Microsoft Launches Communications Suite
At a live event in San Francisco, Microsoft Tuesday announced the launch of
its "Unified Communications" suite of products, which aims to blur the
distinction between electronic and voice communications and provide a
seamless experience that relegates traditional telephone use to the dark
ages.
Underlining the importance of the launch was Microsoft Chairman
Bill Gates, who said during the event that "now is the time when
communications will be revolutionized." The products that
Gates said he hopes will lead the revolution include Microsoft Office Communications
Server 2007, Microsoft Office Communicator 2007--the client component of
Office Communications Server 2007--and Microsoft Office Live Meeting, a
real-time, online collaboration package.
Microsoft also announced a
service pack release for Exchange Server 2007, which will integrate it more
fully with the Unified Communications (UC) products launched.
The
underlying technology is Voice over IP (VoIP), which moves communications
from the realm of hardware into software. Gates said that the shift to UC
will be "as profound as the shift from typewriters to word processors."
Office Communications Server 2007 and Office Communicator 2007, the
successors to Live Communications Server, were released to manufacturing
July 27. Live Meeting is Microsoft's hosted Web conferencing service. A key
part of that was demonstrated at the presentation, with Roundtable, a $3,000
video camera and microphone system that provides a 360-degree view of a
room. Using Office Communicator, end users can see and hear all meeting
attendees, whether in the room or offsite.
Technologies like
Roundtable will help businesses be more efficient, according to Jeff Raikes,
president of the Microsoft Business Division. He said that according to one
study, employees spend "37 minutes per week in voice mail jail or playing
phone tag. Not just the lost time is important, but what it means in terms
of the business," Raikes said. "Using identity and presence at the core,
[workers will] miss fewer conversations and calls, get to business faster
and get business done," he added.
Gates detailed hard numbers to back
up those assertions. According to a Microsoft-sponsored study by Forrester
Research, companies could see a 500 percent return on investment over three
years. The figures are so high, Gates said, because much of the
infrastructure, including the network, servers, clients and e-mail, is
already in place in companies.
Microsoft is working hard to create an
ecosystem around UC. Raikes announced that more than 50 partners are
unveiling products and services for the UC family, and said more will be
coming. "It's a platform for companies to develop on," he said. In addition,
three telephony companies -- Nortel Networks, Ericsson and Mitel Networks
Corp -- are building software apps to run on top of UC and extend their
abilities.
Microsoft did not immediately release give pricing
information for the products. However, previously it has said the licensing
model will remain the same as it is for Live Communications server; namely,
that both client and server licenses will be needed, and will be available
in both Standard and Enterprise versions.
About the Author
Keith Ward is online news editor for the Redmond Media Group. You can contact him at [email protected].