KubeCon + CloudNativeCon 2020 goes digital. Will you be in attendance? If the event were
physical, we would have looked forward to visiting with Infoblox. So we
reached out to them digitally instead.
Read this exclusive pre-show interview
between VMblog and PG Menon, Senior Director of Product Marketing at Infoblox, a company which delivers a next level network experience with its Secure Cloud-Managed Network Services.
VMblog: Are you sponsoring this year's KubeCon 2020 digital event? What type of things will people be able to do and find at your virtual booth this year?
Menon: Yes, we are a silver sponsor this year and can be found in the Silver Hall C. Attendees can chat with our team of experts, including DNS luminary Cricket Liu, at our virtual booth. As well, they can view demos, videos, download collateral, and engage on our Slack channel.
VMblog: Are you giving away any prizes at your virtual booth or participating in any prize giveaways?
Menon: Yes, anyone who stops by our virtual booth will have a chance to win a pair of Bose wireless headphones ($395 USD value). There’s also a chance to win one of eight signed copies of Cricket Liu and John Belamaric’s book “Learning CoreDNS” by completing a short survey.
VMblog: What keeps you coming back as a sponsor of this event?
Menon: We are a repeat sponsor. As a fast growing cloud-native company, we’ve enjoyed sharing our expertise building modular, scalable platforms for foundational networking and security services with the KubeCon community.
VMblog: How
does your company or product fit within the container, cloud, Kubernetes
ecosystem?
Menon: DNS, DHCP and
IP Address management, collective known as DDI, is foundational to all
network and cloud interactions. Kubernetes uses DNS for service discovery and
IPAM for container management. DevOps, an IT management paradigm for business
agility, requires services discovery thru DNS and device management thru
DHCP and IPAM. Cloud-native software development and containerization needs DNS
for discovery of micro-services.
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.
Menon: Infoblox is the
leader in Secure Cloud-Managed Network Services, bringing next-level security,
reliability, and automation to on-premises, cloud, and hybrid networks, managed
through a single pane of glass. Infoblox has 8,000 customers, including 350 of
the Fortune 500. Infoblox pioneered a
cloud-native platform for organizations to easily implement DNS, DHCP, and IP
Address management, as well as DNS Security in the form of modular, scalable
SaaS applications in distributed locations for local survivability and secure,
optimized access to cloud. Workforce transformation is paramount for every
organization and DDI is foundational to all network and cloud
interactions.
VMblog: And
while talking about your products, can you give readers a few examples of how
your offerings are unique? What are your differentiators?
Menon: Infoblox's SaaS
offerings are based on its unique cloud-native platform called BloxOne
Platform, the only cloud-native platform in the industry to offer DDI services.
BloxOne Platform provides:
- Seamless and agile scalability for changing business needs
- Automated life cycle management to mitigate complexity
- Flexible options for on-prem or cloud based deployment
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?
Menon: Modern,
cloud-born companies in industry verticals such as Ad Tech, Fin Tech, Digital
Marketing, and Business Intelligence have adopted containerization right from
the beginning. Other more traditional industries such as Oil and Gas,
Manufacturing, and Healthcare are in various stages of migrating to
containerization. They will continue to operate their legacy infrastructure as
before while moving all new development to microservices and containerization.
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?
Menon: The big changes
and direction in this space will be driven by the wider adoption of 5G, IoT, and
edge computing. Cloud-native technologies, containerization, and micro-services
are crucial for the development and adoption of end user applications in IoT
and edge computing such as self-driving cars, remote-surgery, and smart cities.
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