Polycom Chimes In on Microsoft OCS Integration
Polycom high-definition audio and video as well as Telepresence endpoints
and infrastructure will integrate with OCS 2007 to allow end uses to easily
make voice and video calls through OCS. They will communicate with OCS via
industry-standard Session Initiation Protocols.
The aim of the integration, being announced at the VoiceCon show here, is to
bring Polycom videoconferencing under the unified communications umbrella so
that it can be accessed as easily as any other UC application.
"Video has traditionally been a stand-alone, parallel application that
didn't interact with other applications. Basically, this means that a customer
who has a commitment to OCS and wants to include video as part of a UC
environment can do so," said Joan Vandermate, vice president of marketing for
video solutions at Polycom.
Polycom will deliver the integration in three phases, starting with the
ability to see Polycom endpoints from the OCS buddy list. That will come
by the end of the second quarter. Polycom will later add the ability to
include presence indication for OCS in its endpoints. That second phase is
due by year's end. By mid-2009, Polycom will add native integration with
Microsoft's Real Time Video codecs.
"Over time we'll enable presence on our endpoints so that you can pull up a buddy list with presence information for OCS clients as well as Polycom endpoints. Likewise, from within an OCS client you can include Polycom endpoints for group conferencing and Telepresence so that you can see within the buddy list and click to call," Vandermate said.
In other VoiceCon news, Polycom introduced its first suite of productivity
applications for its line of IP phones. The embedded applications, dubbed Productivity Suite, provide
Polycom's SoundPoint phones with access to corporate directories using industry-standard
Light Weight Access Directory protocols, local call recording using a local
At the same time, Polycom added a pair of new VOIP (voice over IP) management
tools for IT administrators that allow them to measure VOIP call quality in
real time and more easily deploy new call control applications.
The real-time quality monitor gathers data on Mean Opinion Scores, jitter,
delay and other factors that affect call quality so that IT managers can
troubleshoot voice call quality problems, said Alain Mowad, senior product
manager for VOIP applications for the company.
Polycom is actively working to develop a stable of third-party application
developers for its IP phones. It has created an
The SoundPoint IP productivity suite is due in April.
