We try to discern the strategy behind two acquisitions this week: Broadcom buying CA and AT&T buying AlienVault. Seems fine. Meanwhile, you get to join conversation as we talk about how much different product management seems at cloud native vendors than traditional, “enterprise product management.”
Important nonsense
Vinsanto (https://www.google.com/search?q=Vinsanto&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjl2eOyz5LcAhXj5IMKHaK6BkcQ_AUICygC&biw=1593&bih=960&dpr=2) is the Greek wine Coté was talking about (https://www.google.com/search?q=Vinsanto&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjl2eOyz5LcAhXj5IMKHaK6BkcQ_AUICygC&biw=1593&bih=960&dpr=2).
No more hot-dogs at Le Café CostCo (https://losangeles.cbslocal.com/2018/07/10/costco-removes-polish-dog-menu/).
Coté rides a Lime scooter (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rLpqEfnZs5Q&feature=youtu.be)
Sponsored by Datadog
This episode is sponsored by Datadog, a monitoring platform for cloud-scale infrastructure and applications. Built by engineers, for engineers, Datadog provides visibility into more than 200 technologies, including AWS, Chef, and Docker with built-in metric dashboards and automated alerts. With end-to-end request tracing, Datadog provides visibility into your applications and their underlying infrastructure—all in one place. Sign up for a free trial (https://www.datadoghq.com/ts/tshirt-landingpage/?utm_source=Advertisement&utm_medium=Advertisement&utm_campaign=SoftwareDefinedTalkRead-Tshirt) at www.datadog.com/sdt (http://www.datadog.com/sdt)
Datadog wants you to know they monitor performance metrics (https://www.datadoghq.com/blog/monitoring-kubernetes-performance-metrics/). You try it by signing up for a trial at www.datadog.com/sdt (http://www.datadog.com/sdt).
Relevant to your interests
AT&T to Acquire AlienVault (https://www.alienvault.com/who-we-are/press-releases/at-t-to-acquire-alienvault)
Broadcom buying CA (https://www.theregister.co.uk/2018/07/12/broadcom_ca_technologies/):
Broadcom buying CA for US$18.9bn. "Mainframe solutions dominate CA’s income, pulling nearly $2.2bn in the 2017-2018 financial year, followed by its enterprise solutions segment at $1.75bn and services at $311m."
Coté’s 7 tips for becoming a software company (https://medium.com/@cote/so-you-want-to-become-a-software-company-7-tips-to-not-screw-it-up-9580235af076), 2016.
“ (https://twitter.com/sogrady/status/1017402130011971584)Wait… what? (https://twitter.com/sogrady/status/1017402130011971584)” (https://twitter.com/sogrady/status/1017402130011971584)
Basho investor to pay up $20m in damages for campaign that put biz on 'greased slide to failure' (https://www.theregister.co.uk/2018/07/09/basho_damages_20m_misinformation_threats/)
Coté: what was Davenport’s plan to profit?
A customer complaint about Google Cloud went viral last week, and now Google is doing damage control to 'ensure this does not happen again (http://www.thisisinsider.com/google-cloud-responds-viral-customer-complaint-2018-7/)’
The mysterious value of dancing hot dog shares (https://www.bloomberg.com/view/articles/2018-07-11/investors-gave-snap-a-gift), i.e., Snap: ‘You might point out that you own a share in the company that grows in value as the company does, and that right now you can sell that share on the stock exchange for $13.31. But that evades rather than answering the question: What does the person who buys the share from you expect to get from it? The value of a stock in the market is supposed to be equal to the present value of its future cash flows, and there’s nothing about the stock itself that promises you any cash flows. Or you might say that Snap’s directors and officers have a fiduciary duty to you to maximize the profits of the company and the value of your shares, but even if that were true—it’s pretty debatable (https://www.amazon.com/Shareholder-Value-Myth-Shareholders-Corporations/dp/1605098132)—it continues to avoid the question. If Snap made massive consistent profits for decades, it would still never have to give any money back to shareholders, and the shareholders would have no way to force it to. “I own a 1/1,258,171,112 share of a massive pile of cash,” you could say, but you could never spend it.’
Improving intranet search, always a problem:
Box buys AI thing (https://www.axios.com/box-acquires-file-search-tool-butterai-7d7fdd64-a633-4dfa-ae38-5b2d3186b448.html): “a startup whose software lets users search within files across multiple work applications. Butter.ai will be shutting down its application as part of the deal.”
Slack fixing search (https://www.zdnet.com/article/slack-announces-improved-search-tool/#ftag=RSSbaffb68): most anything (https://slackhq.com/less-searching-more-doing-d249e59fa8c1) would be better than how it is now.
IT spending survey from Goldman (https://www.thestreet.com/investing/technology-spending-by-the-numbers-from-public-cloud-to-security-measures-14644681): security, private cloud, and storage rise. Public cloud and SaaS fall, BI/analytics stays the same.
Conferences, et. al.
Sep 24th to 27th - SpringOne Platform (https://springoneplatform.io/), in DC/Maryland (crabs!) get $200 off registration with the code S1P200_Cote. Also, check out the Spring One Tour - coming to a city near you (https://springonetour.io/)!
Listener Feedback
Emeric from Romina got a sticker and we will send you one too.
SDT news & hype
Check out Software Defined Interviews (http://www.softwaredefinedinterviews.com/), our new podcast. Pretty self-descriptive, plus the #exegesis podcast we’ve been doing, all in one, for free.
Join us in Slack (http://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/slack).
Buy some t-shirts (https://fsgprints.myshopify.com/collections/software-defined-talk)! DISCOUNT CODE: SDTFSG (20% off)
Send your name and address to [email protected] (mailto:[email protected]) and we will send you a sticker.
Brandon built the Quick Concall iPhone App (https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/quick-concall/id1399948033?mt=8) and he wants you to buy it for $0.99.
Recommendations
Brandon: In the Dark Podcast (https://www.apmreports.org/in-the-dark).
Matt: Apple hardware, “should be fine.”
Coté: Lovecraft’s commonplace book and such: pictures (https://thelittlesleep.wordpress.com/2015/07/20/john-hay-library-of-providence-and-h-p-lovecraft/), some transcription (https://www.wired.com/2011/07/h-p-lovecrafts-commonplace-book/) (better spaced version (http://www.lapetiteclaudine.com/archives/011196.html)).

We try to discern the strategy behind two acquisitions this week: Broadcom buying CA and AT&T buying AlienVault. Seems fine. Meanwhile, you get to join conversation as we talk about how much different product management seems at cloud native vendors than traditional, “enterprise product management.”

Important nonsense

Vinsanto is the Greek wine Coté was talking about.
No more hot-dogs at Le Café CostCo.
Coté rides a Lime scooter

Sponsored by Datadog

This episode is sponsored by Datadog, a monitoring platform for cloud-scale infrastructure and applications. Built by engineers, for engineers, Datadog provides visibility into more than 200 technologies, including AWS, Chef, and Docker with built-in metric dashboards and automated alerts. With end-to-end request tracing, Datadog provides visibility into your applications and their underlying infrastructure—all in one place. Sign up for a free trial at www.datadog.com/sdt

Datadog wants you to know they monitor performance metrics. You try it by signing up for a trial at www.datadog.com/sdt.

Relevant to your interests

AT&T to Acquire AlienVault
Broadcom buying CA:

Broadcom buying CA for US$18.9bn. "Mainframe solutions dominate CA’s income, pulling nearly $2.2bn in the 2017-2018 financial year, followed by its enterprise solutions segment at $1.75bn and services at $311m."
Coté’s 7 tips for becoming a software company, 2016.
Wait… what?

Basho investor to pay up $20m in damages for campaign that put biz on 'greased slide to failure'

Coté: what was Davenport’s plan to profit?

A customer complaint about Google Cloud went viral last week, and now Google is doing damage control to 'ensure this does not happen again
The mysterious value of dancing hot dog shares, i.e., Snap: ‘You might point out that you own a share in the company that grows in value as the company does, and that right now you can sell that share on the stock exchange for $13.31. But that evades rather than answering the question: What does the person who buys the share from you expect to get from it? The value of a stock in the market is supposed to be equal to the present value of its future cash flows, and there’s nothing about the stock itself that promises you any cash flows. Or you might say that Snap’s directors and officers have a fiduciary duty to you to maximize the profits of the company and the value of your shares, but even if that were true—it’s pretty debatable—it continues to avoid the question. If Snap made massive consistent profits for decades, it would still never have to give any money back to shareholders, and the shareholders would have no way to force it to. “I own a 1/1,258,171,112 share of a massive pile of cash,” you could say, but you could never spend it.’
Improving intranet search, always a problem:

Box buys AI thing: “a startup whose software lets users search within files across multiple work applications. Butter.ai will be shutting down its application as part of the deal.”
Slack fixing search: most anything would be better than how it is now.

IT spending survey from Goldman: security, private cloud, and storage rise. Public cloud and SaaS fall, BI/analytics stays the same.

Conferences, et. al.

Sep 24th to 27th - SpringOne Platform, in DC/Maryland (crabs!) get $200 off registration with the code S1P200_Cote. Also, check out the Spring One Tour - coming to a city near you!

Listener Feedback

Emeric from Romina got a sticker and we will send you one too.

SDT news & hype

Check out Software Defined Interviews, our new podcast. Pretty self-descriptive, plus the #exegesis podcast we’ve been doing, all in one, for free.
Join us in Slack.
Buy some t-shirts! DISCOUNT CODE: SDTFSG (20% off)
Send your name and address to [email protected] and we will send you a sticker.
Brandon built the Quick Concall iPhone App and he wants you to buy it for $0.99.

Recommendations

Brandon: In the Dark Podcast.
Matt: Apple hardware, “should be fine.”
Coté: Lovecraft’s commonplace book and such: pictures, some transcription (better spaced version).

Sponsored By:

Datadog Free Trial: This episode is sponsored by Datadog, a monitoring platform for cloud-scale infrastructure and applications. Built by engineers, for engineers, Datadog provides visibility into more than 200 technologies, including AWS, Chef, and Docker, with built-in metric dashboards and automated alerts. With end-to-end request tracing, Datadog provides visibility into your applications and their underlying infrastructure—all in one place. Sign up for a free trial today!

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