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RIM, Cisco put their phones together

RIM, Cisco put their phones together

By:  Stephen Lawson  On: 03 May 2009 For: IDG News Service (San Francisco Bureau) Creator

The switchmaker is aggressively pushing unified communications, and mobile devices are a key element of the big picture

SAN FRANCISCO -- Research In Motion Ltd. and Cisco Systems Inc. are teaming up to let enterprises integrate their BlackBerrys with Cisco IP phones, providing single-number capability and other features.

The integration, announced Monday, comes in the form of RIM's BlackBerry Mobile Voice System (MVS) Server for Cisco Unified Communications Manager. It brings together the top enterprise mobile platform with the dominant networking vendor's IP (Internet Protocol) voice and messaging system. Unified communications, a concept Cisco has aggressively pushed, is aimed in part at making individuals reachable anywhere, so mobile devices are a key element of the picture.

RIM introduced the MVS Server last year after developing it from technology it acquired through the purchase of Ascendent Systems in 2007. It developed BlackBerry MVS Server for Cisco Unified Communications Manager through Cisco's Technology Developer Program.

RIM announced the deal as it geared up to meet customers Tuesday through Thursday at its Wireless Enterprise Symposium in Orlando, Fla. Also on Monday, the company announced a business software partnership with Hewlett-Packard, a push API (application programming interface) for consumer application developers and the availability of BlackBerry Enterprise Server 5.0.

By bringing together their BlackBerry and Cisco infrastructures, enterprises can make users reachable with one number, one caller ID and one voicemail box for both their mobile and desk phones. When calls come in, they may ring simultaneously on as many as four devices, including BlackBerry smart phones and Cisco IP desk phones, or ring one device after another in a sequence. Alternatively, employees can make calls out from the BlackBerry using either the smartphone's own number or an enterprise line.

The deal also brings to the BlackBerry the functions that workers are used to on their desk phones, including extension calling and transfers. In addition, they can also move a call from the mobile to the desk phone while it's in progress, according to RIM.

Administrators also get new capabilities with the combined Cisco and RIM technology. Using BlackBerry MVS Server, they can set up tightly defined calling policies that can be the same for both desk and mobile phones, or different for each. For example, an administrator could block incoming or outgoing international calls or 411 calls to rein in telecommunications expenses.

RIM and Cisco also will help enterprises move beyond the traditional system of mobile-phone numbers being assigned to individuals. Their integrated system allows employers to assign a phone number to the employee's BlackBerry and keep the number after the employee leaves. That means, for example, that the contact point for a sales representative won't automatically go with them to a competing company, RIM said.


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Stephen Lawson Stephen Lawson 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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