One doesn't tend to associate Cisco with Web 2.0, social media or cloud computing. Cisco equals routers, the plumbing of the web. In other words, vital and hugely profitable; but not the 'new, new thing' of the Internet. It turns out we have written before about how Cisco is using social media to reach enterprise clients and playing in the enterprise social networking space. Now Cisco wants to position its Application Extension Platform (AXP) in the cloud platform space and is encouraging developers with $100,000 in prizes for the most innovative applications.
The product AXP is not new. Cisco launched it about 4 years ago. But it is now ramping up the marketing. Read on for a rundown of AXP's positioning in the market.
On the consumer Internet, we connect directly to big server farms running our favorite services. In the Enterprise world, most users connect via a branch network. In this more complicated world, there are three concerns that are not well addressed by the platforms that emerged in the Web 2.0 era:
Cisco AXP aims to address these challenges in branch networks. The $100,000 contest is part of this, as it asks developers to think of what apps can run at the branch level within a Cisco network router (aka "the box") - which is really a Linux server with the network services exposed via an API. February 27th is the final deadline for submissions, if you're a developer interested in this challenge. Finalists will be announced in May and the winners will be announced in August/September.
For more on the technology, current usage cases, and competition rules see Cisco's presentation on Slideshare.
Cisco Media Briefing Developer Contest V4.3
View SlideShare presentation or Upload your own.
Comments
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It is amazing how cloud computing has suddenly become a hot topic from being a buzzword the last few years. It is as if everybody has suddenly woken up and said, I want to do cloud computing. I'm reading this in every magazine and am wondering if it isn't just another hype. Tipping your hat too much towards any one trend is dangerous.
Cisco's contest doesn't seem to restrict to cloud computing. Or does it?
I agree with your writeup on challenges for remote offices. That's one thing hype needs to factor in.
We just need to get more creative with how we network.
Hi Bernard,
Thanks for your time. You've provided a balanced viewpoint. A minor correction - the AXP is fairly new and introduced in April 2008. It's the Cisco ISR platform that was introduced over four years ago, the former being a service module on the latter.
BTW, I put out a small blog on our thoughts towards the complementary approaches to cloud computing at the branch. Please do check out:
http://blogs.cisco.com/innovation/comments/a_walk_in_the_clouds/
Best regards,
Shashi Kiran