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Cisco’s Spending Spree: An Analysis

The holiday shopping season is in high gear, but consumers aren't the only ones opening their wallets. Cisco has been on its own buying spree lately, picking up two software companies and a WLAN vendor in the month of November.

Of the three companies recently purchased--Cariden, Cloupia and Meraki--Cariden is the most striking. Cariden's core software product could best be described as path and network analysis software. It gathers configuration data from the network devices, then maps data into a network graph, performing mathematical modeling to deliver predictive analytics and resource mediation of the carrier network.

Cariden has solved key analytical problems such as bandwidth structuring, resource prediction and path weakness in the carrier networks. In discussions with Cariden earlier this year, it was clear to me its technology could readily be adapted as an SDN application.

In a Cisco context, Cariden is a mature and proven software platform that carriers trust for network planning and design. Integration with Cisco's OnePK SDN strategy means that Cariden can close the loop from a "read and report" operation to "read, analyze and configure" for dynamic network configuration. And this matters for demand placement in terms of allocating bandwidth on different paths in carrier backbones on a time of day (sometimes known as "routing for dollars").

The Cloupia acquisition is intended to bolster Cisco's data center software automation suite. Cisco already has the Intelligent Automation for Cloud and Network Services Manager options from previous acquisitions, but these tools focus only on Cisco and aren't usable for customers with non-Cisco assets, such as storage arrays.

Cloupia's software provides automation within converged infrastructure stacks for tasks such as server provisioning, VDI and orchestration across the compute/network/storage stratum.

This is the first sign that Cisco realizes it must integrate with partners to provide cloud automation. Until now, Cisco has made software for Cisco products and no one else's. Cisco "encourages" customers to buy only its products by refusing support or integration. Until Cisco buys, at least, a storage company, then third-party integration in cloud platforms will always be a requirement. As such, Cloupia provides a mechanism for integrating NetApp and EMC storage into a Cisco private cloud based on UCS servers and Nexus networking.

And, finally, Cisco has a better chance of going head to head with EMC's Ionix in global accounts. EMC's software portfolio is an enormous revenue and profit center for the VCE joint venture and, if stories are true, a source of much angst between Cisco and EMC executives because EMC garners as much as 75% of the profit in a vBlock sale.

As for Meraki, it seems most likely the WLAN vendor was acquired for its cloud management platform, given that Cisco already has a large wireless portfolio with wide customer acceptance (if not always a high degree of customer satisfaction).

The cloud-based management involves devices located at the customer premises sending data over encrypted Internet connections to an off premise service. The complexity of wireless networks requires software tools to manage, monitor and maintain access points and controllers--the CLI simply isn't enough to keep the system under control. That challenge is exacerbated if you have a network with many remote sites, each with its own WLAN. The cloud platform provides a unified management interface.

Next page: Coherent Strategy Lacking

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