Cisco's Big Push into New Markets

Cisco's Big Push into New Markets

CEO John Chambers is using the giant's cash hoard to expand beyond networking gear. But he risks alienating key partners HP, Dell, and IBM

Chambers says Cisco is moving "with a speed nobody has ever attempted" Chris Kasch Based On Photograph By Sian Kennedy

By Peter Burrows


Pulled up close to a conference table at Cisco Systems (CSCO) headquarters in San Jose, CEO John T. Chambers talks about what feels to him like a tipping point in the company's history. In recent weeks, Cisco has cut deals with customers looking to use its technology in more expansive ways than ever before—Major League Baseball teams that want fully wired stadiums, the city of Miami as it develops a smart power grid. "It's been like that for the last 120 days," Chambers says. "We're in the right place at the right time."

Chambers is betting big that Cisco can capitalize on such opportunities. While many companies retrench, the tech giant has strong profits and $33 billion in cash in its coffers. More important, in Chambers' eyes, is Cisco's position as the dominant provider of the networking gear that runs the Internet. Just as the tech world revolved around IBM (IBM)'s mainframe computers in the 1970s and Microsoft (MSFT)-powered personal computers in the 1980s and '90s, Chambers believes Cisco has an opportunity now to make its digital networks the platform on which new innovations are built. "There's an inflection point happening," he says. "Cisco and the network are at the center of it."

Investors certainly hope so. Cisco's stock, now $18 a share, is at the same level it hit in 1998. Although Chambers has assured shareholders that Cisco can increase revenues 12% to 17% annually, that looks increasingly difficult now that the company has grown to $39.5 billion in revenues.

To hit that growth target, Chambers is hastening efforts to move beyond the core business of selling switches and routers. This year Cisco hiked the number of new markets it is targeting to 30, so it can offer everything from digital billboards to stereos and video surveillance systems. Chambers also is using the company's cash to buy his way into other markets, as he did in March with the purchase of the Flip video recorder maker Pure Digital. Chambers tellsBusinessWeek that Cisco likely will hit a total of 50 fresh markets within a year. "We're moving into new [areas] with a speed nobody has ever attempted," he says.

Such frantic expansion comes with risks, and not just the danger of losing focus. The biggest concern is that Cisco will alienate key partners that as a group deliver more than 80% of the company's sales. IBM, Dell (DELL), and Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), for example, sell billions in Cisco gear each year as they help companies build tech systems. But Cisco's move this spring to sell its own servers makes it more of a rival to those three, which sell similar products. "They definitely risk relationships [with IBM, HP, and Dell]," says Greg Simpson, chief technology officer for General Electric (GE). HP and Cisco already have begun to spar publicly.

BIG BLUE'S TURF

Tensions also appear to be rising with IBM, which resells about $3 billion in Cisco gear to clients, analysts say. The spat started when Cisco swooped in to buy Internet conferencing company Webex Communications in 2007, after IBM had thought it had sealed the deal. But the big blow came when Cisco unveiled its new servers, which are designed for the operators of so-called data centers, a prime piece of Big Blue's business. "[Chambers] is known for trying to find a win-win," says one tech CEO. "This isn't a win-win. It's a declaration of war."

Both IBM and Cisco insist the relationship is fine. But since word of Cisco's plans leaked, IBM has cozied up to Juniper Networks (JNPR), which makes routers that compete with Cisco's. IBM also inked a deal to sell routers from Brocade Communications Systems (BRCD) under the IBM brand—a possible signal to IBM sales staff to move those products. "Cisco and IBM can downplay this all they want," says Zeus Kerravala, an analyst with Yankee Research Group, "but they're competing much more than they ever have before." Analyst Erik Suppiger of securities firm Signal Hill says Cisco could lose half of the $4 billion in gear sold each year by IBM and HP. IBM and HP declined to comment.

Cisco does appear more able to go it alone than in the past. It has increased its sales force from 13,000 in 2004 to more than 23,000. And the company is using these direct links to customers to forge a more strategic relationship with the biggest players. Filippo Passerini, Procter & Gamble (PG)'s chief information officer, says P&G "[talks with Cisco salesmen] less about when do you refresh your routers and much more about what new business models can we explore." One example: P&G plans to install more than 75 of Cisco's high-end TelePresence videoconferencing systems in 55 countries by the end of the year to lower travel costs and hold more global consumer focus groups.

Chambers says there are big advantages to entering so many new markets. If Cisco gear is used to create, process, and transmit digital content, then the company can make everything work together in new ways. For instance, Cisco plans to incorporate inexpensive videoconferencing services into the set-top boxes it sells for cable TV service. One day Dad may be able to plug a Flip camera into a set-top box while talking with Grandma and show her footage of little Sally's dance recital. "No other company touches the content, the carrier, and the consumer—and the best part is they all drive each other," says Padmasree Warrior, Cisco's chief technology officer.

Chambers says nobody has to lose for Cisco to win. "We'd vastly prefer to partner," he says, by teaming up with others to create new markets. The strategy has worked before. When Cisco persuaded companies to make the transition to office phones that use Net technology earlier this decade, it helped others sell related service contracts. That's a big business for IBM, which is currently helping France's Total (TOT) install 100,000 Internet phones.

Even if some partnerships suffer, Chambers may be able to buy what he needs. Mergers and acquisitions chief Ned Hooper says Cisco could easily afford a $10 billion deal, although it plans to stick with smaller acquisitions for now. Some analysts say that if business from IBM and HP plunges, Cisco could build up its own consulting capabilities and even seek to buy a company such as Accenture (ACN). "If push comes to shove, [Cisco] could do it," says Sam Wilson, analyst at JMP Securities. Accenture declined to comment.

In the end, Chambers says, he cares less about how Cisco reaches customers than whether they buy into its plans for the future. A year ago clients attending Cisco's annual powwow were "worried that we were spreading ourselves too thin," says Chambers. "But for the first time, they are telling us they want us to move faster." For better or worse, he plans to oblige.

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SFR / BT : les chiffres des ventes d'iPhone

Près d’un an après sa sortie chez Orange, l’iPhone 3G, depuis peu chez SFR et Bouygues Telecom, continue à très bien se vendre chez ces 2 opérateurs.

Certes ces ventes amènent beacoup moins de nouveaux abonnés, mais elles permettent de fidéliser les clients et donc d’éviter leur fuite vers Orange.

SFR annonce d’ailleurs avoir vendu 100 000 iPhone en 3 semaines.

De son côté Bouygues Telecom avance le chiffre de 40 000 ventes depuis le 28 avril.

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Casablanca last night pictures

       
Click here to download:
Casablanca_last_night_pictures.zip (462 KB)
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Virgin pilots 200Mbps broadband

Virgin Media is piloting broadband speeds of 200Megabit per second (Mbps) for a small group of users in the UK.

Following successful trials in the lab, 100 "lead adopters" in Kent will have access to the high speeds, believed to be among the fastest in the world.

Virgin will be using the high speeds to test applications such as 1080p high definition TV and 3DTV.

The pilot will last six months before the results are analysed. A variety of upstream speeds will also be tested.

Virgin is able to achieve the speeds thanks to a technology called Docsis 3, which makes more efficient use of the capacity of fibre to the cabinet connections used by Virgin.

The challenge in making use of the speeds is the inability of wireless networks to cope with 200Mbps connections therefore requiring hard wired connections.

Users also need high-specification computers that have gigabit Ethernet ports that can deal with such fast data speeds.

There is also the issue that many websites only have 100Mbps connections into data centres, meaning they are unable to serve pages or content at a speed to take advantage of the fast service.

Virgin said the 200Mbps service is the fastest speed in the world achieved using Docsis 3 technology.

In a statement Virgin Media's chief executive Neil Berkett said: "We're at the forefront of innovation and understanding when it comes to ultrafast broadband services and the 200Mb pilot will give us further insight into how true 'wideband' services might be used by consumers." 

Source: BBC
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Israeli ISP speed up torrent download

Over the past few years Internet service providers have been increasingly complaining about the massive load BitTorrent transfers place on their networks. They claim that this load can reduce the performance experienced by other subscribers, but the huge amount of data transferred outside their own network is also very costly.
 
To solve these issues, some ISPs have started to slow down all BitTorrent traffic, Comcast-style. Others choose to limit BitTorrent speeds at certain times of the day, and there are other examples where customers simply cannot download files with a .torrent extension at all.
 
Luckily there are options available which can help manage BitTorrent traffic and please customers, all at the same time. The Israeli ISP Bezeq International has taken this more consumer-friendly route. This ISP actually makes BitTorrent downloads faster by caching popular torrent downloads on their own network. By doing so the load on the network decreases and since there are less connections to peers outside the network Bezeq is also saving on costly bandwidth.
 
It works as follows. When a Bezeq International customer downloads a .torrent file the ISP will intercept it and add (!) a new tracker to it. The additional tracker is only accessible for Bezeq International customers and it connects to a high speed web-seed hosted on Bezeq International’s network. As a result the files will be downloaded much faster. A Bezeq customer told us that almost all ‘popular’ torrents he downloaded connect to local seeds.
 
Interestingly, the tracker Bezeq International uses is hosted by an ISP in The Netherlands, while the actual seeds (caches) are on the ISPs network. The provider confirmed to TorrentFreak that the ISP is indeed listed as a client, but they were not aware of its torrent caching practices or that they were hosting a BitTorrent tracker.
 
On the surface this seems to be a win-win situation for both the ISP and its customers. Bezeq saves on resources and expensive bandwidth while the customer enjoys higher download speeds. There are of course privacy concerns, since the .torrent files are intercepted and edited without permission, but the biggest opposition to such a system will most likely come from the entertainment industry.
 
Various anti-piracy lobby groups, including the MPAA and RIAA are already pushing for more cooperation from ISPs in tracking down copyright infringers. The relationship between the entities is an uneasy one already, and that’s before an ISP decided it would become a BitTorrent seeder. Although Bezeq International does not control which files are cached on their servers, the likes of the MPAA and RIAA will likely see it as aiding in copyright infringement.
 
Caching BitTorrent traffic and attempts to keep it within the local network as much as possible are not new, but aside from occasional tests these technologies are never implemented by ISPs. Bezeq International did not respond to our inquiries so we can’t confirm that they have implemented it for all their customers. For those who are lucky enough, enjoy the ride.
 
Source: http://torrentfreak.com/isp-speeds-up-customers-bittorrent-downloads-090418/
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Nigerian fraud scam mastermind sent to jail



One of the masterminds of a multi-million dollar Nigerian financial scam being co-ordinated from Perth has become the first person in WA to be jailed for their role in the long-running international confidence trick.

From his home in Queens Park, 30-year-old Tuoyo Clement Nikaghanri helped con $132,400 from four Australian victims using elaborate scenarios involving Saddam Hussein, a US Army general, Interpol and a string of fake lawyers and government diplomats.

One victim, a retired financial planner from Busselton, even travelled to Malaysia where he was met at the airport by a black limousine, driven to an office and given the combination to a lock-box full of US dollars.

Clyde Ellison told The West Australian that Nikaghanri, who was sentenced to six years in prison, worked with a network of criminals between Africa, Malaysia and Australia to operate a number of simultaneous stings.

“It was an absolute masterpiece with the amount of work and expertise that went into it,” Mr Ellison said. “There were all sorts of authentic looking documentation and photographs to convince me that this was genuine.”

The other victims were a 50-year-old Brisbane security officer, a couple from Victoria and a 74-year-old Brisbane retiree who lost $63,700 to the scam.

Each victim was drawn into the fictitious financial plots through emails or internet sites between 2005 and 2008 before agreeing to transfer large sums of money using Western Union accounts set up by Nikaghanri. The Nigerian, who had four passport identities and was married with one child to an Australian-born woman, then directed the money to so-called family members in Nigeria or to a handful of people in Africa, Malaysia and Thailand. It’s unclear if any of the recipients were real or had been fabricated.

“It is apparent that many foolish and gullible people are deceived and part with funds hard earned,” District Court Judge Phillip Eaton said during Nikaghanri’s sentencing. “All, somewhat incredibly, believed the fanciful tales that were being told, tantalised by the prospect of receiving amounts of money which they hitherto have only dreamed of.”

Described by the Australian Securities and Investments Commission as “advanced fee fraud”, the scams have been launched from Nigeria for more than a decade and continue to hook people across the globe.

WA Police technology crime investigation Det-Sen. Const. Jamie McDonald said Australians had paid Nigerian scammers at least $200 million over the past five years, with some victims known to have paid more than $1 million dollars to the scammers.

Many victims remain unidentified because of the complex web of fake identities used to perpetrate the frauds and also because many victims are too embarrassed to come forward and reveal they have been scammed. Many other victims remain convinced that their payday is just around the corner.

“If you combine that with the amounts that are being sent, say, from the US and the UK, we’re talking about a billion dollar industry,” Det-Sen. Const. Mcdonald said.

Nikaghanri was the Australian connection for a team of scammers running fake lottery scenarios and non-existent deceased estates supposedly worth millions of dollars. Victims agree to pay up-front fees to help get funds released to them or to bribe government officials where the large sums of money are being held.

“Once the people in Ghana, Nigeria or London felt they fleeced the victims out of all that they can, they then pass the victim’s information on to other people involved in the syndicate until (in this case) it has reached Tuoyo here in WA,” Det-Sen. Const. Mcdonald said.

“Because the victims have already fallen victim to the scam, they have developed a rapport, they have sunk a lot of money into these scams so they are very willing to believe the money is almost in Australia and are willing to help or send fees for the money to be sent to Australia and transferred to them.”

The size of the networks is almost impossible to quantify, but authorities believe entire internet cafes have been manned around the clock by teams of scammers who are constantly on hand to reply to the countless spam emails that are the hook for their prey.

“They are on the emails, answering responses, on the telephone ringing people on a daily basis, harassing them and hounding them and getting them to send any sum of money that they can,” Det-Sen. Const. Mcdonald said.

Sentenced on 51 fraud and passport violation charges, Nikaghanri was described by Judge Eaton as a well-educated man who became a player in the scam network to pay off a $96,000 credit card debt. When arrested he denied any role in the crimes, claiming he had been asked to collect money as a favour for another African man he had met during a night of gambling at Burswood casino.

Later, he pleaded guilty to some of the charges, but maintained his innocence during a trial to dozens of others.

“In my opinion, your evidence at the trial reflected quite deliberate fictionalisation, a continuance of the fictions maintained by you and others so successfully to defraud people,” Judge Eaton said.

The judge found the scam against retired Brisbane man Kai Chan Wah to be the most callous of all. Mr Wah, who was initially contacted via email and offered a chance to net $US20.7 million if he stepped forward as a beneficiary of a deceased estate, was conned twice before losing more than $60,000.

False documents with International Monetary Fund letterheads were sent to him instructing him to pay “release” money and at one point a man identifying himself as John Bruce from Interpol contacted Mr Wah to reassure him that the financial transactions were legitimate. All Mr Wah had to do, according to the fictitious Mr Bruce, was pay a small fee to affect the transfer of the funds – thus starting the fraud again.

“If people see anything on the internet which is a deal that is almost unbelievable they should run screaming,” Det-Sen. Const. Mcdonald said.

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