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How Cisco builds smart systems for the AI era

Simon Osuji by Simon Osuji
February 4, 2026
in Artificial Intelligence
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How Cisco builds smart systems for the AI era
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Among the big players in technology, Cisco is one of the sector’s leaders that’s advancing operational deployments of AI internally to its own operations, and the tools it sells to its customers around the world. As a large company, its activities encompass many areas of the typical IT stack, including infrastructure, services, security, and the design of entire enterprise-scale networks.

Cisco’s internal teams use a blend of machine learning and agentic AI to help them improve their own service delivery and personalise user experiences for its customers. It’s built a shared AI fabric built on patterns of compute and networking that are the product of years spent checking and validating its systems – battle-hardened solutions it then has the confidence to offer to customers. The infrastructure in play relies on high-performance GPUs, of course, but it’s not just raw horse-power. The detail is in the careful integration between compute and network stacks used in model training and the quite different demands from the ongoing load of inference.

Having made its name as the de facto supplier of networking infrastructure for the enterprise, it comes as no shock that it’s in network automation that some of its better-known uses of AI finds their place. Automated configuration workflows and identity management combine into access solutions that are focused on rapid network deployments generated by natural language.

For organisations looking to develop into the next generation of AI users, Cisco has been rolling out hardware and orchestration tools that are aimed explicitly to support AI workloads. A recent collaboration with chip giant NVIDIA led to the emergence of a new line of switches and the Nexus Hyperfabric line of AI network controllers. These aim to simplify the deployment of the complex clusters needed for top-end, high-performance artificial intelligence clusters.

Cisco’s Secure AI Factory framework with partners like NVIDIA and Run:ai is aimed at production-grade AI pipelines. It uses distributed orchestration, GPU utilisation governance, Kubernetes microservice optimisation, and storage, under the umbrella product description Intersight. For more local deployments, Cisco Unified Edge brings all the necessary elements – compute, networking, security, and storage – close to where data gets generated and processed.

In environments where latency metrics are critically important, AI processing at the edge is the answer. But Cisco’s approach is not necessarily to offer dedicated IIoT-specific solutions. Instead, it tries to extend the operational models typically found in a data centre and applies the same technology (if not the same exact methodology) to edge sites. It’s like data centre-grade security policies and configurations available to remote installations. Having the same precepts and standards in cloud and edge mean that Cisco accredited engineers can manage and maintain data centres or small edge deployments using the same skills, accreditation, knowledge, and experience.

Security and risk management figure prominently in the Cisco AI narrative. Its Integrated AI Security and Safety Framework applies high standards of safety and security throughout the life-cycle of AI systems. It considers adversarial threats, supply chain weakness, the risk profiles of multi-agent interactions, and multi-modal vulnerabilities as issues that have to be addressed regardless of the nature or size of any deployment.

Cisco’s work on operational AI also reflects broader ecosystem conversations. The company markets products for organisations wanting to make the transition from generative to agentic AI, where autonomous software agents carry out operational tasks. In most cases, this requires new tooling and new operational protocols.

Cisco’s future AI plans include continuing its central work in infrastructure provision for AI workloads. It’s also pursuing broader adoption of AI-ready networks, including next-gen wireless and unified management systems that will control systems across campus, branch, and cloud environments. The company is also expanding its software and platform investments, including its most recent acquisition (NeuralFabric), to help it build a more comprehensive software stack and product portfolio.

In summary, Cisco’s AI deployment strategy combines hardware, software, and service elements that embed AI into operations, giving organisations a route to production-grade systems. Its work can be found in large-scale infrastructure, systems for unified management, risk mitigation, and anywhere that connects distributed, cloud, and edge computing.

(Image source: Pixabay)

 

Want to learn more about AI and big data from industry leaders? Check out AI & Big Data Expo taking place in Amsterdam, California, and London. The comprehensive event is part of TechEx and co-located with other leading technology events. Click here for more information.

AI News is powered by TechForge Media. Explore other upcoming enterprise technology events and webinars here.



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