HP has unveiled
an extension to its
Halo
videoconferencing suite that will allow it to interoperate with other systems.
Halo uses a purpose built studio, special cameras and a high bandwidth
network to allow videoconferencing without the traditional time-lag associated
with such systems.
The new HP Halo Gateway uses a
Tandberg
6000 MXP codec and video switch, a Halo compositor, an HP ProLiant server and
HP-designed software to allow the system to talk to any H323/H320
videoconferencing system.
"The partnership with Tandberg is very important," said Ken Crangle, general
manager of the HP collaboration studio.
"There are no plans at the moment to offer this kind of technology on the PC
platform yet."
Halo had previously been a closed suite for use only with other HP systems.
The company has sold 120 Halo systems, at a current cost of $249,000 per unit
with $18,000 running costs per month.
"We have actually got paying customers for this system; we are not giving it
away like some companies," said Ross Camp, marketing communications manager for
the HP collaboration studio.
HP is hoping that the new interoperability will give Halo the edge over rival
systems, such as
Cisco's
TelePresence.
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