation and the development of what's going on. Used to be before, a couple of companies would make a technology. You'd build some standard. It would take years to a deployment. We're really seeing a squashing of those cycles. And Paul Cormier said this morning that fast pace of change would not be possible without the power of open source development. So, definitely an area that we've kept a good look on. Brian, we've got a little bit of a chance to go through the expo floor here, some different areas. What's your take on this kind of ecosystem versus some of the other shows that we do in cloud and infrastructure? Yeah, I think a couple of things. One, we are seeing a lot of blurring in the ecosystems. We see a lot of the same companies in terms of large vendors, whether that's server vendors, software vendors like SAP, server vendors Dell and HP and Cisco and so forth. But there is a very good mix of open source ISVs. We're seeing SaaS companies, so we're seeing that part of the model here as well. We're seeing people putting Linux on arm. So, every one of these shows has their own sort of uniqueness to the community, but we are seeing the trends are coming together. It's about mobile, it's about moving faster, it's about cloud native, it's about software defined. I think what we're seeing is the leading companies that are running these shows, they're driving these communities more so than maybe we would have seen in the past with the hardware driven shows. Yeah, absolutely, we've got another setup of theCUBE down the road at the Hadoop Summit, and one of the keynote speakers there from Microsoft is the same person that's giving a keynote here on the program. So, definitely, we talked to Jim Whitehurst yesterday, talked about Hortonworks is another publicly traded open source based company. So, lots going on there. Brian, we've got lots of good guests coming on. What are you looking forward to today? Well, I think today a lot is going to be two big things, containers, as you talked about, a lot around application developers, really people understanding, what do all these buzzwords mean, cloud native, hybrid, DevOps, microservices? We're going to get some reality checks with that, and then we're going to see, what's important to developers? How was Red Hat helping them go faster? How are them doing it in a more secure way? So, those two themes are going to be really strong today and then obviously we'll see what the ecosystem partners have to say that are going to come in the afternoon. Yeah, absolutely. Red Hat's got a nice Dev Nation show that I believe it's the third year they've been running that show. And heck, in the keynote this morning, they had this cool little thing that it was, they had a video game that everybody could play and due to the kind of platform nature, the way they rolled it out, they could make changes to the game, they could add things and move teams. And one of the developers that was running it, he had like this red and like blue, like colored beard, definitely what you expect in an open store show, yeah, absolutely. All right, so we've got lots of coverage here all day. Stay tuned to SiliconANGLE.tv. I'm Stu with Brian Graceley and you're watching theCUBE.