Telepresence Interoperability Protocol Webinar

Update – TIP Webinar was a success – thanks for everyone who participated!
For more information about Telepresence Interoperability, check our TIP Page.

Earlier this year Cisco & Tandberg made headlines by demonstrating industry’s first immersive multi-screen Interoperability using Telepresence Interoperability Protocol (TIP).
In September of this year, IMTC took ownership for TIP and has established a new Activity Group.
The TIP AG  is responsible for the ongoing development of the TIP specification, TIP open source project management, and related development of interoperability tests between TIP adopters.
The TIP Activity Group is co-chaired by representatives from Polycom, AT&T & Cisco and has many members from companies in IMTC today.

IMTC will host a kick off Webinar on December 8, 2010 at 10 AM EST. This webinar will be a brief glimpse into the TIP Activity group and its vision. The webinar is free and open to all.

Please pre-register and access the TIP webinar from the following Webex link: https://ciscosales.webex.com/ciscosales/onstage/g.php?d=206589063&t=a

After the kickoff the Activity Group will have periodic, online meetings to steer the development of TIP. The group will also hold occasional face to face meetings as well as participate in multi-vendor test events, such as IMTC’s SuperOp.

TIP AG is an opportunity for your organization to participate in development of Telepresence Interoperability and leverage the benefits to offer Interoperable products and services.
For more information and inquiries, please contact us via mail at tip_infor@imtc.org
Membership to TIP AG is open only to IMTC members. To become a member of the IMTC and the TIP AG, please visit http://imtc.org/membership/join.asp

TIP Webinar Agenda December 8, 2010 10:00AM EST

  • 10:00 -10:10 Minutes IMTC Intro (Anatoli Levin, President IMTC)
  • 10:10 -10:30 Minutes TIP Overview (David Benham, Co-Chair TIP Activity Group)
  • 10:30 -10:35 Call for Membership (Louise Olson & Sumit Kumar, Co-Chairs TIP Activity Group)
  • 10:35-10:45 Q&A
IMTC TIP Introduction 

View more presentations from IMTC.


About the writer: Itzhak Wolkowicz

Telepresence Buzz – A week in Telepresence Marketing

Who is the leader of online Telepresence mind-share?

Telepresence isn’t new, the term dates back to the 80’s and the fundamental technology behind it isn’t new either.
The widespread usage of the term, however, is clearly new.
Only in the last few years Telepresence became popular in mainstream media:
This is partly to the fact that major players in the video-conferencing world offers Telepresence solutions, but much more importantly – it’s a direct result of marketing efforts made by them.
But who exactly leads this Telepresence revolution, and who own the digital marketing of the Telepresence industry?

The Contenders

Cisco - One of the world leaders in Networking, Data-Center and Consumer electronics. Cisco Telepresence line introduced in 2006, offers complete room solution with future interoperability through the TIP protocol.
Tandberg - A well established company with video-conferencing products dates back to the 90’s. Tandberg released their Telepresence solution in 2007 and was acquired by Cisco in 2009.
HPOne of the worlds largest IT companies – manufacturer of PC, Printers, Digital cameras, Servers, Software solutions and more – HP “Halo” studio considered one of the first Telepresence solutions and differs from competition by providing not only the hardware, but also the network infrastructure. This makes Halo an expensive (but also very reliable) product.
PolycomA manufacturer of Video-Conferencing and Audio products, Polycom introduced it’s RPX Telepresence line in 2006.
TelirisA privately owned company specialized in Telepresence equipment. Teliris delopyed it’s first telepresence solution back in 2001.
DVEA privately owned company specialized in video-conferencing solutions and known for it’s 3D Telepresence solution – The DVE Immersion Room.
DVE’s first HD telepresence solution dates back to 1999!
BrightcomEstablished in 2005, Brightcom manafucture HD & SD Telepresence and Video-conferencing solutions. Brightcom offers its Lumina Telepresence system with screens up to 85inch size.

Results

In this post we are talking about Telepresence Buzz, and how the buzz helps defining the market.
Our “Buzz” rating is based on weekly mentions in online media:
We checked how many times the word Telepresence was mentioned next to each brand to see which Telepresence products are being mentioned over the Internet and how many times. These are the statistics from the the beginning of November (01/11/10 – 07/11/10). We will continue checking these results to see how does new product lines and PR announcements effect each company web-presence.
Not mentioned in this report are Magor and TelepresenceTech, they will be examined however in later articles.

Source: Viralheat.com

First Place – 525 Weekly mentions – Cisco
Cisco knows how to market their products very well and actively seeking to make the word Telepresence known in every household.
The company used descriptive naming and named its Telepresence line -“TelePresence”.
Today, It’s no secret that when people think of Telepresence, Cisco is usually the first name that  comes to mind.
Cisco invests a lot of money in using Telepresence systems for humanitarian aid, distance learning and Telemedicine – They even use Telepresence to broadcast live music events.
The main spotlight for the TelePresence brand however is Television – From CNN to TV series like “24” and “30 Rock”, Cisco’s TelePresece is everywhere.
On the online front, other than maintaining an active telepresence blog, Cisco introduced a Telepresence calculator to help costumers to understand its ROI.
And to set things into proportions – The term “Cisco Telepresence Calculator” itself, is more popular on Google than “Tandberg Telepresence”, for example.
This month, with the announcement of Umi, Cisco made another big step to promote their Telepresence brand.
Umi, which is a home video-conferencing device, was named “Home Telepresence” – It’s safe to assume that Cisco will continue to make efforts to take ownership of the home Telepresence concept – out of the 33,300 Google results for “Home Telepresence”, only 517 does not mention Cisco.
One can say that Cisco tries to own the name “TelePresence” , and thus promote it’s Telepresence brand to the same status as “Coca Cola” or “Rollerblades”.
For now, that works well.

Second Place – 33 Weekly mentions – Polycom
Polycom was once considered the main rival for Tandberg in the Telepresence field, but after Tandberg was acquired by Cisco the situation changed a bit and in order to compete in this new situation Polycom chose to partner with multiple companies such as Microsoft and Juniper. Polycom partnerships create a strong web presence, their name was mentioned multiple times this week in regards to the IBM Unified Communications integration. It seems that the only company that can possibly create as much buzz as Cisco is Polycom, with the help of their business partners.

Third Place – 11 Weekly mentions – Tandberg
Tandberg is now a part of Cisco but they still maintain a web-presence of their own. Tandberg Telepresence products has been recently demonstrated to support TIP and that PR announcement had the most mentions of the Tandberg brand.

The Rest -

HP was one of the first big companies to offer a Telepresence solution and a managed network infrastructure, however it seems that nobody knows about it – or that nobody cares.
While Cisco put product placements at 24, 30 Rock and CSI – HP clearly isn’t a Buzzmaker.
The last PR I’ve read and relates to HP Telepresence was HP partnership with Vidyo to extend it’s visual communications to the desktop level.

BrightCom isn’t as big as the previous companies mentioned, as it’s a privately owned company dealing exclusively with Video-Conferencing and Telepresence.

Teliris and DVE are among the first to deploy Telepresence systems. Both companies are innovative, both offers 3D telepresence solution and both are generally absent from web mentions.

What can we learn from the results?

It’s quite clear that Cisco activly trying to appropriate Telepresence for itself. They began with the use of the term “TelePresence” as their product name and continue with naming Umi as “Home Telpresence”.
Cisco products appear in TV series like 24, CSI, NCIS and 30 Rock – When Telepresence being mentioned in a TV show, it’s probably Cisco’s.
This amount of commitment is absent from industry giants like HP. Budget wise it’s probably not even possible for the smaller competitors – Where does that leave anyone other than Cisco? This is the battle for the Internet, and when Marc Trachtenberg has to explain that he is the “CEO and co-founder of the company that installed the first telepresence solution for business use. Before you even think it – NOOOOO Cisco did NOT start the telepresence industry” – It’s not an easy battle.

In the next posts we’ll examine the Internet footprint of each of the key players, Stay tuned.

To return to IMTC blog, please press here.
About the writer: Itzhak Wolkowicz

Industry News Summary – Polycom, Microsoft, Avaya and Glowpoint


Polycom and Microsoft strengthen relationships
Polycom continues to strengthen its co-operation with Microsoft, the Unified Communication supplier inked an agreement with Microsoft for suppling Unified Communication products.
Microsoft offer products in the software side – Office and Microsoft Communication Server, Exchange Server and Active Directory services.

Tandberg Movi 4.0 platform released
Now with Mac support, Movi 4.0 is the latest in the company personal video conferencing products.  Movi supports connectivity to the higher end Telepresence systems by Tandberg, bitrate adaptation and h264 recovery techniques.

Avaya CEO talks about the Flare and video conferencing
In a PCWORLD interview, Avaya CEO talks about the Flare Platform and Video conferencing in general.
Telepresence Options wrote a great article about the Avaya “Mojo”, the new video tablet device which is a part of the Flare Platform.

A step towards Unified Communications?
Polycom merges its Video, Telepresence and Voice development units into a single R&D unit for the corporate market.

Middle-Man Interoperability?
VoIP Watch blogger, Andy Abramson talks about a different approach to interoperability – having a middle-man.  Glowpoint do just that, on the cloud, with their ability to connect video-conferencing equipment from different makers into hosted meetings. As a managed service in a not-yet interoperable world – it does sound interesting.

Gmail Video Chat getting sharper
Google boosted their video quality in their latest Gmail Labs addition. The modification brings up the quality to WVGA standards.

LTE on the cheap, MetroPCS new 4G plan in Las Vegas
4G without smartphones? For MetroPCS this seems like an ideal solution with a Samsung Craft phone (with its own intergraded operation system, which is not Android/Symbian based) and LTE support. MetroPCS offers a cheap mobile device with a cheap data plan – this seems to fit their current user base.

About the writer: Itzhak Wolkowicz

Presentation – Tandberg Telepresence Solutions

IMTC Requirements WG Chair Patrick Luthi talked about Tandgerb Telepresence solutions and future requirements for Telepresence systems.
View more presentations from IMTC.
Enhanced by Zemanta
About the writer: Anatoli Levine

IMTC SuperOp! 2010 – Interoperability. Evolving

And so another busy week became a history. IMTC SuperOp!, annual industry flagship interoperability testing event, brought together more than 50 engineers from 14 companies from around the world in a small town of Jesi in Italy, to continue enhancing interoperability of multimedia communications products.

SuperOp Testings

Of course you can not drive forward by constantly looking into a rearview mirror. Not looking in to that mirror at all is also dangerous ( especially for those who likes to drive fast :) ).
Reflecting on the past, it is easy to see how much the level of interoperability improved and evolved. Decade ago, an hour long testing time slot was spent on properly registering with the server, and then may be making one successful simple call (or not). Video did look decent on a small screen ( with huge piece of hardware behind it to make it work).
The term “HD Video” was not even coined yes. And the term “telepresence” was unheard of, at least in the practical terms. SuperConnect, a culmination point of a week-long testing, which was connecting all devices passed the preliminary testing, would take more than half a day to achieve.
Fast forward 10 years. To cut the chase as anyone in the industry can figure out the particulars, the SuperConnect 2010, consisting of about 35 endpoints and servers, including a 3-screen telepresence system, took about 37 minutes from start to finish, with brilliant High Definition Video shining all over the room.

Inter-operable Indeed!

Can we now gleefully rest on laurels and declare “mission accomplished”? You guessed it right, the simple two letter answer is “no”. Video communication is only starting to become personal and getting into homes. Mobile video communication is still largely non-existent, and both personal and mobile communication being extremely clustered (read: uninteroperable) as the very least. We are starting (only now) to define telepresence standards which will later on lead to the interoperable implementations. The work just started in various IMTC Activity Groups on other important communication technologies, such as VoLTE and Live Streaming over HTTP. All in all, there is a lot of exciting work ahead of us on making the world better connected (and, therefore, smaller) place – so come on over and will see you all next year at IMTC SuperOp! 2011!
Enhanced by Zemanta
About the writer: Anatoli Levine