Cisco Spark is Cisco’s next-generation collaboration platform. More simply, it’s a place where teams get stuff done. Our Cisco Spark Evangelist answers some of the most frequently asked questions about the product and how to get the most from it.
We’re setting a new standard by making sure Microsoft Skype for Business works with WebEx Meeting Center video conferencing. Now, people can come together easily, regardless of the platforms they use for work. With tools that contribute to your
Cisco sponsored a report by Harvard Business Review Analytic Services to test a hypothesis: are other businesses encountering the collaboration paradigm shift we are experiencing, and what are they doing about it?
Cisco Spark teams is really simple. A team is a group of people working together. Anyone can create a team and then add users to it. A team can have any number of rooms, which are topic-specific rooms used by that team. Anyone in a team can create
Without Cisco Spark, we wouldn’t be launching the Spark service now. Of course, we’d launch it, but the key is the timing. Now. What I am talking about is Spark’s impact internally on our ability to accelerate all the launch-related activities. Don’t
I thought I’d spend a few moments to share a little about what we’re working on in the Cloud Collaboration Technology Group at Cisco. Simplifying collaboration has been top of mind. But it’s been evident that we needed to think about it differently