- Kindle back orders stretch 3 months at Amazon
- Cisco shutting down between holidays
- Smartphone smackdown: Storm vs. iPhone
- 12 myths about how the Internet works
- Google layoffs: 10,000 jobs being cut
Cisco plans to make remote work as simple as plugging a router into a broadband connection and starting up a PC.
Cisco Virtual Office (CVO), announced Tuesday, combines a variety of existing products with management software that hides the complexity of a VPN and other technologies. Remote employees with no technology training can use CVO to make their home setups work just like a regular office, Cisco said.
Fuel price hikes and concern over carbon emissions recently have focused more attention on telecommuting and permanently home-based employees. Cisco, a company with much to gain from large and medium-sized enterprises extending connectivity to remote sites, has been a big proponent of work forces keeping in touch electronically, in both its product offerings and its own infrastructure. CVO began as an internal project in Cisco's IT department, said Bob Berlin, a director of product management at Cisco.
The CVO setup for home and remote offices is built around the Cisco 881w Series Integrated Services Router (ISR). After an employer or a Cisco partner sends the router to a remote site, the worker can connect it to the local broadband connection and start using it. The router can call in to the main office, retrieve the proper configuration, and set itself up. As soon as the remote employee plugs in a laptop, the online experience is just like working at the office, with no special browsers or authentication tools, Berlin said.
VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) is also part of CVO, so employees can plug in a Cisco 7970G IP phone and immediately start using it as if they were in the office. If the worker has both a main office and a home office phone, both will use the same number. Outgoing calls will look like they are coming from the office number, and all incoming calls will ring on both phones unless one of the ringers is turned off, Berlin said.
The full-featured 7970G has been tested and certified for CVO, and other wired and wireless IP phones will follow, but theoretically any IP phone that uses SIP should work with the system, Berlin said. Cisco plans eventually to make its TelePresence high-definition videoconferencing technology an endpoint for CVO.
The 881w Series router can be used with Wi-Fi within the home and shared with other household members with two separate virtual networks. If the local broadband connection goes down or the router is disconnected, it can reconfigure itself again in the same way as soon as the connection is restored, he said.
Comment