Sam Greenblatt is a consultant to technology companies to define strategies, and offers technology services beyond the company’s business strategy. He will focus on the strategic requirements of clients’ businesses by working with them to determine long term technology-related decisions and create the appropriate operating model. Mr. Greenblatt is a Technologist in Residence at several technology companies where he uses his background as technologist and his history of successfully helping companies bring technology to market by helping the management team of these companies source and evaluate potential technology, particularly in areas where he applies his background.
Sam served as CTO and General Manager of Engineering Solutions at Dell providing solutions, to have strong alliances, develop cross-line of business offerings and offer a cohesive architecture that will make customers’ offerings run better with the workloads that meet these needs. He is a recognized expert in Object Technology, IaaS, PaaS, and HPC (Red Hat OpenStack, Azure, HyperV, VMware). He built solutions based on Cloud, Analytics, Big Data, and Enterprise Applications (SAP and Oracle). He was chief architect and technologist at the Enterprise Solution Group was involved in the architecture, communication and technical promotion of Dell’s Enterprise family of products. Sam has served on USDL (Linux Foundation) 4 years, Object Management Group (11 years), Eclipse Board (1 Year), and the DMTF Board 2 Years. He is the primary inventor on 4 US Patents in Object Technology. He was a CTO at Hewlett Packard, Candle Corporation and Chief Innovation Officer at Computer Associates. Sam also was an adjunct professor of Computer Science at both Temple University and LaSalle University.
The opinions expressed in this blog are those of Sam Greenblatt and do not necessarily represent those of IDG Communications, Inc., its parent, subsidiary or affiliated companies.
The use of containers will change applications and their composition forever
Big data scales well in the application-centric cloud
The model changes in the new world of cloud native applications
Kubernetes is the management system of choice for containers and microservices
New paradigms for storage in microservices and containers
Networking in the application-centric cloud: Plug-ins and OpenDaylight are the keys
Mesos ("middle atmosphere") has emerged as a keystone