If you are involved in End User Computing in any way, shape or form, you absolutely must check out the details on the upcoming DISRUPT 2020 event.  Now in its third year, DISRUPT is quickly filling a void and becoming the standard event to address everything EUC. 

The 2020 DISRUPT events will take place January 27 through 29 in Nashville, TN and February 4-6 in Munich, Germany. 

[ WANT TO ATTEND? GET A FREE TICKET WITH PROMO CODE: VMBLOG ]

Read this exclusive pre-show VMblog interview with Geoff Hixon, Director of Sales Engineering at Lakeside Software, to learn more about the company and what they have planned for the DISRUPT event.

If you are involved in End User Computing in any way, shape or form, you absolutely must check out the details on the upcoming DISRUPT 2020 event.  Now in its third year, DISRUPT is quickly filling a void and becoming the standard event to address everything EUC. 

The 2020 DISRUPT events will take place January 27 through 29 in Nashville, TN and February 4-6 in Munich, Germany. 

[ WANT TO ATTEND? GET A FREE TICKET WITH PROMO CODE: VMBLOG ]

Read this exclusive pre-show VMblog interview with Liquit to learn what they have planned for the DISRUPT event.

If you are involved in End User Computing in any way, shape or form, you absolutely must check out the details on the upcoming DISRUPT 2020 event.  Now in its third year, DISRUPT is quickly filling a void and becoming the standard event to address everything EUC. 

The 2020 DISRUPT events will take place January 27 through 29 in Nashville, TN and February 4-6 in Munich, Germany. 

[ WANT TO ATTEND? GET A FREE TICKET WITH PROMO CODE: VMBLOG ]

Read this exclusive pre-show VMblog interview with Jaymes Davis, Director of Product Strategy & Sales Engineering and Craig Irwin, VP Global Strategic Accounts & Alliances of Tehama, to learn what they have planned for the DISRUPT event.

If you are involved in End User Computing in any way, shape or form, you absolutely must check out the details on the upcoming DISRUPT 2020 event.  Now in its third year, DISRUPT is quickly filling a void and becoming the standard event to address everything EUC. 

The 2020 DISRUPT events will take place January 27 through 29 in Nashville, TN and February 4-6 in Munich, Germany. 

[ WANT TO ATTEND? GET A FREE TICKET WITH PROMO CODE: VMBLOG ]

Read this exclusive pre-show VMblog interview with Mark Foust, vice president of sales at CloudJumper, to learn what they have planned for the DISRUPT event.

If you are involved in End User Computing in any way, shape or form, you absolutely must check out the details on the upcoming DISRUPT 2020 event.  Now in its third year, DISRUPT is quickly filling a void and becoming the standard event to address everything EUC. 

The 2020 DISRUPT events will take place January 27 through 29 in Nashville, TN and February 4-6 in Munich, Germany.  To get the inside scoop ahead of the event, VMblog spoke with Simon Townsend, Chief Marketing Officer for IGEL.

IGEL Technology has created a much needed End User Computing event called DISRUPT.  This year, the event will take place in Nashville for its North America event (January 27-29th, 2020) and in Munich for its EMEA event (February 4-6, 2020).

In this video interview, Simon Townsend, IGEL's CMO, gives viewers a nice background on the DISRUPT event, and talks about this year's focus.  Watch and find out what attendees can expect to hear and learn from the events this year, get a sneak peek at some of the hot topics that will be discussed, learn about which sponsors and key speakers will be presenting at the show, and hear other reasons why you should be attending.  

Need some help to attend the show?  How about a free ticket? 

Save on the ticket price by using this promo code at checkout: VMBLOG.

But hurry, there are a limited amount of free tickets available with this code.  So don't delay!

Register here.

December 09, 2019

Why attend IGEL DISRUPT 2020?

Written by

On January 27th, 2020, over 700 peers from the End-User community will gather in Nashville to attend North America’s largest Cloud Workspaces Forum.

Last year’s DISRUPT event laid out a vision for cloud workspaces – this year’s focus is all about education and helping you make your move!

Why should I attend?

Click on the link below and use PROMO CODE: VMBLOG to get a FREE ticket to attend (limited tickets available):

https://www.eventbrite.com/e/igel-disrupt-2020-tickets-70194610971?aff=VMBLOG

 

 

VMblog visits Morpheus during #KubeCon 2019 in San Diego.

The company is helping organizations to solve governance, policies, security, automation and self-service around multi-cloud and multi-platform environments.

Morpheus has recently added Kubernetes and Ansible support to provide a deeper, system-agnostic automation and control product for an organization’s infrastructure.

VMblog visits the DivvyCloud booth during KubeCon 2019 in San Diego.

DivvyCloud software is designed to be agentless and standalone. You can apply it to any computing environment - public cloud or private software-defined infrastructure. The way DivvyCloud interacts with the host environment and Kubernetes is by way of their respective APIs. DivvyCloud continuously interacts with the APIs to gather information about the state of the hosts and the Kubernetes clusters of interest. These hosts can be Google Cloud, AWS, Azure, or a private data center that can expose infrastructure information via an API.

Once DivvyCloud is set up and targeted at the relevant host and Kubernetes clusters, it starts pulling down data about the environments - servers, security groups, load balancers, network-attached stores, S3 buckets, and any resource that is exposed via an API. This information is then unified into a single data model that represents the infrastructure and represents containment holistically.

VMblog visits the Weaveworks booth during KubeCon 2019 in San Diego.

As the inventors of GitOps, Weaveworks demonstrated how GitOps helps a company manage and build applications on Kubernetes. With Git at the center of the operational model, application developers and cluster operators can easily spin up and manage production ready Kubernetes across different environments.

When a cluster configuration is stored in a Git repository, you can then use GitOps to recreate clusters in a predictable way. This brings advantages for building test environments and pipelines, and for reproducing clusters across teams with the same base configuration, or in improving your disaster recovery capability.

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