Ready for KubeCon + CloudNativeCon 2023? Attending the show? Make sure to visit with Mezmo.
KubeCon + CloudNativeCon takes place November 6 - 9, 2023 in Chicago, Illinois.
Read this exclusive interview between VMblog and Tucker Callaway, CEO of
Mezmo, one of the industry's leading observability data platforms.
VMblog:
If you were giving a KubeCon attendee a quick overview of the company, what
would you say? How would you describe the company?
Tucker Callaway: Mezmo helps enterprises understand and
optimize their telemetry data and enables them to respond intelligently.
Mezmo's Telemetry Pipeline makes it easy for SREs, developers, platform, and
cloud engineers to understand the Kubernetes data using data profiling and then
ingest, transform, and route telemetry data from Kubernetes, and other sources,
to any observability platform for analytics or visualization. Mezmo helps
manage data costs, uncover business insights, and ensure data compliance.
VMblog:
Your company is sponsoring this year's KubeCon + CloudNativeCon event. Can you
talk about what that sponsorship looks like?
Callaway: Mezmo is the Gold sponsor at this year's
KubeCon in Chicago.
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?
Callaway: Yes, attendees can find us at booth #B10. Attendees can speak with our data
experts and consult about the challenges they have in managing telemetry data
from Kubernetes and other sources. They can see a live demo of Mezmo Telemetry
Pipeline and also participate in our free Data Profiling program, which will
help them understand their Kubernetes data.
They can also receive their own copy of the O'REILLY book "The Fundamentals of Telemetry Data."
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?
Callaway: Yes, we have been a longtime supporter of
KubeCon and the CNCF community. We are very excited about projects such as
OpenTelemetry. This is a unique opportunity for us to meet various technology
leaders and practitioners, learn about industry advancements, showcase our
latest technology, and meet other partner organizations.
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?
Callaway: Every enterprise is overwhelmed by the deluge
of telemetry data. Logs, metrics, traces, and events emitted by hundreds of
systems. We believe there is a better and more cost-effective way to manage
this data. And, it starts with data understanding. That is the reason we
invested in building first-of-its-kind Data Profiling technology for telemetry
data. Once you understand your data, you can make much better decisions about
optimizing the data for use in analytics and get the most value from your data.
Our approach of Understand, Optimize and
Respond helps SREs, cloud and platform engineers, and infrastructure teams to
build a strong business case for telemetry pipelines that help reduce data
costs and deliver unprecedented business insights from the data. And they can
get started for free, just in hours.
VMblog:
Can you double click on your company's technologies? And talk about the types
of problems you solve for a KubeCon + CloudNativeCon attendee.
Callaway: Mezmo provides a telemetry pipeline that
includes data ingestion, profiling, transformation, and routing to any
observability platforms like DataDog, Splunk, Prometheus, New Relic, or
Grafana.
We have adopted OpenTelemetry to make it
easier for our customers to collect data and route the formatted data to desired
sources. Mezmo is available in the cloud as well as in customers' local
environments.
Users can build a telemetry pipeline using our
graphical interface or if you are an SRE or a platform engineer, you can also
build and deploy pipeline as code. Mezmo provides complete control on our
platform, which customers love for its speed, ease of use, and scale. The
platform gives customers flexibility, regardless of the other tools they use in
their observability and security stacks.
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?
Callaway: We believe that the first step in getting the
most from your telemetry data and your observability investments is to
understand your data. That's what we heard from dozens of SREs we spoke to, and
why we invested in building Data Profiling.
We also believe that telemetry pipelines
cannot be static. They need to be responsive. If there is a data drift or an
incident detected by the observability platform, the pipeline should be able to
detect that and adjust data streams, recommend remediation actions, or take
actions that result in faster MTTR.
This unique approach of Understand, Optimize,
and Respond is what sets us apart.
VMblog:
Where does your company fit within the container, cloud, Kubernetes ecosystem?
Callaway: Mezmo Telemetry Pipeline supports
OpenTelemetry standards, and we have designed best practices to understand and
optimize the telemetry data from Kubernetes. This helps organizations better
monitor their Kubernetes containers and services, and extract business insights
from the logs and events generated for maintaining better system performance
and delivering superior customer experience.
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?
Callaway: Yes, we are launching our new Data Profiling
for telemetry data as well as showcasing our unique approach to Understanding,
Optimizing, and Responding to Kubernetes data.
VMblog: With regard to containers and Kubernetes, is
there anything holding it back from a wider distribution? If so, what is it?
And how do we overcome it?
Callaway: Kubernetes has established itself as the de
facto container orchestration platform and a vital component of the
cloud-native trend. With hundreds of microservices operating on thousands of
containers in ephemeral and disposable pods, it delivers speed, elasticity, and
agility to software development; but it also adds complexity. Monitoring such a
large, distributed, dynamic system is complex and critical.
It abstracts away a lot of complexity to
expedite deployment. However, it masks the resources in use and makes root
cause analysis more complicated when something goes wrong. Observability in
Kubernetes has been a challenge. Using the latest innovation in telemetry
pipelines can help with collecting data, transforming the data for analysis,
extracting business insights from Kubernetes telemetry data, and bringing the
desired visibility into Kubernetes deployments.
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?
Callaway: Many companies have taken the cloud-first
approach. However, there are many enterprises that prefer some combination of
cloud and on-premises deployment. Security, compliance, and data concerns
remain one of the roadblocks. We offer telemetry pipeline both in the public
cloud and in customers' own environments. In addition, a lack of understanding
of cloud TCO and cloud data storage and compute costs keep enterprises from
going all-in. Other challenges include a lack of skill availability to monitor
and manage cloud health and performance.
Having a proper observability stack is critical
to address many of the security costs, as well as ease-of-performance
management issues.
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 2024?
Callaway: We believe there will be a continued surge in
digital adoption and resulting acceleration in telemetry data generation. The
cost of managing and processing the data will continue to increase and
enterprises will look for more effective ways to manage their data.
Cybersecurity will continue to be a concern
and enterprises will demand more responsive infrastructure that not only
processes the data in real time but also detects data drifts and anomalies to
adjust how data is being processed.
We'll see Generative AI moving from science
projects to more practical uses across all functional groups in organizations.
In 2023 we saw many observability platforms incorporating GenAI and LLM into
their analytics, and next year as well, we'll see an increasing appetite for
data consumption and teams demanding access to more variety, and volume of
data, in the right formats to fuel their AI/ML.
VMblog:
Are you giving away any prizes at your booth or participating in any prize
giveaways?
Callaway: At booth #B10 we'll be handing out
complimentary copies of O'REILLY's new report, "The Fundamentals of Telemetry
Pipeline," which covers the transformative power of telemetry
pipelines and how they are used to manage application performance. Paired with
this book, we'll also have new bookmarks, fun observability sticker sheets, and
mesmerizing enamel pins.
VMblog:
Is your company sponsoring any type of party or get together during the event
that you'd like to notify attendees about?
Callaway: This year we're hosting an intimate customer
and prospect dinner to drive deeper conversations around managing the
exponential growth of telemetry data and the need to have visibility into
systems to surface insights. We'll be at The Gage in the heart of Chicago at 6
p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 8. Reach out to the Mezmo team if you're interested in
attending.
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