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Microsoft: On the Road to 'Istanbul'
Tara Seals
10/19/2004 Microsoft Corp. unveiled its next generation of collaboration tools, Live Communications Server 2005, at Fall VON today. With a client code-named “Istanbul,” the software behemoth will support instant messaging and presence, along with PC-based multimedia and other IP-based capabilities for enterprises like Microsoft Live Meeting, a Web conferencing tool, and VoIP. Now in beta release and scheduled for release next year, the client will replace Windows Messenger. The goal is a true personal communications experience on the desktop that encompasses voice, data, video and presence, according to Anoop Gupta, vice president of the Real-Time Collaboration Business Group at Microsoft. Istanbul will allow users to determine call control based on presence (for instance, send all calls to voice mail if the subscriber is in a meeting), engage click-to-talk collaboration from a buddy list and access richer availability data, such as the ability to see if someone is available on cell phone or office phone. Microsoft is encouraging integration and interoperability to help refine the product, and third-party development already is underway. BroadSoft will integrate the server with the BroadWorks platform, which supports next-generation hosted voice communications. Integrating the two solutions allows enterprises and service providers to offer "presence-enabling" voice calls. Users will be able to launch secure multimedia services from within any Windows application. For example, an employee can select a user from an IM list or within Active Directory and initiate a conference call. Participants automatically will be contacted at their preferred end point (cell, office, home) depending on their "presence" on the Microsoft Office Live Communications Server. RADVISION, which already powers desktop video in a Microsoft Live Communications Server environment, announced it has ported the viaIP multimedia conferencing technology to a software-only architecture to capitalize on the new Live Communications client and to scale to thousands of users. It’s part of a software-only multimedia communications middleware platform, iVIEW, for general availability in the first quarter of 2005. The iVIEW unified suite supports point-to-point and multimedia conference calls from the desktop and the boardroom, bridging the communications network and the end users’ voice/video devices and applications and masking the complexity involved in the system. Jasomi Networks announced PeerPoint Version 3.3, which addresses the evolving needs of Microsoft Live Communications Server customers with complex corporate
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