IMTC Forum 2008 – Social Communication

 
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This is a full video of the following panel:
Enterprise and Social Networks – Boundaries and Opportunities

Social networks are no longer the sole domain of consumers and artists. LinkedIn and Facebook could provide benefit to business users – as well as change the way they learn about they competitors, and interact with employees, and partners. How does these players affect enterprise communication needs Panelists: Peter Saint-Andre, Director of Standards, Jabber & Anatoli Levine, Director of Product Management, RADVISION,  and IMTC President.

Moderator: Kfir Pravda, VP Marketing IMTC, CEO Pravda Media

About the writer: Kfir Pravda

Unified Communications Experts meet in San Francisco

Not Communicating to People in the Real World
Image by Wonderlane via Flickr

200810141607.jpgIMTC is having its annual event on the 12th and 13th of November. The event is focused on unified communication and the way it supports business processes in the enterprise, as well as the blurring lines between corporate systems and online applications.

We have great speakers at the event – starting with Joe Burton, CTO of unified communication group in Cisco, Matt Collier, SVP of LifeSize communications, Ty Wang, Senior director of Product Marketing at Oracle, Sridhar Vembu, CEO of Zoho, Hakon Dahla, CTO of Tandberg, and Anatoli Levine, IMTC President. The event covers both cutting edge technologies (such as the world beyond H264, Scalable video coding today, and conformance methodologies) as well as business issues such as unified communication beyond click to call, social networks and the enterprise, Multimedia and tele-health and many more.

It is an exciting event, taking place in an exciting location – St. Regis hotel in San Francisco (personally I am asking myself where is the nearest Apple store, after today’s announcements). I am moderating several panels in the first day, and will be there through the event.

If you are in this business, or want to meet in San Francisco, you should come and say Hi. Here is the agenda, and you can register here.

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About the writer: Kfir Pravda

Reference Architecture to the Rescue

Written By Anatoli Levine  

My CEO swears by Yahoo messenger. My R&D guys swear by Jabber. We have Cisco Call Manager connecting our offices in 15 countries and providing seamless voice connectivity. We use Polycom room systems in most of our conference room, however some of new Tandberg devices we connected just recently, also work quite well. We just equipped two of our boardrooms with brand new Telepresence systems from Telanetix. And our support department is really happy with their decision to use Skype to allow customers call in with questions for any place in the world. My Sales department is demanding that each sales director is always reachable on one and the same number, whether inside or outside of the corporate office, so I need to find an FMC solution for them. By now you probably figured that I’m in charge of information systems in my company, so I’m really the one who have to make this all work together. And hh yes, yesterday my friends got really upset with me – I didn’t have twitter installed on my brand corporate smartphone, so we couldn’t chat during the football game.

Sounds far fetching? I don’t think so. Today’s enterprise deploys myriad complex communications tools and technologies, all of which should function in concert. Does it always? No, not really, there is lots of work required and no success is guaranteed. What can help here? IMTC is proposing to define a reference architecture, a deployment blueprint which will define a minimum technological profile for the prospective equipment and recommend potential design of the network to make all the pieces to interoperate smoothly and successfully. Want to learn more about it? Come to VON.x in San Jose this week and participate in IMTC Panel “Reference Architectures for Content Delivery & Unified Communications” which will take place on Thursday, March 20 from 1:30pm – 2:45pm.

About the writer: Kfir Pravda

Let's talk about content delivery, vendors, creators and users – at IMTC Forum

Do you remember the times when service providers didn’t think about issues such as being a pipe versus media company? When media consumers could easily identify which device is used for video and which for audio? When content creators had to buy equipment in millions and millions of dollars just to create one minute of moving picture – and distribute it?

Well, these times are long gone. Today, technology is disrupting the whole industry – and its value chain. Content creators are making new innovative media products for a fraction of the cost, and distribute it independently. Availability of high bandwidth across networks poses a dilemma to service provider regarding their role in the market place, and which infrastructure will support an unclear future. Users consume media in various shapes and forms – often with intrusive content protection methods that affect their rights.

IMTC Forum will discuss these issues and more, with thought leaders from companies such as Radvision, Cisco, AT&T, BEA, Avaya, RealNetworks, FWD, and independent content creators. Panels cover perspectives of each industry player – vendors, users, content creators, service providers, and the link between content delivery and unified communication.

The event, a Fall VON pre-conference, is taking place in Boston on the 29th of October. Come to say Hello, and be a part of a controversial and insightful conversation.

(Cross posted here)

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About the writer: Kfir Pravda

Video Share – the work ahead

By Tsahi Levent-Levi

The first interoperability event for the IMS Activity Group, and now the real work begins. We know where we are and what we want to achieve.

There were 6 of us there. Companies with implementations of video share. It seems like each one has interpreted what are the requirements on the SIP level a bit differently, and this caused some issues. We had issues in various messages that were sent as well as with accessing and registering to a P-CSCF (a SIP server). I wouldn’t delve here into details, but I’d like to say that we’ve made some good progress this week.

The general feeling in the group is that now we have substance to talk about, and a lot of work ahead of us.

Testing outside for better network receptionSo what’s next?

  1. We need to start drafting out the baseline scenario test case with as much detail as possible – especially in the areas where we found issues between companies. Having that would assist us in our next steps and will provide a good starting point for new members.
  2. Outline the requirements from operators and IMS core networks. We had some issues with the 3G network we used and its firewall configurations. As we plan to have more events in the future, we better get these requirements into an official working document for our group.
  3. See if we can somehow find a solution that would allow our group to test not only during face to face events, but also remotely throughout the year.
  4. We’re already planning the next event. We’re targeting the beginning of 2008 for it. I am sure we will make good progress there.

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About the writer: Kfir Pravda