Microsoft has launched Office Communications Server (OCS) 2007, a platform
for delivering unified communications to users of its Office productivity suite.
However, firms will need to run other Microsoft programs to take advantage of
the release.
OCS
2007 supports on-premise web conferencing, audio, video, group instant
messaging, and Microsoft’s RoundTable teleconferencing system.
Microsoft chairman Bill Gates said OCS would make it easier for staff to
communicate with each other in real time. “They will be able to initiate a
conversation by email, voice, video, or instant messaging from within Microsoft
Office system,” he added.
Gates said the release would also let people stay connected using Windows
Mobile devices thanks to a new
Communicator
Mobile 2007 client and the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) client already
built into Windows Mobile 6.
Microsoft’s unified comms group product manager, Mark Deakin, said a number
of organisations have trialled OCS, but it is now available for all firms.
Deakin added the arrival of OCS brings telephony firmly within the domain of
the enterprise IT manager. “We’re trying to apply our software approach to the
traditional telephony world, so when you want to give a new starter access to
unified communications, it’s as simple as right-clicking on that person in
Active Directory, selecting properties, adding the telephone number and ticking
the right box,” he said.
For managing quality of service, OCS offers a “quality of experience”
monitoring server, which Deakin said would let IT managers check voice calls for
problems such as lag and jitter.
Butler Group analyst Mark Blowers pointed out that OCS runs on a platform
that people are familiar with and have the skills to support. “In the past,
firms usually needed [third-party kit] to get the same functions,” he added.
Forrester analyst Henry Dewing said his firm’s clients were interested in OCS
as a means of increasing productivity. “But Microsoft has had this technology
for some time, so it’s not a revolution, rather a good evolution,” he argued.
Dewing added that OCS would make it much easier for Microsoft to embed
presence and click-to-call functions into its ERP and CRM systems.
The software comes in two versions: OCS Standard, which is aimed at smaller
firms, and OCS Enterprise, which requires SQL Server running on dedicated
hardware and also Active Directory. The SQL database would be linked to what
Microsoft calls an “enterprise pool”, a collection of servers running OCS behind
a hardware load-balancing system.
Dewing argued that the extra investment needed to deploy the software could
easily be recouped.
“Any costs associated with an OCS rollout could easily be saved on cutting
long-distance international calls, as well as mobile bills and associated
roaming charges,” Dewing said
Microsoft’s OCS technology partners include Nortel, which is building unified
communications systems using OCS and its own hardware, and EMC, which last week
announced complementary tools for the server.
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