2015-10-23
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Where and how are you seeing Redis technology being used today? Bengal: There is the traditional enterprise caching, but then we also have front-end database use cases. These are use cases where Redis is the only source of data, but the data is not stored forever; rather it's some sort of transient data. Those are things like session store and e-commerce shopping carts. Another use case is using Redis as a primary database, where Redis is the only database used for an application. Caching is a great business, make no mistake about it, but I think that what we want is to have more database use cases because it's more strategic for customers. What has been the impact of Redis creator Salvatore Sanfilippo stepping back from leadership of the open-source project? Bengal: We fully understood the decision; after 11 years of doing Redis, he got a bit tired and wanted to do other things. The decision was a joint decision and we worked for almost a year to prepare and build governance for the project to carry on after he left. Today we have a team that leads the continuous development of the open-source project, which is comprised of two people from Redis Labs, one from AWS and one from Alibaba. I think that the community fully understood and embraced this change and there hasn't been any negative response. How do you view the cloud and the risk from a cloud service provider that simply takes Redis open source and runs it as a service? Bengal: You know, we were born into this reality. AWS had a Redis service even before we started Redis Labs back in 2010, so we had to deal with this issue from day one. So what we have done is focus on taking Redis beyond just caching. For AWS, Redis is only for caching, since they have other databases for different use cases. Also, we are now cooperating with AWS competitors, with Google and Microsoft partnerships. What's next for Redis Labs? Where do you go from here? Bengal: In terms of technology, we have put a lot of effort into artificial intelligence, more specifically with a technology we call RedisAI. We think this is a natural expansion for us since Redis is used by companies all over the world to serve data to applications in a fast manner. Now expecting Redis to serve the data to the application with an AI model, this is a very natural expansion. Generally speaking, we would like to continue growing the company and an IPO is definitely on the table.Ofer BengalCo-founder and CEO, Redis Labs