Sanjay Poonen, VMware | VMworld 2016
01. Sanjay Poonen, VMware, Visits #theCUBE!. (00:20) 02. Share A Little Bit About Tomorrows Announcments And The Keynotes. (01:05) 03. What Are Some Specifics On Where Airwatch Is Evolving. (03:19) 04. How Does Your Security Story Play Into The Indenity Management. (05:42) 05. How Do You Look At Timing And When The Market Is Ready For Someting. (07:13) 06. How Should We Look At The Unification Announcement. (09:06) 07. What Does Workspace One Do. (10:51) 08. What's The Uptake Your Taking On Traction. (13:02) 09. How Would You Summerize The Keynote For Tomorrow. (13:57) 10. What Are Your Marching Orders For The Team. (14:38) 11. What Is Your Differentiation As An Organization. (16:20) 12. Do You See Social Media As A Part Of Marketing. (17:07) Track List created with http://www.vinjavideo.com. --- --- Taking security to the mobile world: User friendly, enterprise secure | #VMworld by Nelson Williams | Aug 29, 2016 Computer security used to be about access points. The company controlled the computers, the network lived inside nice, safe wires, and all the tools everyone used were locked up in a mainframe down in the basement. That time is gone. The world now is one where the network flies through the air, tools come from cloud services, and everyone accesses the system through six different devices, one of which might be a company computer. Bringing security to the modern computing world is no easy task. To learn more about security and mobile computing, John Furrier (@furrier) and John Troyer (@JTroyer), host and guest host of theCUBE, from the SiliconANGLE Media team, went to the VMworld US conference in Las Vegas. There, they spoke to Sanjay Poonen, GM of End-User Computing and Head of Global Marketing and Communications at VMware, Inc. A focus on transformation The discussion started off with Poonen explaining the transformation as businesses moved to the Cloud. He mentioned a key part of this transformation is preparing people for the public Cloud and an increasingly mobile world. There are three points to focus on, Poonen said. The entire base of how people work is driven by identity management and access to applications. Then there’s unified endpoint management, where desktop and mobile come together. Finally, a business must consider management and security and how they think about security. Customer expectations Poonen then described how the security people in a company have become a key influence on buying decisions. VMware’s products protect the endpoint, the user and the data center, which makes them attractive to the security people. They’ve also picked partners with strong brands on security, he said. Even the best security is meaningless if no one knows how to use it. Poonen pointed out that VMware needed to attack cost and complexity. On mobile, it has attacked security and simplicity. He summed up the company’s approach as consumer simple, enterprise secure. “These solutions are going to become very critical to our growth,” he said.