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Cisco's seven hard luck happenings in '07

Cisco's seven hard luck happenings in '07

By:  Linda Leung  On: 26 Dec 2007 For: Network World (U.S.) Creator

A look bad at some unfortunate occurances for the networking management giant

FRAMINGHAM - Even the best of us has bad days, but when a company like Cisco has them, they get widely reported. Here are Cisco Subnet 's picks of the top seven bad luck happenings in Ciscoland over the past year, including the departure of a high-flying exec, a wireless LAN data flooding and some major problems with Cisco VoIP equipment.

No. 7: The departure of Mike Volpi

Mike Volpi, formerly head of Cisco's Routing and Service Provider Technology Group, surprised industry watchers when he resigned early in February. Widely tipped as the first heir apparent to CEO John Chambers, Volpi orchestrated many of the acquisitions that helped Cisco grow from a US$2 billion company to the $30 billion behemoth it is today. Volpi also was responsible for developing switching products for data centers and distribution applications during his 13-year-career at Cisco.

Several key products were under Volpi's management, including the Catalyst 6500 and 4000 series switches, VPN and security services, and content networking. Looking at how Cisco is putting more emphasis on its consumer networking and social networking strategies today, we wonder whether Volpi would have been a good fit for Cisco now.

With his departure, Cisco's clear hier-apparent is Chief Development Officer, Charlie Giancarlo, who last week was given the job of heading up the new Cisco Development Organization, which basically oversees all technologies coming out of the company (and it's not clear how Giancarlo's new role will operate next to that of the newly-installed CTO, Padmasree Warrior). Also, the ambitious Volpi would have had to wait another five years before Chambers would vacate his position.

Volpi became CEO of online video company Joost Operations in June.

No. 6: Cisco.com's bad hair days

We've all suffered from the curse of technology but when you're the leading networking company and customers and partners can't access your Web site, it doesn't look too good, PR-wise. Cisco.com suffered two high-profile days of intermittent service this year (there may have been other days/hours when the Web site was inaccessible but we didn't notice).

The first blackout of the year, that we know of, happened on Aug. 8 when Cisco.com was inaccessible for almost 3 hours and service was spotty the rest of the day. Cisco did a good job of updating users of the problem throughout the day through its Platform blog. It issued its final statement at 10 p.m. PT, that day, blaming the problem on human error. It said: "The issue occurred during preventative maintenance of one of our data centers when a human error caused an electrical overload on the systems. This caused Cisco.com and other applications to go down. Because of the severity of the overload, the redundancy measures in some of the applications and power systems were impacted as well, though the system did shut down as designed to protect the people and the equipment. As a result, no data were lost and no one was injured."


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Linda Leung Linda Leung is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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