Cisco Steps Up To Google, Microsoft And IBM

Guido Jouret, CTO of Cisco’s emerging technologies group, explains how Cisco solutions such as Pulse, Show and Share are different from existing offerings from Cisco’s competitors

As eWEEK reported yesterday, Cisco Systems Nov. 9 jumped into the hosted e-mail and enterprise social networking arenas, challenging Google, Microsoft, IBM and a legion of smaller startups.

Cisco WebEx Mail is a hosted e-mail application that lets customers move from Microsoft Exchange but continue to access e-mail through an Outlook client if they desire.

Enterprise Collaboration Platform is a hodgepodge of tools with which companies are already familiar, including team spaces and communities, profiles, a corporate directory, and social networking tools. Cisco also unveiled a Show and Share video app and a tagging solution called Pulse.

But there are two types of new. There is new to Cisco, and new to the market. At first blush, Cisco’s new solutions appear new to Cisco, following in the hosted mail footsteps of other notable giants and in the social networking wake of a smattering of capable startups.

For example, Cisco WebEx Mail comes months after Google released Google Apps Sync for Microsoft Outlook. This plug-in lets Microsoft Outlook users continue to access their information via the familiar Outlook interface if their companies switch to Google Apps.

Cisco is pitting Enterprise Collaboration Platform as an alternative to IBM Lotus Connections and wiki platforms from MindTouch, Socialtext, Jive Software, Awareness and others that have similar tools. Show and Share has promise, given Cisco’s enterprise video chops.

Yet Google has Google Video for businesses, and MindTouch offers an extension to Kaltura to offer video for enterprises. Pulse is nice, but IBM Lotus Connections has offered its Dogear bookmarking tool for a few years now.

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So, what’s new here for Cisco, which is celebrating its collaboration portfolio at the Cisco Collaboration Summit today? eWEEK put that question to Guido Jouret, CTO of Cisco’s emerging technologies group, in a recent interview.

Jouret said that the enterprise world has been locked into a collaboration world that has been focused on documents and PCs within the confines of the company firewall. He argued that Cisco is bringing video collaboration not just to PCs, but to phones and mobile devices using telepresence between corporate firewalls.

So, while previously Cisco focused on letting employees within big businesses work together efficiently, Cisco is applying its network security provisions to its collaboration software to let colleagues, partners, suppliers and customers work together across their firewalls.