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Mitel ships phone call controller for virtual servers

Mitel ships phone call controller for virtual servers

By:  Greg Meckbach  On: 22 Feb 2010 For: Network World Canada Creator

Virtual Mitel Communications Director lets administrators route calls using Internet Protocol on Intel Xeon Nehalem servers running VMWare Inc.’s vSphere 4. A Wainhouse Research analyst said Ottawa-based Mitel Networks Corp. is first out of the gate with virtualized call control

Mitel Networks Corp. of Ottawa has released a version of its call control software that lets companies install unified communications on servers using VMware Inc.’s (NYSE:VMW) vSphere virtualization software.

The whole point is to let users save money on hardware, electricity and cooling by running phone call control software on the same hardware as computing applications.

Virtual Mitel Communications Director is available now, and virtualized server versions of Mitel Applications Suite (MAS) and Mitel Border Gateway (MBG) will be available in two months, said Alan Zurakowski, Mitel’s director of business development.

“Instead of running it on ICP 3300 it runs virtualized on vSphere,” Zurakowski said, referring to Mitel’s Internet Protocol Communications (ICP) private branch exchange.

It’s part of a trend in which users are installing telecommunication software on to commercial off-the-shelf servers instead of purchasing PBXs or call control hardware, said Brent Kelly, senior analyst and partner at Wainhouse Research LLC of Brookline, Mass.

“Given that fact that all these call control engines are software-based anyway now, it seems to makes sense to be able to do this,” Kelly said.

Virtual Mitel Communications Director will have the same features as the current version of Mitel Communications Director, Zurakowski said.

These include controlling calls using IP, media streaming, dynamic extensions, administration groups, audio conferencing, multi-node management and connecting calls between more than one Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) provider.

“It moves companies away from needing a specialty and often proprietary communications hardware in their data centre,” said Grant Aitken, area vice-president of VMware Canada. “A customer now has all they need for running their telephone systems at least on the back end, by using industry-standard servers and industry standard computer networking.”

 

Virtual Mitel Communications Director requires version 4 of vSphere on a server running Intel Corp.’s (NASDAQ:INTC) Xeon 5500 series processors with a speed of at least 2 GHz, with a minimum of two processor cores, with Intel’s Nehalem technology and hyper-threading. The server requires at least 2 GB of RAM, 10 GB of disk space and 40 Megabits per second (Mbps) of throughput.

By using vSphere 4, users can run other applications on the same server, including SAP AG’s business software, databases and file and print servers, Zurakowski said.

“You can run Mitel Communications Director on a virtual machine with other business applications and call quality and performance is guaranteed,” he said. “We have done enough testing to guarantee that. Our competitors have not been able to achieve that.”

Kelly said this is the first product available to the public he is aware of that offers these features using virtualization.


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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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