I
witnessed the referendum of UK and it quickly became the historical moment and
shocked the world when UK voted to exit the European Union. It happened a day
after the Cloud DevOps World 2016, London. This two-day forum was held at
Olympia Exhibition Hall, on the 21st and 22nd of June. Simultaneously
or so a three-day Security Exhibition, IFSEC International 2016 was on-going at
a much larger exhibition hall in ExCel, London. I have managed to make a visit
on its last day, which was on the 23rd, the same day when the
Britons casted their vote to mandate on exiting or remaining in EU.
I
don't think there’s a need for me to talk about the impacts of Brexit, because
it was well taken care of by experts flooding their views in the papers and
Internet. I’m just plainly discussing the difference between Cloud DevOps and
IFSEC. If I have to choose, should we remain and partake in Cloud DevOps next
year, or to exit and get back to IFSEC that we left a year ago?
IFSEC
is no longer new to those who are actively involved in the security industry.
Visiting IFSEC is like meeting some old friends, exchanging pleasantries and gossiping
the same old stories. Yes, new products were being introduced every year, like
products related to Internet of Things, smart home system, and even cloud
technology and Apps, but the vast conventional security products still took up 90%
of the exhibition hall. There were hardly any new show-stopping products that manage
to create disruptive impacts during the exhibition. In other words there were no any WOW factors! No doubt that the trade shows drew larger crowd compared to Cloud
DevOps. However, there were many dull faces that were booth hopping to occupy
their time.
Cloud
& DevOps World 2016 is a mosaic of Knowledge
& Networking Division of Informa PLCC, which operates
in the heart of Knowledge & Information Economy. No hush-hush that it is a leading
business intelligence, academic publishing, knowledge and event-exploring
medium. So forums and exhibitions becomes their main focus just
like the auxiliary events.
If
we split the cloud technology solutions into 3 main categories, there would be Platform as a service (PaaS), Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS), and Software as a
Service (SaaS).
If I were to make my two-cents worth wrap up, the Show
was not equally spread out within the categories. The anticipation to hear from
some of cloud giants like Amazon, Microsoft, and Salesforec were let down, as
they did not participate. It was mostly cloud consultancies and service
providers exhibiting their cloud management, storage, training, cloud
virtualization, optimization assessment, cloud strategy and planning and cloud
security. We were proud to take the slice of being the only SaaS provider for
our 8 applications in the entire show.
Our
partner, Bob Marshall, managing director of CSD Global Group, turned up with
his three key personnel and took interest in our new cloud guard tour system, TimeTec
Patrol. He also requested a demo account to try on and get familiar with before
we could start marketing it. To my surprise, one of the visitors said that he had
already created a trial account for TimeTec TA and wants to be our partner. One
potential end user with more than a hundred chain stores inquired whether shift
swaps are possible in TimeTec TA, which I have told him that it is currently
under development. More excitingly we had a very keen company from Turkey who wanted
to sign up as our premier partner for I-Neighbour, a residential visitor management
system.
I
don’t think the response for Cloud &
DevOps was overwhelming this year, but we’re certainly happy about cultivating
some quality leads. Cloud computing is still in its infancy stage, the exposure
and preparation is much more important than making a grand leap in pursuing the
sales activities.
I
conclude that since we have stridden a giant step to transform ourselves from
a biometric product supplier to a cloud solution provider, we now need to
establish a cloud platform rather than pinning focus on the existing security
market. This whopping huge migration from hardware selling to software
subscription clearly firms the need for us to build a Cloud Ecosystem.
Therefore,
between ‘Brexit’ and ‘Bremain’, I made up my mind: See
you again in Cloud & DevOps World next year in
a much larger Exhibition Hall, ExCel, London.
1 comment:
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