Dubai Tech News

Zoom And Oracle Red Bull Racing Partnering Up On Technology And Marketing

Cloud Zoom And Oracle Red Bull Racing Partnering Up On Technology And Marketing Patrick Moorhead Senior Contributor Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own. I write about disruptive companies, technologies and usage models. New! Follow this author to stay notified about their latest stories.

Got it! Sep 1, 2022, 03:00am EDT | New! Click on the conversation bubble to join the conversation Got it! Share to Facebook Share to Twitter Share to Linkedin Oracle Red Bull Racing and Zoom logo. Zoom Oracle Red Bull Racing (RBR) and Zoom today announced a new partnership that would integrate the Zoom platform into every communication line of Oracle RBR. When Formula 1 (F1) racing is in season, I hardly miss a race, and over the years, it has quickly grown in popularity stateside.

I have to confess, I am a huge RBR fan. Around this time last year, I was given the opportunity to attend the Formula 1 U. S.

Grand Prix in my hometown of Austin, which you can read about here . If you ever watch F1 live, there are times when we get shots of the driver’s seat, and when problems or challenges arise between the team and the driver, communication becomes key. These moments of communication become critical and, at times, are pivotal to the race.

Data is sent from the RBR’s technology center in Milton Keynes, where information is communicated to the team on the ground at a race and then communicated to the driver for critical racing decisions. It becomes exhilarating for fans to hear the communication of a team and its driver. Oracle RBR and Zoom’s partnership is huge for both parties.

Zoom is the most popular communications platform. It had a rough start at the beginning of its popularity but, through its growth, has managed to scale and move quickly. Zoom’s workplace vision and movement toward platformization reveal that it is not reaching its ceiling anytime soon.

These company traits are complementary to that of RBR and its innovative and technological leadership in F1 racing. Janine Pelosi, CMO at Zoom Communications, sat down with Christian Horner, CEO and Team Principle for Oracle Red Bull Racing, and I was able to ask a few questions that are sprinkled throughout my analysis of the partnership. Zoom Chat, Meetings, and Events Team members will be using Zoom Chat to communicate between the campus in Milton Keynes and from the pit wall live at the race.

The RBR team will be able to switch from chat functionality to an enhanced conversation in Zoom Meetings. I asked in the interview between Pelosi and Horner how Zoom Meetings could enhance the communication between the RBR team and give an advantage with video over audio. Horner alluded to the enhanced interactions that you get when communicating over video.

It is a different experience than audio and you can gauge a room better through video. Recommended For You 1 Western Digital’s Journey To Build Business Resiliency Through Cloud And ERP Transformation More stories like this Fewer stories like this 2 Amazon Climate Pledge: Two Years In And Going Strong More stories like this Fewer stories like this 3 Microsoft Takes First Steps To Finally Kill The Password More stories like this Fewer stories like this I also believe there is considerable potential to enhance the interactions between an F1 team, especially with Zoom’s communication platform. Zoom recently created an App SDK that allows developers to create an app within a Zoom meeting.

I was told from the interview that Red Bull Racing is open to working closely with Zoom to explore new and unique ways to utilize the Zoom platform to achieve team goals and objectives. Although RBR could not give any more details beyond the collaboration, I believe an RBR app within Zoom could give the team an advantage. In the Zoom app, data and analytics could be communicated between the team on the ground at the race and team members at the RBR Technology Center.

Imagine in the Zoom call team members pulling up a 3D rendering of the car or the track and being able to communicate ideas and make decisions on the fly through a Zoom app. A 3D rendering of Max Verstappen’s RB18. Oracle Red Bull Racing RBR will also be using Zoom Events for the RBR team to communicate with its fans.

Fans and partners will be able to join RBR events through Zoom Events and engage in hybrid experiences. I am interested to see how RBR integrates these events into its existing Red Bull Racing Paddock app. Hearing the communication between the driver and the RBR team can be exhilarating when watching live.

I imagine as fans join the RBR events, it would be even more exhilarating watching the RBR Team communicate over a video call. I also asked the question of when the events will be live and how the video will differ from what’s on F1. com.

I was told from the interview that live events will vary for partners and fans. I believe it will depend on location and convenience. The RBR Zoom Events will be specific to RBR content and will not relate to what is on F1.

com. I am interested to see the difference in content and availability of RBR F1 content that come through these RBR Zoom Events. It is not about making the same content that comes from F1.

com but unique hybrid experiences and events from wherever in the world for partners and fans. Wrapping up As a part of the partnership, Zoom branding will be displayed on both RB18 cars, drivers, and team race shirts, in the pit, garage, and online. We should be seeing some of these live at this weekend’s Formula 1 Heineken Dutch Grand Prix in Zandvoort, Netherlands.

I don’t think this partnership is very surprising to me. Zoom uses Oracle as one of its largest cloud infrastructure providers. Oracle provides data analytics to the RBR Team, and this partnership between Zoom and RBR could be the fruit of that deepening relationship between Oracle and RBR.

I am excited to see this partnership between RBR and Zoom grow. I believe its ability to scale and adapt to the changes quickly is exactly what is needed in a Formula 1 racing environment. I believe it has a unique platform to give fans the exhilarating interactions they desire and the RBR team the technology it needs to win races.

Note: Moor Insights & Strategy co-op Jacob Freyman contributed to this article. Follow me on Twitter or LinkedIn . Check out my website or some of my other work here .

Moor Insights & Strategy, like all research and tech industry analyst firms, provides or has provided paid services to technology companies. These services include research, analysis, advising, consulting, benchmarking, acquisition matchmaking, and speaking sponsorships. The company has had or currently has paid business relationships with 8×8, Accenture, A10 Networks, Advanced Micro Devices, Amazon, Amazon Web Services, Ambient Scientific, Anuta Networks, Applied Brain Research, Applied Micro, Apstra, Arm, Aruba Networks (now HPE), Atom Computing, AT&T, Aura, Automation Anywhere, AWS, A-10 Strategies, Bitfusion, Blaize, Box, Broadcom, , C3.

AI, Calix, Campfire, Cisco Systems, Clear Software, Cloudera, Clumio, Cognitive Systems, CompuCom, Cradlepoint, CyberArk, Dell, Dell EMC, Dell Technologies, Diablo Technologies, Dialogue Group, Digital Optics, Dreamium Labs, D-Wave, Echelon, Ericsson, Extreme Networks, Five9, Flex, Foundries. io, Foxconn, Frame (now VMware), Fujitsu, Gen Z Consortium, Glue Networks, GlobalFoundries, Revolve (now Google), Google Cloud, Graphcore, Groq, Hiregenics, Hotwire Global, HP Inc. , Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Honeywell, Huawei Technologies, IBM, Infinidat, Infosys, Inseego, IonQ, IonVR, Inseego, Infosys, Infiot, Intel, Interdigital, Jabil Circuit, Keysight, Konica Minolta, Lattice Semiconductor, Lenovo, Linux Foundation, Lightbits Labs, LogicMonitor, Luminar, MapBox, Marvell Technology, Mavenir, Marseille Inc, Mayfair Equity, Meraki (Cisco), Merck KGaA, Mesophere, Micron Technology, Microsoft, MiTEL, Mojo Networks, MongoDB, National Instruments, Neat, NetApp, Nightwatch, NOKIA (Alcatel-Lucent), Nortek, Novumind, NVIDIA, Nutanix, Nuvia (now Qualcomm), onsemi, ONUG, OpenStack Foundation, Oracle, Palo Alto Networks, Panasas, Peraso, Pexip, Pixelworks, Plume Design, PlusAI, Poly (formerly Plantronics), Portworx, Pure Storage, Qualcomm, Quantinuum, Rackspace, Rambus, Rayvolt E-Bikes, Red Hat, Renesas, Residio, Samsung Electronics, Samsung Semi, SAP, SAS, Scale Computing, Schneider Electric, SiFive, Silver Peak (now Aruba-HPE), SkyWorks, SONY Optical Storage, Splunk, Springpath (now Cisco), Spirent, Splunk, Sprint (now T-Mobile), Stratus Technologies, Symantec, Synaptics, Syniverse, Synopsys, Tanium, Telesign,TE Connectivity, TensTorrent, Tobii Technology, Teradata,T-Mobile, Treasure Data, Twitter, Unity Technologies, UiPath, Verizon Communications, VAST Data, Ventana Micro Systems, Vidyo, VMware, Wave Computing, Wellsmith, Xilinx, Zayo, Zebra, Zededa, Zendesk, Zoho, Zoom, and Zscaler.

Moor Insights & Strategy founder, CEO, and Chief Analyst Patrick Moorhead is an investor in dMY Technology Group Inc. VI, Dreamium Labs, Groq, Luminar Technologies, MemryX, and Movandi. Patrick Moorhead Editorial Standards Print Reprints & Permissions.


From: forbes
URL: https://www.forbes.com/sites/patrickmoorhead/2022/09/01/zoom-and-oracle-red-bull-racing-partnering-up-on-technology-and-marketing/

Exit mobile version