Ready for KubeCon + CloudNativeCon 2022? Attending the show? Make sure to visit with Quali.
KubeCon + CloudNativeCon takes place October 24 - 28, 2022 in Detroit, Michigan.
Read this exclusive interview between VMblog and Lior Koriat, CEO at
Quali. Quali provides the leading platform for Environments-as-a-Service. Global 2000 enterprises rely on Quali’s infrastructure automation and control plane platform to support the continuous delivery of application software at scale. Quali delivers greater control and visibility over infrastructure, so businesses can increase engineering productivity and velocity, understand and manage cloud costs, optimize infrastructure utilization and mitigate risk.
VMblog: Can you give VMblog readers a quick overview
of your company?
Lior Koriat: Quali is leading the Environments as a Service category, aiming
to democratize cloud and make programmable infrastructure accessible to
application developers in a safe and productive manner. With more than a million
users worldwide and over a hundred enterprise customers, our solution eliminates
infrastructure bottlenecks by providing self-service access to complete
environments for application development. It allows organizations to leverage and
better manage existing IaC assets like Helm and Terraform. As an IaC control
plane it offers greater control and visibility over infrastructure, so
businesses can increase engineering productivity and velocity, understand and
manage cloud costs, optimize infrastructure utilization and mitigate risks.
VMblog: Your
company is sponsoring this year's KubeCon + CloudNativeCon event. Can you talk about what that sponsorship
looks like?
Lior Koriat: We are excited to be a Silver Sponsor of KubeCon +
CloudNativeCon North America. For us, it's an opportunity to connect with CNCF
members and the broader community of Kubernetes users, experts, and
stakeholders. Several members of our leadership and technical staff will be
on-site to demonstrate how our users automate discovery, orchestration, and
governance for Kubernetes manifests and complete application environments.
VMblog: How can
attendees of the event find you? What do
you have planned at your booth this year?
What type of things will attendees be able to do at your booth?
Lior Koriat: We'll be at booth S6, three rows in from the main entrance,
and located on the left-hand side of the expo hall. We'll be demonstrating how to
automate discovery for Kubernetes manifests and Helm Charts, then show the
process of orchestrating complete application environments, self-service access
for developers within their IDE and IDP, and automated deployment within the
CI/CD pipeline. Our team will also help attendees set up automation for their
own Kubernetes assets. And anyone who creates and activates a new trial account
of our Torque platform at the booth has the chance to enter a raffle for a
prize we'll be giving away at the end of the show-so be sure to stop by our
booth for details.
VMblog: Are you
and your company excited for this event to be in person this year in Detroit? What are your thoughts and expectations for
the show? Are attendees ready to come
back in person, in full force?
Lior Koriat: I believe
that everyone attending gets more value out of in-person events as opposed to
virtual events. It's important for us to talk to people face to face and have
meaningful conversations; it is the only way to build real relationships and to
understand the problems these people are trying to solve within their
organizations. We've had an incredible response from in-person conferences this
year, so we're excited to see what KubeCon/CloudNativeCon has in store.
VMblog: Have you sponsored KubeCon + CloudNativeCon in the
past? If so, what is it about this show that keeps you coming back as a
sponsor?
Lior Koriat: This is our first time sponsoring this event. It became clear that we needed
to support the community once we saw how ubiquitous Kubernetes-based
infrastructure-whether configured natively or through Helm Charts-is becoming within
our users' application environments. Our users are finding that automation is
critical not only for its ability to deliver and maintain those environments,
but to keep developers happy and productive. Sponsoring this event is an
important step toward advocating for automation to support and enable the infrastructure
experts within the Kubernetes and cloud-native community.
VMblog: What do you attribute to the success and growth of this
industry?
Lior Koriat: Companies are increasingly
moving workloads to the cloud because of its flexibility and scalability. But
with increased cloud adoption comes other unanticipated business challenges.
Cloud infrastructure is much more complex than just the cloud platform itself. It's
further complicated by the proliferation of tools throughout the DevOps
pipeline. As a result, companies have ended up with fragmented toolchains and
processes which make it difficult to scale, to enforce security and compliance policies,
and to manage costs. That's why many are turning to platforms like Quali's
Torque to overcome these challenges, so they can better understand and manage infrastructure
across the entire environment lifecycle.
VMblog: What are
you personally most interested in seeing or learning at KubeCon +
CloudNativeCon?
Lior Koriat: Again, for us, it's really about learning more about the real-world
pains that people in the industry are contending with. Our platform addresses
many of these challenges, but it's important to us at Quali that we continue to
evolve the capabilities of Torque to tackle future challenges as they develop.
Meeting directly with industry professionals at conferences like KubeCon, allows
us to continue to have our finger on the pulse.
VMblog: Can you
double click on your company's technologies?
And talk about the types of problems you solve for a KubeCon +
CloudNativeCon attendee.
Lior Koriat: The market has reached a point of great saturation of IaC
assets, and a significantly elevated level of infrastructure complexity and
cloud cost. Quali is changing the dynamics of cloud and infrastructure consumption.
By that, I mean we are bringing frictionless centralized control to DevOps
teams that allows the business to maintain governance over infrastructure and
gain greater visibility into costs and consumption, all while getting out of
the way of their developers to accelerate product development and time to
market. That also applies to containerized technology and Kubernetes due to the
distributed nature of application development, operational and technological opportunity
for scale, and the associated need to govern anything that has a security and cost
risk associated to it.
VMblog: What kind
of message will an attendee hear from you this year? What will they take back to help sell their
management team and decision makers?
Lior Koriat: First of all, with the economy potentially softening,
there's increased scrutiny on costs within almost every business. Instead of
just knowing what the monthly cloud bill is, Quali can put business context
around that cloud consumption, so organizations can manage ballooning cloud
costs by measuring value, prioritizing spend and predicting future costs.
Secondly, there are too few people with the cloud
infrastructure expertise to accommodate the number of developers within most
organizations and the number of technologies each company relies on. With
Quali, DevOps teams can maximize and "multiply" those skills to alleviate the
bottleneck created by that skills gap.
We want people to understand how Quali can make not only
infrastructure management and the software development process quicker, easier
and more consistent, but from a business perspective that the time to value on
Quali's platforms is remarkably quick.
VMblog: While
thinking about your company's solutions, can you give readers a few examples of
how your offerings are unique? What are
your differentiators? What sets you
apart from the competition?
Lior Koriat: Quali's Torque platform serves as a control plane, so it
adds value by automatically discovering your
existing IaC assets (within your source control), normalizing different IaC
tech like Terraform, Helm, etc., and presenting them in the form of stackable blueprints
that allow users self-service access to complete application environments.
Torque is also cloud agnostic and multi-cloud/hybrid-cloud capable.
VMblog: Where does
your company fit within the container, cloud, Kubernetes ecosystem?
Lior Koriat: Quali bridges the vertical gap between consumers of
automated infrastructure (developers, testers, SREs, etc.) and the producers of
it (DevOps and automation teams). That also applies to containerized/Kubernetes
environments running on-prem or in the cloud.
We plug ourselves into the "day in a life" of a developer (populating our environments
into the IDE, IDP the developer uses) and provide environment services to
developers and the CI/CD pipeline (on-demand governed launch, access, logs and
observability, debug, teardown, etc.).
At the same time, we allow the DevOps, Platform Ops and ITOps teams to
automatically discover all of their IaC and Helm assets, normalize them into
blueprints, apply consumption, compliance and security policies, enforce custom
tagging and govern the launch of such environments.
Such environments can be launched on any target infrastructure from your laptop
to the public cloud in a governed fashion, monitoring all infrastructure data
(cost, drift, diffs, etc.) and owning the launched environment all the way to
its eventual teardown.
VMblog: KubeCon +
CloudNativeCon is typically a great venue for a company to launch a new product
or an update to an existing product. Will
your company be announcing anything new?
If so, can you give us a sneak preview?
Lior Koriat: Our Torque infrastructure
automation and control plane platform allows the automation and management of
application environments and works in any cloud, and across all major
infrastructure types like Kubernetes.
Ahead of KubeCon, we are announcing
enhanced features for our Torque platform. For example, we have expanded our
environment drift detection capabilities to include Helm charts; we previously announced
this capability for Terraform. Our new release also allows organizations to
import existing Terraform definitions into Torque, so users can leverage their
existing work to define policies. We've added an Environments View in a single
pane of glass that lists all elements in environment blueprint definitions
pulled from the customer's Git.
VMblog: Where are we at in 2022 with
regard to containers and Kubernetes? Is
there anything still holding it back from a wider distribution? If so, what is it? And how do we overcome it?
Lior Koriat: Containers and Kubernetes
offer great flexibility, scalability and development velocity. It enables distributed
application development and deployment and supports all modern application
architectures. It's here to stay and because it is a favorite target for developers,
despite all odds (as it is complex) Kubernetes adoption is taking off. Developers
love containers, so Docker isn't going anywhere either.
VMblog: Are companies going all in
for the cloud? Or do you see a return
back to on-premises? Are there
roadblocks in place keeping companies from going all cloud?
Lior Koriat: Most companies are sold on the
virtues of the cloud. The elasticity of the cloud provides organizations with a
high level of flexibility, and they can avoid the massive capital outlay and maintenance
associated with on-premises infrastructure. I think the move to cloud is going
to continue.
However, many companies still
have existing investment in on-prem infrastructure, whether because of legacy
applications, industry compliance requirements, or simply better budget control.
While they might also be utilizing some cloud resources, that can keep them
from going all in on the cloud.
Migrating completely from
on-prem to the cloud is certainly a strategy for many companies, but even then,
we see multi-cloud strategies to help manage cost over time and offer
redundancy.
VMblog: The keynote stage will be covering a number
of big topics, but what big changes or trends does your company see taking
shape as we head into 2023?
Lior Koriat: With cloud adoption continuing to grow, companies will have
to come to terms with cost management, and control planes will be the next big
thing in the world of cloud. The threat of a recessionary environment will
separate category leaders from laggards in the industry. Organizations will
look for consolidation across the board-from architecture tools to
collaboration apps.
VMblog: Are you
giving away any prizes at your booth or participating in any prize giveaways?
Lior Koriat: We'll be holding a raffle for a free drone for anyone who
signs up and activates a free trial of Torque at our booth during the event.
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