Cisco Systems Inc. launched a virtual online 3-D world based on a trade-show motif Thursday to enable its 40,000 global channel partners to meet and exchange information with application providers and device manufacturers.
While the new Cisco Industry Solutions Partner Network (ISPN) is loosely based on the animated look and feel of Second Life and related sites, channel partners don’t need to pick an avatar, download a desktop application or trade in Linden Dollars, a Cisco spokeswoman said.
In fact, the company has run industry events for several months for resellers on the well-known Second Life site in a simulation called Bandwidth Amphitheater, where each participant had to create and name an avatar to attend. However, Cisco’s new ISPN will give it control of the virtual world and will encourage interactions more easily, said Andrew Sage, senior director of worldwide channel marketing.
The new Cisco site will be accessible through Cisco’s Web site, but it is not open to the public. The ISPN was designed and housed on servers owned by Unisfair Inc. in Menlo Park, Calif., Sage said. Visitors to ISPN will be able to click on buttons to navigate as they move through trade show halls and booths, a meeting hall and a lounge, along with various “shadow people,” without the need to pick attire or facial characteristics as in Second Life. However, they will be able to chat with one another in ISPN to compare technologies. In coming weeks, Cisco plans to allow voice communication between ISPN participants through WebEx and Skype, he said.
A big difference between the two sites, at least for Sage, is that the ISPN site won’t allow users to “fly” as in Second Life, he said. “About six months ago, we hosted an event in Second Life for 40 or so channel partners, and in the midst of making a presentation, I accidentally hit the ‘fly’ button and flew away right in front of everybody. It took a while to navigate back. So, no, we didn’t put in a fly button in our site.”
There won’t be any “Chambers” dollars, either, named after CEO John Chambers, or buttons that allow an avatar to disrobe in one click, he confirmed. Users won’t be required to load an application onto their desktops as in Second Life, either, Sage said.
It took Cisco about three months to develop the site with Unisfair with a “relatively modest start-up cost,” but Cisco envisioned using the site for many other purposes and provided a “significant” infrastructure to support it, Sage said. He didn’t say what other purposes it might serve, however.
The initial purpose of ISPN is to “introduce channel partners to the whole world of application developers,” Sage said, so that a channel partner could investigate new applications or even those under development to be able to sell them with more knowledge to customers.
About 30 independent software vendors are already on the site, including Salesforce.com Inc.; QM Group Ltd., a queue management provider in the U.K.; and Nomadix Inc., an access gateway provider in Newbury Park, Calif.