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Cisco launches Virtual Office

Cisco launches Virtual Office

By:   On: 08 Sep 2008 For: Network World Canada Creator

Virtual Office bundle includes an 800 series Integrated Services Router and a 7900 series IP phone. A Forrester analyst says the security features are critical for home office users.

Cisco Systems said it’s capitalizing on rising energy prices and the increased focus on green programs by offering a hardware bundle that makes it easy for companies to roll out full office functionality to workers’ homes and remote offices.

The company announced its Cisco Virtual Office bundle – consisting of an Integrated Services Router and IP phone at the remote site, managed at the head-end site by a VPN aggregation router and software package – on Tuesday.

“We think this is a very timely solution,” said Calvin Chai, senior security solutions manager for Cisco, in a pre-briefing last week. Aside from rising gas prices and environmental efforts, globalization and collaboration are “contributing to the rise of the remote work force,” Chai said.

“It’s not always an either/or discussion” when it comes to work from the office or working from home, Chai said. More than 40 per cent of adults who use a computer at work also work at home after hours at least once a week, according to a North American Technographics survey.

Whatever’s fueling the move to more telework, there are still business concerns that can make the enterprise hesitant – compliance issues, threat management and policy and control issues. “IT security continues to be the main concern,” Chai said.

The Virtual Office is aimed at extending enterprise security and functionality to remote locations. “Everything (in the bundle) is what we have off-the-shelf today,” Chai said.

The remote site gets a Cisco 800 series Integrated Services Router and 7900 series IP phone. “This is really the end-user premises equipment,” Chai said. When a user docs his or her laptop at home, or connects wirelessly to the router, presence is detected and the IP phone activated on the office line. The computer is connected directly to the corporate LAN. With four Ethernet ports, the ISR can also be hardwired into a LAN at the remote site.

For unified communications and voice over IP purposes, the router must have a 256Kbps downstream connection to the Internet, well within the limits of most broadband services, said Chai.

In a home environment, where other users might want recreational access to the Internet, the ISR uses split tunneling – other computers pass through straight to the cloud, while the corporate computer uses the VPN connection, Chai said. That way, traffic that might cause security problems is isolated from the corporate network.

“There’s a real physical demarcation,” said Elizabeth Herrell, vice-president of Forrester Research. “Security is a major issue when you’re working at home over the Internet.” She said the extenstion of an extra enterprise-level layer of security should make companies more comfortable rolling out telework initiatives.


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