 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, we're here for the day two wrap of three days of live coverage from theCUBE at Red Hat Summit 2016. You know, June 29th, 2016, Brian's going to go down in history as the first time at technology conference had a live wedding break out. Yeah, they gave us a little hint last night that something interesting might happen, and pretty amazing. I mean, it definitely tells somebody that a couple is super passionate about, not only themselves, but about this technology community. So first time for me. Absolutely, I mean, we talk sometimes at these shows about the passion that they have for product, whether they love something there. I remember back in the day, VMware used to have the iHeart VMware bumper stickers. We go to lots of shows like Splunk and Service Now where customers are really boisterous and getting excited, but a wedding is showing true commitment that they wanted one of the most important days of their lives to be here at the show. I know, again, I'm still a little bit shocked that it happened. We've seen a lot of things at technology shows. This took it to a whole other level. All right, so from a technology standpoint, Brian, we got to talk to a bunch of the innovation winners. We talked to some of the big partners and some of the executives. What's your takeaways from day two? For me, a couple of big takeaways. The first one was as we talked to some of the end customers, the innovation partners. We talked to the Bombay Stock Exchange. We talked to Amadeus who runs the backbone of basically the travel industry. Huge mission-critical applications, huge vertical industries, running on open source, running on containers, running on platform technology. It really makes it very real. It makes it mission-critical. It shows what Red Hat's doing, but we also heard from them saying, look, this is not just about technology. This is about a partnership. It's about changing the way they work. It's really impressed with those two customers. Yeah, it's interesting. I want to get your thoughts on, Paul Cormier came out here and said basically, containers are Linux. Since the user space, it's just, all containers today are Linux. Of course, Microsoft's working on their bit. Sure. Microsoft's off of here embracing Linux. So what's your take on Red Hat's position in the container marketplace? Paul made a very bold statement. He said, look, we think we are in the lead. He thinks everybody else is chasing them because again, he said, this is a Linux game. You've got to be a Linux distribution company. You've got to manage Linux. You've got to deal with security. Overall, this week they've laid out a very, very compelling, not only container strategy, but also platform strategy. So we'll see how that plays out, but I think if you look at portfolio wise, Red Hat is in a very strong position. Yeah, and it was great to see, as you talked about, Amadeus, a proof point company that's, they're leveraging Docker, they're leveraging Kubernetes, they're using OpenShift there. So it's good to see, as we talked about with Chris Wright and Dave Ward, some of these things that we've talked about emerging technologies kind of stabilizing and getting into actual real customer environments. Yeah, I think we saw that, and then on the flip side, we also saw a lot of talk around new things going on in the development space. New versions of Jboss, opensource.net core, so we're seeing Windows and Linux kind of merging together. Those two communities, again, that seems almost as foreign as having a wedding here to show, but we're seeing pretty interesting things this week. We're seeing mature technologies, we're seeing innovation technologies. It's what you'd expect from Red Hat Summit. Yeah, one of my favorite lines of the day is when we had one of the security guys on from Red Hat and he said, oh, well, security, is it good, is it bad, is it ready? And he said, basically, we've got Schrodinger's container. So I think speaks for itself, is it dead, is it alive? We're getting the point, we'll figure that out. Now, it's been really interesting. Today was very interesting. I think we got much more depth around the products. We got a very good sense of how committed Red Hat is to some of these markets and really wants to drive that container cloud native space. And really, they backed it up. They backed it up with not only a very bold technology demonstration live on stage, but have been backing it up with customers all week. So I think the walk away from day two, we're two thirds the way through the event is, Red Hat wants to be a serious player. They're still the only one making money as an open source, pure open source player. And the community, again, it's growing, continues to grow. We're seeing people actively begin to change how they interact with communities, interact with open source. So it's an interesting transition. Yeah, so Brian, some of the other shows we go to, the one that comes to mind, AWS re-invent. The tension between the developer community and enterprise, Red Hat's had an interesting intersection of that space. What should take about how that dynamic plays here? You know, I think, to me, if you boil it down to its simplest things, what AWS is delivering, or any of the public cloud services delivering, is a business that says, I really want to kind of get out of the IT business. I want to focus more on applications, or on kind of that frictionless thing. Whereas Red Hat has kind of a blended strategy for the customer who wants to continue to own technology as a core competency, but also wants to have the flexibility to use the public cloud and use that agility. They're giving people more of a blended story. So, look, we're seeing very clearly, this is not a winter tank all game. We're seeing open source plays a role, public cloud plays a role, and the applications, the different types of applications are driving different business models for different customers. Yeah, all right. So we've got one more full day of coverage here. Really pleased to have, we've got some more customers. We've got somebody from NASA JPL coming on. We've got Microsoft coming on. It's, oh my gosh, we're at a Red Hat show. Microsoft's coming on. We've got the new acquisition three scale. We've got the CEO coming on. Talk APIs. A couple more customers, and lots more to cover. And of course, there's free beer in the booth area, so that's where a lot of people are going. Here at home, feel free to crack open your own beer. You're watching on the live stream. All right, and when the beer starts flowing, it's time for us to kill the stream. So thanks so much for watching. We'll be back tomorrow with lots more coverage here from Red Hat Summit 2016. Thanks for watching theCUBE.