KubeCon + CloudNativeCon 2020 goes digital. Will you be in attendance? If the event were
physical, we would have looked forward to visiting with Spectro Cloud. So we
reached out to them digitally instead.
Read this exclusive pre-show interview
between VMblog and Tina Nolte, VP Product at Spectro Cloud, an enterprise cloud-native infrastructure company that makes Kubernetes
manageable at scale for enterprises that need superior control and
flexibility.
VMblog: Are you sponsoring this year's KubeCon 2020
digital event? If so, can you talk about what
that sponsorship looks like now that things are digital? How will it be different?
Tina Nolte: Of course we are! We sponsored the EMEA event as well -
while we're clearly looking forward to the day when we can interface in person
with attendees again we still found that the event was lively. Something that
we appreciated is just how accessible a digital platform makes the event.
VMblog: What type of things
will people be able to do and find at your virtual booth this year?
Nolte: The key thing that a virtual booth offers is the opportunity
for conversation. Our technical leaders and executives will be there to help
answer questions about infrastructure, Kubernetes, edge, Cluster API... and, of
course, Spectro Cloud! It's so much more important in times like these that we
all have the opportunity to interact as humans.
VMblog: Are you giving away any prizes at your
virtual booth or participating in any prize giveaways?
Nolte: We're hosting a Kubernetes infrastructure stack builder
game... and we'll be giving away some fantastic Lego sets to the top scorers. (As
an aside, my CEO had to convince me that they should not all be Star Wars
sets...)
VMblog: Have you sponsored KubeCon in the past? What keeps you coming back as a sponsor of
this event?
Nolte: This will be our third Kubecon sponsorship. Kubecon is
really the best venue for hearing from the thought leaders in the space, and
for having conversations with people that are taking this technology and
turning it into something that solves their business problems. We also have a
significant contribution profile, particularly within the Cluster API project,
and this is a great forum to ensure that we continue to focus on what really
matters to users.
VMblog: With COVID-19, we've seen a lot of changes in
the tech world. One big change has been
the disruption of physical trade shows.
Many, like KubeCon, have become digital in 2020. What are your thoughts on digital events
compared to traditional physical events?
Nolte: Well, we feel pretty mixed on it. Clearly we miss the in
person interaction and connection that we value as members of the human race.
At the same time we're grateful that technology enables us to still have
conversations and learn from each other in venues such as Kubecon's digital one
during these challenging times we are living through.
VMblog: What do you attribute to the success and
growth of this industry and the KubeCon event itself?
Nolte: Technology in the distributed system space has finally
reached a point where a large population of developers can consume it and get
benefit. That has been in conjunction with the rise of digital transformation
initiatives, where people are making data driven decisions and executing on
them more quickly than ever. That has necessitated a new approach to
development that Kubernetes was well placed to help with, and Kubecon is a
venue custom built, if you will, to enable the community around that
technology.
VMblog: What are you most interested in hearing about
at this year's KubeCon event?
Nolte: There are a couple key topic areas that are growing in
popularity and applicability. They aren't unexpected, I don't think: edge
computing and AI/ML are what we are being asked about more and more often in
our engagements, and the community is definitely digging in there.
VMblog: How does your company or product fit within
the container, cloud, Kubernetes ecosystem?
Nolte: Spectro Cloud is a CNCF-certified Kubernetes distribution,
though our technology is really geared around allowing users to define their
own flavors of infrastructure stacks around Kubernetes. We support deployment
and management of Kubernetes clusters and their associated infrastructure
stacks in public or private clouds or bare metal and edge environments.
VMblog: Can you give us the high-level rundown of
your company's technology offerings?
Explain to readers who you are, what you do, what problems you solve,
etc.
Nolte: Spectro Cloud provides an enterprise Kubernetes management
platform that removes tradeoffs between flexibility in infrastructure
technology options and manageability and ease of use. It enables administrators
to say "yes" to the unique infrastructure needs of their different teams (think
particular flavors of operating systems or service meshes), no matter what
infrastructure they are deployed on.
VMblog: And while talking about your products, can
you give readers a few examples of how your offerings are unique? What are your differentiators?
Nolte: Our differentiation is really around choice and optionality
throughout an infrastructure stack, without giving up manageability and ease of
use. Users get the flexibility and optionality that you can get with a DIY
approach, but with the ease of use and ongoing manageability of a managed
service offering.
VMblog: Normally at the KubeCon event, sponsors are
showcasing new products or new product updates and features for the first
time. Do you have anything new that
you've either recently announced or plan to discuss in more detail at the
event? Can we get a sneak peek?
Nolte: Some of the new things we are discussing at Kubecon are
around our newest sets of features. We're introducing options around
self-hosting the Spectro Cloud management plane, as well as some new
self-service features.
VMblog: At what stage do you feel we are at with
regard to containers? Is there anything
still holding it back? Or keeping it
from a wider distribution?
Nolte: We see containers are being in early majority; enterprises
by and large have either dipped their toes or are planning to in the not too
distant future. However, it is still not a technology space that is particularly
easy to adopt and consume; that is certainly an inhibitor. We see solutions
that are focused at a very important part of that problem, namely deployment,
but we still have opportunity areas in the day 2 side of things.
VMblog: There will be plenty of interesting topics
covered during the KubeCon keynotes. But
can you take this opportunity to share your own thoughts about any big changes
or directions you see for this industry?
Nolte: We're going to continue to see progress on how this
technology will enable and be consumed at the edge. We're also going to
continue to see consolidation amongst the players here...
VMblog: Finally, without a crystal ball, what do you
think trade shows look like in 2021? Do
we go back to thousands of people in person at an event? Or do things stay virtual for the near
term? Is your company prepared to
sponsor a physical event next year should they return?
Nolte: I think most folks believe that we are staying virtual for a
while... until a vaccine is available and widely distributed at least. Whenever
those conditions hold we'll be eager to safely engage with our broader
community.
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