January 25th, 2010 | Tags:

When I first started up this blog (almost a year ago) it was about Virtualisation, Messaging, Windows, Voice and anything else relevant! However over the last 6 months a common theme has prevailed – Unified Communications.

Therefore from this point forth “I’m a PC Blog” is now “I’m a UC Blog”, both old and new domains remain intact, namely http://imapcblog.com (old) and http://imaucblog.com (new).

The focus continues to be things that are UC:

  • The PBX
  • Mobiles/VoIP enabled devices (iPhone, BlackBerry & Windows Phone)
  • Microsoft Exchange
  • Microsoft Communications Server
  • Security
  • Crazy off-topic geekyness!
January 20th, 2010 | Tags:

For those of you that didn’t attend Avaya’s webinar (or just want some key take-aways) read on…

Firstly I thought it might be good to remind you why the joining of these two telecommunications giants is a big thing for the UC community.

1. Nortel and Avaya have a combined Unified Communications revenue share of 32%, bigger than any other competitor (see illustration below)

2. Avaya’s CS1000 (previously Nortel) as of rel 5.5 supports integration with OCS 2007, OCS 2007 R2, Microsoft Exchange 2007, Nortel SCS and Avaya Aura + more

3. The Nortel/Microsoft Innovative Communications Alliance continues (they play nice with some of the Redmond UC guys!)

So what is changing?

First the CS1000…

Throughout the keynote participants were asking about the life of their CS1000 or Meridian investments, Avaya consistently delivered the message that development will continue, rel 7.0 in 2010 and further releases planned subsequently. Given Avaya’s policies on end of life support, should the CS1000 be dropped today, end users would be covered until 2017 (as mentioned previously, this is not planned).

Contact Center

Avaya has interestingly decided to continue to develop Nortel’s Contact Center product, initially placing it for mid-market. From what I can gather their plan is to scale up future versions in view of replacing Avaya’s Contact Center:

“With that as the architectural approach that both we and the Nortel Enterprise Solutions team agreed was the right direction, we started looking at our various products and product sets. And what we found was that within the Nortel Enterprise Solutions product portfolio is a product known as CC7. The team believed in the architecture that I described earlier, but they were well on the path to pursuing that. Their CC7 product has a number of the elements, the core elements of that architecture. It was designed to operate in a multi-vendor environment. It could operate on top of Avaya Aura and the session manager environment. As a result of that what we decided was that CC7 would become the midmarket Contact Center solution for Avaya going forward. Midmarket because today CC7 doesn’t have the scale or the fault tolerance required to operate in the high end enterprise environment. Our road is to continue with the Avaya Contact Center solution, CC elite, but to move to CC7 for the midmarket.”

Unified Communications

To finish off the keynote an analyst from Forester spoke of how positive an effect this would have on the Avaya/Nortel proposition (at this point I was drifting), however he did echo the views that UC adoption is growing and overall a 1/3 of all new business opportunities are within this space.

A full transcript is available here

Taken from Brett Johnson’s Blog:

Busy day today 🙂

The latest versions of the Live Meeting Client and Outlook Conference Add-In have been released – this also includes the 64bit version Add-In’s for the 64 bit version of Outlook 2010 – woohoo..!

Remember

  1. Both the LM Client and Conf Add-In versions should match for the best experience – so install both – I just installed over the top of the existing ones with no issues.
  2. Once you have installed the latest Conf Add-In you will need to check your Audio location is correct.

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For the more Techy:

Source: here

January 14th, 2010 | Tags:

The new Web-based tool walks you through various upgrade and deployment scenarios, including upgrades from Exchange 2003 or Exchange 2007 to Exchange 2010. Currently, the upgrade from Exchange Server 2003 is the first scenario available.

Source: here

January 12th, 2010 | Tags: ,

Client updates:

Communicator 2007 R2 cumulative update: January 2010 here

Server updates:

Office Communications Server 2007 R2 cumulative update: January 2010 here

Office Communications Server 2007 R2 Administrative Tools cumulative update: January 2010 here

Office Communications Server 2007 R2 Core Components cumulative update: January 2010 here

Office Communications Server 2007 R2 Database cumulative update: January 2010 here

Office Communications Server 2007 R2 Unified Communications Managed API 2.0 Core Redist 64-bit: January 2010 here

December 31st, 2009 | Tags: ,

Wishing you all a great 2010 (and hopefully bigger budgets for UC spend!)