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Cisco to expand WebEx conferencing capabilities

Cisco to expand WebEx conferencing capabilities

By:  Howard Solomon  On: 13 Dec 2007 For: Network World Canada Creator

The network gear manufacturer says new features could include presence, instant messaging, searchable content and voice collaboration. What it means for reduced travel expenses

SAN JOSE, Calif. -- The next version of Cisco System's WebEx hosted online meeting service will greatly expand the capabilities of the on-demand product, according to a company executive.

Robert Lloyd, senior vice-president for Canada, the U.S. and Japan, said in an interview here Wednesday during the company's annual C-Scape conference for industry analysts that the features could range from presence, instant messaging, searchable content and voice collaboration.

He said some 2,000 members of his staff have been using a beta version of the software, parts of which will be released in the next quarter, for six weeks and already have dramatically changed their work habits.

"It transforming their job roles," he told a panel discussion earlier in the day.

"Our commercial teams, who look after medium-sized companies, do a lot of driving every year to meet their customers and rack up the miles. We have three employees who last year could have driven around the world twice...(Now) they've given eyeball cameras to their customers, putting them in constant (online) contact with their customers. Our specialists in security and other areas have changed their jobs: They have 'mike Fridays,' park themselves in their office Fridays, [go online] and say 'I'm here'" to field questions, he said.

Cisco bought WebEx earlier this year as a tool to spread its collaboration and video conferencing technologies. Lloyd is a eager enthusiast for video meetings, one of the themes that Cisco is pushing here. His 6,000-person division is one of the biggest internal users of the company's large-screen TelePresence conferencing system.

There's been a 46 per cent reduction per person in travel expenses, he said, and a 31 per cent reduction in overall travel and entertainment expenses.

The cost savings alone make video meetings "a great big payback," he said. "It isn't a travel restriction. It's being embraced by those who don't like to travel. Who loves the experience of being frisked in a U.S. airport?"

While TelePresence is a high-cost product -- the smallest TelePresence system Cisco sells lists at US$79,000 -- the company is piloting a project to bring it to Regus Business Centres, a world-wide chain of stores that offer services to businessmen on the go. The idea is that organizations that can't afford a TelePresence meeting could go to a Regus store and hold it there.

TelePresence is a high-end solution that, through large screens and good audio, is being touted by Cisco as going beyond mere video conferencing.

"Meeting replacements are context," he said. "Intercompany interactions are core." He noted in the interview that Bell Canada is a TelePresence partner and Rogers Communications is piloting it internally. Both service providers will examine the potential for hosting TelePresence services, he said.


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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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