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Cisco to expand WebEx conferencing capabilities

SAN JOSE, Calif. โ€” The next version of Cisco Systemโ€˜s WebEx hosted online meeting service will greatly expand the capabilities of the on-demand product, according to a company executive.

Robert Lloyd, senior vice-president for Canada, the U.S. and Japan, said in an interview here Wednesday during the companyโ€™s annual C-Scape conference for industry analysts that the features could range from presence, instant messaging, searchable content and voice collaboration.

He said some 2,000 members of his staff have been using a beta version of the software, parts of which will be released in the next quarter, for six weeks and already have dramatically changed their work habits.

โ€œIt transforming their job roles,โ€ he told a panel discussion earlier in the day.

โ€œOur commercial teams, who look after medium-sized companies, do a lot of driving every year to meet their customers and rack up the miles. We have three employees who last year could have driven around the world twiceโ€ฆ(Now) theyโ€™ve given eyeball cameras to their customers, putting them in constant (online) contact with their customers. Our specialists in security and other areas have changed their jobs: They have โ€˜mike Fridays,โ€™ park themselves in their office Fridays, [go online] and say โ€˜Iโ€™m here’โ€ to field questions, he said.

Cisco bought WebEx earlier this year as a tool to spread its collaboration and video conferencing technologies. Lloyd is a eager enthusiast for video meetings, one of the themes that Cisco is pushing here. His 6,000-person division is one of the biggest internal users of the companyโ€™s large-screen TelePresence conferencing system.

Thereโ€™s been a 46 per cent reduction per person in travel expenses, he said, and a 31 per cent reduction in overall travel and entertainment expenses.

The cost savings alone make video meetings โ€œa great big payback,โ€ he said. โ€œIt isnโ€™t a travel restriction. Itโ€™s being embraced by those who donโ€™t like to travel. Who loves the experience of being frisked in a U.S. airport?โ€

While TelePresence is a high-cost product โ€” the smallest TelePresence system Cisco sells lists at US$79,000 โ€” the company is piloting a project to bring it to Regus Business Centres, a world-wide chain of stores that offer services to businessmen on the go. The idea is that organizations that canโ€™t afford a TelePresence meeting could go to a Regus store and hold it there.

TelePresence is a high-end solution that, through large screens and good audio, is being touted by Cisco as going beyond mere video conferencing.

โ€œMeeting replacements are context,โ€ he said. โ€œIntercompany interactions are core.โ€ He noted in the interview that Bell Canada is a TelePresence partner and Rogers Communications is piloting it internally. Both service providers will examine the potential for hosting TelePresence services, he said.

โ€œOne of our key targets is road warriors who are tired of going around the world and going for MRIs to see whatโ€™s wrong with their backs.โ€

Cisco is about to expand TelePresesence from its current limitation of being used inside a company to having the ability to connect to other video systems. As a result, through partnerships with service providers, will come โ€œthe video telephone system,โ€ he said โ€” one directory, with calls placed across VPNs and quality of service administered by telcos and cablecos. These providers are โ€˜excitedโ€ at this opportunity, he said, because theyโ€™ll be able offer rich value-added services to organizations.

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