Market Roundup July 7, 2006 Microsoft Reveals Unified Communications Roadmap |
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Microsoft Reveals Unified Communications Roadmap
Microsoft recently announced details of its plans in the
area of “unified communications.” Unified communications encompasses bringing
together the major systems that are routinely used by almost everyone working
today including email, instant messaging, and voice communications telephony
platforms. The field also seeks to bring in systems that are relatively new or
that are just beginning to be deployed in mainstream business such as video
conferencing and Web conferencing as well as the more usual audio conferencing.
Microsoft’s plans include placing unified communications capabilities into its
Office System 2007 suite of products. Tools in this wave of releases will
include Microsoft Exchange Server 2007, Microsoft Office Live Meeting, and
Microsoft Office Speech Server along with Microsoft Office RoundTable. The
company’s Office Communications Server 2007 and Office Communicator 2007 Client
will supply the SIP VoIP telephony, call management, “presence” capabilities,
and the VoIP Softphone that will be utilized by users to access the
communications systems. The new software platforms are currently scheduled to
be released progressively between late 2006 and the second quarter of 2007.
Microsoft also announced that it is working with a number of partners,
including HP, Motorola, and Siemens to build an ecosystem around its platform.
Unified Communications is an area that has until recently
been championed by specialist vendors such as Cisco and Avaya. It is rapidly
becoming clear that bringing together a wide range of integrated functionality
and business capabilities in the field of communications holds great potential
for organizations of all sizes. The current drive is to empower business
operations to run more effectively as people have access to key information in
an integrated, consistent manner wherever they happen to be located. A feature
that has already attracted considerable attention is the feature known as
presence, whereby it is possible to see at a glance whether someone is
available for contact, i.e., connected to the Internet, and by what means they
may be reached (voice, email, IM, etc.). As “softphone” software that provides
access to voice and video communications using VoIP systems becomes more widely
used, it will become much easier for people to remain in contact without the
need to manage a desk phone, mobile phone, and email devices, both static and
mobile. Unified communications also holds the potential to integrate business
information and applications into the same devices, thus smoothing out access
to key business data and enhancing productivity.
The very public entry of Microsoft into an area that has previously been the domain of specialist communications suppliers is certain to raise public awareness of the potential of unified communications. This is especially the case in the small and mid-tier business sectors where traditional communications vendors are beginning to gain visibility. It is also the case that Microsoft is certain to shake things up and may help hasten the marketing plans and hopefully general customer adoption of VoIP systems and unified communications solutions. However, for Microsoft to be as successful in penetrating the space as it could be it will need to ensure that it works with the wider community active in the development of unified communications. This is an area where cooperation among all vendors is essential. Any fragmentation or even perceived lack of maximum interoperability will harm all of the vendors involved. More importantly it will also inhibit adoption of valuable business solutions.
Aperi: We’re Here and Doing Interesting Stuff
This week Aperi, a community of storage vendors dedicated to
creating open storage infrastructure software based on industry-standard
platforms, announced that it has proposed an open source project to the Eclipse
Foundation. Aperi has also announced that Novell is joining the community,
bringing the total number of members to ten, including Brocade, Cisco, CA,
Emulex, LSI Logic, Fujitsu, IBM, McData, and Network Appliance. Aperi claims to
be building and evolving a common, open platform for managing all brands of
storage systems which will be available free of charge. The group’s members
believe that the open source collaboration model is an effective way to bring
open standards to systems and has functioned in the areas of datacenter
automation and Web services. Finally, Fujitsu, IBM, and McData have also
announced that they plan to contribute storage management software code to the
Eclipse Aperi project. IBM plans to contribute more than one million lines of
code from its TotalStorage Productivity Center software. Aperi plans to work
with the Storage Networking Industry Association (SNIA) to drive existing
standards and develop new ones while carrying out open source software
development under Eclipse. The group has reiterated that the Aperi framework
will comply with the Storage Management Initiative Specification (SMI-S) and
will be certified at the latest SMI-S levels. In fact, Aperi is positioning
itself as the open source implementation of SMI-S. Through the Eclipse project,
Aperi says that technology vendors can enable their offerings to the Aperi
framework or contribute code to the open source project.
The news about Eclipse should be heartening to those who
like Aperi’s open source plus open standards approach. Eclipse is an
organization that has experience in managing the process of keeping multiple
vendors engaged and moving toward their goals. While SNIA and the SMI-S
standard have support from a wide range of vendors, they have suffered from process
inertia. In essence, it means that Aperi doesn’t have to recreate the open
source processes necessary to make the vision a reality. In addition to process
capabilities, Eclipse also has visibility in the developer, vendor, and user
spaces;; credibility with all three groups; extensive
experience in bringing projects to fruition; and distribution mechanisms, and
has constructed a community that turns to it as a trusted primary source of
open source software. Aperi’s decision to hitch itself to the Eclipse train
bodes well for its ability to move forward.
One cannot help but compare the Aperi group’s approach with the recent announcement taken by EMC, HP, HDS, Sun, and Symantec. This group, aka the Fab Five, also wants to see SMI-S continue, but has eschewed the use of open source, preferring to stay with open standards in combination with vendor-specific intellectual property. Putting aside the issue of whether open source is or is not the right approach, the composition of both groups is interesting. All the Fab Five participants are traditional storage and systems companies, albeit with interesting businesses within their portfolios. EMC has Documentum, although that has not played any role thus far, and it also has the potential of Smarts and VMWare in its approach. Symantec has the Veritas capabilities of value-added performance and optimization capabilities, and HP has OpenView. Aperi on the other hand has IBM, NetApp, Emulex and LSI Logic as traditional storage businesses, and IBM has its Tivoli and Director products. But Aperi also has the storage network players: Brocade, Cisco, and McData, and it has CA and Fujitsu, who both have systems management capabilities. The only piece missing is a document or information management provider who might take an interest in this approach. At any rate, Aperi has a wider range of players who focus on different aspects of management which means its approach will go in different directions to those of the Fab Five. Of course we hope this doesn’t turn into another battle for standards such as BetaMax versus VHS. In fact it reminds us of the words from the old Melanie song, “I’ve got a brand new pair of roller skates, you’ve got a brand new key.” We’d like them to get together and try each other out to see if they can create something that can benefit everyone.
iPod: Not Just for Music Anymore
Washington D.C. recently enabled Metro riders to download a
copy of the revised Fourth of July schedule to their iPods. Called “The
Revolutionary Map,” it was compatible with any color-screen iPod or Nano that
enables viewers to view photos or video. Holiday schedule changes could have
been confusing; having The Revolutionary Map would have been a boon to those
who are dependent upon the Metro to move around the city.
This is one of the latest attempts to prompt users to combine
information access functions into one platform. So far, the market hasn’t
seemed to wholeheartedly embrace the concept of several functions per device,
although sales haven’t been completely dead either. This may just be a concept
that needs some warming up to in order to see a widespread usage. But despite
the lack of market enthusiasm, companies keep trying to reduce all functions—phone,
calculator, music player, email service, Internet access, and
calendar/organizer—into one form factor. But perhaps content providers are
going about this the wrong way by aligning their content for use with only one
platform. If the market wants to go with several uses for one device, then
perhaps the market will want to choose which device is their primary function,
not have companies choose for them. Take, for example, the aforenamed iPods
getting maps and transit info downloaded for navigation help. In this case, the
user’s primary concern is, most likely, the tunes. Getting where they need to
go is, if the teens we know are any indication, a secondary consideration.
However, eventually getting to where they want to go will become an overriding
imperative, especially if it involves food or parental financial supplement.
One device for many different functions may be more efficient at times, but not
necessarily for all tasks. For example, scheduling an appointment while on the
phone almost guarantees that a person has to utilize two separate devices. But
having the option of which device by which to consume information is a valuable
consideration, one that perhaps eclipses the thought process of many content
providers.
And what about data security?
Companies that are offering widespread access to their maps and other
information must heed security nonetheless. The opening of defenses, even if
it’s only a crack, often invites hackers to take a stab at infiltration. A one-way
download of the subway map to an iPod is quite different from a two way
interaction with the accounts payable database through a mobile device; however,
all access to information must be guided through a secure, yet flexible
mentality. How happy would organizations be with corporate information being
held on a non-corporate device, no matter how seemingly innocent that
information? Does information downloaded to iPods follow corporate information
access rules? Or is that the job of iTunes or other DRM solutions? Transit maps are free and open to the public, but is the
combinations for the safe holding the fare machine cash collection keys to have
the same free and open access? As with all proprietary information it is
doubtful that Human Resources would like to have salary schedules eventually
end up floating around on someone’s iPod. The scenario may seem far-fetched,
but when one considers the numerous and potentially ugly data security breaches
that have occurred lately, it is not too much of a stretch of the imagination.
Just because you can doesn’t always mean you should. Washington D.C.’s endorsement of the iPod as “the” device to have (was anyone without an iPod aware of Metro schedule changes?) is curiously close to discrimination against of those not in the technological “know” or those who might just think that a mobile phone is a better device for getting transient, location-sensitive information. Afterall, few iPods feature two-way realtime communications, whereas this fits the mold of the mobile phone/browser to the T (sorry, Boston). And what about those who prefer to listen to an MP3? So while we applaud any government agency or NGO that seeks to distribute information in a new way beyond printing more paper, we puzzle about the need to closely align with a single consumption device, especially one that is not commonly associated with two-way realtime communication. Governmental baby steps into the technology arena should be applauded while at the same time closely monitored, just like everything else the government does.