Interop Day 1: Interop started for me with meetings and then the HP Media Event which was very good. The HP executives mentioned the HP Procurve 8200 switch on the show floor. It comes from HP Labs and has an optical backplane. Yes, that is very cool and we will get a video presentation of it in the morning. HP is really working hard to beat Cisco.
But before HP, I visited Start Up Alley, and was very disappointed to find there were only four companies there. I have always supported the startups at Interop, but I didn't see any that caught my interest this year. Many companies are making product announcements, but I like startups -- I like finding a company that has a niche and does it well. That reminds me. My company has always been a big supporter of Vidyo and their technology. They won Best of Interop Award this year and I extend my congratulations to the company, the award was well deserved.

As most of you know, from my annual Larry Awards, I am not only interested in the technology, but in the booths and presentations. There's always a few booths that turns me off and it didn't take me long to find one on my first day: Fusion-IO. The booth had a good display, but the mechanical bull in the middle, it is a bit much. It reminded me of the boxing ring I disliked from last year. While this is Las Vegas, people tend to forget it is about the product.

On the bright side, I sat through the Spirent presentation, and can give it a thumbs up for being both good and informative.
I was also interviewed by two TV stations and a couple of other media outlets, so keep on the look out.
On top of that, I was recruited to participate in a few focus groups for vendors who need to gain more insight into their product, message and marketing. The one thing that stood out so far was how many companies think they need their product to be associated with the word "cloud." They often have a good product but by trying to make every product tied to the "cloud" they can lose their message to the partners and customer on what they really do, how well they do it and why they are good.
That said, the Riverbed/Akamai announcement was interesting today. Partnering with Akamai for cloud products that Akamai has direct access to is a good match for Riverbed. It is for cloud service what the Virtual Steelhead is to the premises infrastructure. Customers will get faster access to their software-as-a service subscriptions. I'm thinking this could be good for services like Microsoft Office 365 or Salesforce.com.
But another thing that gets to me is how hard it is to learn about a company from the people staffing the booths at Interop. I stop by many booths and ask one question, "Tell me about your product." I get so many deer-in-the-headlight looks that I feel bad for them. You have about 20 seconds once someone stops by your booth to get them on the hook. Too many just want to scan your ID rather than taking the direct approach. Introduce yourself…
I have my first chat with Cisco at an Interop on Wednesday and I am looking forward to that. I am glad to see that are showing products this year, and not just PowerPoints.
I will also be going to more presentations, looking to see who has the Best at Interop for my annual Larry Awards. (Check out the 2010 winners.)
Larry Chaffin Ph.D is the Chief Executive Officer/Chairman and founder of Pluto Networks, a Consulting and VAR partner specializing in WAN acceleration, VoIP, WLAN, telepresence and security.
Pluto Networks is a Riverbed reseller. Pluto was previously a Cisco reseller but in June, 2010, ended its reseller relationship with the company and is no longer a Cisco channel partner.
Pluto Networks specializes in the needs of small, large and enterprise companies by always giving them a great ROI on the products they sell. Pluto Networks has a presence in 23 countries around the world enabling all of its consultants to be virtual. Larry was a Judge at Interop for the Best of Interop Awards for 2009.
Larry has also co-authored all of the books listed below:
Managing Cisco Secure Networks, Skype Me, Practical VOIP Security, Configuring Check Point NGX VPN-1/Firewall-1,Configuring Juniper Networks NetScreen & SSG Firewalls,Essential Computer Security: Everyone's Guide to Email, Internet, and Wireless Security, How to Cheat at Microsoft Vista Administration, Microsoft Vista for IT Security Professionals, Asterisk Hacking, 2008 VoIP and Video Conferencing, Infosecurity 2008 Threat Analysis and author of Building a VOIP Network with Nortel's MS5100, along with co-authoring/ghost writing eleven other technology books for VIOP, WLAN, security and optical technologies. Larry is currently working on a follow up to Building a VoIP network with Nortel's MCS 5100 Book as well as new books on Cisco Telepresence Networks, Practical VoIP case studies and WAN Acceleration with Riverbed.
Larry also has more than 29 vendor certifications and has been working on many others. Larry has been a principal architect around the world in 22 countries for many Fortune 100 companies designing VoIP, security, wireless and optical networks. He has expanded over time also to include application acceleration. Larry is working with worldwide company now out of Asia as a Special Assistant to the CEO and CIO as they go through organizational and network changes, helping them with strategic advice from his years of experience.
Pluto Networks is a channel partner of, LifeSize, Riverbed, Call Copy, Fastsoft and Symantec.