Let’s relate Ravello to a few things we heard in the keynote this AM
5% of workloads are in the cloud
Half of that is experimental, new initiatives etc
The other half is bleeding into AWS
We are not too late but we are behind, and the reason AWS is at $10B is because they started early and Iaas is iterative
The 95% is backed up behind a Damn. And that Damn is the reality that enterprise workloads are tethered to the data center
Let’s relate Ravello to a few things we heard in the keynote this AM
5% of workloads are in the cloud
Half of that is experimental, new initiatives etc
The other half is bleeding into AWS
We are not too late but we are behind, and the reason AWS is at $10B is because they started early and Iaas is iterative
The 95% is backed up behind a Damn. And that Damn is the reality that enterprise workloads are tethered to the data center
Let’s relate Ravello to a few things we heard in the keynote this AM
5% of workloads are in the cloud
Half of that is experimental, new initiatives etc
The other half is bleeding into AWS
We are not too late but we are behind, and the reason AWS is at $10B is because they started early and Iaas is iterative
The 95% is backed up behind a Damn. And that Damn is the reality that enterprise workloads are tethered to the data center
Let’s relate Ravello to a few things we heard in the keynote this AM
5% of workloads are in the cloud
Half of that is experimental, new initiatives etc
The other half is bleeding into AWS
We are not too late but we are behind, and the reason AWS is at $10B is because they started early and Iaas is iterative
The 95% is backed up behind a Damn. And that Damn is the reality that enterprise workloads are tethered to the data center
Let’s relate Ravello to a few things we heard in the keynote this AM
5% of workloads are in the cloud
Half of that is experimental, new initiatives etc
The other half is bleeding into AWS
We are not too late but we are behind, and the reason AWS is at $10B is because they started early and Iaas is iterative
The 95% is backed up behind a Damn. And that Damn is the reality that enterprise workloads are tethered to the data center
Let’s relate Ravello to a few things we heard in the keynote this AM
5% of workloads are in the cloud
Half of that is experimental, new initiatives etc
The other half is bleeding into AWS
We are not too late but we are behind, and the reason AWS is at $10B is because they started early and Iaas is iterative
The 95% is backed up behind a Damn. And that Damn is the reality that enterprise workloads are tethered to the data center
Let’s relate Ravello to a few things we heard in the keynote this AM
5% of workloads are in the cloud
Half of that is experimental, new initiatives etc
The other half is bleeding into AWS
We are not too late but we are behind, and the reason AWS is at $10B is because they started early and Iaas is iterative
The 95% is backed up behind a Damn. And that Damn is the reality that enterprise workloads are tethered to the data center