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Microsoft sets communication plan

Microsoft sets communication plan

By:  John Fontana  On: 10 Jan 2007 For: Network World (U.S.) Creator

Microsoft has put its stake in the ground concerning unified communications, saying it plans to integrate e-mail, instant messaging, voice and video into a single platform stretching across corporate applications and services.

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Microsoft has put its stake in the ground concerning unified communications, saying it plans to integrate e-mail, instant messaging, voice and video into a single platform stretching across corporate applications and services.

The company recently laid out upgrades and a road map for its software lineup and introduced a hardware product called Office RoundTable (formerly code-named Ring Cam), a room phone for audioconferencing with a 360-degree camera for online meetings. The software, hardware and a Web conferencing service belong to a family of products built for Office 2007, which is slated to ship to corporate clients in November.

Microsoft did not announce any software but changed the name of its IM and presence software from Live Communications Server to Office Communications Server 2007.

Microsoft says Exchange Server 2007; the Office Communicator 2007 client, with a version for phones; and the Office Live Meeting 2007 Web conferencing service will be available in the second quarter of 2007. The company plans to have betas of the software by year-end.

Earlier this year, Microsoft merged its Exchange and real-time collaboration groups to form a unified communications group. The company intends to give users a single platform for real-time communications that can be integrated with traditional desktop and network applications, mobile devices and the business processes running across all three.

"This is a bold move," says Mike Gotta, an analyst with the Burton Group. "Microsoft is focusing on the bigger game rather than cherry-pick a few features. They are talking about one big architectural domain. Microsoft is trying to change the nature of the argument. Why compete when you can change the rules?"

Gotta says that thinking will force corporate users to ask questions about how other pieces plug into the architecture, about interoperability around standards and about how to deal with federation to the real-time environment of partners. He says the potential exists to change the way corporate users think about deploying real-time communications, which are becoming increasingly important in an online world. Possible changes are already evident. Microsoft showed off Exchange's new features earlier this month at its annual TechEd conference, demonstrating its unified messaging capabilities, which include integration of voice with e-mail, calendaring and other Exchange features. Those features include potential architectural changes to the Exchange infrastructure.

Jeff Raikes, president of Microsoft's business division, hinted at other changes, specifically in IP PBX deployments. "We do think over the next few years there will be a dramatic transformation [with IP PBX]," Raikes says. "The way in which that is going to play out is to build on the infrastructure that companies have in place, but then give them new capabilities; frankly, [it's] probably ultimately true that they may think of themselves as not actually purchasing a PBX but adding the kind of software platform, enterprise communications software platform, to their server and network infrastructure."


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John Fontana John Fontana is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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