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Cisco to broaden its cloud computing offerings

Cisco to broaden its cloud computing offerings By:  Howard Solomon On: 29 Jun 2009 For: Network World Canada Creator

Company says its trying to build an enterprise-class software as a service architecture for collaboration. An industry analyst says it’s the only way it can go after Microsoft



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Cisco Systems doesn’t want to go up against service providers in delivering computing infrastructure to organizations, according to company executives.

But the networking giant, which already delivers online collaboration through its WebEx offering, made it clear Tuesday that in other areas of cloud computing it could be a vigorous competitor by saying it will broaden its software as a service portfolio.

The company’s strategy was outlined during in an online briefing for industry analysts and the media as part of a two-day session describing the company’s collaboration and cloud computing competencies and goals.

“We don’t necessarily want to be a service provider,” Padmasree Warrior, Cisco chief technology officer, told analysts in a morning session. “In the sense of offering computing resources … we probably won’t get into [it],” she said. “It’s contrary to our business model because it requires us to build huge data centres and invest billions of dollars…. Plus it puts us into competition with the service providers, who are our customers today. So I don’t see us doing that as a mainstream business.”

However, both she and Doug Dennerline, senior vice-president of Cisco’s software group, detailed the software as a service offerings of the company, which include WebEx for shared meetings, WebEx Connect (which adds notification, chat, audio and video conferencing as well as document and task management) and security services.

“We’re also looking at an additional collaboration suite of application that we can integrate.” Warrior said. “Some of them will come from a Cisco-hosted cloud, and some of them will come from a service –provider hosted cloud and some will be on-prem.”

Dennerline added that thanks to Cisco’s hosted WebEx Mail service the company has “large amounts of storage” that could be used to offer paid off-site storage or backup services to small businesses.

Organizations are increasingly becoming attracted to the numerous provider offerings that come under the umbrella of cloud computing – ranging from off-site storage to end-user applications Salesforce.com to complex computing services such as Amazon Web Services.

The Yankee Group, an IT market research firm, believes that by 2012 more software will be bought as an online service than packaged applications.

Still, Cisco believes that organizations won’t easily give up IT infrastructure they’ve invested heavily in. Nor, Warrior added, are many organizations willing to trust all of their data to the cloud, a place where security and service level agreements are open questions. “I don’t know of a single large enterprise customer that’s willing to give up all of their data into a public cloud,” she said at one point.


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Howard Solomon Howard Solomon Howard Solomon is assistant editor of Network World Canada covering network infrastructure and communications issues. An IT journalist  since 1997, he has written for several of IT... more

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