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To: Ibexx who wrote (10287)11/5/1997 11:12:00 PM
From: JT  Respond to of 77400
 
"Cisco to enter consumer market"
By Ben Heskett November 5, 1997, 4:50 p.m. PT

"The Internet backbone.Corporate enterprise networks High-priced routers. These arethe things most often associated with monolith Cisco
Systems (CSCO). But that could soon change.

In the first half of next year, the company will formalize a
strategy to enter the consumer networking market by mobilizing a line of business around technologies that cater to homes and individuals,
according to John Chambers,president and CEO of Cisco.

Cisco is currently divided into units focused on corporate enterprises, service providers, and small to medium-sized businesses.
Cisco is already laying a foundation for a consumer market play, with elements of ongoing partnerships with Intel and Microsoft targeted at the typical residential user.

Chambers said, "Don't underestimate how far we already are in terms of adapting our technology for the consumer space."

The first examples of Cisco's move into the consumer arena
are arriving in concert with partners. Cisco and Intel, for
example, are in the midst of developing cable-modem technology to allow home users to surf the Net using the high-speed infrastructure
normally associated with television.

Intel's cable modems will use Cisco's reference design implementation. The two giants are also working on set-top box technologies for Net surfing using the television set, security enhancements for desktop connections, and enabling easier use of multimedia technology--a
bandwidth gobbler--on a network.

Cisco is also working with Microsoft to add, among other things, more networking functions to that company's operating systems.

Analysts said Cisco's move into the residential market is only natural since the consumer user at one end requires heavy-duty networking gear at the other to surf the Net.

Martin Pyykkonen, networking analyst with Furman Selz, said, "What you want to make sure happens is that more people connect to the Internet.
Anything Cisco can do to help that has a direct benefit for them."

Chambers said the company, in typical Cisco fashion, would start with a short list of expectations to test the market once the organization
is formally announced. The move is intended to essentially shore up the last remaining area of market focus in networking-related products
for Cisco.

The company has already moved to prop up an initiative to sell simplified networking gear to small businesses--an environment dominated by 3Com and a sales channel with which Cisco is generally unfamiliar. Officials said the sheer size of the market and the opportunity necessitates a move into the space.

The small-business segment grew close to 50 percent quarter-to-quarter in the most recent period, showing that Cisco's attention to small
businesses may be paying dividends, according to officials."

Best Regards/Chen



To: Ibexx who wrote (10287)11/6/1997 5:34:00 AM
From: smolejv@gmx.net  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 77400
 
re SAP: I understand you like what we're singing ;)

DJ

PS: have their 1999 leaps. Knowing that DAX index also incorporates a company growing at 50% causes the same shift in opinion about Germany as when you realize that Germans' diet is not just Kraut und Bier...