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Cisco will be hard pressed to match 2009

Cisco will be hard pressed to match 2009

A look at this year's achievements and what is on the cards for the networking giant in the new year

In April, Cisco's smart grid initiatives bore fruit with a $US200 million project for the City of Miami. Cisco, along with GE, Florida Power & Light and Silver Spring Networks, will deploy more than 1 million wireless "smart meters" to homes and businesses in Miami-Dade County to provide information on energy usage, efficiency and reliability.

April saw Cisco acquire Tidal Software for data center automation software; announce pricing for UCS; and roll out cloud-based security services.

In May, Cisco formally announced it Smart Grid initiative to supply utilities with upgraded, IP-based communications infrastructures. Cisco said at the time that smart grids were a $US20 billion opportunity. Later, Cisco upped that outlook to $US100 billion and said the opportunity was orders of magnitude greater than that of the Internet.

Also that month, Cisco became the supplier of choice for Clearwire's WiMAX buildout. It also packaged up UCS for service providers by bundling it with its Nexus 7000 data center switch and CRS-1 router.

June saw Cisco roll out rack mount servers for UCS; win a deal to outfit the Dallas Cowboy's new stadium with video; and extend smart grid plans in a deal with Duke Energy. Cisco stretched smart grid even further in July with the Smart Connected Buildings plan to upgrade the energy usage, measurement and management communications infrastructure of commercial buildings.

In August, Cisco announced a customer for UCS: Tutor Perini, a $US5 billion construction management firm in California. Cisco also landed a deal with Warner Music Group for its EOS entertainment platform; and announced a 160Gbps Ethernet -- 16x10G -- module for its ASR 9000 edge router.

September was pretty quiet -- the only Cisco "event" was the introduction of the TelePresence 1100 system for intercompany collaboration. But October was anything but quiet.

Cisco announced plans to acquire three companies in October: Norwegian videoconferencing leader Tandberg; wireless gateway maker Starent Networks; and Web messaging security company ScanSafe. Tandberg and Starent together cost Cisco $US6.3 billion and allowed the company to enter two key markets -- low-end and mid-range videoconferencing, to fill a big TelePresence gap; and an enhanced packet core for LTE 4G wireless, a market Cisco was not able to adequately address before.

Cisco would have its hands full with Tandberg, however. Cisco faced resistance from about a third of Tandberg's shareholders who felt the company was being undervalued. Cisco ultimately hiked its offer and won over 90 per cent of the shareholders by the end of the year.

October also saw Cisco refresh its Integrated Services Router line, a product that sold 7 million units since being introduced in 2004. ISR G2, as it is called, is optimized for video and virtualized services, and the foundation of a new Cisco strategy called Borderless Networks -- anywhere, anytime, any device access to anything.

In November, Cisco and EMC launched an anticipated joint venture to offer integrated data center/cloud computing products and services. The joint venture company, Acadia, has a board comprised of Cisco and EMC executives and is charged with accelerating the adoption of technologies offered by the Virtual Computing Environment coalition of Cisco, EMC and VMware. Key products from the VCE coalition are Vblocks, which are pre-integrated and packaged data center compute, storage, network and virtualization systems comprised of Cisco's UCS, EMC storage arrays and Vmware virtualization software.

In introducing VCE, Vblocks and Acadia, Cisco says the market for this venture is $US350 billion.

Also in November, Cisco acquired the set-top box business of DVN, a provider of digital cable systems to the Chinese market.

Cisco wrapped up a busy and important 2009 by celebrating its 25th anniversary in December. It will be interesting to see what the next 25 years -- starting in 2010 -- will bring for Cisco and the industry.

"Who are they going to buy in FY'10, and why?" Avain Securities' Trebnick asks. "Cisco is still talking M&A."

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