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Security threats Toolkit

Cisco wants to be watching you

Marguerite Reardon CNET News.com

Published: 07 Mar 2006 10:15 GMT

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Cisco is getting into the security surveillance market with the acquisition of a small company called SyPixx Networks.

The networking giant is paying $51m (£29m) in cash and options for SyPixx, which has developed software and hardware products that allow existing analogue video systems to operate as part of an IP network.

Most of the video systems used today are analogue, which limits where and how video can be viewed. Digitising video using the SyPixx technology will make video accessible at any time from any place, so watchers can respond to, investigate and resolve incidents as they happen. That will help companies install and control new security applications and make live and recorded video more valuable to customers, Cisco said.

"If you can digitise all video, you can record it, timestamp it and instantaneously get access to video across the IP network much more efficiently than having to send an actual tape," said Marthin De Beer, a vice-president in Cisco's Emerging Market Technologies Group. "It also lets people coordinating a disaster halfway across the country to get live video feeds from cameras connected to an IP network, so they can see what's happening."

Cisco says it believes the video surveillance market is a good fit for the company, which has traditionally sold IP routing and Ethernet switching equipment to large companies. For one, it is already probably the provider of networking equipment to the companies that use video surveillance.

In addition, it makes sense for businesses that have already embarked on consolidating their networks to decide to carry all of their corporate data and voice traffic over an IP network. Cisco also provides storage area networking gear, which is essential for customers who must store all the video.

The company said it plans to keep on all of SyPixx's 27 employees. Today, those workers are spread between two locations in Waterbury, Connecticut, and Carlsbad, California When the acquisition closes, which is expected to happen by the end of April, Cisco says it plans to relocate the employees on the East Coast to the Carlsbad facility.

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