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Collaboration technology gives us the ability to work together anywhere, on any device, at any time. With more and more people using smartphones and tablets to do their work, it is more important than ever that enterprise collaboration delivers high quality voice, video, chat and online sharing instantly, to any device on any platform.

Today, I am pleased to announce Cisco’s acquisition of Assemblage to help us capture the ongoing market transitions of mobility, cloud and the Internet of Everything (IoE). Assemblage has built a talented team of web developers to deliver the tools and the infrastructure to enable simple, real-time collaboration through the browser to any device, without the need for downloads, plugins, or installations.

Assemblage offers real-time collaboration apps for shared whiteboarding, presentation broadcasting and screensharing. Users are able to collaborate simply via their browser with one-click, instantly accessing collaboration apps delivered via the cloud. Assemblage’s technology also integrates with popular third party cloud services and supports 40 different file types to enable quick and efficient collaboration.

With this acquisition, Assemblage brings a strong team of engineers with deep web development expertise to Cisco’s Collaboration Technology Group (CTG), enabling Cisco to accelerate innovation and develop simple, easy to use, next generation collaboration solutions. In addition, Assemblage’s experience integrating with third party cloud ecosystem applications like Box and Google shows a close alignment to Cisco’s collaboration strategy and our commitment to simplicity and interoperability.

We are excited to welcome Assemblage to our collaboration team. Together, Cisco and Assemblage will provide simple, easy-to-use solutions that help employees work smarter together from virtually anywhere.



Authors

Hilton Romanski

No Longer with Cisco

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nehibBy Greg Nehib, Senior Marketing Manager, Cisco

Part 2 – Virtualized Services in an EPN World?

In part one of this series Gina covered the basic definition of an Evolved Programmable Network or EPN and its linkage to the Cisco Evolved Services Platform (ESP).   Figure 1 offers a quick visual recap.

Figure 1:  Cisco’s Open Network Strategy

1

And here’s a link to part one of this blog series if you need to play catch up.

In this segment we Continue reading “Cisco Evolved Programmable Network: Virtualized Services in an EPN World”



Authors

Greg Smith

Sr. Manager, Marketing

Cisco Solutions Marketing

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The Internet is evolving, and its next phase – the Internet of Everything – brings together people, process, data and things to create opportunities that benefit people, communities, and the environment. Cisco estimates that 50 billion devices will be connected to the Internet by 2020, making cybersecurity more vital than ever before. Cisco is engaged in several efforts to prepare young people for careers in the field.

First, Cisco has partnered with CyberPatriot, the national youth cyber education program. Bernie Skoch, CyberPatriot National Commissioner, emphasizes the need for cybersecurity training as breaches and threats become more common on the Internet.

“There are 15,000 attacks per second in the United States by people who would do ill to our systems,” Skoch said. “We have a dire need for cybersecurity professionals in the United States, but we frankly aren’t drawing enough young men and young women to be the designers, to be the planners, to be the operators of these very technical systems.”

Continue reading “Cisco Prepares Young People for Cyber Security Careers”



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Austin Belisle

No Longer with Cisco

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Sales teams everywhere are embracing recent advancements in technology—think smart devices, mobility, and wireless. But expectations and requirements of implementing a mobile management strategy can put a high demand on IT departments to ensure network accessibility, security, and scalability.

While business and IT are meshing more and more, it’s important to understand that they’re still not the same thing. Your company needs to be able to focus on your core competency, whatever it may be. To keep focus in your area of expertise, have you considered outsourcing? Finding a trusted managed services provider means that you don’t have to sacrifice the advantages of innovative technology to business—you can still gain the benefits, without the time, expenses, and headaches.

Unleashing IT has a new, special edition coming soon that highlights Cisco Powered™ Cloud and Managed Services. Our experts team up with other industry leaders to find you a solution that fits your business objectives. Outsourcing your desktops or infrastructure to the cloud allows your data to be readily available and accessible yet secure, and removes burden of IT management.

Featured customer JMAC Lending, a wholesale mortgage lending company in California, began tossing around the idea of outsourcing their IT and moving desktops to the cloud. Sensitive customer data was a big concern—JMAC needed to have access to information on the go while ensuring it was not accessible to just anyone. To eliminate risk, JMAC wanted to allow company desktops to be available to its sales team from anywhere—in a secure environment—without having the data stored on personal devices, or even viewable by the service provider.

They found a suitable solution from Cisco Powered service provider Quest Technology Management, and their desktop-as-a-service (DaaS) vision came to life. Read the full article on UnleashingIT.com. And pre-order your own copy of Unleashing IT: Cisco Powered Special Edition to read similar experiences with managed services from Cisco.



Authors

Adrian den Hartog

Senior Marketing Manager

Field Marketing US Commercial

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There is an age-old debate on the word ‘football’ – there is world football (or ‘soccer’ to us Americans) and American football.  To me, real football is played with shoulder pads and helmets, demonstrates a wide range of skills from running to catching to strength and toughness (with no credit for bad acting to fake injury), and ends with a winner and a loser … no ties.

football helmet 1Hearing all the hype on the World Cup back in 2010, I invested 90 minutes watching a mildly entertaining spectacle of ‘keep away’ (we used to play that in grade school) which ultimately ended in a tie.  Really, you’re kidding me. That’s it?  A tie. It had exactly as much impact as if they hadn’t played the game at all – except I was 90 minutes older and (theoretically) wiser.

In the Minority, Again

When the world cup came around this year, I was already a little jaded about the whole event and, to be honest, not all that interested.  Apparently, I’m in the minority globally because I can see the social media results on a daily basis.  For example, there were 485,000 new twitter followers on the tournament’s first day, 8 million ‘likes’ on the world cup-specific Facebook page, and 2.5 billion page views across platforms in 5 days.  Over the course of the tournament one of every two people on earth will watch at least a few minutes of the games. According to CNNTEch, the World Cup is becoming the largest social media event ever.

How Do They Do It with Official Digital Coverage?

Although I don’t appreciate the game on its own merits, I am interested in the digital aspects and impacts of the massive global tournament.  What does it take to execute a digital plan for the world cup? According to Mashable it takes: world cup

  • 68+ digital FIFA team members stationed in Brazil
  • 12 FIFA editors stationed at each of the tournament’s 12 venues
  • 12 FIFA photographers fanned out across the country
  • Dozens of FIFA programmers, writers and strategists
  • A massive public audience (about half of the world’s population at some point) and some subset of those participating in social media

And what are they doing?

  • Publishing content on the 6 FIFA World Cup websites (in 6 languages: English, Spanish, French, Portuguese, German, and Arabic)
  • Monitoring the official FIFA World Cup App
  • Posting images on the FIFA World Cup Instagram account
  • Listening, commenting, and monitoring FIFA social channels
  • Posting, liking, and tweeting in many languages around the world

Variety of Video Options

And don’t forget YouTube and the over 9 million videos posted on ‘world cup 2014’.  (With 100 hours of video uploaded every minute of every day to YouTube, Vimeo, Ustream, and other platforms, I’m not surprised there are so many World Cup videos).

You can find a wide variety of videos, from the Top Best Goals, to World Cup 2014 Predictions, to the opening ceremonies, to – my favorite – fake injuries.

Top best goals:

Fake Injuries:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P6nf4hdSwMg 

Cisco Colleagues Watch on our Own App

At Cisco, like everywhere, the world cup is a topic of discussion, both in the hallways and through social media networks.  Our internal Cisco TV team is running live streaming of the World Cup 2014 through our mobile app for employees to follow anywhere on any device.  You can imagine that work meetings take on a different flavor as colleagues watch the games live, chat with fellow fans, and root for favorite teams (go, USA!) through the internal Cisco TV mobile app.

2014 World Cup Sets the Stage for Rio 2016 Olympics

Of more interest to me than the actual games is how the event is driving digital change and adoption in Rio  de Janerio and creating a legacy of digital inclusion; especially with the 2016 Olympic games also to take place in Rio de Janerio.  Cisco will be central to the Olympic Games in two years, so for me, the World Cup is a warm-up event to see how digital – through the web, mobile devices, social media, and video – will play out.

We can even compare and contrast this tournament with other high-profile championships.  For example, the opening match between host country Brazil and Croatia had only 12.2 million tweets this week, while the 2014 Superbowl between the Seattle Seahawks and Denver Broncos garnered 24.9 million tweets. I suspect that Twitter and other social outlets will light-up as we approach the semi-finals and finals.

travelballGlobal Star Power vs. Local Celebrities

Far moLamorindare important to me than the World Cup or even the Superbowl is the fact that my grandson is playing in the U.S. national travel team baseball championship near Atlanta this week in the 11U category (on the #2 ranked team in the U.S.).

We’re in high anxiety mode rooting long distance for the Lamorinda Knights! This is one case where the global superstars don’t even compare to our little hometown heroes.

Digital:

  • Blanket Coverage

  • Anywhere Access

  • Real-Time Updates

  • High Engagement 

Whether it’s my type of game or not (not), the kind of football being played at the 2014 World Cup is the rest of the world’s most popular game, and the World Cup itself is the world’s most popular event. My interest is piqued, however, watching how it impacts and is impacted by digital channels, devices, apps, and new ‘digital’ behaviors.

It may not be football, but is sure is interesting. Especially interesting is the rise of digital as the medium or channel by which most of us are watching, sharing, participating, or getting updates.

Just imagine how digital is already – and will continue to – transform business and life in the months and years ahead…

 



Authors

Mark Yolton

Vice President of Digital

Cisco Marketing

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Software Defined Networking is at the center of many discussions and debates regarding networking, and right fully so. It means many different things to many different people, and there is a lot of confusion and discrepancy in the term.  You can ask 10 different people what SDN means, and you will get 10 different answers. If you ask me, SDN is today what cloud was five years ago.   I won’t attempt to define what exactly SDN means, but what I will say is that like cloud, the value of SDN will clarify itself over time with powerful use cases and meaningful applications.  Case in point, at the Spring 2014 Open Networking User Group (ONUG) meeting in New York City, the ONUG board of directors proposed nine different use cases that were most likely to be in an RFI/RFQ in the next 12 months.  From these use cases, the IT business leader community at ONUG chose Software Defined WAN as the most critical use case in open networking today.

While the idea of SDN in general is exciting and powerful, most companies are in the planning stages of their SDN and automation vision.  Most believe it will take at least two to three years to architect and realize the benefits of automation across the enterprise.  What’s driving SDN is the promise of the following benefits:

  1. Management: Manual -> Automated Networks
  2. Configuration: Box Centric -> Network Wide
  3. Speed/Agility: Weeks/months -> Minutes
  4. Interoperable: Closed system -> Open System

Currently, there are very few, if any, companies who have completed their SDN strategy.  Partially because it’s quite complex with many permutations, and partially because it’s so important to get it right.  While planning for SDN and automation in the enterprise, there are two key things to consider:

  1. SDN applications must add value to the existing network today
  2. SDN applications must be able to integrate into the customer’s vision for SDN and automation.

There will be a transition between beginning and end state, but any SDN tool being considered must show value on the network as it is currently deployed and allow for integration with future architectures and platforms.  If these considerations can be met, there is a clear reason to begin deployment today.  Companies desire a mature solution in global production that enables value through SD WAN, meeting all of the benefits above, not just the promise of those benefits.   Glue Networks can provide these benefits. Continue reading “Glue Networks Software-Defined WAN Deployed at MWH Global”



Authors

Nate Chessin

Vice President of Sales and Business Development

Glue Networks

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Bryan Williams on TechWIseTV
Bryan Williams on TechWIseTV

One of my favorite unsung hero’s for making life easier with what seems like all of your Cisco devices: Smart Call Home. Machine to machine communication that is disabled by default…but just a few quick steps could make your life SO MUCH EASIER.

Smart Call Home proactively flags device issues and initiates resolution which can dramatically improve business continuity. Enabled devices continuously monitor their own health and notify you of potential issues, often before business is affected. This automated support capability reduces resolution time by up to 80%.

Imagine getting these four benefits – right away

  • 24 hour self-monitoring and analysis of potential problems (I get this through my wife…but that’s a different story)
  • Proactive alerts with actionable resolution insights sent right to your inbox
  • Auto-generated Service Requests expediting support from Cisco TAC
  • Access to detailed device diagnoses, resolution insights, advisories and history reports through a dedicated portal.

Imagine TAC calling you with resolution of a problem you did not even know existed yet? It could happen.

Smart Call Home transforms device data from machine code for easy-to-execute, plain-language description of the alert, possible reasons for the fault, and recommendations on how to fix the issue.

I love this stuff. Our TechWiseTV episode on this came out great.

Preview:

https://youtu.be/-ApChNE096I

It was even my great fortune to cover for Jimmy Ray and personally host Engineer and Services Expert Bryan Williams again for the workshop. Watch right now and see just how easy it can be.

Robb

@robbboyd

TechWiseTV Tina Shakour

TechWiseTV Jimmy Ray Purser

 

 

 

 

 

 

TechWiseTV Geeks



Authors

Robb Boyd

Producer, Writer, Host

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Two of the biggest problems that prison staff must face every day are security and cost. From visitation to healthcare to education, cost-efficient technology solutions can make the lives of inmates safer and better.

Cisco® Connected Justice™ and Renovo Software have partnered to integrate Renovo’s expertise in inmate visitation management and Cisco’s open communications infrastructure. This combination provides prisons and courts with the ability to offer telecommunications services that improve lives and uphold public safety standards while cutting costs.

A great example of this theory in practice is Muskegon County Jail. The Michigan jail will leverage Renovo’s videoconferencing technologies to facilitate visitation for inmates and their families, as well as streamline communication with courtrooms and lawyers. Televisitation allows inmates to maintain frequent face-to-face contact with their legal counsel and visitors without the concerns of physical safety and contraband. This technology alleviates a burden on prison personnel and eases the physiological impact of visiting a prison for families of inmates, especially children. Video visitation is not new, but Muskegon County is a pioneer in fully adopting the practice and planning for its future use. Continue reading “#CiscoPublicSafety Series: Connected Justice Solutions for Correctional Facilities”



Authors

Bob Stanberry

Senior Law Enforcement Advisor

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Cisco_FOM_Podcast_Gordon 6.18.14“It’s not secure enough… so we are not going to allow it to happen.”

Does this phrase seem all too familiar?

Today, IT and business leaders are faced with the challenge of securing any user from any location on any device with access to any information. At times, it can be a daunting road to travel on the path towards true enterprise mobility security. This is especially true as the combination of sophisticated threats and new mobile capabilities and applications are continuing to shape the role and evolution of security controls and policies.

As the mobile endpoint becomes the new perimeter, how can organizations evolve their mobility security policies to mitigate risk? Is protecting information at the data or device level the way to keep employees and assets secure when users conduct business on untrusted networks?

Recently, I had a chance to participate in a new Future of Mobility podcast with Dimension Data’s Stefaan Hinderyckx, to discuss the biggest challenges our customers are seeing as they deploy enterprise mobility security solutions.

Many CSOs that Stefaan speaks with are seeing the clear and present danger of opening their networks, devices and applications to a new mobile world. Yet, many are not shying away from the benefits that enterprise mobility offers. They say:

“Mobility is inevitable. It’s happening and we need to embrace it and deliver it for the business.”

With this in mind, how can IT and business leaders address key challenges and embrace a holistic approach to secure enterprise mobility?

Complexity: There Are No Boundaries Anymore

One of the biggest challenges our customers are seeing is the increase in complexity as they work to meet business needs through mobility, all while keeping users and assets secure.

Simply put, there are no boundaries anymore. There is no place you can put a firewall to make things secure on the inside and insecure on the outside.

A major reason for this complexity is the result of approaching security in a siloed manner. It can be complex to try to secure the device, data on the device, the user and the network in a disparate way!

IT and business leaders need to work together to make the whole environment secure. It is no longer enough to find point solutions to data-centric or device-centric controls, the only way to be confident in your approach is to build a holistic strategy.

Continue reading “A Holistic Approach to Secure Enterprise Mobility”



Authors

Gordon Thomson

Vice President

Global Enterprise Networking Sales