Cisco down to business with gear for digital home
By Matt Hamblen
,
Computerworld
, 01/08/2009
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Cisco pushed further into living rooms today with new audio devices and network attached-storage products for the digital home,
as well as a hosted software platform, Cisco Eos, aimed at helping media and entertainment companies create and manage online
fan communities.
Cisco launches wireless multi-room audio system, digital media NAS
Slideshow: The 2009 CES gadget gallery
CEO John Chambers said at the Consumer Electronics Show that he wanted the public to understand Cisco's commitment to consumer products generally.
"We are really committed to this consumer market and we're putting the power of the whole company behind it," Chambers said.
Cisco has been active in building and marketing consumer products such as Linksys Wi-Fi routers for five years, but Chambers pointed to today's announcements as examples of products that will move Cisco's
revenues for consumer products from $1 billion a year to his goal of $10 billion.
Chambers also said the company will begin more active branding and marketing of its consumer products, using the Cisco brand
name, over the next year. He also said the company was working to build handheld wireless devices for consumers, using internal
development teams and partnering with other companies.
Zeus Kerravala, an analyst at The Yankee Group in Boston, said the consumer direction for Cisco, the leader in networking products used by businesses and service providers,
was still an uphill battle.
Consumer products are still "the next frontier for Cisco ... [which] has very little name recognition with consumers," Kerravala
told Computerworld .
"Most of the things Cisco sells to consumers today, the consumer use but never see," Kerrvala said. "They make Linksys routers
and TV set-top boxes, so the overall awareness by consumers is low. Consumers say, 'That's the company that makes that Internet
stuff.'"
However, Kerravala said Cisco could succeed in the consumer market with the "long hard work of delivering consistent products."
Cisco Eos: A platform is born
Warner Music Group was named by Cisco as the first entertainment company to use the Eos platform for sites from artists Laura
Izibor and Sean Paul.
The platform includes analytics and site management tools, Cisco officials said. Eos relies on drawing consumers to recording
artists and others at their own branded sites where they can meet other fans through links to YouTube and Facebook, as well
as other social networking services.
Dan Scheinman, general manager of media solutions for Cisco, said the tools can be used to help companies build social networking
connections in a fraction of the normal time involved. Eos is a software and a service that allows media companies to focus
on their end users rather than building and maintaining their own Web platform, he said.
Cisco plans to integrate Eos with more of its products in the future to extend online entertainment to multiple screens, including
TV and mobile devices, the company said.
Michael Nash, executive vice president of digital strategy at Warner Music Group, said in a statement that using Eos was a
part of a larger plan to rely on key partners like Cisco to allow connections between fans and their favorite artists. "The
industry has seen a dramatic shift in the way consumers engage in the entertainment experience and we are exploring ways to
partner with Cisco to leverage their technology platforms to create new opportunities to monetize that engagement," Nash said.
For more enterprise computing news, visit Computerworld. Story copyright Computerworld, Inc.
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