Day Two Kickoff | Hadoop Summit Dublin 2016
01. Kickoff Day 2, Hadoop Summit 2016 Dublin on #theCUBE!. (00:14) 02. How the Hadoop Ecosystem Has Grown. (01:00) 03. "Making It" As a Big Data Company. (03:25) 04. Open Source, Community and Hadoop. (06:04) 05. Linux and Unix and the Open Source Revolution. (09:03) 06. Big Data Community Needs Core Platform to be Tier One. (10:13) 07. Amazon, Microsoft and the Propietary Advantage. (11:05) 08. The Hadoop Ecosystem Must Own the Hybrid Environment. (12:54) 09. Hybrid Talks at Hadoop Dublin. (16:13) 10. The Race to Provide Automation & Tooling for Big Data Apps. (17:20) 11. Hybrid Has to Have Significant Differentiation On-Prem. (19:27) 12. Going Forward: Divvying Up the Cloud Financially. (21:05) Track List created with http://www.vinjavideo.com. --- --- The Hadoop ecosystem still fragmented and in need of unification | #HS16Dublin by Marlene Den Bleyker | Apr 14, 2016 As day two of the Hadoop Summit – Dublin 2016 began in Dublin, the consensus seemed to be that the Hadoop ecosystem is not moving fast enough to bring the platform to the enterprise. John Furrier (@furrier) and Dave Vellante (@dvellante), cohosts of theCUBE, from the SiliconANGLE Media team, opened the show today viewing the landscape of the Hadoop ecosystem, noting that it is still fragmented and needs unification. A changing landscape “You are seeing the transformation of the ecosystem, and it couldn’t be more highlighted by this show. In our view, it’s growing, but is it big enough?” said Furrier. He continued by saying that the big players are moving into the space, including Oracle, IBM, HP and Microsoft, and he wondered what the landscape is going to look like in the ecosystem. Furrier feels as if the Hadoop ecosystem has failed customers by not going faster. He explained that there is probably about 10 percent enterprise penetration, and while it is still early, the market is shifting and if it doesn’t grow fast enough, the big guys will be moving into the space with the cloud. Hitting the numbers Vellante pointed out that the only “pure play” companies to hit the leaderboard in terms of revenue were Palantir Technologies, Inc. and Splunk, Inc. “Add those two up and you’re talking about a billion dollars; and Cloudera, a private company, is estimated to be just under $200 million in revenue last year … and Hortonworks hit about 120 million, so they are becoming more than rounding errors,” he said. However, he also pointed out that players like Microsoft could aim at big data and takeover, much like Amazon Web Services (AWS), but in a bigger way. Furrier believes we are seeing a wave of change with the enterprise transitioning. And while there are some successful new startups, he feels that experience matters and we are seeing the same movie over and over again. Community matters The companies in the ecosystem are targeting the CIO, who wants simplicity not complexity. “They are kind of misfiring on what CIOs want,” Furrier states. He compared Hadoop to Linux and said that history is repeating itself in the open-source environment. The innovation for Linux really begun once everyone came together as a community, so in his view, the community needs to come together around a core platform because there are many opportunities in the Internet of Things (IoT) and analytic markets. Total cost of ownership Vellante spoke about the total cost of ownership and how the bigger companies like AWS are providing growth and value. According to Furrier, “This industry has to move out of the catch-up, fall behind, the catch-up, fall behind to catch up and drive.” Furrier also advised that insights will not win the battle; value must be added. He offered up the low-hanging fruit of cybersecurity, fraud detection and 360 marketing, but ultimately he said that the public cloud guys will win the profit battle. Furrier and Vellante concluded that the Hadoop ecosystem needs to go beyond and do a better job of providing value. @theCUBE #HS16Dublin