
From dashboard sprawl to Cloud Control
The most visible proof point of the new Cisco is Cloud Control, the unified management plane that now spans networking, security, compute, observability, collaboration, and an expanding ecosystem of third-party tools. Cisco is careful to note that this is not just another single pane of glass but an active execution environment with policy and identity embedded in the control path, designed from the ground up for humans and AI agents to operate infrastructure together.
Patel’s demo underscores how far Cisco has come from its historical dashboard sprawl. When operators land in Cloud Control, they see a familiar, ChatGPT‑style interface with three modes: Assistant, Canvas, and Actions. Assistant lets operators converse with the platform in natural language. Canvas provides a multiplayer workspace where humans and agents can investigate and resolve issues together. Actions become the mission control for supervising what agents propose and execute.
Crucially, Cloud Control surfaces shared platform services such as inventory and topology across the entire Cisco estate and exposes product tiles for Meraki, Intersight, security services, Splunk, Webex Control Hub, and Cisco IQ, all accessible with a single login. Instead of bouncing between multiple dashboards and authentication domains, operators can move seamlessly between platform services and product experiences within the same environment. For customers who have lived with overlapping portals and inconsistent workflows, this alone makes Cisco feel fundamentally different.
Cloud Control as an AI harness, not a console
Under the hood, Cloud Control is built on a shared data fabric that correlates telemetry across users, devices, applications, networks, and threats. That fabric fuels both human decision-making and agentic automation. Cisco describes this evolution as moving from “infrastructure as code” to “infrastructure as a harness.” Rather than relying solely on scripts and playbooks written by humans, Cloud Control becomes the governed substrate where AI agents can safely observe, reason, and act on real systems.

















