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Recently, I had the opportunity to participate on a panel discussion of Internet of Things (IoT) privacy and security at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. This week, Barcelona plays host to the 2016 Mobile World Congress, where technology leaders convene to discuss what’s next in the mobile industry. Both events point to a future in which Internet-enabled devices are ubiquitous.

We cannot yet see exactly how our lives will change as a result of this next wave of innovation. What is clear, however, is the potentially transformative nature of a world packed with connected devices. For that potential to be reached, consumers need assurances that their privacy and security will be carefully protected. Here, both industry and government have important roles to play.

Continue reading “The First Law of IoT: Things that Can Be Connected, Will Be Connected”

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Eric Wenger

Senior Director, Technology Policy

Global Government Affairs

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The workforce of tomorrow is being created today. Technology is now a fundamental part of education even at its earliest stages, at the pre-school and elementary level. While this technology brings great power, it’s also important to ensure it is being used as effectively and positively as possible.

Education is less about just acquiring knowledge, and more about how to analyze, evaluate, validate and use the unlimited information that is available to us. We need to teach more about critical thinking and collaboration skills, while shifting the focus from teaching the answers to instead teaching students how to ask the right questions.

That’s why Cisco is working with the Bullis Charter School in Los Altos, California, to run an “Innovate Together” event for students in grades 6-8. The event, to be held March 22-23, will task students with researching and creating an idea that would positively impact their community by leveraging IoT technology.

At its core, Bullis Charter School is dedicated to helping students build interest and comfort level with technology, innovation, entrepreneurship and collaboration through personalized education and focused learning goals. The curriculum is centered on building the critical skills of problem solving, creativity and critical thinking. This type of educational construct aligns strongly with our philosophies and goals here at Learning@Cisco when it comes to developing the talent of today and tomorrow. Partnering on this event is a way to bring two very different entities together to accomplish a common goal and give back to the community.

“Innovate Together” is aimed at teaching students how to identify a problem, how to complete research to validate it, how to brainstorm solutions and effectively communicate a solution in a pitch format.

Mentored by Bullis faculty and Cisco innovation experts through our Services Innovation Excellence Center (SIEC), students will work together in teams of 10-15. Each team will pitch their innovative IoT idea to 10 industry experts from such entities as the Stanford University community, who will select a winning team. Winners will be awarded a $250 check to donate to the community charity of their choice.

Bullis Charter School’s innovative approach to project-based learning sets it apart from other schools, and this event to get students get thinking about how they can help their communities while also learning about leading technology applications in the Internet of Things.

Pairing with schools and education organizations is a fundamental part of the work we do at Learning@Cisco to advance skills development and prepare the workforce of tomorrow. Empowering students with these skills at an early age will go far in closing the current technology skills gap we currently face as a society.

Authors

Jeanne Beliveau-Dunn

Vice President and General Manager

Cisco Services

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How the Digital Age has us re-thinking the victor of the AC/DC wars.

Luis Suau shows Robb Boyd how to plug in a light. TechWiseTV Digital Ceiling
Luis Suau shows Robb Boyd how to plug in a light.

Remember when gas lighting gave way to electricity as the future for lighting?

Me either, it was over one hundred years ago.

A traditional incandescent light bulb, originating from the 1860’s, still produces light in the same way today: A coil of wire inside a vacuum-tight glass enclosure, agitates electrons through that coil by applying the proper voltage, and it gets white hot — so hot that it produces light.  The more resistance, the brighter the light.

Thomas Edison is credited with making the light bulb practical.  Moving from gas lights to electric lights required much more than just a reliable lightbulb, it required: ELECTRICITY.

Edison and his team grappled with the tough job of designing and producing the necessary components of a viable electrical system.  They had to invent, to create all the sockets, fuses, switches, power meters, and generators that would be needed to get these new lightbulbs in places they were needed. In 1882 Edison helped form the Edison Electric Illuminating Company of New York, which brought electric light to parts of Manhattan.

What Edison created, was a NETWORK.

Edison promoted electric light as being clean, healthy, and efficient — unlike it’s predecessor…foul-smelling, dangerous gas.  Cables insulated with beeswax and paraffin were run under the streets…and before long problems began to surface: horses were shocked while trotting down wet streets, some workmen were electrocuted. Across the country, the Edison system was meeting with widespread resistance.

It took over 40 years before before electricity began to finally surpass gas as the lighting network of choice in the United States. And even today, all the bulbs may have changed but the infrastructure, the network, is essentially the same.

Most of my audience knows this…but It was actually NOT Edison’s network that brought electricity to the masses…it was another genius that made that possible.

Continue reading “Let there be “Networked” Light”

Authors

Robb Boyd

Producer, Writer, Host

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Orange Juice BarDuring Cisco Live! in Berlin last week, 43,320 oranges were squeezed to fuel the creative juices of customers, partners and developers who converged to co-innovate around the Internet of Things. That’s a lot of orange juice!

And what a smashing success! With more than 12,000 attendees and hundreds of thousands who joined online, this was by far the largest-ever Cisco Live in the EMEAR region (Europe, Middle East, Africa, Russia). To me, it was also the most energizing – and not just because of those orange juice beverages.

The energy around co-innovation was positively hyper and non-stop – from the pre-event DevNet Coding Camp and Hackathon . . . to the openBerlin Innovation Center booth . . . and Co-Innovation Summit hosted by the Cisco Entrepreneurs in Residence program. Co-creation was contagious everywhere! Continue reading “Co-Innovation Juices Overflowed at Cisco Live! Berlin”

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Alex Goryachev

Senior Director, Innovation Strategy & Programs

Corporate Strategic Innovation Group

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I am a new Cisco hire – Head of Financial Services Solutions & Innovation EMEAR and I just came back from Cisco Live Berlin. This is my first time at the event, having spent 30 years in banking.

My first impression? Firstly, WOW! I have been a Cisco customer in previous banking roles and I thought I knew Cisco. However this has opened my eyes again – the range of solutions, the range of industries we are involved in – even digitizing cities and countries.

https://youtu.be/2MHl1BPYTaU?list=PL8gOJrNQJ_FskKoyO4jNWbSeYrR3yAlfC

Continue reading “My first Cisco Live…and it was in Berlin!”

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Simon Blissett

Head of FS Solutions & Innovation EMEAR

Financial Services Solutions & Innovation EMEAR

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The Dandy Lab is a menswear lifestyle store based in Central London. Using Cisco Universal Power over Ethernet on Catalyst switching as the foundation, The Dandy Lab has seamlessly integrated technology into their business to provide a cutting edge retail experience to customers.

https://youtu.be/E481iXCJBqk

Continue reading “Cisco UPoE Powers Cutting Edge Retail Experience At The Dandy Lab”

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Neelay Thaker

Product Manager

Enterprise Switching

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Massive digital transformation is creating significant new opportunities for service providers. The number of Internet connected devices will grow from 15 billion today to 500 billion by 2030. The rise of cloud computing is a game-changer in service provider architecture and service delivery resulting in greater efficiency, capacity and reduced costs.

Unfortunately, this means that as modern networks evolve, the attack surface that service providers must protect is expanding. Financially motivated attackers recognize the opportunity and devise sophisticated methods to infiltrate networks to steal newly digitized assets.

The new threats make security foundational to seizing emerging business opportunities created by the digital economy. Service providers must move swiftly to protect their business, customers, services, and infrastructure with comprehensive cybersecurity technology to ensure they can capitalize on digital growth opportunities.

Light Reading commissioned independent test lab European Advanced Networking Test Center AG (EANTC) to evaluate Cisco’s threat centric security solutions. The result from EANTC is the industry’s first, third party validation of physical and virtual security solutions for securing SP cloud and NFV environments. The products tested include Firepower 9300, ASAv, NGIPSv, WSAv, ESAv, and Radware DefensePro.

Continue reading “Cisco Drives Service Provider Cloud and NFV Growth with EANTC Validated Security Solutions”

Authors

Sam Rastogi

Senior Product & Solutions Marketing Manager

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Did you know that Cisco created the Cisco Secure Development Lifecycle (Cisco SDL) to ensure that security is central through the entire product development process? Cisco SDL is a repeatable and measurable process we’ve designed to fortify the resiliency and trustworthiness of our offerings.

Are your customers aware of this foundational security?

Did you know that Cisco builds-in security technologies that provide anti-counterfeit and anti-tampering capabilities, and trust anchor technologies into many of our latest-generation platforms?  These technologies enhance the security and trustworthiness of the products and the overall network infrastructure.

Security should not be bolted on as an afterthought, but built-in to your customer’s infrastructure. While Cisco has the largest portfolio of security products and services, we also build security into networking devices like switches, routers and other IT products.

There couldn’t be a more important time for our partners and their customers to understand the importance of Cisco’s commitment to security and trust across the network.  It is no longer a matter of if, but when a hack will occur. And the potential risks to your customer could be overwhelming – upwards of $575 Billion. Your customers need to be able to trust the technologies in their networks, and building trustworthy systems is at the heart of our security commitment.  As customers refresh aging infrastructure, they should be aware of the many Cisco products with built-in security features that provide platform integrity and reduce cyber risk.

Cisco CEO, Chuck Robbins discussed the requirement for trust and security in his recent blog about the WEF’s “Fourth Industrial Revolution”. “As we think about this new world, and the interwoven systems that are being created, a new level of trust is required — beyond anything in our history. We must trust the systems that manage and process the data, the people and partners who access the data, and the fundamental technologies and processes that protect the data.”

Continue reading “Security and Trust That Is Foundational to Reducing Cyber Risks”

Authors

Anthony Grieco

SVP & Chief Security & Trust Officer

Security and Trust Organization

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Volker small

Written By Volker Tegtmeyer, Senior Manager Product & Solution Marketing

The adoption of Network Functions Virtualization is a top item on every Service Providers’ agenda. Agility, Flexibility and Cost Reductions are the drivers pushing for network transformation. Cisco is announcing Cisco NFV Infrastructure Solution. Enabling services providers to deploy virtual network functions at scale and opening opportunities for new revenues and reducing the time to market. “This solution is another step in delivering on our strategy for an open, modular and expandable network architecture,” said Gee Rittenhouse, senior vice president and general manager of Cisco’s Cloud and Virtualization group.

Cisco NFV Infrastructure provides you: Continue reading “Cisco NFV Infrastructure Solution – Carrier Class Network Functions Virtualization”

Authors

Sanjeev Mervana

Vice President of Product Management

Emerging Technologies & Incubation