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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

Cisco is trying to position itself as a company that can help organizations bridge their internal IT operations with cloud computing. At the same time, its aim is to beef up its software as a service collaboration offerings. For example, at the end of the summer WebEx Connect will add instant message and presence connectivity as a result of its acquisition earlier this year of Jabber.

Today, collaboration is fragmented, Warrior argued, with voice, audio conferencing, video conferencing, document sharing, instant messaging and e-mail not integrated well. “One of the efforts we’re putting together… is how do we bring all these capabilities to a new architecture that is enterprise-class,” she said.

Dennerline said Cisco thinks of WebEx as a “product portfolio” of applications it still wants to add to. “We look at WebEx Connect a little bit like ‘revenue per user’ – what other capabilities can we bring that people will pay us for to be part of that experience.” He gave as an example the ability to add high-definition video to a WebEx session instead of standard video.

Zeus Kerravala, a Yankee Group’s senior vice-president for enterprise research, who was on the conference call, said in an interview later that Cisco’s software as a service strategy for collaboration is targeted at Microsoft.

“If you look at the way unified communications is going, it’s moving very rapidly to the desktop, and with Microsoft’s strength there, if it (UC) stays as a traditional packaged app type of delivery I’m not sure they (Cisco) have a strong enough offering to compete. I think WebEX is better than what Microsoft has [with Office Live Meeting], so from that aspect they can compete properly. So I certainly expect them to push that delivery model.”

“Microsoft obviously has the ear of the customer in desktop software, so if Cisco’s going to try and grab share in presence or e-mail, it’s not going to be by outdoing what Microsoft does well. The alternative is pushing the cloud, which has benefits: It’s pay as you go and as long as the experience stays the same the simplified backend architecture makes it easier to deploy.”

There are any number of other collaboration vendors, including Avaya, Polycom, IBM’s Lotus Live, and, soon, Google Wave. But other than Wave they don’t have fully developed software as a service offerings, Kerravala said. And in the collaboration market, he agreed, that’s’ essential.










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Howard Solomon Howard Solomon I'm assistant editor of ComputerWorld Canada covering network infrastructure, communications and government IT issues. An IT journalist  since 1997, I've written ... more

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