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Unified Management Across Distributed Cloud Environments

Key Points

  • Enterprises are gaining speed and scalability by using public‑cloud APIs, yet many regulated or latency‑sensitive workloads still cannot be moved to public‑cloud data centers.
  • To capture cloud agility while keeping data and applications where they’re needed, vendors are introducing the “Distributed Cloud” model that runs services on‑prem, across multiple clouds, or at the network edge.
  • IBM Cloud Satellite extends IBM’s catalog of 130+ cloud services (e.g., OpenShift, AI/ML, databases) so they can be provisioned via the same APIs in any location, including on‑prem data centers and factories.
  • Satellite provides a unified control plane—a single console for provisioning, security, observability, inventory, and change management—ensuring consistent operations across all distributed environments.

Full Transcript

# Unified Management Across Distributed Cloud Environments **Source:** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kI62_Xw2Qgg](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kI62_Xw2Qgg) **Duration:** 00:06:19 ## Summary - Enterprises are gaining speed and scalability by using public‑cloud APIs, yet many regulated or latency‑sensitive workloads still cannot be moved to public‑cloud data centers. - To capture cloud agility while keeping data and applications where they’re needed, vendors are introducing the “Distributed Cloud” model that runs services on‑prem, across multiple clouds, or at the network edge. - IBM Cloud Satellite extends IBM’s catalog of 130+ cloud services (e.g., OpenShift, AI/ML, databases) so they can be provisioned via the same APIs in any location, including on‑prem data centers and factories. - Satellite provides a unified control plane—a single console for provisioning, security, observability, inventory, and change management—ensuring consistent operations across all distributed environments. ## Sections - [00:00:00](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kI62_Xw2Qgg&t=0s) **Hybrid Agility with Distributed Cloud** - Enterprises want public‑cloud speed and flexibility while keeping regulated, low‑latency, or performance‑critical workloads on‑premises or at the edge, and IBM Cloud Satellite provides a “distributed cloud” model that lets the full catalog of 130+ IBM Cloud services run anywhere. - [00:04:02](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kI62_Xw2Qgg&t=242s) **IBM Cloud Satellite Locations and Links** - The speaker explains how IBM Cloud Satellite uses OpenShift‑based “Locations” to run cloud services on any Linux infrastructure and a “Satellite Link” to securely connect those locations back to IBM Cloud for management and visibility. ## Full Transcript
0:00Many enterprises today are getting advantages  out of moving workloads into the public cloud. 0:04They're building cognitive applications, they're  scaling them on demand, and they're improving the 0:08speed of their development through as a service  API-based consumption on the public cloud. But 0:14the reality is many workloads have not moved to  the public cloud yet many of those workloads are 0:19from regulated industries, they have security  and compliance requirements, or performance and 0:23latency requirements, that make it challenging to  physically move those applications into a public 0:28cloud data center. And what many organizations  really want is all of the agility benefits of 0:33public cloud, but the flexibility to run those  workloads wherever they need them: on-premises 0:39in their existing data centers, in multiple public  cloud providers around the world, or at the edge 0:44of the network closer to the applications  and data sources that they need to process. 0:50Public cloud is evolving to satisfy this  requirement with a new concept called 0:54“Distributed Cloud”. So, the heart of IBM Cloud  Satellite is the notion of IBM Cloud Services 0:59managed anywhere. When you consume capabilities on  the IBM Cloud today you have a catalog of over 130 1:05services that you can use to build and run your  applications - everything from infrastructure to 1:11Kubernetes and OpenShift databases, DevOps tools,  and frameworks for AI machine learning and IOT. 1:18All of those services are available as APIs that  you can provision on demand, and you can consume 1:24and use to build your applications. With IBM  Cloud Satellite, we're extending that catalog 1:28of services and enabling it to be consumed  in the exact same way, through the same APIs, 1:34in locations outside of IBM Cloud regions. So,  you can now consume an OpenShift cluster in your 1:39data center, or AI machine learning framework in  your factory. You can use those capabilities in a 1:46consistent way wherever the application workload  needs to run. You can also use software - things 1:53like IBM Cloud Paks and open-source capabilities  - and deploy them in a consistent way across 1:58any environment. One of the advantages of this  approach is that the public cloud becomes kind of 2:04the central management, or control plane, for all  of your distributed workloads. You have a single 2:09console that you can log into with IBM Cloud  that allows you to provision resources, provision 2:15cloud services, configure them, provision your  applications, and manage them in a consistent 2:19way across this diverse set of environments.  You  get a single way to do security. You also get, 2:24of course, common observability - logging  and monitoring, and dashboards and alerts, 2:29that allow you to monitor the workloads that  you're running in a consistent way across all 2:33these environments.  We're also doing some work  in Satellite to help you with inventory and change 2:38management. So, part of the power of Satellite is  this common control plane or single pane of glass 2:43that allows you to manage your applications across  a diverse set of environments. Now, how does this 2:48work?  Kind of the key idea within Satellite that  we're introducing is the notion of a location. 2:53A location is a way to define, to IBM Cloud, a  place outside of IBM Cloud where you want to be 2:59able to deploy and consume cloud services. It  is a collection of infrastructure that you own 3:05that we're going to use on your behalf to run  cloud services. That location is essentially 3:10a collection of Linux hosts, of virtual machines  or physical machines, that get arranged together 3:16into a pool of resources, that get managed  automatically by Satellite, and that get used, 3:22by us, to provision services. So, when you, let's  say, you want to create a Satellite location in 3:27your data center, you can provision a set of Linux  machines within that data center. You register 3:32those Linux machines with IBM Cloud as a location,  and once that collection is registered with IBM 3:39Cloud Satellite, you now see that location kind of  as like a custom region within your cloud account, 3:44where you can now deploy cloud services. So,  if you want to create a Postgres database, 3:49define a DevOps tool chain, or create an  OpenShift cluster - when you provision that 3:53cluster through services in the cloud, that custom  location you just defined in your data center 3:58will be a location that you can select  when you provision that resource. 4:03And so, locations is a really simple concept where  you're able to take any Linux infrastructure and 4:08make it available as a place to run cloud  services.  Now, one of the advantages of 4:13this idea of a location is it really provides a  tremendous flexibility. IBM Cloud Satellite is 4:18built on top of Kubernetes and OpenShift as the  common infrastructure abstraction that we use 4:24to allow you to consume cloud services in any  infrastructure. And by using OpenShift as that 4:30abstraction layer, we can support a variety of  infrastructures underneath a Satellite location. 4:36You can bring your own custom infrastructure  in your data center, physical or virtual 4:40servers. You can use your account on  another public cloud like amazon, or azure, 4:45or google - and consume that infrastructure,  and arrange it into a location that's used by 4:50IBM Cloud for running cloud services.  Now, since  those locations, those services and applications, 4:56are managed by IBM Cloud, we, of course,  need a connection back to the cloud to help 5:01us manage those things - and that connection  is provided by a component called “Satellite 5:05link”. And the idea of Satellite link is to  give you the transparent visibility to all the 5:10data that's flowing back and forth between  the cloud and that location, and to give you 5:15control over what applications and resources are  exposed in those locations. So, these two ideas, 5:21of location and link, provide the fundamental new  concepts that Satellite introduces to IBM Cloud 5:26to give you the power of services anywhere. We're  also going to provide some optimized solutions. 5:32Fully integrated rack systems both from IBM and  from partners, and as-a-service infrastructure 5:38capabilities where we can run the entire stack  for you from hardware through infrastructure, 5:43and up into platform and SaaS applications. And  so, you can consume infrastructure either with 5:49what you have, you can build new environments,  or you can run multi-cloud environments 5:54across IBM Cloud and other public cloud providers.  So, those are kind of the core ideas in Satellite: 5:59locations and link allow us to extend our  cloud catalog services to any location, 6:05giving you the power of cloud, and the power of  IBM Cloud, anywhere in the world that you need 6:11it. All you need is some Linux infrastructure  and IBM does the rest. Thanks a lot.