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Cisco Snags Procket

Cisco Systems said Thursday that it's buying the assets of router-maker Procket Networks.

Procket sells high-end, high-bandwidth routers to service providers, a market that Cisco has been aggressively courting. Over recent years, Cisco has lost market share in the space to Juniper Networks; Cisco still dominates the market, with a 59% share compared to Juniper's 34%, but that percentage is down from 70% two years ago.

Yet in some ways, it's a curious purchase. Just last month, Cisco launched the CRS-1, or Carrier Routing System, a new router which fills holes in the competition against Juniper, and which cost the company four years and $500 million to develop.

As such, Pacific Growth Equities analyst Erik Suppinger says Cisco may be looking to benefit more from Procket's customers than its technology. "It would clearly have overlap with their existing product line," he says. "But they do have highly regarded technology, and it is installed in some sizable accounts."

In a statement, Cisco execs indicated they were making the purchase for access to Procket's engineers, more so than for its product line. It's a spin that falls in line with the cagey answer Cisco CEO John Chambers gave to a question during a keynote at Bear Stearns' 15th Annual Technology Conference in New York on Tuesday. "I'm not going to buy another router company for a router," he said when asked about rumors of the purchase. "I could not be more comfortable with our routing strategy."

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