With the Right Technology, Today’s Traffic Jam Could Be Your Last
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With the Right Technology, Today’s Traffic Jam Could Be Your Last

For 30 years, we’ve been helping change the way people work, live, play, and learn. During this time, our world has advanced faster than ever.

It seems like yesterday when we saw the introduction of the Macintosh, the first-ever consumer machine with a mouse and graphical interface. Then, just two years later in 1986, Cisco introduced the Advanced Gateway Server, or AGS.

This breakthrough multiprotocol router became the foundation for moving traffic across networks. In 1990, researcher Tim Berners-Lee developed HTML—the official language of the World Wide Web and the spark to make the Internet mainstream. Today, it’s hard to remember life before the Internet. The industry has come a long way, and so have we.

We owe our founding to Len Bosack and Sandy Lerner, two former Stanford University computer technologists, who set Cisco on an incredible journey as a networking and Internet pioneer.

In 1995, less than 1 percent of the world’s population connected on the Internet. Today, more than 40 percent connect online.

We’ve seen businesses transformed and economies modernized. The way we buy and sell products has changed—so has their design, production, and distribution. It’s as if no industry has been untouched.

In the next 30 years and beyond, we’ll see everything become connected—people, process, data, and things. This will expand our understanding of the world and the experiences we have, and we’ll generate new ideas and discover new solutions.

And while “firsts” are noteworthy, and we have our share of those, we think they’re most interesting for the “lasts” they create.

I can imagine the last product recall, the last traffic jam, the last checkout line, even the last blackout.

A number of these lasts, and many more, are already taking shape.

Cities around the world—including San Carlos, California; Barcelona, Spain; and Hamburg, Germany—have embedded network sensors to help drivers find open parking spots. This is huge, given that 30 percent of urban congestion is caused by drivers looking for parking.

What comes next is connecting sensors to traffic lights and signage—and eventually driverless cars. We’ll see traffic jams eliminated, saving $121 billion in the U.S. alone on wasted time and fuel much sooner than we think. Greenhouse gas emissions will go down, too.

These are transformational times, where we can make the seemingly impossible possible. This is what drives us to achieve and to succeed.

But it isn’t about legacy. It’s about the opportunity, the challenge, and the impact we can help make.

We’re grateful to have this opportunity. And we’re grateful for our employees, past and present, our partners, our customers, and our shareholders. Together, we’ve accomplished so much.

I can’t wait to see what’s next.

This post was originally published on The Platform.

Jason Wang

Strategic Account Manager

10 年

Excellent, we are embrace the internet of Everything

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Malik Baudry Maiga

Managing Director, Search, Technical Solution Consultants

10 年

There is some truth into it though size of the infrastructure and number of cars on the road (wire and traffic) will remain the same. Better utilisation of it will not result in "eliminating" the underlying basic issue i.e. the roads bottlenecks though it might improve the throughput. Nice pitch for the IoE and good way to create the great "vision" and position Cisco as a thoughtleader...

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Essa M.

Principal Sales Engineer | ServiceNow Expert | 20+ Years IT Sales & Solutions | Driving Enterprise SaaS Success

10 年

I am not sure I agree with the last Traffic Jams, lets face it that we can do better but at the same time. There will be more people with more cars on the road, it is all about macro economic, the car manufactures need to sell more cars, more cars means more cars during rush hour. I dare to compare it with the paper less office, it was a vision and yes if we compare how much data we produce and how much is printed it is much less, however yet still we print documents and yes we still don't have paper less office. Just my two cents on this topic.

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Anna O.

Senior Manager, US Sales and Use Tax, Canada & International Indirect Tax

10 年

Lol! Pigs flying got me laughing.This is interesting. Traffic in Lagos, Nigeria might be the worst there is. Its so bad on some days people going to work just turn right back and go home. I think having subways and train stations might be a good first approach to reducing traffic jams.

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