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Don't touch that PBX

Don't touch that PBX

By:  Greg Meckbach  On: 13 Jul 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

An IDC study released this week says Microsoft is touting Office Communications Server and Exchange for its unified communications capabilities, though this doesn’t seem to have affected IP PBX sales. Find out who’s winning the battle for market share

The rise of unified communications software does not seem to have affected the market for IP telephony, according to market research firm IDC.

IDC Monday released a study, titled Worldwide IP PBX and Hardware Desktop IP Phones, that concludes unified communications products from IBM Corp. and Microsoft Corp. “have had minimal impact on the growth of IP telephony lines.”

“The bulk of Microsoft’s marketing around IP telephony and unified communications adoption has been, ‘Don’t touch your PBX,’” said Nora Freedman, senior analyst for enterprise networks at Framingham, Mass.-based IDC.

She added Microsoft is trying to convince customers they can get “advanced features” by upgrading to Exchange 2007 and buying Office Communications Server. “In the near term Microsoft is relying on … telephony vendors to provide technology to make a phone call, because not everything can be done through IM.”

Microsoft currently has a partnership with Nortel Networks Corp. to offer unified communications technology using hardware from Nortel and software from Microsoft. In March, the companies jointly launched four products, including Converged Office, Multimedia Conferencing, Carrier Hosted Unified communications Solutions and UC Integrated Branch.

The vendors say UC Integrated Branch will extend unified communications to branch offices by combining Office Communications Server 2007 with Nortel’s Secure Router 4134.

Last month, Nortel and Microsoft announced a unified communications and collaboration service for carriers, which would let them offer services to companies based on Office Communications Server. The combined offering uses Nortel Communications Server 2000 and Microsoft’s Hosted Messaging and Collaboration version 4.5, which combines hosted versions for Office Communications Server 2007 and Exchange Server 2007.

“A lot of telephony vendors are using the Nortel-Microsoft partnership as the case example of how to engage with Microsoft,” Freedman said. Last month, Campbell, Calif.-based Infonetics Research reported the unified communications software market grew by 20 per cent in 2007, which was “driven by” the Nortel-Microsoft alliance.


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Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach Greg Meckbach is editor of Network World Canada and has worked for ComputerWorld Canada, Communications & Networking and Computing Canada.

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would you buy a unified communications solution from microsoft corp.?if the product is anything like the operating system software the company sells, then most definitely not. unified communications (uc) isn’t something to invest in without some rock-solid guarantees of performance and reliability. there’s no, “we’ll work out the kinks as we go,” with this sort of application. it’s not windo

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