Formerly | Jasper Wireless, Inc. |
---|---|
Company type | Subsidiary |
Industry | Cloud computing, software |
Founded | 2004 |
Founder | Jahangir Mohammed |
Headquarters | Santa Clara, California, United States |
Number of locations | Atlanta, Georgia, Singapore, United Kingdom |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Daniel Collins, Amit Gupta (co-founders) |
Services | Cloud platform, M2M |
Number of employees | ~400 |
Website | www |
Jasper Technologies, Inc., formerly Jasper Wireless, Inc., was an American software developer that provided a cloud-based software platform for the Internet of Things (IoT). Jasper's platform was designed to aid in launching, managing, and monetizing the deployment of IoT for enterprise businesses.[1] Founded in 2004, Jasper partners with over 120[2] mobile operator networks to serve IoT and machine-to-machine (M2M) companies in[3] different industries, including automotive, home security and automation, agriculture, food and beverage, wearable technology, healthcare, advertising and industrial equipment.[4]
On February 3, 2016, Cisco Systems announced its plans to acquire Jasper for $1.4 billion. The deal was finalized on March 22, 2016. With the acquisition, Jasper became the IoT Cloud business unit within Cisco.[5] Jasper's CEO, Jahangir Mohammed, is now the GM of the IoT Cloud business unit – reporting to Rowan Trollope, SVP of the IoT and Collaboration Technology Group at Cisco.[6]
Jahangir Mohammed, alongside with his colleges Amit Gupta and Daniel Collins founded Jasper Wireless in 2004. Prior to Jasper, Mohammed founded Kineto Wireless while working at Bell Labs.[7] He is the holder of over 80 U.S. and international patents related to IoT, mobile communications and software. He is also credited to have contributed to technologies used to converge GSM and Wi-Fi that have become GSMA standards.[7] Jasper is privately owned and was founded with venture funding from Sequoia Capital and Benchmark Capital. Jasper Technologies, Inc. is headquartered in Santa Clara, state CA. Jasper employs approximately 400 people.[8] In May 2014, Jasper Wireless became Jasper Technologies.
Jasper was selected for the 2015 World Economic Forum Technology Pioneer award which recognizes technology companies impacting business and society.[9] In February 2016, Cisco announced that they made an acquisition offer of $1.4 billion to acquire Jasper Technologies,[10] "We’ve been keeping an eye on this market and what we noticed was that Jasper represented a unique asset. We believe they are the largest Internet of Things service platform of scale today."[11][12] The acquisition was finalized in March that same year and the company was renamed from Jasper Technologies to Cisco Technologies.[13] Following the acquisition by Cisco, Mohammed is now the GM of the IoT Cloud business unit.[6]
The Jasper Control Center Platform is a cloud-based product that allows enterprises to launch, manage and monetize an Internet of Things (IoT) deployment using a single turnkey result.[14] The Jasper Control Center delivers visibility and real-time control for connected service businesses, along with IoT/ Machine to Machine (M2M) capabilities like provisioning, mobile service management, real-time engagement, support diagnostics, billing and business automation.[14] The platform is deeply integrated with 35 mobile operator groups, that represent various worldwide companies—including: AT&T,[15] China Unicom,[16] Telefónica,[17] SoftBank,[18] NTT DoCoMo,[19] América Móvil,[20] SingTel,[21] Telenor,[22] and Telstra.[23][24]
Jasper's platform operates on a single base of code[25] that can be configured to meet specialized enterprise needs across a wide range of business models, technologies, and industries.[1]
Jasper's Connected Car Cloud is used by eleven automotive OEMs (original equipment manufacturer) worldwide including General Motors, Nissan, Ford Motor Company, Volkswagen, and Tesla Motors.[26] The Jasper platform enables carmakers to offer real-time diagnostics, safety, security, information and entertainment services, as well as apps and Wi-Fi hotspot services.[27] The Jasper platform is also used by companies like Coca-Cola,[24] Starbucks, GE Aviation, Allstate, Audi,[28] and Garmin[29] to offer new IoT services.[24] Coca-Cola is known to use Jasper to connect vending machines, which can help notify the respective manager of inventory and service needs.[4] As opposed to that, GE is known to use the Jasper platform for their connected jet engines, which provide performance data to their service teams on the ground, intended to reduce maintenance costs and increase engine life span.[30]