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VoIP: Not Just Saving Money Print E-mail
What is really exciting about VoIP is what you can do with it. In other words, it's all about the applications. But what, specifically, does that mean? How will your end users' lives be different- and better-once you've migrated to a VoIP infrastructure? What new things will they be able to do? What old things will they be able to do better?

Many of the applications aren't conceptually new. Applications like unified messaging and collaboration (including video) have all been around for years. But they weren't widespread because they were expensive to build, deploy and integrate. The use of IP and other industry standards makes these applications much more practical for deployment to a broad enterprise user base. In addition, many other applications are new-or at least represent new ways of doing and combining existing applications.

Unified Messaging  (voice mail, email and fax )

For years, PBXs have been able to integrate voice mail and email, letting users access voice mails in the form of email attachments that can be played out over the PC-or, conversely, users can have emails read to them through the voice mail system via text-to-speech (TTS) capabilities. But TDM-based unified messaging couldn't really be cost-justified on a standalone basis, and it never really caught on.

In the converged world, however, it's a different story. The narrow capabilities that went under the heading of "unified messaging" in the old days are simply features of today's larger collaboration packages, an addition to find-me/follow-me or presence capabilities.

The IP-PBX application packages offer the basic UM function of providing access to voice mail via a text interface, and vice versa. These packages either pull voice mail into a client, or can be integrated into Microsoft Outlook or Lotus Notes.

Where's the benefit in unified messaging?It allows users to be more efficient, listening to email while in their cars or otherwise away from a computer. Likewise, users can scan, prioritize, forward and otherwise deal with voice mails via a PC interface that may be handier and quicker for these purposes. No more listening to multiple unimportant voice mails just to reach the one you are interested in.

Conferencing And Collaboration

Collaboration is advancing in the converged IP-telephony world through features such as document sharing, whiteboarding, Web co-browsing, and of course traditional audio conferences.
All of these features are included in the IP-telephony applications At the most basic level, audio conferencing as an IP-PBX application promises to avoid high per-minute service provider charges, as an enterprise can put all of its internal audio conferencing onto its IP WAN.

But the real promise is that these collaboration applications can change how employees work, allowing them to work together remotely and spontaneously.

The ultimate goal is to be able combine all the capabilities in an ad hoc session, creating a dynamic collaboration environment.

Multimedia

Speaking of video, or multimedia, there are huge opportunities for growth in this market as enterprise networks converge.

"Video is coming to a desktop near you." Another reason why video is coming soon is cost.  And even more cost is being driven out of the networks that carry enterprise video traffic. Earlier generations of videoconferencing required expensive, less reliable ISDN connections among sites, while the new systems are built on IP. That can mean impressive savings.

The exact cost won't be as easy to determine, however, because the IP LAN/WAN must have sufficient bandwidth and, more important, quality of service (QOS) to carry the video traffic.

One type of application that's somewhat new is "presence." The name comes from this application's ability to let colleagues know where you are or, more accurately, where you're reachable.

Presence packages are built on the model developed for instant messaging (IM) "buddy lists." With basic consumer IM services from AOL, Microsoft or Yahoo, the user adds members to his/her buddy list, and each time the user goes on line, he or she sees which "buddies" are also on line and available for text chat. An advanced presence "portal" lets users see not just whether a colleague is logged into IM, but their reachability status via various media.

Whether their telephone is off hook, whether they're logged into the messaging system for IM or email.
Obviously an application like presence was, if not impossible, certainly impractical in a traditional environment where voice, email and instant messaging all resided on discrete systems that would have had to be integrated via APIs and expensive middleware. With IP-telephony, all these capabilities work as part of the same system.

As a complement to presence, an enterprise can also deploy "find me/follow me" call routing. As its name suggests, this feature lets a user provide call routing instructions based on factors like time of day or calling party, to determine where individual calls should be delivered-office phone, cell phone, direct to voice mail, etc.

Therefore, productivity gains appear to be benefit from using IP-telephony.

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