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Microsoft to add more PBX features to UC suite

Microsoft to add more PBX features to UC suite

By:  Howard Solomon  On: 21 Oct 2008 For: Network World Canada Creator

When Release 2 of Office Communications Server 2007 comes out in February, Microsoft will move closer to its goal of offering an almost complete IP-PBX. Industry analysts say traditional PBX makers will have to adapt

As expected, Microsoft will soon add more voice features to its unified communications suite, making the application more of a threat to traditional PBX makers like Nortel Networks, Cisco Systems and Avaya.

An attendant console, dial-in audio conferencing and support for single phone numbers across multiple handsets are some of the features to be added in February to Release 2 of Office Communications Server 2007, Microsoft has announced.

When OCS was unveiled a year ago, telephony manufacturers knew it was only a matter of time before the software giant would eat into deep into their businesses. That day is getting closer.

So far, there hasn’t been a rush by network and voice buyers to replace their IP-PBXs with OCS, according to Irwin Lazar, principal research director of Nemertes Reseach. Only 25 per cent of IT participants in a recent survey by his firm said OCS’s entry into unified communications has changed their telephony plans. But, he added, with R2 “some organizations may be more inclined to look at or trial it.”

The next full version of OCS will likely have a “pretty compelling” set of telephony capabilities, he said, and by 2010-2011 will be very attractive to organizations.

Yankee Group analyst Zeus Kerravala said when it first came out, OCS had about half of the capabilities of a PBX. When R2 comes out, he said, it will have 75 per cent of the features.

“If Microsoft starts to replicate PBX features, then you have to ask why do you need the traditional PBX vendor?” he asked in an interview. Many buyers, he said, won’t.

Nortel, which is deeply involved in a unified communications alliance with Microsoft which bundles the equipment maker’s communications servers with OCS, was asked for comment. However, the company said a spokesman could not be found. Bryan Rusche, a senior product manager for unified communications products at Microsoft Canada, said R2’s improvements were “relatively significant changes.”

The attendant console allows a receptionist to use OCS to completely manage calls, he said, while the dial-in audio conferencing capability does away with the need to pay for conference bridges. In the current version of OCS, the only way persons can join a conference is to be brought in by someone already in meeting.

Also added will be persistent group chat, which allows instant message users to see the entire history of a chat room conversation. This capability comes from Microsoft’s acquisition last year of Parlano.

Single number support will help people whose mobile phone has the same number as their office phone. R2 also includes Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) trunking, which allows a direct VoIP connection between an Internet telephony service provider and Office Communicator 2007 without an on-premise gateway.

Finally, R2 will include expanded APIs and integration with Microsoft Visual Studio so customers can better integrate OCS into business applications.


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Howard Solomon Howard Solomon Howard Solomon is assistant editor of Network World Canada covering network infrastructure and communications issues. An IT journalist  since 1997, he has written for several of IT... more

Comments (3)

Associate
by chris 10/22/2008 12:00:00 AMLots of hype on OCS yet no way to address 911 or remote survivability. Most large Enterprises have multiple office locations which converting to an OCS environmnet is a lot of servers and high-priced licenses. The article mentions high-priced PBX's ... the author has no idea how high-priced MS CALs can be.
Microsoft is more expensive
by Paul 10/22/2008 12:00:00 AMBecause Microsoft licensing is so complex and in some cases because different groups pick up the tab for certain licenses, it is not always clear to a company just how much they are paying for 'voice.' They believe they are getting it for free. But check it out. It actually costs anywhere from 150% to as much as 200% more.
We Can Not compare MS to Nortel, Cisco and Avaya - the whole story is different
by Mahmoud Quraan 11/5/2008 12:00:00 AMMicrosoft does not manufacture end point (IP, Analog or Digital Phones) making their offerings a (Partial Solution). MS does not offer the necessary infrastructure (Switches, Routers, Security, QoS, etc) to carry Voice traffic, thus leaving the crucial area of Operation and Maintenance in the hands of multiple vendors. MS does not make Voice Gateways or any Digital Signal Processors (DSPs) necessary to do Media Services like Conferencing, Transcoding, etc ? MS will have to rely on third party (another vendor) to do this job.. Other vendors have the advantage of providing end to end solutions ? better integrated with each other, managed and supplied from single systems integrator, thus reducing the TCO and O&M costs. In summary, I think that MS offers the PBX as another (Application) much like MS Office or Great Plains , this does not fly for Enterprise deployments.
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