Robert Youngjohns, HPE - HPE Big Data Conference 2016 #SeizeTheData #theCUBE
01. Robert Youngjohns, HPE, visits #theCUBE!. (00:18) 02. Software and Analytics Eating the World. (00:33) 03. Amazing Apps and the Fear of Machines. (03:12) 04. Ethical Challenges Brought Forth by Machine Learning. (04:54) 05. Does HPE Have a Better Solution Than IBM Watson?. (06:06) 06. The Strength of the HPE Platform. (08:23) 07. HPE Strategy for the Developer World. (09:53) 08. Finding the Industries in Which You Have Expertise. (11:36) 09. Competition and Open Sourcing. (12:23) 10. The Shift in the Public Cloud Strategy. (16:25) 11. State of the Software Industry and SaaS. (18:20) 12. Data Has Gravity. (23:04) 13. The HP Legacy of Systems Management. (23:53) Track List created with http://www.vinjavideo.com. --- --- Head of HPE Software: “There’s no standing still here” | #GuestOfTheWeek by Marlene Den Bleyker | Sep 9, 2016 At the recent HPE Big Data conference in Boston, MA, the company unleashed the power of Vertica 8 advanced analytics and Haven OnDemand cloud services platform solutions on stage during the keynote addresses. One keynote speaker, considered a visionary by many in the industry, was Robert Youngjohns, EVP and GM of Software at Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co. (HPE). During the keynote, he shared HPE’s present status and its vision for the future. He even threw down the gauntlet to industry giant IBM and its Watson Analytics platform to prove HPE is one of the most powerful players in enterprise technology. Youngjohns joined Dave Vellante (@dvellante) and Paul Gillin (@pgillin), cohosts of theCUBE, from the SiliconANGLE Media team, during the HPE Big Data Conference to provide some of his insights about where the industry is heading. This week theCUBE features Robert Youngjohns as our Guest of the Week. The data evolution accelerates Vellante led the discussion by talking about Youngjohns’ view of how software is eating the world — and now analytics is eating software. Youngjohns responded by talking about data disruption. “I think if you look at the evolution … the way we use to divide the applications as we go to study a business process, you know walk around with that clipboard [to see] who’s doing what. We’d then turn that into a process with a nice diagram. We’d then try to automate that process and then we decided what data we need to support it,” he said. He went on to add: “And I think what’s happening today is the world’s almost turned upside-down. People are starting with the data. They’re using analytics on the data to expose patterns or potential new business processes. Then they are building new business processes on top of that, and they’re transforming and disrupting industries. I think that’s a huge change, and its accelerating right now.”