Techzine TV podcast
In the Techzine TV podcast we analyze B2B IT solutions, strategies, and trends. IT companies are happy to invite us to talk about what they are working on and what they are going to bring to market. We visit them all around the world, and in some cases, they visit us in our office.
We have a good understanding of how technologies work, or how they should work. We also hear a lot from the market about what companies need or where things go wrong. This gives us the ability to have really in-depth conversations on technology, strategies, and products, but we always try to keep it practical and easy to understand.
We explain innovations, interpret new IT concepts, and use practical examples to make complex technology understandable for everyone. Where necessary, we bring in experts to clarify matters further. The goal is to help IT professionals, decision makers, and other listeners better understand IT developments, but also to help them in their search for new solutions for their business and not get stuck on buzzwords and one-liners.
The Techzine TV podcast is an evolution of the previous Techzine Talks on Tour series. We still bring a lot of conversations and interviews from events to this series. We record so many video interviews nowadays, so we can select the best ones for this podcast series.
The topics still vary greatly, as Coen and Sander attend a total of 50 to 60 events each year, ranging from open-source events like KubeCon to events hosted by Cisco, IBM, Salesforce and ServiceNow, to name only a few. With a lot of experience in many walks of IT life, Coen and Sander always manage to produce an engaging, in-depth discussion on general trends, but also on technology itself.
So follow the Techzine TV podcast and stay in the know. We might just tell you a thing or two you didn't know yet, but which might be very important for your next project or for your organization in general. Stay tuned and follow Techzine TV.
Techzine TV podcast
No backdoors, no excuses: Cisco bets big on sovereign infrastructure
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At Cisco Live in Las Vegas, Techzine TV sat down with Gordon Thomson, president of EMEA at Cisco, for a wide-ranging conversation about the explosive pace of market change, and some of the most significant product and strategic moves Cisco has made in decades.
A major focus of the conversation is Cisco's Sovereign Critical Infrastructure (SCI) initiative. Launched in September 2025 with limited scope, SCI has since evolved into a formal legal framework giving customers guarantees around air-gapped operation, no backdoors, and continued product functionality even during embargoes or conflict. Thomson talks about how SCI has expanded to 13 product families, including data center, campus, wireless, collaboration, and Splunk on-prem, and how Cisco plans to allow customers to recertify existing installed-base devices as sovereign toward the end of the year, switching them from subscription-based to perpetual licenses.
The interview closes with a deep dive into Cisco Cloud Control, which Thomson, a 29-year Cisco veteran, describes as one of the most fundamental things the company has ever done. By unifying networking, security, and observability into a single AI-assisted platform with agentic automation, Cisco Cloud Control represents the culmination of years of incremental innovation. Currently rolling out in the US before expanding to Europe, it is a cloud-only service, a deliberate trade-off that Thomson acknowledges some customers will need to weigh carefully.
Key takeaways:
• Why Cisco shifted from cloud-first thinking to Sovereign Critical Infrastructure
• How SCI moved from a market signal to a binding legal framework with perpetual licenses
• The plan to recertify hundreds of millions of existing Cisco devices as sovereign
• The sovereignty debate: emotion, trust, chip-level demands, and the price customers are willing to pay
• AI's role in reducing interoperability costs for sovereign cloud deployments
• Cisco Cloud Control: unifying networking, security, and observability in one platform
• Why Cloud Control is cloud-only, and what that means for sovereign customers
Chapters:
1:08 - Navigating a world of generational change
3:06 - Cisco's cultural and organizational transformation
5:01 - Sovereign Critical Infrastructure: from intent to legal framework
8:50 - The sovereignty debate: emotion, trust, and chip-level demands
11:28 - 13 product families and recertifying existing sovereign devices
16:47 - AI, sovereign clouds, and on-prem dashboard trade-offs
20:14 - Cisco Cloud Control: networking and security unified