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Cisco counter-attacks on unified communications

Cisco counter-attacks on unified communications

By:   On: 25 Jul 2007 For: Network World Canada Creator

The company faces the threat of increased rivalry from the likes of Microsoft and Nortel, but executives say its platform is more open and carries more strength on the infrastructure side. The networking talent behind El Cajon Dam makes the business case

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ANAHEIM, Calif. -- What most people don’t understand about a construction project like El Cajon Dam, according to Raul Orozsco Medina, is that “when you start, there’s nothing … You build a city to build a dam. When the dam is finished, you have to remove the city.”

In this case the city, with a population of about 2,000 construction workers, was built high in the Mexican mountains, about 47 km from the nearest town. Medina is the systems and telecommunications manager for the project, begun for commission Federal de Electricidad in 2003 and wrapping up in the next couple of months.

The project’s infrastructure was modest at first – a few trailers, two satellite links and a traditional PBX, Medina said. It evolved into a full-blown wireless unified communications system connecting 17 offices and even a bore house 70 metres underground, using about 300 Cisco IP telephony handsets.

The conditions are unusual for a telecom infrastructure; some months of the project, it had to withstand the use of 10 tonnes of explosives daily onsite. Offices moved frequently – where some were located originally, they’d now be under several metres of reservoir.

“For this kind of project, there’s lots of savings,” Medina said, beginning with 60 kilometres of optical fibre and 20 km of telephone cable.

Those aren’t typical drivers for a unified communications system, which wraps wireline, wireless, instant messaging, e-mail and other functionality onto a single communications system to be able to reach users wherever and however they’re best reached at any given time.

“Presence is a very big deal in this world of ‘find me, follow,” said Rick Moran, vice-president of solutions marketing for Cisco, during a session at this week’s Cisco Networkers conference.

The oft-ignored “busy lamp,” familiar to instant messaging users, is presence at a very rudimentary level. Presence can be tied to documents – can I reach the person who wrote or changed this, and how? – and mobile devices. “It’s only valid if it’s very, very accurate,” he said. A communications session was once simply a telephone call, he said. Even switching from analogue to digital did not change that. But session initiation protocol (SIP) changes the game.

“With SIP, we change what the session looks like,” incorporating e-mail, instant messaging and voice communications. Telepresence, for instance, is really only one SIP session, he said. SIP also enables high-definition video and sound. There’s no reason a phone call has to have the same sound quality as a phone call, as any Skype user can attest, he said.

Cisco and Microsoft are taking fundamentally different approaches to unified communications, but it isn’t as clear cut as a hardware versus software orientation, said Jayanth Angl, research analyst with London, Ont.-based Info-Tech Research Group.


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i feel like i'm seeing more and more of these kinds of commercials where crude graphics are used to illustrate complex technology, but something about this one seems a little condesending to me. if it's supposed to appeal to actual it managers, i think it would insult their intelligence around the subject area. maybe it's aimed more at business executives, who need to get a better sense of what "

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