Update: Cisco doubles down on collaboration with 61 new products
Included are enterprise e-mail and social networking software
November 9, 2009 12:01 AM ETComputerworld - Cisco Systems Inc. massively expanded its portfolio of collaboration technologies today, announcing 61 products, including a corporate-grade hosted e-mail system called Cisco WebEx Mail as well as a social networking application and a video system to help groups securely share video content and search capabilities.
The range of products shows Cisco's interest in integrating and expanding new video-related technologies with more traditional collaboration tools, such as instant messaging and presence, Cisco officials said. One new tool, called the Intercompany Media Engine, focuses on allowing companies to share business-to-business communications over any IP network.
The products are designed in part to make it easier for companies to incorporate content from video and other media produced on all kinds of devices, from expensive telepresence videoconferencing systems to handheld Flip video cameras, as well as photos and recordings taken from smartphones.
Alan Cohen, vice president of enterprise solutions, said in an interview that today's new products, and Cisco's recent agreement to buy videoconferencing vendor Tandberg for $3 billion demonstrate that "Cisco is doubling down [its investment] on collaboration."
Cohen said he feels Cisco "intends on doing this," referring to a completion of the massive Tandberg purchase, despite a blog by Cisco Chief Strategy Officer Ned Hooper on Nov. 2 that suggested fiscal prudence might prevent the deal from being completed.
Yankee Group Inc. analyst Zeus Kerravala said the Tandberg deal "has to go through just because video is too important to let it fall through." Considering the broad range of products that Cisco announced, Kerravala called Cisco's overall investment in collaboration "huge."
Of the 61 products, Cisco's new WebEx Mail product will have the biggest impact, Kerravala said, because of the industrywide move into cloud computing. The e-mail system will put Cisco in a better position to compete with Microsoft for e-mail customers as e-mail moves more fully to the cloud architecture in 2012, Kerravala said.
The Webmail client with 5GB of storage will cost $3.50 per user per month or $5 per month with support for Microsoft Outlook and Active sync, Cisco said. Support for Blackberry users will be another $1 per user per month.
Also important, Kerravala said, is Cisco's new Unified Communications version 8.0, which adds support for a wide range of endpoints, including more smartphones, video and Wi-Fi-ready Cisco Unified IP phones. That software will help connect the diverse array of devices that produce video. "The value of a network is proportional to the number of nodes, and there are a lot of nodes out there but they are just not connected now," Kerravala added.
Cisco didn't offer pricing or shipping information for the new products other than for Webmail.
cisco collaboration
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