Cisco Systems' 100,000th Router Shipment Saves Stanford
Japan Scholars
from "Internet Deprivation"
MENLO PARK, Calif., August 9, 1993 -- The 100,000th internetwork
router to be shipped by internetworking leader Cisco Systems, part of a
donation to the Stanford University Center in Japan in Kyoto, will help
rescue scholars at the center from "Internet deprivation," according to a
Stanford official.
Cisco has donated the historic router and two additional units, paid
for by Cisco employees and executives, in recognition of the firm's
founders'roots at Stanford and of the university's role in the development
of internetworking technology as a whole.
A new network based on two Cisco Model 3103 ISDN (Integrated Services
Digital Network) and one Model 500-CS Communication Server will replace the
center's orginal low-speed networking facilities. "The Center has outgrown
these facilities, and Cisco's donations will help provide full Internet
connectivity for faculty and students who have been suffering from Internet
deprivation," said William Yundt, Stanford's director of networking and
communication systems.
The Internet is a network of computers that links tens of thousands of
university, corporate and military systems worldwide. Since Cisco began
shipping products in 1986, its
routers have been used to help build the
global Internet infrastructure. Today nearly 600 hosts on the Internet
carry the name "Cisco."
John Morgridge, Cisco president and CEO, said, "We felt it was
appropriate that our 100,000th router represent the best of Cisco. Since we
owe our start to Stanford, we wanted to acknowledge its role in our
development of a technology that has literally created a new data
communications industry. In addition, we hope our donation to the Stanford
University Center will underscore the part Cisco has played in global
deployment of the Internet."
The Stanford University Center, founded in 1989 encompasses programs
in Japanese language, history, culture and politics, as well as the Stanford
Center for Technology and Innovations (SCTI), which focuses on technology
and economic development. Particpating in these programs are faculty and
student scholars from Stanford and other major universities, including Yale,
Harvard, Columbia, Princeton and Michigan.
Cisco Systems, Inc., is the leading worldwide supplier of high-
performance, multimedia and multiprotocol internetworking products,
including routers, bridges, communication servers and router management
software. Cisco technology is used to build enterprise-wide networks
linking an unlimited number of geographically dispersed LANs, WANs and IBM
SNA networks. In the United States, Cisco is traded over the counter under
the NASDAQ symbol CSCO.