Aside from an ill-timed Milanese taxi strike and a lot of rain and snow, the first CiscoLive of 2014 was a fascinating week.Cisco EVP Rob Lloyd announced our latest Cisco ONE capabilities with a new APIC Enterprise module and the new Inter Cloud capability for moving workload (virtual machines) between private and public clouds. Both of these announcements underscore Cisco's expansion into software-defined infrastructure. Now IT administrators can centrally apply policies across data center, WAN and access networks and transparently move workloads and apps across private and public clouds. Now, that's agility. That's lower operational costs.
Internet of Everything...Italian style
Meanwhile, in the Cisco booth, we showed how the Internet of Everything can impact an industry-namely wine production as our local example. The demonstration started with a connected vineyard, with sensors in the ground and on the vines providing data to make grape growing efficient, higher yield, and higher-quality. The second demo stop was bottling, where tracking data can provide more efficiencies to the vintner and guarantee of quality for the consumer. Third was distribution, which involved fleet tracking and correlating sales patterns with distribution information. This means more quality assurance for the consumer, and verification for the sellers. Naturally, we also included in the demo the consumer experience, with a little wine tasting, courtesy of Corliano wines. This brought together social media, on-site expertise, more information for the consumer, and data tracking of the whole thing. We had our pals from i-robot on site, cruising the booth in a mobile telepresence unit called the Ava 500 (which sadly did not have a Roomba integrated into it). You can see how this type of application could be used for expertise in the field, onsite troubleshooting for the vintner, or even a special experience for consumers. Private wine tasting with Robert Parker over telepresence, anyone?
You can see how this example brings together people (consumers, growers, vintners and distributors), process (growing, bottling, distribution and sales), data from all of those sources, and things, namely the grapes and wine. It's all connected and loads of sensors (IoT), collaboration technologies, big data, mobility and networking make it all possible. That's the Internet of Everything. Think about the possibilities for medical care, or government services or raising your kids.
More and more IT is being asked to drive business value and it is vital that we consider the opportunities that technology can create, but also the operational burden that requires. This means balancing growth initiatives with efforts to reduce operational costs. That sentence has been true for 20+ years in IT, but thanks to some advances in management-increasingly called orchestration and automation-along with programmability and the advent of lots of new data from new sources-thanks to IoT and mobility-we have some opportunities to more closely align IT with the business.
Afew additional takeaways from Milan:
What are your thoughts about next-gen IT? Tweet me at@eschroedercisco.Find out for yourself how a new model for IT transform your business atCisco Executive Perspectives.