@Lacework. Former Delphix, Symantec, Sun, Apple / NeXT, Rockwell AI Labs, and Nasa. Passionate about great products, music, food, and 357 other hobbies...
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@JamesMaguire A7: Vendors who provide capabilities in any technology category that can operate consistently across the clouds. Data management, infrastructure configuration, CI/CD tooling, governance and compliance... #eweekchat https://t.co/Bkn6d3uVpN
@JamesMaguire Enterprises needs to make this choice and follow through with people / process / technology to achieve it #eweekchat https://t.co/HOEIl9IGTL
Which brings us to back to two very different multi-cloud strategies: 1. Trying to make everything portable across clouds for future migration, and 2. Assuming things built in any cloud will stay there, and determining which workloads / data ... #eweekchat https://t.co/FVaDoGjFvG
@JamesMaguire A5: enterprises can help project teams by building out enterprise-wide best-practices of DevOps processes and tools, technologies, open-source components and multi-cloud software capabilities to leverage. #eweekchat https://t.co/ps1SnJLxld
@JamesMaguire A5: If a companies objective with multi-cloud is avoiding lock-in, then they have to carefully govern the architecture and services decisions for each project. Easier said than done with the real-world pressures on project veloc... #eweekchat https://t.co/gtLjTsCgrO
A2: Most companies have at least a few apps in multiple clouds, so they can claim they are already 'multi cloud'. However, typical enterprises are 10-30% in Cloud A, 1-10% in Cloud B, and 1-2% in Cloud C, with 50-90% still on-premise. #eweekchat https://t.co/fRiDBSWFib
@JamesMaguire A4: Companies also struggle on the portability tradeoff. Taking advantage of cloud-specific services may accelerate project velocity but inhibit future workload movement. #eweekchat https://t.co/WSbt1xaXN4
@JamesMaguire A4: Managing the multi-cloud application lifecycle is a top challenge. Building on disparate services, testing interoperability of application landscapes (including with onpremise applications) and managing these consistently. #eweekchat https://t.co/zVLMvHDni4
A4: Companies also struggle on the portability tradeoff. Taking advantage of cloud-specific services may accelerate project velocity but inhibit future workload movement. #eweekchat https://t.co/1HSsPOdauc
A4: Managing the multi-cloud application lifecycle is a top challenge. Building on disparate services, testing interoperability of application landscapes (including with onpremise applications) and managing these consistently. #eweekchat https://t.co/B2cQRAEHn2
A3: The clouds are disparate enough in services and APIs that each has its own learning curve. Most CIOs I talk to say they are becoming competent on one cloud, and still early learning on the others. #eweekchat https://t.co/9zBPq0hTir
A1: Multicloud strategies often start with risk management, and then grow to fit for purpose, determining which applications (and their captive data) get the most benefit from each cloud's capabilities. #eweekchat https://t.co/RLqdDWLeSn
@JamesMaguire A8 We've discussed the trends - more data, more places, more regulations, more complexity. Investments will be made to make data easier despite these headwinds. Programmable data infrastructure will enable automation, and ML wil... #eweekchat https://t.co/pLyLdS5JK9
@JamesMaguire A7 Companies need immutable, air gapped copies of their production systems, with continuous capture and recoveries measure in minutes not days or weeks #eweekchat https://t.co/cDTOxYQKD2