![]() One of the first SaaS-based solutions offered by EMC, Jeetu spearheaded the company’s acquisition. He also created the Box Platform business unit where he led product strategy, marketing and developer relations – driving products from incubation stage to mature offerings.īefore joining Box, Jeetu was General Manager and Chief Executive of EMC’s newly acquired Syncplicity business unit, a cloud service for Enterprise File Sync Sharing (EFSS) and collaboration. Box’s growth scaled to reach over 60M users with over 50% of customers using multiple products. The discipline, quality standards, performance metrics, and stability Jeetu instilled fueled the platform’s growth – nearly quadrupling revenues to $700M+. He transformed Box from a single product application to a multi-product platform used by 100K customers representing 69% of the Fortune 500. He led the company’s product and platform strategy, setting the company’s long-term vision and roadmap for cloud content management in the enterprise. Prior to joining Cisco, Jeetu was the Chief Product Officer (CPO) and Chief Strategy Officer (CSO) at Box, a role he pioneered. ![]() His team is creating and designing meaningfully differentiated products that diverge in the way they’re conceived, built, priced, packaged and sold. His mission is to build world class, subscription-based products that solve Cisco customers’ biggest problems. Jeetu combines a bold vision, steeped in product design and development expertise, operational rigor and innate market understanding to create high growth Software as a Service (SaaS) businesses.Ī member of the Executive Leadership Team, Jeetu is helping to redefine Cisco's SaaS business and strategy to further accelerate the company's transformation and growth. He leverages a diverse set of capabilities to lead the strategy and development for these businesses and also owns P&L responsibility for this multibillion-dollar portfolio. This is the one feature I’ve been waiting on for years and am very excited.Jeetu Patel is Cisco’s Executive Vice President and General Manager of Security and Collaboration. By pointing out the 8k feature, it tells us that they are actually using a chipset capable of the full 40/48gbps bandwidth required for all of the HDMI 2.1 specs. This means that there are manufacturers using the term HDMI 2.1 for their products that don’t actually support all of the HDMI 2.1 features. I believe the “8K” descriptor is a simple way of communicating to customers that this is “real” hdmi 2.1 since the standards body that controls naming for HDMI has made a rather controversial decision to allow any HDMI 2.0 technology that includes any single feature from the HDMI 2.1 spec to call itself HDMI 2.1. I won’t settle for running through an HDMI 2.0 box that reduces the bandwidth from 48gbps to 18gbps. I have an xbox series x and love gaming with Dolby Vision + VRR + 4k. Hey, I’m one of those mythical customers who owns the original sync box, but stopped using it on my main TV because it can’t do HDMI 2.1. Knowing Hue they will not even reduce the price of the current sync box to give us a “choice”, but probably discontinue it all together so we have only one choice, a more expensive “8K” box.Ĭan’t wait to see what they’ll stuff up with bridge v3 when it finally comes out in 2045. They should focus on making the app work on all (Android?) TVs and not just latest Samsung’s, so it actually works with what people use the most, their TVs inbuilt streaming apps. The price of this one will be even higher than the already available and overpriced sync box, while not having additional power connectors (so a downgrade) and still not working with anything that’s not connected directly to it.Īs the article mentioned it will probably have HDMI 2.1 on all ports and people will pay a premium price to get that, not because it’s 8K. ![]() Who needs 8K capable sync box? What 8K content is available out there, except demos that you see running on TVs in the shops? 8K consoles? No. I fell like Hue is lately just releasing same old products with no significant change or improvement made to them, while upping the price in the process, just to make more money on “new” products. ![]()
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