Nortel's archive
Verizon CEO Seidenberg’s Words of Entrepreneurial Wisdom
Ivan Seidenberg, the CEO of Verizon, appeared on “The Charlie Rose Show” yesterday talking about the communication company’s plans for global growth, network neutrality and the role of government. For the record, Verizon plans to build out its wireless business internationally within the next 5-10 years, and about one-third of that growth will be through […]
Tweet This
Nortel Falls To Telecom’s Titanic Shift
Earlier this month, when I wrote about Telecom’s Titanic Shifts and the decline of the once mighty service providers, in passing I noted the slow-mo descent of Western equipment makers. With the mega-growth registered by non-Western carriers as dominant equipment buyers, we have seen the rise of two hardware giants: Huawei and ZTE.
Their rising […]
Tweet This
Mike Zafirovski’s Nortel Legacy: Fail
With Nortel deciding the only course of action is a fire-sale of all assets, Mike Zafirovski’s reign as CEO is about to conclude. Without being too harsh, it’s fair to say Mike Z.’s initial - and perhaps last - stab as a CEO was a colossal failure.
Sure, he dealt with some pesky accounting issues and […]
Global Cell Phone Growth Slowed During Q1
Global revenue growth from mobile phone subscriptions has slowed, according to data released today by research firm Telegeography. The firm notes that the top 20 global service providers generated $251 billion during the first three months of 2009, which was only up 3 percent from the same period last year. Part of the slowed growth […]
Nortel Won’t Be Coming Back from Bankruptcy
Nokia Siemens Networks has offered to buy several business units of bankrupt telecommunications gear provider Nortel, according to the Wall Street Journal. The Journal reports that Nokia Siemens has bid on Nortel’s Long Term Evolution (LTE) R&D unit and its carrier networks business, to help expand its sales in the U.S. The paper also reports […]
GigaOM Spring Cleaning: Motorola and Others Hit the Dustbin
We’re no rating agency here at GigaOM, but Om and I got together this week to figure out our coverage priorities for the coming months — let’s call it a spring cleaning — and decided there are five companies that we’re just not going to spend a lot of time on anymore. Nortel , AMD, […]
Watch out for Sharks in Turbulent Water
It has certainly been anticipated that the recession would force telecommunication markets (not unlike other industry sectors) into further consolidation. The enterprise telephony space, for example, has long been struggling with slowing revenue growth, limited differentiation opportunities and rising competition from non-traditional vendors such as open-source telephony providers, Microsoft, Skype, mobile carriers (somewhat indirectly, through increasing usage of mobile phones for business purposes), you name it. At this stage, it just does not seem likely that Nortel is going to make it through bankruptcy protection intact.
Think Ahead When Selecting Your Network UC Infrastructure Solution
As we tried to (re)define SaaS and evaluate how different enterprise applications fit into this model, we assessed the different UC platforms from a SaaS point of view.
As I have previosuly stated, given the interoperability challenges when integrating disparate applications into an end-to-end unified communications solution, a pre-integrated service package offered on a hosted/SaaS basis […]
Microsoft OCS 2010 Will Finally Eliminate the PBX
Well, Microsoft has let the cat out of the bag and leaked word that Microsoft OCS 2010 will “remove the need for PBX equipment within your organization”. I’m certainly not surprised. Let’s flash back to last year where I wrote and article titled Microsoft OCS 2007 R2 Heralds the Death of the IP-PBX. In it I wrote:
“Office Communications Server 2007 R2, debuting just one year after the Microsoft unified communications launch, highlights the pace of innovation that is possible with software,” said Stephen Elop, president of the Microsoft Business Division at Microsoft. “This new release puts Microsoft on a rapid path to deliver voice software that does much more than a network private branch exchange (PBX) and with much less cost.”
Interesting quote, eh? Does this not sound like Microsoft is sounding the death knell for the network PBX (IP-PBX)? This is an interesting turn of events. Microsoft hasn’t been pitching OCS 2007 as an IP-PBX replacement, but rather as something complementary. In fact, I remember talking with Microsoft about this last year (2007) and they went out of their way to explain that OCS 2007 is not an IP-PBX replacement. Also, Microsoft has many IP-PBX partners in the OCS 2007 arena, including Mitel, Nortel, and others. Slip of the tongue? Or is Microsoft going full-out into the IP-PBX arena? Certainly, the fear by many IP-PBX vendors is that one day Microsoft will offer a full-fledged software-based IP-PBX replacement, but I don’t think that day has come yet - even with the new features in OCS 2007 R2.
Now with OCS 2007 R2 fully launched and with added support for direct SIP trunking, the next logical step is a 100% Microsoft UC solution without the need for a PBX/IP-PBX at all. Of course, Microsoft OCS 2007 R2 is still currently very limited in the support it has for SIP IP phones. Most businesses aren’t ready to toss desktop phones for a 100% software-based softphone solution, i.e. Microsoft Communicator. So OCS 2010 will have to support SIP phones from popular SIP phone players such as Aastra, Polycom, and snom. Perhaps Microsoft will borrow or acquire the technology from SmartSIP, which recently launched an add-on for OCS 2007 R2 that enables any SIP phone to work with OCS.
So where did I hear that Microsoft was aiming to eliminate the need for a PBX in OCS? I discovered the information within a document on Microsoft’s website titled ‘Microsoft Unified Communications Business Value Tool’. On Page 24 it states:
You will deploy Office Communications Server 2010, which expands on the communications capabilities delivered in OCS 2007 R2. This release is designed to remove the need for PBX equipment within your organization and replace it with an integrated communications system that dramatically reduces management costs and gives end users innovative tools to communicate and collaborate across geographic boundaries from their office, home or on the road.
Not only do they state they will eliminate the PBX, but they declare the next version name of OCS (OCS 2010), which as far as I know Microsoft hadn’t announced yet. Many UC/VoIP experts predicted that eventually Microsoft would attack the IP-PBX space alone, but one has to wonder if alienating their IP-PBX partners is such a good idea. One of their strongest OCS partners is Nortel, who is experiencing financial difficulties and is probably not in a position to pressure Microsoft to back off. Mitel is another strong partner as well that could be impacted by Microsoft’s decision. Of course, Nortel and Mitel could still go after the SIP-based IP phone space within the OCS arena, but the IP phone market is much more of a commodity with a much lower margin than a full-fledged IP-PBX. Of course, there’s always the high-end media phone market with large margins. For instance, Polycom recently announced their VVX1500 media phone, which created some buzz.
I doubt OCS 2010 will have all the advanced call center functionality you get from Nortel, Avaya, Mitel, etc. After all, this will be Microsoft’s first release that doesn’t rely on the IP-PBX to do the intelligent call routing & handling. They’ll probably have some rudimentary call queues and skills-based routing, but not much else. Don’t expect predictive dialing in OCS 2010, a mainstay of the call center market. Still, a 100% software-based IP-PBX with unified communications capabilities will be a compelling choice for many businesses.
Tags: microsoft, Microsoft OCS, Microsoft OCS 2007 R2, mitel, nortel, sip, SmartSIP, unified communications, voip
- Related Entries
- SmartSIP Launches for OCS 2007 R2 Enabling Any SIP Phone & Any SIP Trunking Service Provider - Mar 04, 2009

- Microsoft and IBM Announce Sametime and Microsoft OCS integration - Nov 13, 2008
- Microsoft OCS 2007 R2 Heralds the Death of the IP-PBX - Oct 14, 2008

- Microsoft OCS 2007 R2 (next release) to be 64-bit Only - Aug 29, 2008

- Microsoft Drops VoIP from Windows Live Messenger - Jun 26, 2008

- Dell VoIP Products Analysis - Jan 23, 2008
- Microsoft OCS 2007 Review - Oct 16, 2007
- Microsoft and Nortel to co-develop IP-PBX - Jul 18, 2006
- Windows Server 2008 RDS Does VoIP - Mar 11, 2009

- Sametime and Microsoft OCS integration - Nov 10, 2008
TrackBacks
| Comments | Tag with del.icio.us | VoIP & Gadgets Blog Home | Permalink: Microsoft OCS 2010 Will Finally Eliminate the PBX
Copyright VoIP & Gadgets Blog
Nortel Keeps Market Guessing, Will It Sell or Slim Down?
Like any celebrity coyly letting the tabloids speculate about the status of her relationship, the bankrupt Nortel seems to have the business press all aflutter with news that instead of emerging from bankruptcy, the company may break up its business. The Wall Street Journal says the Canadian telecommunications gear maker is considering selling its core […]
State of WiMAX: Will Huawei Win It All?
WiMAX, despite losing attention and mindshare in the U.S., seems to be thriving across the planet. Business Standard, an Indian newspaper, reports that Huawei, Telsima and Alvarion are three of the companies shortlisted for the $1 billion WiMAX network being built by BSNL, the state-owned Indian telecom company. With Nortel and Alcatel-Lucent (a ALU) […]
Nortel to Cut 3,200 More Workers
Nortel, the bankrupt telecommunications gear maker, said today it will lay off an additional 3,200 workers worldwide over the coming months — bringing its total workforce down to 25,000. The Canadian company, which filed for bankruptcy in January, said last November that it would cut 1,300 employees — and that was on top of […]
Let The Nortel Breakup Begin
Radware, the maker of application delivery equipment, wants to buy a business unit of bankrupt gear maker Nortel. The unit in question is Nortel’s Alteon unit, which makes application switching and WAN optimization products for the data center. Nortel bought Alteon for $7 billion back in 2000. Light Reading reports the Radware bid may be […]
Our Readers Take on the LTE v. WiMAX Debate
When I wrote last week about Sprint giving up control of its 4G future, my post engendered a lively debate among some of our commenters about the technical merits of LTE and WiMAX. Since most of our readers aren’t planning a network buildout, they may have skimmed over the arguments, but buried amidst the talk […]
U.S. Social Security Blows $300 Million on Nortel VoIP system
According to CNN:
Nortel Government Solutions, a U.S. company wholly owned by Nortel completed the core network for the massive new U.S. Social Security Administration (SSA) VoIP system within 180 days of initial purchase orders, an aggressive requirement of the 10-year, US $300 million Telephone Systems Replacement Project (TSRP) award.
Now I’m all for Social Security upgrading their phone systems and going VoIP, but $300 million? $300 million? That’s just crazy talk. What’s in this Nortel phone system - titanium? platinum? Surely, there must be a cheaper, perhaps open source solution that can save the Social Security program millions, which means saving me, the U.S. taxpayer millions.
Ok, so I read further…
The new system, expected to become one of the largest enterprise VoIP deployments in the world, is already supporting more than 125 offices and more than 33,500 calls daily. To date, the new system has handled over 1.6 million calls. With 12-16 offices added each week, approximately 500 offices will be added per year until all 1,526 offices are online. Nortel Government Solutions has engineered the system to support over 100,000 phones.
Ok, now that is one massive integrated VoIP phone system. It definitely has to handle quite a bit of call volume, lots of phone endpoints (100,000+), security, management, etc. Government institutions have to be especially wary of security and privacy implications, so Nortel probably offers special professional services to ensure security and high availability. I still keep tripping over the $300 million though, which is part of the Telephone Systems Replacement Project (TSRP). Doesn’t this sound eerily similar to TARP (Trouble Assets Relief program), the massive U.S. government bailout program? Only 1 letter off.
Social security is going bankrupt and they’re spending hundreds of millions on a newfandagled phone system made by a Canadian and not by an American company. Makes perfect sense to me. American taxpayers may as well bailout Nortel, Canada’s pride and joy telecom company.
Just kidding folks. The SSA should should the best phone system as the best price. Obviously, Nortel won the contract fair and square. Unless of course they greased some palms at the SSA. When it comes to the government and politics, I am always a bit wary.
Tags: bailout, Nortel, Nortel Government Solutions, Social Security, SSA, voip
- Related Entries
- Social Security Goes VoIP - May 28, 2008
- Toktumi Now Offered on Dell VoIP Website - Nov 24, 2008

- Nortel cuts jobs and lowers forecast - Nov 10, 2008

- Fonality’s trixbox Pro Unified Agent Edition integrates with Salesforce.com - Sep 05, 2008

- The IP-PBX Energy Wars… - Aug 04, 2008

- Dell VoIP Products Analysis - Jan 23, 2008
- Internet Telephony Expo Recap - And SIP Trunking has Arrived! - Sep 14, 2007
- Avaya #1 VoIP PBX Vendor? - Aug 21, 2007
- Nortel Strong Arms Open Source Vendor - May 22, 2007
- Microsoft Public Beta of Office Communications Server 2007 - Mar 07, 2007
TrackBacks
| Comments | Tag with del.icio.us | VoIP & Gadgets Blog Home | Permalink: U.S. Social Security Blows $300 Million on Nortel VoIP system
Copyright VoIP & Gadgets Blog
Ericsson Cuts 5,000 Jobs After Strong Quarter
Today Ericsson reported a 31 percent drop in its fourth-quarter profits to 3.9 billion kronor ($465 million), announced 5,000 job cuts and said its core telecommunication equipment business was still unaffected by financial turmoil. Ericsson saw a large loss in its handset unit, but demand from telecommunication operators and a weakening currency meant strong equipment […]
Nortel Fights On
![]()
Nortel - will they or won’t they file for bankruptcy? Will they be chopped up into pieces and sold off? All the news these past few months leading to a crescendo of news yesterday stating Nortel is planning to file for bankruptcy. Certainly, all the rumors didn’t help their stock any. I’m reminded of Senator Chuck Schumer (D) who released a public letter about IndyMac’s viability causing a bank run by customers that led to the fall of IndyMac. So perhaps we in the media should carefully consider what we say about Nortel, one of the premiere telecommunications companies of all time. If we continue the drumbeat of Nortel headed into the fires of obvlivion we just might help march them there. Sometimes the media and bloggers are way too gleeful when a company ‘titan’ takes a fall.
The media should always report the news of course, but I’ve read way too many stories about Nortel these past few weeks that is all “doom & gloom”. Nortel has many technological assets, patents, and a huge customer base. Their customers aren’t going to disappear overnight, but if the media keeps hammering away at Nortel’s viability, it might scare their current and potential customers away from purchasing Nortel equipment. I’d just hate to see a good company die because of fear or panic caused by overblown news coverage.
This isn’t to say Nortel doesn’t have problems - they do. As Rich points out, “they have up to six billion dollars of debt which means they pay hundreds of millions of dollars of interest.” But we should take everything in perspective. With the global slowing economy, nearly every company is hurting - even those with good technology and great products. Nortel went on a bit of spending spree acquiring companies back in the dotcom boom days and now the bill has come due.
A fascinating read by Rich Tehrani where he talks to Nortel’s President of the Enterprise Solutions Division of Joel Hackney was just posted. The article is titled “Despite Reports, Nortel Operates as Usual”. In the article, Rich writes, “reports are circulating that Nortel has declared bankruptcy and pieces will be sold off to foreign firms. Company sources say this is untrue. Here is the complete story.” There is certainly more to the story than just ‘doom & gloom’ and Rich gets Nortel’s perspective. Read More…
Tags: bankruptcy, Chuck Schumer, IndyMac, joel hackney, nortel, rich tehrani
- Related Entries
- Nortel Web.Alive = Second Life for Business - Dec 15, 2008

- Avaya acquires Nortel rumors - Jan 14, 2009

- Nortel uses Unreal Engine and Lands Lenovo as a customer of web.alive - Jan 08, 2009

- Toktumi Now Offered on Dell VoIP Website - Nov 24, 2008

- Calling All Bloggers! Free Blogging on TMCnet.com - Nov 14, 2008

- TMC Launches NGN (Next Generation Networks) Magazine - Nov 13, 2008

- Circuit City’s Lights Get Even Dimmer - Nov 10, 2008

- Nortel cuts jobs and lowers forecast - Nov 10, 2008

- VON Joins forces with TMC? - Oct 29, 2008

- Internet Telephony Expo Preview - Sep 10, 2008

TrackBacks
| Comments | Tag with del.icio.us | VoIP & Gadgets Blog Home | Permalink: Nortel Fights On
Copyright VoIP & Gadgets Blog
Avaya acquires Nortel rumors
With today’s news of Nortel’s potential bankruptcy flying, my fellow TMC team members have been trading emails back-and-forth about Nortel’s future. (See also Rich’s overview).
Brendan Read had an interesting take that I thought I’d share:
This could cause a political firestorm in Canada: Nortel being a Canadian company, Avaya being American, expected more job losses from consolidation, Stephen Harper’s Conservative minority government being propped up by the center-left parties including a resurgent Liberal party under its US-educated new leader Michael Ignatieff, and the bulk of Nortel’s jobs being in the battleground province of Ontario.Parliament resumes later this month with a new budget–and his deal could add enough explosives to the mix to ignite another election. Harper is a superb political gameplayer which is why he stopped the sale of the firm that made the Canadarm to an American outfit.
He then pointed to an Industry Week article where the sale was blocked by the Canadian government.
So is an Avaya acquisition of Nortel in the works? And if so, will the Canadian government block it? Nortel is one of Canada’s most prestigious companies. It would almost be equivalent to the U.S. losing Coca-Cola. Ok, maybe not. AT&T then? Interesting times ahead for Nortel, which has very good technology. Someone is going to pick up Nortel, whether it’s an American company or someone else remains to be seen. Maybe the Canadian government will join the U.S. “bailout” fracas and acquire Nortel themselves?
Related:
Nortel throws a Hail Mary - “Nortel will now seek creditor protection under the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act (CCAA) in Canada, and its American subsidiaries have filed for Chapter 11 with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware”
Tags: american, avaya, bailout, canada, nortel
- Related Entries
- Nortel cuts jobs and lowers forecast - Nov 10, 2008

- Fonality’s trixbox Pro Unified Agent Edition integrates with Salesforce.com - Sep 05, 2008

- The IP-PBX Energy Wars… - Aug 04, 2008

- Unified Communications Growth Soars - Jun 23, 2008
- Avaya #1 VoIP PBX Vendor? - Aug 21, 2007
- Microsoft Public Beta of Office Communications Server 2007 - Mar 07, 2007
- Leading IP-PBX Manufacturer in The World - Jul 05, 2005
- Nortel uses Unreal Engine and Lands Lenovo as a customer of web.alive - Jan 08, 2009

- Nortel Web.Alive = Second Life for Business - Dec 15, 2008

- Toktumi Now Offered on Dell VoIP Website - Nov 24, 2008

TrackBacks
| Comments | Tag with del.icio.us | VoIP & Gadgets Blog Home | Permalink: Avaya acquires Nortel rumors
Copyright VoIP & Gadgets Blog
It’s official, Nortel is finished.
After billions of dollars lost in the past few years, Nortel is bankrupt. It’s the dawn of a whole new era, bring it on!
Bloomberg
Globe & Mail
A Nortel Bankruptcy Could Lead to a Deal
In a sign of the troubled telecommunications industry, Toronto’s Globe and Mail is reporting that equipment maker Nortel ( s NT) plans to file for bankruptcy, perhaps as soon as today. The Canadian company has $4.5 billion in debt, faces declining sales for its gear as operators pause network deployments. To further its woes, the […]
Nortel uses Unreal Engine and Lands Lenovo as a customer of web.alive
Apparently, my skepticism over Nortel web.alive was lost on Lenovo since Nortel and Lenovo today announced the first-ever customer to its web.alive Virtual World Application. Lenovo uses web.alive to let shoppers browse, demo and interact with other shoppers and Lenovo Staff in real-time 3D.
In addition, Nortel has licensed the Unreal gaming Engine for web.alive Engine which they claim will create more realistic, interactive 3D Environment for Web 3.0 Collaboration, Training and Commerce. Wow, I used to play Unreal on my old PC. If Nortel web.alive uses the Unreal Engine and looks anything like the video game I used to play, then maybe I’ll retract some of my skepticism. 
Here’s both news releases coming out any second on the newswires…
Just months after announcing its incubation efforts to develop web.alive, a new virtual world business application, Nortel* [NYSE/TSX: NT] today announced that Lenovo, one of the world’s largest manufacturers of personal computers, is using the application in a new online virtual store as a way to give consumers an exciting new avenue for e-commerce.
The Lenovo “eLounge” virtual store is being showcased at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas this week at the Venetian Hotel’s AquaKnox.
What are the benefits of virtual stores?
• Shoppers can create personalized avatars to walk around the 3D virtual store and browse through products while interacting with other shoppers and sales staff from around the globe.
• Shoppers can also attend product demonstrations or tutorials given by the virtual store staff.
• People can build social/virtual shopping communities/groups and host online shopping get-togethers with their network of friends, family and associates - a concept defined as assisted e-commerce or social shopping.
• Customer service online is taken to an entirely new level as customers do not need to email, click to call or deal with hundreds of pages of forum based questions and answers. If a customer has a question, they can simply log on and walk up to a customer service representative or ask another customer with a high feedback rating.
• Businesses can use their online stores to test out new store designs/ideas - in a virtual setting.
Interested in seeing Lenovo’s virtual store prototype?
• To see the new Lenovo eLounge, visit www.lenovo.com/elounge** or visit them at CES at the Venetian Hotel’s AquaKnox.
• For more information on web.alive, visit www.projectchainsaw.com or www.nortel.com/webalive.
OTTAWA - Nortel’* [NYSE/TSX: NT] announced it has licensed Epic Games’ Unreal Engine for Nortel’s new web.alive virtual world software application.
“The Unreal gaming engine provides an array of core technologies, content creation tools, and support infrastructure essential to Nortel’s web.alive application,” said Arn Hynman, web.alive chief architect. “By collaborating with Epic Games and licensing the Unreal Engine, we are enabling our customers to benefit from the same platform that powers industry-leading video games and complex 3D simulations.”
“The Unreal Engine enables companies to build dynamic, interactive virtual worlds for the next-gen workforce, and this licensing agreement signifies Nortel’s commitment to take its e-commerce and learning initiatives to the next level,” said Mark Rein, vice president of Epic Games. “Nortel’s web.alive application uniquely showcases how Epic’s engine technology can be leveraged to improve business collaboration.”
To learn more about the Nortel and Epic collaboration and to hear an interview with Arn Hyndman and Mark Rein, visit http://podcast.nortel.com/podcasts2/nortel_web_alive_7961.mp3.
web.alive integrates spatial, high-definition audio and customized 3D spaces with conventional telephony, corporate systems and software to create a “real-life” experience in a virtual environment. Epic’s Unreal Engine 2.5 enables the display of stunning 3D environments and avatars with lifelike movements and interactivity. Nortel brings this impressive capability to your web browser as a thin client.
Nortel has also announced that Lenovo, one of the world’s largest manufacturers of personal computers, is using web.alive in a new online virtual store as a way to give consumers an exciting new avenue for e-commerce.
Nortel’s web.alive is a collaborative, browser-based virtual world application for enterprise use that provides an immersive, interactive and web integrated world with 3D voice and graphics. The application facilitates internal collaboration as well as customer interactions over the web and in real time. web.alive brings new dimensions to business collaboration, virtual training and ecommerce. For more information on web.alive, visit www.projectchainsaw.com or www.nortel.com/webalive.
Tags: 3d, avatar, ces, Consumer Electronics Show, Lenovo, nortel, unreal engine, virtual store, virtual world, web.alive
- Related Entries
- Nortel Web.Alive = Second Life for Business - Dec 15, 2008

- More of Us Will Be Living in a 3D Virtual World - Oct 14, 2008

- More on That Second Life Thing - Jan 24, 2007
- CES Opens Big in LV: Gadgets Galore! - Jan 08, 2007
- 2007 CES Registration Now Open; Go Gadget Crazy! - Jun 12, 2006
- Sports Fans Drive HD TV Sales - Jan 25, 2006
- CES 2006: Annual CE Clambake Kicks Off Tomorrow - Jan 04, 2006
- Toktumi Now Offered on Dell VoIP Website - Nov 24, 2008

- Anybody Like the New Xbox Live? - Nov 19, 2008

- Nortel cuts jobs and lowers forecast - Nov 10, 2008

TrackBacks
| Comments | Tag with del.icio.us | VoIP & Gadgets Blog Home | Permalink: Nortel uses Unreal Engine and Lands Lenovo as a customer of web.alive
Copyright VoIP & Gadgets Blog
China’s 3G Plans to Benefit Local Vendors
Three Chinese mobile networks plan to spend a total of 280 billion yuan ($41 billion) over the next two years building out 3G networks, for which the government will announce licenses at the end of 2008 or in early 2009. Plans like that would normally have equipment vendors around the world salivating, but in truth […]
The State of Nortel
Rich has an excellent piece on Nortel where he talks to Nortel’s President of Carrier Networks’ Richard Lowe and Bruce Gustafson, Director of Marcom, Carrier Networks. With all the bad news surrounding Nortel it’s interesting to get a perspective of Nortel from the horse’s mouth. Of course, Nortel’s job or any company for that matter is to try and spin things in a positive light.
However, reading the article it seems that Nortel was fairly open about their current status and the direction they are taking. For instance, Rich’s article states, “He did say a large number of carriers are slowing their spending in CDMA… they have deployed 1x he mentioned for voice and have their first EVDO deployments in place for data. He says they will be looking for this line of business to decline perhaps 5-10% a year.”
The article adds, “He further explained that ROI parameters are getting more challenging so operators are slowing their CAPEX investments which would be used to upgrade TDM to VoIP. He says these operators will hold onto their Class 5 switches longer than originally planned… As long as it continues to support the traffic he explained.”
Rich’s article then goes into Nortel’s views on their prospects in GSM, WCDMA (wideband CDMA) and more.
Great read. Check it out.
Tags: Bruce Gustafson, CDMA, EVDO, nortel networks, Richard Lowe, TDM, voip, WDMA
- Related Entries
- Nortel cuts jobs and lowers forecast - Nov 10, 2008

- Microsoft develops Vi-Fi (Vehicle Wi-Fi). VoIP while driving baby! - Aug 27, 2008

- Call Screening Patent - Apr 30, 2008
- OctroTalk Launches - Mar 31, 2008
- Is T.38 Fax Dead? - Jan 18, 2008
- PIKA releases major enhancements to host-based media processing platform - Jun 27, 2007
- Flash Skype Video cards = Flash Skype Client in the Near Future? - Dec 19, 2008

- Verizon FiOS Voice+Internet Cheaper than just FiOS Internet? - Dec 19, 2008

- Belkin Desktop Internet Phone for Skype - Dec 18, 2008
- <a href=”http://blog.tmcnet.com/blog/tom-keating/news/cnet—wheres-the-love.asp” title=”CNET - Where’s the ♥ love?”>CNET - Where’s the ♥ love? - Dec 16, 2008

TrackBacks
| Comments | Tag with del.icio.us | VoIP & Gadgets Blog Home | Permalink: The State of Nortel
Copyright VoIP & Gadgets Blog
Nortel yanked from NYSE?
Telecom equipment manufacturers are put to the test as the economy tightens.
Things are not looking all that rosy for Nortel these days, Canwest news had this to say..
With significant declines expected for the telecom equipment market in 2009, Nortel Networks Corp. runs the risk of losing market share regardless of whether it actually files […]
Nortel Web.Alive = Second Life for Business
Rich Tehrani has a very interesting post about Nortel’s foray into virtualized business meetings. Think Second Life virtual world meets business world…
Rich participated in a virtual world demo with Nortel where they showed him web.alive. This business-oriented virtual world looks eerily similar to Second Life, including the 3D avatars, and 3D world but under the covers it sports something else - namely 3D audio powered by DiamondWare 3D stereoVoIP technology. Both Rich and I have espoused DiamondWare’s technology over the years and recently their technology was acquired by Nortel. No doubt Nortel was impressed as well, and this virtualized business meeting world with 3D audio appears to be the fruits of that acquisition.
Rich explains, “I have touted DiamondWare’s patented technology for over half a decade and it is as impressive now as it has ever been. It allows you to have your voice volume increase and decrease as you get closer or move farther away from others. It also allows you to hear people on the left or right when they talk and it seems these people are really speaking from one direction or another.”
Rich goes on to explain that the technology could be used to power virtual tradeshows, as seen by the screenshot above showing what could be a keynote room complete with full Powerpoint and video & telepresence support. Does this mean no more Internet Telephony Expo in sunny Miami in the middle of winter here in the Northeast? Nomore pressing the flesh? Say it ain’t so, Rich! 
Rich seems excited by the technology when he says, “I really feel like Nortel is onto something here. This could just be a short-lived fad but it just seems like there is just so much productivity boosting that can be done with virtual business worlds - it just has to happen.”
Rich is one of the busiest guys I know - a true multitasker, so he’s always looking for the most efficiency in business. Considering how many internal & external meetings Rich participates in, I can see why he likes the idea of 3D virtualized meetings.
I’m a little more skeptical. Reading Rich’s demo, I like the idea of “the room of silence”, the ability to ‘dress up’ to indicate to co-workers that you are an an important meeting with clients (so they don’t interrupt), and the ability for 3D voice is certainly cool & sexy. I’m just not sure these features replace the good ole’ telephone with a WebEx session. I suppose for meetings larger than 6 people, this idea makes more sense, since I’ve been in conference calls where you get too many people talking at once and you can’t tell who is the one talking. The 3D audio with animated avatars could certainly help for larger meetings. Though meeting software such as WebEx allows you to raise your hand to speak. Maybe if I held a few meetings in Nortel’s Web.Alive I’d be less skeptical. Definitely has the coolness factor though.
In any event, check out Rich’s blog for more details, including a plethora of screenshots.
Tags: 3D, business, conferencing, Nortel, rich tehrani, Second Life, virtual, virtual world, web.alive
- Related Entries
- More of Us Will Be Living in a 3D Virtual World - Oct 14, 2008

- More on That Second Life Thing - Jan 24, 2007
- Toktumi Now Offered on Dell VoIP Website - Nov 24, 2008

- Sony Phone Home for Gaming Future - Nov 25, 2008

- Calling All Bloggers! Free Blogging on TMCnet.com - Nov 14, 2008

- TMC Launches NGN (Next Generation Networks) Magazine - Nov 13, 2008

- Watch Two TV Programs at Once on Same TV! - Oct 31, 2008

- VON Joins forces with TMC? - Oct 29, 2008

- Internet Telephony Expo Preview - Sep 10, 2008

- Buying an iPhone at Best Buy - Sep 08, 2008

TrackBacks
| Comments | Tag with del.icio.us | VoIP & Gadgets Blog Home | Permalink: Nortel Web.Alive = Second Life for Business
Copyright VoIP & Gadgets Blog
Alcatel Makes Cuts–Will It Help?
Today beleaguered telecommunication equipment maker Alcatel-Lucent said it would cut 2.0 billion euros ($2.7 billion) in costs between now and 2010. It plans to do this by laying off 1,000 managers, 5,000 contractors and cutting costs in areas such as R&D and real estate. While this move follows on troubling signs in the telecommunications industry […]
The Nortel Tale
Nortel is in the news as it weighs bankruptcy. Rich Tehrani has an historic view of Nortel here, as he makes an excellent point:
Sadly, we are learning now (as we do in every downturn) that branding, marketing and “perception augmentation” is something that needs to be done constantly. In good times and especially in bad.
Nortel is experiencing what the VoIP hardware market is feeling: not enough money for everyone to live off. If Cisco is reaping the most benefits, the rest of the hardware companies have to learn to live with a diet of scraps as consolidation and trimmed CAPEX hits the industry. How many Class 5 or Session Border Controllers do you need before you have maxed out?
Nortel suffers from what many companies do: You cannot be everything to everyone. You need an Identity that Differentiates you from the pack.
Tags: bankruptcy, capex, nortel
- Related Entries
- What a Crazy Wall St. Monday - Sep 15, 2008
- And the BK Starts - Jul 30, 2008
TrackBacks
| Comments | Tag with del.icio.us | On Rad’s Radar? Home | Permalink: The Nortel Tale
Tags: nortel, bankruptcy, capex
Copyright On Rad’s Radar?
Nortel Seeks Bankruptcy Advice
According to the Wall Street Journal, telecommunications equipment maker Nortel is talking to lawyers about its strategy, including filing for bankruptcy. This is grim news for the vendor, and the industry at large. Nortel has a lot of debt ($4.5 billion as of the last quarter), is facing continued pressure from emerging competitors such as […]
Japan’s KDDI Adds LTE to the 4G Mix
Japan’s second largest wireless carrier, KDDI, has taken the plunge into the Long Term Evolution (LTE) standard, by building an LTE overlay on top of its existing CDMA network. KDDI is using equipment from Nortel and Hitachi for the fourth-generation wireless network, which will be operating by 2010. For those of you in the U.S. […]
Toktumi Now Offered on Dell VoIP Website
Toktumi recently announced a partnership with Dell to distribute its small business VoIP service through a co-branded site on Dell.com (www.dell.com/voip), which also features Fonality, Nortel, and Bandwidth.com. So what’s so special about Toktumi, (a word play on ‘talk to me’) and it’s USB-based plug-in device? Well, Toktumi is very
similar to the popular Magicjack, which also uses a USB connector for connecting an analog phone. However, Magicjack is only $19.99/year (first year is $39.95) for unlimited U.S. calling while Toktumi is $179.40/year ($14.95/month) for unlimited dialing inside the U.S. and Canada. So what does this extra cost get you?
Continue reading Toktumi Now Offered on Dell VoIP Website…
Tags: Bandwidth.com, Fonality, Magicjack, Nortel, packet8, Toktuni, voip
- Related Entries
- Windows Live Messenger Back in the VoIP game! -
Oct 03, 2008 - ITEXPO West 2008 a Resounding Success -
Sep 18, 2008 - Microsoft Response Point Adds T1 Support and SIP Trunking Service Providers -
Sep 17, 2008 - Fonality’s trixbox Pro Unified Agent Edition integrates with Salesforce.com -
Sep 05, 2008 - Dell VoIP Products Analysis -
Jan 23, 2008 - Avaya #1 VoIP PBX Vendor? -
Aug 21, 2007 - Nortel Strong Arms Open Source Vendor -
May 22, 2007 - PIKA WARP Appliance Adds FreePBX Support -
Nov 18, 2008 - Comcast Best in VoIP Quality, AT&T Best in VoIP Reliability -
Nov 13, 2008 - Vonage Lives to Fight Another Day… -
Oct 20, 2008
TrackBacks
| Comments | Tag with del.icio.us | VoIP & Gadgets Blog Home | Permalink: Toktumi Now Offered on Dell VoIP Website
Copyright VoIP & Gadgets Blog
Nokia Siemens Networks Makes Deeper Cuts
The troubles in telecom continue as Nokia Siemens Networks plans to cut an additional 1,300 employees in Finland and Germany as part of an overall restructuring. According to today’s Wall Street Journal, the telecommunications equipment maker has cut about 6,000 workers and plans to lay off a total of about 9,000 before the restructuring is complete. NSN is a joint venture between Nokia Corp. and Siemens AG. Laid-off NSN employees won’t be alone, as workers throughout the communications value chain watch their jobs disappear — from those working at Freescale and ST-NXP Wireless to those at Nokia and Motorola. The industry and its employees have weathered downturns before, but it’s hard to watch it happen all over again.
Nortel Cuts: Layoffs Come to Telco Land

Updated with information about Nortel cuts: Big job cuts are not just for startups. The grim reaper has started to take its tool on the telecom ecosystem. We have already reported about the job cuts at Nokia (600) and Motorola (3,000) and Nortel is likely to cut about 10 percent of its work force. The malaise has started to spread to component makers. For instance, JDSU cut 400 jobs, shut down seven R&D centers and three plants. Anadigics, a Warren, N.J.-based broadband wireless and wireline chip maker cut 15 percent of its work force. ST-NXP Wireless has cut its workforce by 500. Elsewhere Freescale and Verio also made some cuts. All these companies are reacting to the broader market declines and slowing demand from consumers. Vodafone, one of world’s largest telecom operators, is looking to cut jobs soon.
Update: Nortel today announced that it was cutting 1,300 jobs versus previously reported 3,000 cuts. Nortel had previously cut about 1,200 jobs. John Roese, Chief Technology Officer at Nortel along with some other senior managers is going to be leaving the company by end of this year. Roese, who participated in our Mobilize 08 conference, in my view is one of the smartest people when it comes to the broader direction of the telecom and technology industries. I think with his exit, Nortel loses a critical thinker. But right now it seems Nortel is fighting for its dear life as economic realities are crushing the company.
The original post was published yesterday.
Guest Post: Duncan Stewart
Nortel’s Q3 results are out, and they are just about as rough as I expected in terms of how the company did and what the immediate future looks like. On the other hand, the company was far more tentative than I expected in terms of strategy, divisions for sale, JVs, etc.
Let’s start with the financials […]
Nortel cuts jobs and lowers forecast
Nortel plans a major restructuring and another round of job cuts.
From Fortune:
The Toronto networking equipment giant said Monday it would trim 1,300 jobs on top 1,200 cuts previously announced. Nortel had 32,550 employees at the end of 2007.The company also said four top executives, including its head of sales and its chief technology officer, would leave at year-end.
The news comes as Nortel posted third quarter earnings that met lowered targets. The company warned, however, that 2008 sales would fall 4% — at the lower end of its previous guidance of 2% to 4%.
It’s too bad Nortel is a Canadian company or they could have been added to the $700+ billion U.S. bailout package. In fact, Congress is looking to add the U.S. auto industry to the bailout, so why not VoIP/telecom companies? Heck, why not foreign telecom companies, such as Nortel? Let’s bailout everybody! In fact, I’m hoping they bail me out of my mortgage and offer me free gas like Peggy “the Moocher” Joseph so eloquently stated.
Tags: bailout, moocher, nortel, nortel networks, Peggy Joseph, voip
- Related Entries
- Fonality’s trixbox Pro Unified Agent Edition integrates with Salesforce.com -
Sep 05, 2008 - Digium AsteriskNOW News and more… -
Aug 25, 2008 - The IP-PBX Energy Wars… -
Aug 04, 2008 - Call Screening Patent -
Apr 30, 2008 - Dell VoIP Products Analysis -
Jan 23, 2008 - Internet Telephony Expo Recap - And SIP Trunking has Arrived! -
Sep 14, 2007 - Avaya #1 VoIP PBX Vendor? -
Aug 21, 2007 - Nortel Strong Arms Open Source Vendor -
May 22, 2007 - Microsoft Public Beta of Office Communications Server 2007 -
Mar 07, 2007 - Microsoft and Nortel to co-develop IP-PBX -
Jul 18, 2006
TrackBacks
| Comments | Tag with del.icio.us | VoIP & Gadgets Blog Home | Permalink: Nortel cuts jobs and lowers forecast
Copyright VoIP & Gadgets Blog
Motorola Sells LTE With Visions of Mobile Streaming Video
Motorola today said it has demonstrated over-the-air data transmissions using equipment based on the LTE next generation wireless protocol in the recently auctioned 700 MHz spectrum. The equipment will be ready for limited network deployments in 2009.
Mobilize: Nortel CTO John Roese
GigaOM Founder Om Malik just took the stage to grill John Roese, the CTO of Nortel, who promised a world of hyperconnectivity is already upon us and warned that infrastructure needs to evolve appropriately. It was a timely conversation given the recent news that Nortel will sell off its Metro Ethernet Networks (optical and 40G) […]
Nortel Exits Optical, End of an Era
For those of us who’ve been following the rise of optical networks, today will go down as a red-letter day for the industry. Nortel, whose name has long been synonymous with optical networking gear, has announced it will sell off its Metro Ethernet Networks (optical and 40G) business, as a way to shore up rest […]
Fonality’s trixbox Pro Unified Agent Edition integrates with Salesforce.com
Fonality’s trixbox Unified Agent Edition (UAE) can automatically match all inbound and outbound calls with the corresponding record in salesforce.com’s AppExchange, and call data is captured and logged eliminating manual entry. This is a big step for Fonality in taking their Asterisk-based IP-PBX from simply an enterprise phone system to a “true” call center platform that can compete with Avaya, Nortel, Interactive Intelligence, and other major call center platforms.
Fonality, today announced the collaboration of the trixbox Pro Unified Agent Edition and salesforce.com’s AppExchange.
Fonality’s trixbox Pro, Unified Agent Edition (UAE) is immediately available for test drive and deployment from Fonality Australia. It’s unclear whether trixbox UAE is available in the U.S. or elsewhere as well. I’m looking into it. Relatedly, go check out my in-depth trixbox Pro 2.0 Call Center Edition (CCE) review I wrote yesterday.
In the meantime, Fonality UAE features:
- Performance Management:
- Automatic Call History provides a detailed history of who employees are calling and the duration of each call.
- Integrated Call Recording allows any call to be recorded from the PBX system and attached to the corresponding record in Salesforce.com.
- Lead Management Reporting provides reports on how many calls were required for conversion, lead activity, etc.
- Agent Activity Reporting ranks agents based on activity and productivity.
- Outbound Call Reporting shows which reports are busiest on the phone, how many calls have been made to leads and customers.
Agent Productivity:
- Click to Call allows any number is Salesforce.com to be automatically dialed with the click of a mouse.
- Improved Screen Pops address the problem of multiple matching records. A screen is automatically launched for immediate note taking, and then can be attached to the proper record after the call.
- Deal Size Alerts pop-up on a rep’s desktop and display the name, company and size of the opportunity before the phone starts ringing.
- Account Ownership Routing automatically directs incoming calls go to the account owners
Tags: Asterisk, Avaya, call center, Fonality, Interactive Intelligence, IP-PBX, Nortel, salesforce.com, trixbox Pro UAE, trixbox Pro Unified Agent Edition, VoIP
- Related Entries
- Avaya #1 VoIP PBX Vendor? -
Aug 21, 2007 - The IP-PBX Energy Wars… -
Aug 04, 2008 - trixbox Pro 2.0 review -
Sep 04, 2008 - Intuitive Voice Technology Calls Out other Asterisk Competitors - Asterisk Clone Wars Have Begun… -
Mar 13, 2008 - Schmooze the Yiddish Asterisk -
Feb 01, 2008 - Dell VoIP Products Analysis -
Jan 23, 2008 - Free IP-PBX! -
Oct 24, 2007 - Internet Telephony Expo Recap - And SIP Trunking has Arrived! -
Sep 14, 2007 - Mitel sues ShoreTel - What does it mean? -
Jun 28, 2007 - Nortel Strong Arms Open Source Vendor -
May 22, 2007
TrackBacks
| Comments | Tag with del.icio.us | VoIP & Gadgets Blog Home | Permalink: Fonality’s trixbox Pro Unified Agent Edition integrates with Salesforce.com
Copyright VoIP & Gadgets Blog
trixbox Pro 2.0 review
Fonality is one of the premiere providers of Asterisk-based IP-PBX solutions. Fonality offers three products: PBXtra, trixbox CE (community edition), and trixbox Pro (commercial/reseller edition). trixbox Pro. which is their commercial edition runs on Fonality’s “hardened” PBXtra technology, which Fonality claims has 5 thousand installations and over 325 million calls to date. trixbox Pro is a hybrid-hosted solution, which means you get 24/7 monitoring, phone mobility with no NAT traversal issues, and automatic software updates.
trixbox appliance
|
trixbox Pro comes in three editions. The trixbox Pro family starts with Standard Edition (SE), which is free.The remaining two editions, Enterprise Edition (EE) and Call Center Edition (CCE), are available at a low monthly cost or for a lifetime fee. TMC Labs checked out Fonality’s flagship product, trixbox Pro Call Center Edition (CCE) which has all the features of trixbox Pro SE and trixbox Pro EE, plus additional call center functionality. trixbox Pro Call Center Edition scored very well in my ratings. It’s lowest rating was still a very good 4 stars for ‘Performance’. The reason for this not achieving 4.5 or a 5 star rating was that their hosted web interface can be occasionally slow.
trixbox Pro CCE is based on Asterisk and includes an easy web-based user interface, web-based voice mail, exportable reporting, click-to-call, mouse-driven operator panel, Outlook integration, real-time resource graphs, system alerts, auto-card configuring, seamless VoIP trunking, and more. trixbox Pro CCE is designed for companies with 2 - 200 agents and includes ACD and IVR capabilities with unlimited queues, skills-based routing, real-time queue statistics, graphical reports, and web-based recording access.
One of the most powerful features included in trixbox Pro CCE is HUD Pro, a communications software application which features enhanced presence, on-the-fly recording, call barge, call monitor, CRM integration, and one-touch agent login. Each extension has up to 6 icons at the bottom. Depending on your permissions, you can click on one of these icons to call their voicemail, record, barge, email, call their alternate number (mobile phone), or chat.
Here’s a screenshot of HUD during an internal extension call.
You’ll notice there are different colors to indicate presence and color coding of calls.
Green - Inbound/outbound call
Orange - Queue call
Purple - Intraoffice extension call
Grey - Unregistered
HUD also features drag-and-drop call control, which not only lets you drag calls to someone’s extension, but if that person is out of the office, you can drag the call to the mobile phone icon which will transfer the call to their mobile phone. One neat feature is that HUD can launch a Web browser to a custom URL when your extension rings. This can be used to look up inbound callers in your Web-based CRM software or even direct the search query to Google, AnyWho reverse number lookup, etc. HUD Pro also features secure chat for intraoffice instant messaging.
For users that use Outlook Contacts, there is a TAPI plugin that lets you simply right-click on a Contact and initiate a call. They have also extended TAPI so that you can call directly from your Inbox or any other Outlook email folder. What’s even cooler is that trixbox Pro takes care of dialing the “9″ and it automatically takes your phone off-hook (speakerphone mode) so you don’t have to even touch the phone. The off-hook speakerphone mode actually works throughout HUD. So you can also double-click an internal extension from within HUD and your phone will go off-hook automatically. Similarly, you can highlight a phone number anywhere on your computer, and then “drag” that number into HUD and HUD will dial the number. I should mention that currently trixbox Pro supports this off-hook feature on Polycom and Aastra phones.
trixbox Pro has some other interesting tricks up its sleeve. For instance, it has a Firefox plugin called FONcall which automatically highlights a phone number on a web-page. You simply click it and it initiates the call - once again automatically taking your phone off-hook.
Similar to an Outlook toast popup on an incoming email, HUD also displays a toast alert in the lower right of your screen on an inbound or outbound call. This allows you to direct callers to voicemail, record, or other functions without having to open the main HUD interface. The feature-rich HUD Pro client is certainly a competitive advantage Fonality has over many other Asterisk-based solutions. Though, Fonality does offer a free version HUD Lite which has a slimmed down feature-set and which works on most Asterisk flavors. HUD Lite for instance, doesn’t have on-the-fly recording, recording of others, log in & out of queues, call barging, call monitoring, and some other features. Thus, the powerful functionality in HUD Pro is a compelling reason for prospective buyers evaluating various flavors of Asterisk.
trixbox Pro supports your traditional telephony features such as auto-attendant, IVR, and voicemail. Similarly, from your desktop phone you get your traditional features such as call parking, call transfer (after a flash hook), and call conferencing. All of these work as expected. trixbox Pro also supports Ring-All (Blast Group) and similarly the ability to intercom page an extension or a group.
For trunk support, trixbox Pro supports analog, T1/E1, and now BRI. The user-friendly web-based administrator supports plug-and-play detection of your telephony hardware, which is typically Sangoma hardware in trixbox Pro. I liked the ease at which I was able to detect and configure the T1/E1 card and the two analog cards in the machine.
Faxing is also supported on trixbox Pro. While faxing on Asterisk-based platforms often gets a bad rap, (due to timing/clock syncing issues) Sangoma has recently built some very good analog hardware to solve this problem. Actually, the developed a simple bridging cable that connects from the T1/E1 card to the analog hardware to keep the timing in sync. Presto, bango! - reliable faxing on an Asterisk-based platform! ![]()
trixbox Pro has extensive BLF support, although only for Aastra phones. You can easily drag-and-drop users into your BLF area on any Aastra model with BLF support. Fonality also added automatic detection and support for the Aastra 536M and 560M sidecars to extend the number of BLF keys available on your Aastra phone.
Another key feature is the built-in conference bridges. The 5 built-in conference bridges each support an unlimited number of internal participants and as many external participants as you have inbound phone lines.
Mobility features are very strong in trixbox Pro. Each user can logon to their own personal web control panel and specify rules for how/when/where they are contacted as part of their FindMe feature (see screenshot below). FindMe supports presence detection (via HUD) to know when you have walked away from your desk and thereby ring your cell phone.Further, it features a “white list” to only allow specific people to access “findme”, as well as a VIP list (spouse, important contacts) that can reach you regardless of the schedule or your HUD presence status. Very useful feature to help stay in touch with your important contacts while respecting the times you don’t wish to be contacted.
Part of FindMe, the Boomerang feature allows you to send a call that has been forwarded to your cell phone right back to any extension on your PBX. Simply press some touch-tones on your cell and the call can be redirected to your assistant or back to your own desk. You can also record calls on your mobile using Boomerang - a powerful feature. Call screening is included and one of my favorite features. The caller is prompted for their name and once again you have the choice to accept or reject the call.
Telecommuters/Home workers Support
Telecommuting support in trixbox Pro is very good. trixbox Pro’s hybrid-hosted approach means no more pesky VoIP over NAT firewall issues. I was able to take an Aastra phone I auto-provisioned in the office home with me, connect to my home broadband connection, and simply change the DNS setting on the phone to the external DNS entry of the trixbox server and voilà, I was able to make & receive calls to my extension. No need to poke any holes in the corporate firewall or my home firewall. Nice and simple.
Features:
- Outlook Integration
- Voicemail
- Voicemail-to-Email
- Hot Desk
- Music-on-Hold
- Scheduler
- Night Mode New!
- Custom CTI (AGI)
- Analog & IP Phones
- Call Forwarding
- Name Directory
- DIDs
- Unlimited VoIP Accounts
- PSTN Fallback
- Branch Office Support
- Web-based Control Panel
- Powerful Reporting
- Hands Free Auto Phone Provisioning
- FAX Support
- BLF Support
- BRI Detection
- E1 Support
- Live Backup Server
- Multiple Deployment Management
- Conference Bridges
- Routing by DIDs
- Paging / Zone Paging
- Intercom / Zone Intercom
- Voicemail Groups
- Advanced Call Forwarding
- Call Return
- Call Out
- Custom Caller IDs
- SMS/Pager Voicemail Notify
- Alerts & Notifications
- Trunks Status Pages
- Real-Time System Graphs
- FindMe
- Boomerang Mobile Integration
- Call Screening
- Music-On-Hold (Unlimited)
- Historical System Graphs
- Unlimited Call Queues
- Full Featured A.C.D.
- Skills-Based Routing
- Graphical Queue Reports
- Barge Report
- Agent Call Recording
- Agent Variable Log-off
- Agents on Cell Phones
- Agents Shared across Sites
- Real-Time Queue Stats
HUD features:
- Operator Panel (w/ BLF)
- Call Parking Area
- Drag & Drop Call Control
- Color-Coded Call Status
- Drag & Drop to Voicemail
- Extension Sorting
- Enterprise Instant Messaging
- Outlook Integration
- Presence Management
- Click-to-Call Mobile Phones
- Click-to-Email
- Desktop Alerts
- Interactive Desktop Alerts
- Group & User Permissions
- Extension Grouping
- Extension Search
- Extension SearchQuickMenu
- Shortcuts (Hotkeys)
- On-the-Fly Recording
- Queue Status
- Agent Login/Logout
- Call Barging (active)
- Call Monitoring (passive)
- Web Access to Recordings
- Advanced CRM Integration
Some important new features in trixbox Pro 2.0 worth highlighting:
First, calendar-based scheduling has been added allowing you to have your call menu do something specific, such as special holiday greetings. trixbox Pro has had very good auto-provisioning already, but they’ve improved it in 2.0. I was able to connect several Aastra and Polycom phones on our network and trixbox Pro auto-detected them and auto-assigned them an extension in sequential order. Hands free phone auto-provisioning is supported on all supported Aastra models and Polycom models with firmware 2.2 and above.
Resellers will especially like the single-screen management for all of their customers. From one Admin web interface you can switch between installations with two clicks of the mouse in the lower-right corner of the Admin Panel.
Room for Improvement:
The call recordings (screenshot of interface below) within the web-based interface should have a memo text field to allow users to add recording details, such as caller’s name, topic discussed, etc. If you keep a lot of recordings, this will make it easier to reference them in the future.
I’d like to see standard-based videoconferencing support in HUD Pro. If Counterpath can offer a slick videoconferencing app (eyeBeam softphone) based on SIP and other industry standards, then surely so can Fonality. In addition to video, perhaps collaboration capabilities (WebEx, Microsoft Live Meeting) would be a nice addition. This would negate the need for a separate collaboration platform, the associated licensing fees, and duplication of the same employee information which must also be maintained due to employee turnover.
One last suggestion would be to email the call recordings automatically, similar to the voicemail-to-email feature. You can of course access the recordings via the web and download & save to your local PC, but an automatic email option would be nice.
Conclusion
I was very impressed with the ease-of-use of the admin interface, and I especially liked the strong mobility features. Users will like the web-based visual voicemail and voicemail-to-email features. The web-based GUI is one of the best you’ll see on any Asterisk-based platform and it makes extensive use of AJAX and tool-tips. Lastly, HUD’s motley of features, including desktop call control, presence, and on-the-fly recording make trixbox Pro a compelling choice when deciding which IP-PBX to purchase.
Perhaps the only caveat with trixbox Pro as compared with other Asterisk-based solutions is the trixbox pricing. Many Asterisk-based solutions are extremely inexpensive, some under $1000. trixbox Pro does offer a relatively inexpensive monthly option. For instance, for trixbox Pro Call Center Edition (CCE) that I tested, it’s $11.39/month per extension for 26-50 extensions. However, the lifetime fee is $159.99/month per extension which works out to be $14,259.50 for a 50 extension IP-PBX. That’s not ‘terribly’ expensive, but it is more than some competing Asterisk-based solutions, though still much less expensive than many Nortel, Avaya, or Cisco systems.
I’m sure Fonality would argue their main competitors are not other Asterisk solutions but the “Big 3″ (Avaya, Nortel, Cisco). Further, in my past discussions with Fonality, they’ve told me that they believe they add a lot of value to the “core” Asterisk that gives it a much stronger feature-set than other Asterisk-based systems. In testing trixbox Pro I would agree that it has many features I have not seen in many other Asterisk-based systems, including HUD Pro, call screening, call recording (some others do have this), strong call center functionality (queues), easy-to-use web-based admin, etc.
I recently saw a demo of Digium’s latest version of Switchvox down at Digium’s headquarters and did notice there are features in Switchvox that trixbox Pro doesn’t have, like Web 2.0 features. I plan on doing a review on Switchvox in the near future. It’ll be interesting to compare the two. Overall, I think trixbox Pro is one of the most feature-rich IP-PBXs I’ve reviewed and I would not hesitate to recommend it to companies looking for an easy-to-use and easy to maintain IP-PBX.
Tags: Asterisk, fonality, HUD, IP-PBX, trixbox CE, trixbox Pro, trixbox Pro Call Center Edition, trixbox Pro CCE, trixbox Pro Enterprise Edition, VoIP
- Related Entries
- Intuitive Voice Technology Calls Out other Asterisk Competitors - Asterisk Clone Wars Have Begun… -
Mar 13, 2008 - Schmooze the Yiddish Asterisk -
Feb 01, 2008 - PIKA for Asterisk boards now trixbox CE compatible -
Jan 22, 2008 - Avaya #1 VoIP PBX Vendor? -
Aug 21, 2007 - Mitel sues ShoreTel - What does it mean? -
Jun 28, 2007 - PBX Prompts for Asterisk and other open source PBXs launches tomorrow -
Apr 03, 2007 - Fonality’s trixbox appliance Part 2 -
Mar 19, 2007 - Fonality launches Asterisk-based trixbox Appliance -
Mar 18, 2007 - Fonality Lands $12M Financing Round from Draper Fisher Jurvetson (DFJ) -
Sep 04, 2008 - Digium Headquarters Tour -
Aug 26, 2008
TrackBacks
| Comments | Tag with del.icio.us | VoIP & Gadgets Blog Home | Permalink: trixbox Pro 2.0 review
Copyright VoIP & Gadgets Blog
More Carriers Upgrading Long-Haul Networks
Today Nortel named two of the customers deploying its new 40G optical long-haul network equipment, begging the question, Why the heck do we need those bandwidth caps? The short answer is, we don’t.
Wireless Hit by Economic Worries
After a few quarters of nonchalant statements that the sub-prime mortgage crisis and rising oil prices weren’t going to affect the tech stocks, the bloom is off the rose. The lowered sales forecasts and lackluster quarters are trickling in, and the trend for wireless companies is clear. This morning, networking equipment maker Ciena said in […]
Desktop Virtualization: Where Thin Clients Meet the Cloud
Today the organization behind the popular Xen open-source hypervisor announced the latest release of its virtualization software. It’s smaller, has better power management and graphics capabilities, and can run on machines ranging from servers to laptops and mobile phones.
Also, Nortel announced today a product it calls an “office-on-a-stick.” I would call it a virtualized desktop. […]
Digium AsteriskNOW News and more…
![]()
As I hinted last week, I would have some “interesting” news to tell after my visit to Digium’s brand new headquarters along with colleagues Greg Galitzine and Dave Rodriguez. Before I get into the MAJOR news being made by Digium, let me cover what else I learned on my trip. It had been 3 years since I last visited Digium down in Huntville, Alabama.
After getting a grand tour of the new Digium building we sat down in a state-of-art boardroom complete with a high-end Polycom IP conferencing unit, theater lighting, and a projector with motorized retractable screen. The boardroom was named the Mark C. Smith Boardroom to honor Mark Smith, who was the founder and chief executive officer of ADTRAN and Mark Spencer’s mentor. A picture honoring Mark Smith sits on a table in the room. We all admire how Mark Spencer was able to transform open source telephony - myself included - but no doubt Mark Smith and his company ADTRAN played a major role in making Asterisk the phenomenon it is today.
During our full-day meeting, Digium wanted to fill us in on the latest happenings going on and the future directions Digium was planning to take. One of the first takeaways I took was that their 1.5 year term CEO, Danny Windham believes strongly that Asterisk should be classified as an “engine”. It’s the “core guts” on which other software from third-parties can be added. For instance, Asterisk is not simply an IP-PBX, as of 1.6 it has an SS7 stack enabling Asterisk to be used in carrier and service provider applications. Another example they gave was how Asterisk can run just about any protocol, and were quick to point out that sipXecs, an open source alternative recently acquired by Nortel, can’t even natively run Nortel’s own digital phones while Asterisk works just fine with Nortel phones.
Another important takeaway was that Digium said flat out that claims Asterisk could not scale were false or at the very least were misleading since they were based on older versions of Asterisk. In fact, it seemed Digium took great personal umbrage that some of their competitors were making these claims. As evidence of scalability, they mentioned a particular service provider running thousands of ports and are currently writing a write paper case study on this customer. When they publish it, I’ll be sure to include excerpts in my blog.
One last takeaway that is important to mention is that Digium considers themselves to be the “Benevolent Asterisk Project Sponsor and Maintainer”. This is a key mantra that they want to reinforce. They have no plans to ever fork Asterisk into say an open source version and a premium closed source version. They know there are many companies that do add proprietary code on top of the Asterisk engine and don’t give back to the community, but Digium has no plans on monetizing Asterisk that way. I should point out that corporations that purchase Asterisk Business Edition (ABE) do have the right under the dual licensing to add their own code without giving it back to the community, however, there are companies that have taken the Asterisk engine, didn’t pay for ABE, added their own code, and didn’t give the code to the community.
Some interesting statistics about Digium that they told me during the meeting that I thought I’d share. First, Digium currently has 150 employees and has had 26 consecutive growth quarters. The headquarters are now running on Switchvox, which Digium acquired in September of last year. This is the first year that Digium has been named to Gartner’s renowned visionaries quadrant. One stat that I’ve always wonder about is what percentage of Asterisk code is developed by the open source community and what percentage by Digium. Well, the answer is 50% each, which was a little surprising. I would have expected the open source community to be higher, but this goes to show you how important Digium is to the future of Asterisk. They are obviously paying for developers and making an investment in improving Asterisk.
Some other interesting stats:
- Over 1,000,000 downloads in 2007
- Project 2008 downloads at over 1.54M
- Over 4 million servers deployed with Asterisk
- Over 56,000 active on forums
- Over 17,700 on active Asterisk mailing lists
- Over 7,248 on our Bug Tracker
- Over 400 active contributors
- Over 200 service providers worldwide using Asterisk
Further, the number of commits to Asterisk Trunk was 3,498 (mainly Asterisk 1.6 related) and the number of commits to Asterisk 1.4 was 1,401 (bug fixes). A staggering 132GB of bandwidth was consumed in 2008 YTD.
Here’s an interesting photo I took from the 2nd or 3rd floor aimed at the Asterisk logo which I believe is the center of the 3 buildings. From what I’m told if you fly over Digium’s building, the three buildings form the Asterisk logo. For some reason looking down at this circular area reminded me of the Star Trek Enterprise’s warp core. Forget “Powered by Intel”, this building is “Powered by Asterisk”. 
![]()
Digium recently hired Stephen Burcham, the Director of Quality who came from a company that designed controllers for anti-lock braking systems, which demand the most stringent quality control and reliability standards. Stephen has brought that same high standards mentality to Digium. Surprisingly, Digium’s hardware production is done by two American companies, so it’s Made in the U.S.A. Considering many electronics can be done more cheaply in China, I was happy to hear Digium was using American companies to manufacture their goods. In fact, Digium is using two local Alabama companies and they told me that they actually made in an investment in at least one of them to purchase a higher-end process manufacturing machine to meet Digium’s stringent quality requirements.
One of the biggest challenges facing Digium has less to do with technology and more to do with market perception. Digium told us that they have to battle Cisco and their claims that Asterisk is not a business class solution. I found it fascinating that Cisco is still able to leverage their own name brand recognition to get (scare?) customer wins, but if anything that’s great news for Digium and Asterisk. It isn’t technical comparisons or feature-sets that Asterisk is losing customers to Cisco, it’s name brand recognition. That’ll improve with time and my guess is very quickly since Asterisk has a full head of steam.
Now for the interesting news. AsteriskNOW which previously ran on rPath will now be using the very popular CentOS (5.2) distribution. Now that it runs on CentOS it will support easy operating system updates (via .rpm files). Also new in AsteriskNOW will be a yum repository for easy updates of Asterisk itself. Just ‘yum’ the lastest version of Asterisk and it will upgrade your version of Asterisk without screwing up your customizations.
Also new is that the next release of AsteriskNOW (1.5) will bundle the very popular FreePBX front-end GUI. This is big news! FreePBX has become the defacto standard for web-based GUI administration of Asterisk, so now Asterisk fans can download AsteriskNOW, boot of the self-install CD and not only getting a working copy of AsteriskNOW, but FreePBX as well! This isn’t to say Digium will stop developing their own GUI. In fact, when I asked that question, they said categorically they will continue to develop and improve their Asterisk GUI 2.0, which is currently installed on Asterisk Business Edition (ABE) and the Digium Asterisk Appliance 50 (AA50), as part of the 1.2 release I recently blogged about. Digium told me they expect the next release of AsteriskNOW to be available by Astricon.
Some other interesting news to talk about soon and I want to blog my grand tour of Digium’s state-of-the-art facility, but I’ll break that out into a separate blog post. Stay tuned…
Tags: adtran, AsteriskNOW, Cisco, Digium, Digium Asterisk Appliance 50, FreePBX, Mark C. Smith, Mark Spencer, nortel, VoIP
- Related Entries
- The IP-PBX Energy Wars… -
Aug 04, 2008 - Leslie Conway Joins Digium -
Jul 11, 2008 - Avaya #1 VoIP PBX Vendor? -
Aug 21, 2007 - Top 10 Reasons Why I love Asterisk -
Aug 03, 2007 - Digium podcast of Mark Spencer’s new role -
Jan 30, 2007 - Digium AA50 1.2 Software Released -
Aug 19, 2008 - Cisco Manager Meets Jurassic Park -
Jul 10, 2008 - Awesome Adtran & Digium article -
Jul 08, 2008 - PhoneFromHere.com & Digium Ink 5 Year Deal -
Apr 09, 2008 - Digium Wins InfoWorld ”Best of Open Source Software” Award -
Sep 18, 2007
TrackBacks
| Comments | Tag with del.icio.us | VoIP & Gadgets Blog Home | Permalink: Digium AsteriskNOW News and more…
Copyright VoIP & Gadgets Blog
The IP-PBX Energy Wars…
So today I get a new report from the Tolly Group stating that the ShoreTel Unified Communications system is significantly more energy efficient than the Cisco Unified Communications Manager. ShoreTel apparently topped Cisco in using less energy to drive VoIP communications in specific large, medium and small enterprise-class scenarios.
This energy usage comparison reminded me of Nortel’s The Nortel Tax Relief Plan which aims to “stop paying the ‘Cisco Energy Tax’ and save up to 40%”. Tony Rybczynski who works for Nortel and writes a TMCNet blog called The HyperConnected Enterprise sparked some controversy with some of his blog posts promoting the fact that Nortel is more efficient than Cisco. He even cites one customer that put a stop order on a $2 million dollar Cisco order once they did the energy efficiency calculations.
Is that what it’s come down to? Instead of feature-to-feature comparisons where going to have to start comparing energy consumption? I’m not against the idea, I just find it kind of humorous that everyone is jumping on the enviro-green bandwagon.
I hate to wonder if an IT manager, CTO, etc. might purchase a more efficient IP-PBX over a less efficient one that has many more features? Well, certainly in San Francisco and other uber-green areas that might be the case. Green trumps everything when you’re a greenie - not that there’s anything wrong with that.
I should point out that the IT Manager or CTO often not held accountable to what the electricity costs are. Many businesses see their electricity bills just as one of the costs of running their businesses. Other than instructing their users to turn off their radios, monitors, and computers at night, most businesses don’t delve into purchasing energy efficient computer or phone equipment. That is changing due to high energy costs - albeit slowly.
What’s missing from this ShoreTel energy comparison report is a comparison with Nortel, Avaya, and other IP-PBX players. Just who is the “king” of energy efficiency? Inquiring minds want to know.
So what are your thoughts on the IP-PBX Energy Wars? Do you care about efficiency or are features for important to you? Post a comment.
Lastly, the press release is included after the jump for your perusal…
Continue reading The IP-PBX Energy Wars……
Tags: Avaya, Cisco, Cisco Unified Communications Manager, efficiency, electricity, energy, IP-PBX, Nortel, ShoreTel, Tony Rybczynski, VoIP
- Related Entries
- Avaya #1 VoIP PBX Vendor? -
Aug 21, 2007 - Shoretel Rumors -
May 01, 2008 - Microsoft Public Beta of Office Communications Server 2007 -
Mar 07, 2007 - Cisco Manager Meets Jurassic Park -
Jul 10, 2008 - Free IP-PBX! -
Oct 24, 2007 - Mitel sues ShoreTel - What does it mean? -
Jun 28, 2007 - Skype 4.0.0.155 Beta 1 for Windows -
Jul 31, 2008 - Level 3 & Packet8 major outage -
Jul 31, 2008 - 3CX Free SIP Softphone -
Jul 31, 2008 - Astricon, Win $100, and Party Hardy at ITEXPO -
Jul 29, 2008
TrackBacks
| Comments | Tag with del.icio.us | VoIP & Gadgets Blog Home | Permalink: The IP-PBX Energy Wars…
Copyright VoIP & Gadgets Blog
Alcatel-Lucent: Sign of an Industry-Wide Malaise
The problems at Alcatel-Lucent are not unique to the Franco-American communications equipment maker. Instead they are part of a bigger disease that ails some of the older gear makers in the West, which are being squeezed by low-cost Asian rivals, fewer buyers and massive shifts in the technology landscape. Continue Reading
Subscribes
Archives
-
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
- December 2008
- November 2008
- October 2008
- September 2008
- August 2008
- July 2008
- June 2008
- May 2008
- April 2008
- March 2008
- February 2008
- January 2008
- December 2007
- November 2007
- October 2007
- September 2007
- August 2007
- July 2007
- June 2007
- May 2007
- April 2007
- March 2007
- November 1999
- January 1970
Sipy...
-
News, opinions and announcements about fast changing communication tools and technologies, from various blogs and ezine.

