The Machine Learning prophecy from Apcera, Part 2 of 2
This is the continuation of the Part 1 The Machine Learning prophecy from Apcera is proven true
Please read it first
George
So now let's bump up a layer. How applications will get built?, (1) are applications built by machines or (2) do people now use those predictions as a sort of composable galleries to build those applications?
Derek
It is the latter, the applications become a sort of composable gallery. We have seen even without machine learning: if you want to build something faster, build less and assemble the pieces, like the services Amazon does. That is amazingly powerful to an enterprise who's trying to go to the cloud , because they don't want to build a sustainable database of a key-value database whatever that is . That trend will continue, there is value, business value of the application for the developer, but I agree it is just composable service. I see the cloud wars waged and its services ecosystem front: (1) Data services including Big Data, (2) Human Machine learning and then (2) Human Machine interfaces.
Whoever comes up with the best classes services is going to win.
George
Can you elaborate on the Human Machine interfaces?
Derek
Cortana, Alexa, Siri
So what is Apcera's role into that? Are you pulling these together and putting the rules around how to have them deployed and consumed within the guidelines of a particular organization?
Derek
Exactly. Everything becomes more and more complex; the notion of "how to trust all these pieces that are moving around?" We do get in three to four years ahead this notion of pumping data into a machine learning algorithm and getting back some insight for our business.
Who is going to access that? Who is allowed to write new applications to actually consume this information and make better decisions? This world of microservices, who decides which decomposition of the software system we do, that great but this increases the complexity and increases risk. Who is going to take up those risks? All these details are included on the Apcera 's platform, even in more impressive fashion, in my opinion
George
Derek, this is as always, profoundly insightful
Please read it first
Are applications build by machines? Answer: No!
George
So now let's bump up a layer. How applications will get built?, (1) are applications built by machines or (2) do people now use those predictions as a sort of composable galleries to build those applications?
Derek
It is the latter, the applications become a sort of composable gallery. We have seen even without machine learning: if you want to build something faster, build less and assemble the pieces, like the services Amazon does. That is amazingly powerful to an enterprise who's trying to go to the cloud , because they don't want to build a sustainable database of a key-value database whatever that is . That trend will continue, there is value, business value of the application for the developer, but I agree it is just composable service. I see the cloud wars waged and its services ecosystem front: (1) Data services including Big Data, (2) Human Machine learning and then (2) Human Machine interfaces.
Whoever comes up with the best classes services is going to win.
George
Can you elaborate on the Human Machine interfaces?
Derek
Cortana, Alexa, Siri
The Apcera role
GeorgeSo what is Apcera's role into that? Are you pulling these together and putting the rules around how to have them deployed and consumed within the guidelines of a particular organization?
Derek
Exactly. Everything becomes more and more complex; the notion of "how to trust all these pieces that are moving around?" We do get in three to four years ahead this notion of pumping data into a machine learning algorithm and getting back some insight for our business.
Who is going to access that? Who is allowed to write new applications to actually consume this information and make better decisions? This world of microservices, who decides which decomposition of the software system we do, that great but this increases the complexity and increases risk. Who is going to take up those risks? All these details are included on the Apcera 's platform, even in more impressive fashion, in my opinion
George
Derek, this is as always, profoundly insightful
Derek Collison, Apcera and Jason Hoffman, Ericsson |
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