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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.

Gotta says there are questions from a development standpoint: "If I develop applications, does this lock me into a back-end provider?"

Microsoft says it is not introducing any new protocols and is firmly behind Session Initiation Protocol and SIP for Instant Messaging and Presence Leveraging Extensions. The company did not say if it planned to support Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol.

Microsoft's focus clearly is on its software lineup. "The approach we are going to take is to use the power of software and apply the innovation and the economics of that to this communications problem," says Eric Swift, senior director of product management in the unified communications group at Microsoft. "We want to ensure that people can communicate from the applications they use and the business processes they use, and reach the people they need to by being able to see their availability, and to communicate in a method that is most effective for them."

As part of its unified-communications stake in the ground, Microsoft announced improvements to its software lineup. It has added multiuser data and application sharing and video support to Communications Server, as well as deeper integration with a PBX to support advanced call features, such as letting users place calls with names and e-mail addresses. Microsoft also has added what it calls enhanced presence, which lets users set their presence by groups listed in Active Directory, which will have metadata extensions that will let developers add controls for presence rules to their applications. Microsoft also plans to introduce Communicator client software to integrate phones, including IP-enabled business desktop phones, with voice and video devices.

New to the lineup is Office RoundTable, which plugs into Communications Server. RoundTable provides a panoramic shot of everyone sitting at a conference table and a picture of the active speaker in a separate window on the PC.

Microsoft will add video streaming, flash support and IP-based voice capability to its online Office Live Meeting service. The company plans to introduce other services, including hosted presence and IM for businesses so users can connect a Communications Server to partners' IM infrastructures.

Microsoft also unveiled partnerships to support peripheral devices such as USB handsets, headsets, Webcams and PC monitors. The partners include Logitech, Motorola, Plantronics, Samsung and Tatung, whose devices will be integrated with Office Communicator 2007.

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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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