Microsoft Lync 2010 formally launched with a New York City event Nov. 17. Microsoft hopes the unified communications platform will appeal to businesses large and small.
Microsoft formally launched Lync 2010, the rebranding of its
Office Communications software suite, with a New York City event Nov. 17. In
addition to providing business users with a software platform for enterprise
telephony, instant messaging, and video and audio conferencing, Lync can also
interface with Microsoft products such as Windows Live Messenger and its new
Kinect hands-free game controller-potentially expanding the platform's
viability to the consumer segment.
Research firm Forrester estimates that the overall
unified-communications market will be worth $14.5 billion by 2015, making it a
ripe target for tech giants like Microsoft looking to expand their workplace
reach. Lync also operates in conjunction with software platforms such as
Microsoft Office, SharePoint, and Exchange; users can collectively input on a
PowerPoint document while engaged in a conference call, for instance.
Microsoft's
Lync Website offers a free trial of the software, which will be available
Dec. 1. Mobile clients for the Apple iPhone, Nokia phones and Windows Phone 7
are expected within the year, although Microsoft executives have been reluctant
to discuss about clients for other platforms such as Research In Motion's
BlackBerry.
"Lync is the linchpin to our communications strategy," Chris
Capossela, senior vice president of Microsoft's Information Worker Product
Management group, said during his keynote at the event.
Capossela then ran through some of Lync's basic functions,
demonstrating in a particularly splashy way how the software dashboard allows
for video conferencing-by launching a conversation with former Microsoft CEO
Bill Gates, sitting in his office in Seattle.
Gates took it from there, describing his own push for a
Microsoft unified communications platform around five or six years ago. "When
you looked at PBX, it sort of just sat there by itself," he said, referring to
the traditional telephone exchanges servicing an office or business. "That isolation
meant it wasn't an available platform" for software development.
The shift to a software-driven, unified communications
platform "is probably the most important thing to happen for the office worker
since the PC came along," Gates added. From now on, "when
you see somebody's desk in a movie, and a separate phone, you'll think, -Wow,
that was before this happened'."
Lync's other features include the ability to select multiple
people from a contact list to make a group call; test a network connection before
initiating a video call; and flipping through instant messenger, video and
document-collaborating within the same client experience. Integration with
services such as Exchange means that Lync will auto-update its users' statuses
if they're in a meeting, for instance, or otherwise away from their desk.
Lync also interfaces with Windows Live Messenger and even
Kinect, with users able to activate a video conference through gestures.
"The way people work has really dramatically shifted, and
the blending of the home life and the work life has been really quite extreme,"
Capossela said in a conversation with eWEEK following the press conference. "We
felt we wanted [Lync] to scale all the way down, so people could use that one
system to connect with their friends and family who aren't connected with that
software."
That being said, Microsoft recognizes that companies have
made a substantial legacy investment in PBX systems. "It's not something that's
going to happen overnight," Capossela said about those companies' possible
transition to Lync. "But if you or I were starting a small business from
scratch today, there's no way we'd invest" in a traditional telephone system.
Nicholas Kolakowski is a staff editor at eWEEK, covering Microsoft and other companies in the enterprise space, as well as evolving technology such as tablet PCs. His work has appeared in The Washington Post, Playboy, WebMD, AARP the Magazine, AutoWeek, Washington City Paper, Trader Monthly, and Private Air. He lives in Brooklyn, New York.