 Next up we're gonna be hearing from Rackspace and they've got some really cool demos and news as well and so they're gonna start off with a quick video. One of the reasons that the Intel partnership is so powerful is that we are philosophically aligned on the idea that we want enterprises to adopt this technology faster and that we want everything that we do in this space to be fully open source and create nothing proprietary. I think one of the great things about the OpenStack Innovation Center is the commitment that leaders in the community and two companies with a great track record of innovation and maturity are making to strengthen the community. The OpenStack Innovation Center will have the largest OpenStack development team that is completely dedicated to make OpenStack you know available for everybody easy to use easy to deploy and very easy to manage. We both have domain expertise and we both have common goals and we have you know common vision and hey in a year from now how should people be able to use OpenStack? How should the cloud be open for people? One of the most impactful parts of the Intel Rackspace partnership is the creation of these two 1,000 node clusters. And this is just going to you know put development on steroids for people to actually use OpenStack at amazing scale. So these two hybrid clusters will allow developers to write code test code and validate that we're actually able to deliver that promise in a way that will generate much more credibility with the enterprises that we're trying to serve with this platform. Well to tell us all about what Rackspace has been up to in the OpenStack world we have Scott Crenshaw who's senior vice president of strategy and product for Rackspace and Adrian Otto who was actually with me on stage at the last summit in Vancouver distinguished architect with Rackspace. So come on out and let's hear from you. Thanks so much we're really excited to be joining Intel in delivering a thousand node cluster if we can get the advance of the slides. We're going to deliver a thousand nodes that are available to you today we need the slide advance. Well we have a thousand node cluster that's available for you the community use for free that's an amazing resource that you have that will enable testing and development at cloud scale and soon we'll have 2,000 nodes available for you and to use this it's free all you have to do is go to go.rackspace.com slash developer cloud and sign up so take advantage of this opportunity. Well what we're really here to talk about today is something a bit different about containers of course containers have the possibility to transform the economics of computing through superior consolidation ratios but there's another aspect to them that might be even more transformational and that's the promise of instant compute. VMs take minutes to spin up but when you have instantly available compute you have the possibility to change the way your applications interact and engage with your users. Imagine a world where infinite compute capacity was available to you instantly without any delay that would be so transformative and I'm excited to tell you that today that dreams a reality announcing Karina by Rackspace. Karina is a container as a service with instant on and it gives you a choice of native tools and APIs like Docker so you don't have to change the tools you're using. It allows you to run your applications on bare metal for performance or VMs if you prefer and it's all with zero infrastructure. You can focus on your applications and we handle the complexity of networking and scale. Now before we get into Karina further let's take a look at how one company transformed its engagement with its users with this technology. I'm Andrew Odeon I'm the CTO of O'Reilly Media and we're makers of technical media so we make books famously the ones with the animals on the cover. We identified a problem which is that people are learning new technologies in different ways than just a static book rather than just reading about it people want to use it directly in the browser and have an experience with it immediately. Rackspace has been helping us with a lot of the back end technology around Docker and around containers so that we can offer these environments in ways that people can easily access them. Karina by Rackspace gives us a way to offer containers really easily to the thousands of people who come to our website and where we would really like to take the technologies to be able to support hundreds of thousands or millions of people to come who want to learn Spark, who want to learn programming, who want to learn any kind of technology. One of the things I most appreciate about Karina is that it's got great APIs so that if we want to create a new cluster we can simply spin one up and have access to it within a minute and that flexibility gives us great power to be able to do a lot of different things that we might not have even considered before. So O'Reilly's made their pages come alive their readers can go to the web page change the sample code press the run button and instantly that application is up and running in a Karina container. The results are sent back to the web page and the container is destroyed. That's a whole new experience it takes education and learning to a whole new level and it's enabled by this technology. Now this same technology is available for you today for free. Just go to get Karina dot com get Karina dot com and sign up. All we ask is for your feedback. So we've transformed the experience and the availability of compute but yet a lot of people view containers as complex or little daunting and I wonder Adrian can Karina change the game to make containers simple? Yeah it can because a few weeks ago you asked me how much faster how much easier is this approach with Karina than doing it the old-fashioned way and in answering that question it got me to thinking that any developer can do this and I made this comment that I thought my 10-year-old son could do this and that gave me an idea. So we recorded Jackson my son using Karina for the first time and this is what we found out. My name is Jackson I'm in fifth grade I'm 10 years old and I'm going to start a cluster named Foo. All right let's do it. Jackson's named the cluster and he's waiting for it to build this takes about 45 seconds 45 seconds let's see what happens next. All your clusters up. Okay. Now what are you going to do? I'm going to download the cluster. Downloading your credentials? Okay. And now you're going to your terminal? All right. You're going to do an LS to see what's there? I mean no way. Oops. It's an LA. Good okay. You're going to see the end of that directory? And maybe an LS in there to see what's there? Okay. Oh you have a docker.in file you want to source that? Okay. Are you sure? Docker.in? Okay. All right. Now you're ready to run docker.in file. So Jackson's Foo cluster is up now. And what were those credentials he downloaded Adrian? So Jackson downloaded his TLS credentials from Karina and he ran a little script in in that download that set up his local shell so that he can interact with Karina using the docker client. No proprietary tools. No. So now do you want to run a container in that cluster? Okay. All right. So we can run docker run. Today's minus IT. Busy box. All one word. You're running a container. Awesome. Now I'm going to talk. Okay. So Jackson brought up a cluster and he ran a container on it in a couple seconds. And he's using the native docker client from this point to interact with Karina. So he doesn't use a tool that's specific to rack space. He doesn't use a spool that's specific to open stack. He's using just the same tool that you would use to run a docker container locally on your laptop except it runs in the cloud. A 10 year old did this. Well let's see what he thought. There it is. You did it Jackson. Very well done. High five. Yeah. So Jackson's actually here in the audience with us today. Thank you Jackson. Jackson do you have a question? Dad am I the only one that runs containers on rack space? Oh good question. Well Scott told you about a Riley media. They use Karina. But there's another customer who who is using our cloud in a very big way. And I'd like to tell you about Pantheon. What we built is one giant infrastructure one giant website platform with the only container based multi-tenant website platform on the markets. The way this works is we have one big Pantheon and we run and scale your website your Drupal WordPress application in containers which we can spin up in seconds and we can manage millions of these containers now in the wild keeping consistent 100% software and that's what lets us do smooth scaling because we can really easily horizontally scale you from one container to two containers to ten containers in seconds and software and know that it's going to work. And because everything is super standardized as in one Pantheon we can update Pantheon we actually deploy multiple updates a day and because of that as a company we're able to innovate much faster we're able to build better developer tools and better platform and because of that it's why developers really prefer to use our platform. So we saw yesterday the example of lithium running 122 simultaneous containers using open stack every day Pantheon runs 1.2 million containers that's just one customer running 1.2 million containers in the rack space cloud. I think this proves without any doubt that rack space can take containers to cloud scale but Adrienne can you explain how this all fits together with open stack. Yeah Scott I mean in 2014 the open stack containers team formed the Magnum project and Magnum is about combining the best of infrastructure technology with open stack with the best of container technology and making them work together. Now in Vancouver I explained that Magnum is now part of open stack and that you can create a resource called a bay and inside of a bay you can run a container orchestration engine there are three choices today in Magnum you can run Docker swarm Kubernetes or now Apache mesos and this is great because it gives you the opportunity to use a native API so like you saw Jackson using the native Docker client in order to interact with it or if you choose the Kubernetes Bay you can get the Kubernetes API as well. Now open stack also gives you the ability to choose what kind of compute instances you make so we could run compute it can run containers on top of virtual machines or on top of bare metal. We also can use Magnum to run this same experience on private cloud. You know just as we made containers simple we also made private cloud simple the rack space private cloud delivers cloud as a service the way clouds meant to be delivered not as a complicated outdated distribution that you have to spend months and millions trying to get installed and running it just works and with the operational experience and maturity we've gained as the largest user of open stack in the world we're able to deliver an unparalleled four nines availability on the rack space private cloud so you saw Karina running on our public cloud it'll soon be available on our private cloud so as you look to run your containers at cloud scale you really only have one decision to make do you want to run it in our place or in yours give it a try get karina.com thank you very much and thank you Jackson you were marvelous thank you so much that was wonderful well I just wanted to have one quick word of warning to all the recruiters out there please leave Jackson alone I know how you think