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October 26, 2007 10:37 AM PDT

TelePresence is way better than you think it is

by Jon Oltsik

Have you seen Cisco System's TelePresence? If you haven't, you should. TelePresence is a next-generation video-conferencing offering from Cisco and to call TelePresence "technology" minimizes its scope. TelePresence includes television monitors, desks, chairs, and everything you need for connectivity. Once installed, you get a Star Trek-like experience. Cameras react to voices and focus on the person speaking. Television monitors display remote participants across a virtual table as if they were in the same room. Geek heaven!

TelePresence is nothing like any video-conferencing technology I've ever seen or thought about. The first time I heard about TelePresence was in a presentation by Cisco Chief Development Officer Charlie Giancarlo. When describing TelePresence, Charlie talked about the AT&T "picture phones" at the 1964 New York World's Fair. Since I am originally from the New York area and about Charlie's age, I thought about small TV screens on red phones that may or may not have had dials on them.

Charlie's historic comparison made TelePresence personal for me but I had no idea just how far things have progressed. As an adult who has now been in the tech industry for 20 years, I dismissed TelePresence as the newest version of those dopey PictureTel video hookups of the early 1990s.

My point is this: technology has evolved so quickly that our personal analogs are extremely narrow and may be nothing like the real thing of today. By equating TelePresence with 1964 AT&T phones and PictureTel, I completely eschewed TelePresence until I saw it in action. This presents a challenge to Cisco as I'm sure there are lots of folks like me who remember the agony and stupidity of those early video conferences.

Cisco found that the best way to convince skeptical customers of the power of TelePresence was with live demos. Like the futuristic theme of the 1964 World's Fair, technology has progressed to a point where you have to see this stuff to believe it.

Jon Oltsik is a senior analyst at the Enterprise Strategy Group. He is not an employee of CNET.
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Saw it in '24'
by scott_br October 26, 2007 11:24 AM PDT
Wasn't it in season 6? It did look nice. Of course, Cisco must have an exclusive product placement agreement with the '24' producers, because there just HAPPENS to be some fancy Cisco firewall (that someone attempts to breach), some Cisco VOIP phones (that get strategically placed in the screen shot), and the TelePresence suite (that starts up with a nice wide Cisco logo).

If it's good enough for CTU and Jack Bauer, it's good enough for my company. <g>
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They actually made it look grainer on "24"
by meh130 October 26, 2007 1:49 PM PDT
The TelePresence scene in 24 actually made the video look grainer intentionally, so the viewer could tell when the camera point of view was on the Russian leader in Russia, and when the camera point of view was on the TelePresence screen in Washington.

It is better than that. See it in person, if you can.
Not All Telepresence is created equally
by joecaffrey February 20, 2008 5:59 AM PST
Cisco's product while not the best meeting experience is at least reliable. They are serious about delivering a finished product not just racing to a quarterly profit deadline. Cisco ships fully configured ready to go systems
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