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Since it was first founded in 1984, Cisco Systems Incorporated
has acquired a number of other companies, in an effort to bring innovation and
improvement to their services and devices.
Back in 1999, the company purchased Petaluma-based Cerent
Corporation for $7 billion, which was Cisco’s most expensive deal at that time.
All the acquisitions, which included Stratacom, Scientific-Atlanta and Linksys, have been successfully integrated into the
company, helping Cisco to become the most valuable company worldwide in
2007, with a market capitalization exceeding $500 billion.
After buying, in 2007, the on-demand collaboration, online meeting, web
conferencing and video conferencing applications provider WebEx Communications Incorporated for $3.2 billion, last
month, the multinational purchased maker of the Linux-based Exchange server
replacement PostPath Server, PostPath Inc for $215 million.
Yesterday,
Cisco announced that it has acquired yet another company, Jabber Incorporated, a
privately held messaging technology provider. The latter’s services will
be used to complement two of Cisco’s apps, the WebEx Connect
and the company’s on-premise unified communications suite, in an attempt to provide
users with a more capable messaging platform.
The deal, whose financial details remain
undisclosed, will also allow large organizations to use instant
messaging without fearing security breaches, since Jabber’s software is fitted
with additional safety and archiving tools. Currently, the aforementioned
software can work with Google Talk, AIM, Microsoft Windows Live Messenger and
Yahoo Messenger.
Cisco's chief executive John Chambers stated that the corporation
aims at winning the race against their competition on the collaboration market,
Microsoft and IBM, since this industry seems to be a highly profitable one, estimated
to be able to bring in $34 billion.
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