Cisco Live: What Happened To The Internet Of Everything?

In an industry plagued by buzzwords and acronyms, few will lament Cisco’s decision to use ‘digitisation’ instead of the ‘Internet of Everything (IoE)’ at its conference this year.

The fact that Cisco had persisted with IoE instead of the almost universally used Internet of Things (IoT) was an illogical and pedantic annoyance for many, not least because the IoT is, of course, a marketing term itself, representing a group of technologies.

At last year’s Cisco Live event in Milan, the company endeavoured to explain the difference between IoT and IoE. The IoT, it said, connects objects, but IoE uses a network to correlate people, process, data and things to become “intelligent”.

What happened to IoE?

But as 13,000 visitors heard at this year’s event in Berlin, the largest ever attendance for a Cisco show outside the US, the company decided to give the IoE a more human term that would resonate better and perhaps cause less confusion.

It cited interest at this year’s World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos as one of the reasons for the change and described how ‘digitisation’ had the capability to transform businesses of all sizes. It’s a superficial change, but as one the leading advocates of IoE, it was a notable one. Even still, Cisco seemed a tad bemused by the media’s (including TechWeekEurope’s) interest.

“I think we’re completely consistent,” said Cisco CTO Zorawar Biri Singh. “Digitisation and IoE are themes we started talking about two years ago. IoT is just about the industrial side of things, IoE is a broad theme but perhaps too broad. We’re just choosing to use Digitisation as the umbrella, IoT is the industrial element.”

“Digitalisation is the business term and IoT is one of the enabling technologies,” added Inbar Lasser-Raab, who leads Cisco’s enterprise marketing efforts. She said it was normal for companies to alter their message after a few years and Cisco was no different. She also said that Gartner had started to use the term ‘digitisation’.

So there you have it. The IoE is dead, long live digitisation. Until the next buzzword.

Do you know the secrets of Cisco? Take our quiz!

Steve McCaskill

Steve McCaskill is editor of TechWeekEurope and ChannelBiz. He joined as a reporter in 2011 and covers all areas of IT, with a particular interest in telecommunications, mobile and networking, along with sports technology.

Recent Posts

Russia Accused Of Cyberattack On Germany’s Ruling Party, Defence Firms

German foreign minister warns Russia will face consequences for “absolutely intolerable” cyberattack on ruling party,…

2 days ago

Alphabet Axes Hundreds Of Staff From ‘Core’ Organisation

Google is reportedly laying off at least 200 staff from its “Core” organisation, including key…

2 days ago

Apple Announces Record Share Buyback, Amid iPhone Sales Decline

Investor appeasement? Apple unveils huge $110 billion share buyback program, as sales of iPhone decline…

2 days ago

Tesla Backs Away From Gigacasting Manufacturing – Report

Tesla retreats from pioneering gigacasting manufacturing process, amid cost cutting and challenges at EV giant

3 days ago

US Urges No AI Control Of Nuclear Weapons

No skynet please. After the US, UK and France pledge human only control of nuclear…

3 days ago