- Worst of the lot: PCConnection and PCMall
- 10 ways the Chinese Internet is different
- Hacker writes rootkit for Cisco's routers
- Cisco loses $2 million order to Nortel
- Enterasys, Extreme hooking up?
Nortel, Microsoft deliver UC products; CIOs prep for recession. Listen now!
DEMO '08: Toktumi eases VoIP for SMBs. Listen now!
Most companies have a solid disaster recovery plan in place to handle a "complete failure" of its Active Directory, which is really quite rare. What most recovery plans are missing, and the most common scenario, is a means to efficiently restore single directory objects. In this paper, we'll explore what most disaster recovery plans already address, highlight potential weak points, and suggest solutions that help fill those gaps-without requiring you to completely re-do your existing plan.
Get the latest on storage technologies that allow IT professionals to better cope with new IT demands. Learn how storage technologies can help you successfully tackle e-Discover, regulatory compliance, green data center initiatives and the data explosion. Get all the details now.
Find out how you can consolidate Windows workloads and create a more efficient virtualized data center in this informative webcast, "Reduce Complexity and Cost - Windows Server Consolidation with Virtualization." Six concise webcast modules are available for your viewing. Watch them all consecutively or only the topics that interest you. The modules cover performance, user case studies, enterprise-level support, managing windows workloads, setup and configuration and the future of virtualization. Learn more today. Register below to learn more and be entered to win an Archos 605 Portable Media Player.
For implementing GTD you might try out this web-based application:
Gtdagenda
You can use it to...- Dan

Foundry Networks, Inc. (NASDAQ: FDRY) is a leading provider of high-performance enterprise and service provider switching, routing, security and Web traffic management solutions. Foundry's customers include the world's premier ISPs, metro service providers, and enterprises.
For further information on Foundry Networks please click here.
Today's enterprise network provides more than simply a technology infrastructure. It's an enabler for the enterprise, supporting mission critical applications, creating operational efficiencies and increasing productivity gains. Foundry Networks provides the ideal foundation for a multi-vendor network.
Microsoft introduced the public beta version of Microsoft Office Communications Server 2007 at VoiceCon. Following the announcement, Gurdeep Singh Pall, corporate vice president, of Microsoft's Unified Communications Group, discussed with Network World Senior Editor Phil Hochmuth how Microsoft's SIP-based VoIP, messaging and collaboration server fits in, and competes, in the enterprise convergence market.
Latest news from the VoiceCon show
How are you presenting Office Communications Server 2007 to enterprise voice managers and IT managers?
The key message is to see what it can do for you and see what the limitations they may have. We see a lot of folks going down these one-way streets [with PBX and IP telephony vendors]. They might find themselves in a situation where they've deployed a solution, and because it is not an open solution, it is slow in terms of innovation.
Are you talking IP PBX products from companies such as Avaya, Cisco, Nortel, and so forth?
Yes. These are closed systems. They're just like mainframes. Once you bought the computer, or IP PBX in this case, you pretty much every component you buy from that vendor. They'll tell you about openness, and say "you can buy any SIP phone, sure," but when you call product support, they'll tell you, "sorry, if you're not using their phone, we can't guarantee the voice experience." It sort of builds on the fear that voiced cannot be delivered in an open platform.
Our approach to building a solution was we didn’t try to look at it that way. We didn't go back and say here is a list of 300 features on a PBX, and that we need to start matching each one of them. We looked at what people want from their communications systems. For example, IP PBXs today have all these features, but if you ask a user to do anything more than answer a call, or add a third person into a call, is very hard. Most users have unmet needs today.
Many of IP PBX vendors at VoiceCon are calling Microsoft a partner. Is OCS a complementary product, or a competitive product for these companies?
Enterprises which have a TDM PBX today and are looking to move to an IP solution. Then you have some enterprises which have some TDM PBXs and some IP PBX and their goal is to replace all of their TDM PBXs with IP PBXs. What we are telling both groups of users is that we believe, over time, you can be totally based on Office Communications Server. For now, we also want to help customers deal with missing features they may not have, or to help along those who are saying, 'oh, can I trust my voice entirely to Microsoft.' They can keep their current system in place, and put Office Communicator next to it, and slowly phase out the old one.
This resonates with customers, but what about the partners? I'm a big believer in the force of the customer. If customers are educated and aware and they know what they want, they will make the right choices. If there is merit to our approach, then the partners who are in the [IP telephony market] today will have to transform themselves, similar to the way IBM transformed itself form a mainframe company to a great services company. They will provide what the customer is asking right now, which is interoperability with OCS. Over time, they will figure out how to create a good business in this new market. Nortel certainly has joined with us to do that. The question is, will other players do it, or will they push their vertically integrated stack.
How does Nortel figure into the OCS roadmap? Is Nortel call control technology, or other code, included in OCS?
There are several components to the [Interactive Communications Alliance] we talk about three pillars. One is around the cross-licensing of intellectual property. The second one was around Nortel creating a systems integration business for unified communications. The third one is around working together around some jointly-developed solutions in the UC market. The first thing we're doing is with Nortel gateways, which we will interface with. Nortel is looking at how its contact center solution works with our infrastructure. So we're working with them in a sense that this specification we're announcing today. We did work with them to get their feedback. So it's things like that. We are not actively taking code from Nortel and incorporating it into OCS.
Reply to Relpy to LOLBy Anonymous on March 19, 2007, 10:40 amOk you got me with the Siemens product, that was a miss on my part. Now you can tout the CS2100 and any of the other CS* Nortel switches, but they really suck so...
Reply | Read entire comment
Kool aid drinkersBy Anonymous on March 19, 2007, 10:26 amI think all of us Kool Aid drinkers are concerned with QOS becuase some of us have expereinced the beta OCS first hand and see this as a problem area for Microsoft....
Reply | Read entire comment
Reply to LOLBy Anonymous on March 18, 2007, 10:59 pmHmmm. Nortel CS2100 and Siemens HiPath 8000 all had linux Operating Systems prior to Cisco rolling their linux variant. Several Tier 2 players had linux prior...
Reply | Read entire comment
More Kool Aid DrinkersBy Anonymous on March 18, 2007, 10:33 pmI remember when they bought Meetingplace. The idea was to compete directly with the likes of Webex. I guess that didnt go to well. Now they realize they needs something...
Reply | Read entire comment
Many of Nortel's products run on windowsBy Anonymous on March 18, 2007, 8:25 pmBCM, Call Pilot and so on........
Reply | Read entire comment
View all comments