Microsoft Rolls Out (Private) Beta Of Office Communications Server
December 12, 2006 12:01 AM ET
Microsoft's Office Communications Server 2007 is hitting "private beta" in about 2,500 sites, the company said Tuesday.
As it has already stated, Microsoft is adding VoIP capabilities, Web conferencing as well as incremental chat and presence improvements. Office Communications Server 2007, the successor product to Live Communications Server is due in the second quarter of 2007, said Paul Duffy, group product manager. (The "Live" moniker was dropped to avoid confusion with Microsoft's hosted Office Live and Windows Live efforts.)
With this release, Microsoft is making Web conferencing capabilities available for on-premise use where it had previously offered via hosting in Live Meeting.
Duffy said while Microsoft is working with the major PBX vendors to assure its offering will work well with their new IP-based PBX switches, it expects a bevy of gateways to be available to let it also work with legacy PBXes. "We're focused on a continuum of choice so users won't have to rip and replace legacy PBXes. The gateways will sit between the switches and our product," he noted.
That means solution provider partners are not limited by the PBX gear installed in customer accounts, he noted.
This product is the latest piece of Microsoft's much-touted unified communications push which puts it into competition with some of the same gear makers it otherwise partners with. This strategy, observers say, puts Microsoft and networking leader Cisco Systems in each others crosshairs. Cisco, like Microsoft, offers instant messaging and Web conferencing for businesses.
Duffy stressed the coopetition angle. Microsoft's Communicator client will work with Cisco equipment and other gear, he noted. "We want to deliver the kind of interoperability our customers want."
IBM last week said it was adding planned interoperability between its SameTime IM and Web conferencing offering and Google Talk and Yahoo IM networks. It already offered AIM interop. Sametime, like Microsoft's offering supports the popular SIP/SIMPLE standard for IM and chat. Unlike Microsoft, IBM SameTime also supports the Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol, or XMPP, protocol, popularized by Jabber.
Duffy said the company would consider adding XMPP support if demand develops but now sees SIP/SIMPLE s the "core" protocol because of the momentum it's achieved.
In other Microsoft communications news, the company released Exchange Server 2007 e-mail to manufacturing. This edition of the server adds voice technology heretofore found in Microsoft Speech Server.
|
|
Telco Shuffle: AT&T's Executive Reorganization Following its fourth-quarter loss, AT&T makes some major changes to the executive ranks. |
|
|
Telco Updates: Level 3 Wins DoD Contract; CenturyLink Hooks Up Jeans Maker CRN looks at recent headlines made by telecom carriers, including CenturyLink, China Unicom, Integra and more. |
|
|
10 Telecom Predictions for 2012 What will next year hold for telco mergers and the mobile device boom? CRN makes its 2012 predictions for the Telecom industry. |
- IBM Raises IM Interop Stakes With Sametime
- Barb Darrow's Unblog: Microsoft Vs. Cisco Part Deux
- Microsoft To Take On Cisco In Unified Communications
- Can Office 2007 Prevail In A Web 2.0 World?
- Microsoft Ramps Comms Effort With Updates, Hardware Partners
- F5's Big Play With Big-IP Is VDI Support
- West Coast Video VAR Nabs Former Polycom Americas President
- Dell Hires Former CA CEO To Run New Software Group
- IBM Expands Endpoint Security, Operations
- Microsoft Taps Cisco Exec To Manage Public Sector Business
- Microsoft Sets Feb. 29 For Windows 8 Consumer Preview Release
