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  • Toshiba Integrates VoIP System With Microsoft OCS RCC


    Toshiba’s telecommunication division has announced integration of Microsoft Office Communications Server (OCS) 2007 Remote Call Control (RCC) capabilities with its Toshiba Strata CIX family of VoIP business communication systems.

    Brian Metherell, vice president and general manager of Toshiba America Information Systems, Telecommunication Systems Division, said that with the integration, enterprise users of Toshiba’s Strata CIX family of VoIP business communication systems can Click-to-Dial from Microsoft OCS 2007 using a Toshiba Strata telephone device.

    He said it is compatible with Toshiba’s most popular IP and digital telephones as well as Toshiba’s SoftIPT softphone.

    Users also gain telephony status information for other callers on the Strata CIX system, viewable from their Microsoft OCS Enhanced Presence screen.

    "In providing an integrated solution with Microsoft OCS 2007, Toshiba is delivering on its promise to expand its Unified Communications offerings by giving customers a choice in how they communicate with their Toshiba Strata CIX VoIP system," he said.

    The Toshiba Strata CIX VoIP system is available through authorized Toshiba dealers.

  • VoxOx Improves VoIP Freeware


    VoxOx is offering new freeware that comes with a Personal Assistant feature that includes call recording, call forwarding, call routing, and call screening.

    The multi-protocol messaging and VoIP communication client also has expanded social-networking features and stronger back-end support.

    The Personal Assistant feature introduced in the new version can also be set to answer all calls, route calls based on caller, as well as more standard uniform call routing.

    It also offers the ability to listen in on voicemails as they’re being recorded and users can set personalized ringback tones.

    With the new version VoxOx is setting out its stall as a one-stop communication hub.

    Instant messaging support has been expanded in the improvements to Facebook IM, MySpace IM, Gadu Gadu, and Skype.

    E-mail address book contacts can now be imported from Google, Hotmail, AOL, Mac, and Outlook address books.

    Both inbound and outbound faxes are included as part of VoxOx’s free feature set.

    The program automatically converts text documents to fax-appropriate signals when you’re sending out. Incoming faxes are received as PDFs.

    The freeware is available for Windows and Mac.

  • WCell Joins Mobile VoIP App Market


    WCell International has announched that its VoIP calling platform is now available for download on a variety of mobile operating systems, including BlackBerry, Java, Windows Mobile and Symbian.

    The Hong Kong-based application for mobile devices is awaiting approval by Apple for listing in the iPhone App Store.

    WCell claims it offers comparable or better voice call quality than its many competitors in the mobile VoIP applications world.

    The company says it does this while also delivering cost savings against market leaders such as Skype.

    It is planning to differentiate itself from the big names such as Skype, fring, Nimbuzz and Truphone by targeting retail handset sales.

    WCell wants to have 10 million paying customers of the service by November this year.

    Ish Paneet Singh, vice president at Wcell International, said that Wcell’s pay-as-you-go rates are at least 60 per cent cheaper than Skype’s.

  • Smartphones for Business User

    The mobile phone market in the UK is unrecognisable now from what it was like two decades ago. The technology included in mobile phones changes frequently and the market has to change accordingly to include the new advances in technology, and to meet the ever-increasing demands of consumers.

    A smartphone is a combination of a mobile phone and personal digital assistant (PDA) that offers advanced features and functions to the user. They are usually aimed at business people who tend to require more advanced features for their phone than a standard mobile offers. The four smartphones explored below include features and functions such as a QWERTY keyboard, WiFi, Bluetooth, Camera, Video Conferencing, GPS, Internet, applications and e-mail.

    One of the best smartphones on the market at the moment has to be the Apple iPhone 3G. Complete with 16GB of usable memory, a sleek design and an excellent interface, the iPhone is an excellent smartphone possessing many features. It sports a two mega pixel camera that can take pictures of a decent quality, 3G to allow for easy access to the Internet, and access to Apple`s fantastic application store. The App store contains excellent applications suitable for all different types of users, particularly business people. The addition of a touch-screen keyboard, GPS through Google maps, and the inclusion of both bluetooth and WiFi, means this is a smartphone possessing all the key features a business user would desire. However, the battery tends to get "zapped" very quickly and usage is restricted to selected phone networks in the UK i.e. O2, which makes the device less appealing but still perfectly adequate for a business user.

    The Palm Treo 800w comes with the addition of WiFi and GPS when compared to previous Treo Smartphones. The design when compared to its competitors is fantastic. It is ideal for business users, but like the iPhone, possesses the problem that the battery can get used up very quickly if the device is used frequently.

    Another leading smartphone is the RIM BlackBerry Curve 8320. This smartphone is only available on the T-Mobile network, but does possess WiFi, fantastic design for a smartphone, and excellent performance.

    The Nokia E71 is another smartphone ideally suited to business users. Including a fully integrated QWERTY keyboard, 3G, Bluetooth, a USB port, a microSD card slot allowing an additional 8GB of memory to be gained, WiFi, radio, GPS, a wide screen, a superior battery life in comparison to the other smartphones reviewed above, and a 3.2 mega-pixel camera, this smartphone does it all and looks fantastic with its ultra-slim stainless steel design. broadband speed test. However, this all comes at a price, with the Nokia E71 costing £30 a month on 18 month contract, or £280 just for the handset on Pay As You Go through O2. However, this would be the ideal smartphone for a business user to own, if of course they can afford it.

     
    Jessica McArdle is Marketing Manager of Top-10 broadband
    Top-10 Broadband is an independent broadband comparison site and essential resource for anyone looking for information about broadband. Whether you are looking to buy a broadband package, find out the latest developments in the broadband industry or understand more about how broadband works and the options available, Top 10 Broadband can help.
  • EMC Completes Acquisition of Data Domain


    EMC Corporation has finally overcome rival NetApp and succeeded with its bid to buy data deduplication leader Data Domain at a price of USD $2.1 billion.

    The acceptance of the final offer comes after a six-week bidding war and will raise questions about whether EMC overpaid for Data Domain – and what NetApp will do now.

    EMC’s final offer of USD $33.50 per share for Data Domain is a lofty figure compared to the $18 its stock was trading for before NetApp’s first bid May 20.

    NetApp went on to offer of USD $25 per share before increasing that to USD $30 after EMC joined the fray.

    While EMC could be accused of overpaying, deduplication is viewed as a growing segment of the storage market and Data Domain offers some very good technology.

    For NetApp there do appear to be other potential acquisition targets to bring it into the data deduplication/backup space, including CommVault, FalconStor, Quantum and Sepaton.

    The challenge facing EMC now is to decide how to bring Data Domain to market.

    With businesses storing 50 per cent more data each year, according to some market research estimates, EMC is betting the acquisition will pay off.

    Joe Tucci, EMC chairman, president and CEO, said: "This is a compelling acquisition from both a strategic and financial standpoint.

    "We look forward to bringing Data Domain together with EMC to form a powerful force in next-generation disk-based backup and archive."

  • BlueArc Unleashes High-end Network Storage Solution


    BlueArc has launched its Mercury series network storage platform in a bid to address the storage challenges faced by many midsize companies.

    Michael Gustafson, president and CEO of BlueArc, said that as the volume of unstructured, file-based data continues to explode, and retention and archiving demands increase, companies of all sizes are struggling to keep pace.

    He said that while traditional network storage solutions have offered some relief, they have resulted in the unintended creation of storage silos, filer sprawl, poor utilization rates and lagging performance.

    BlueArc Mercury has been designed to address these storage inefficiencies with a powerful file system and hardware platform that allows companies to consolidate users, applications and storage systems in order to lower the total cost of ownership (TCO) of their storage infrastructure, all without giving up performance.

    "Many midsize companies face enterprise-sized storage challenges and until now, traditional solutions have created unintended downstream challenges and costs," said Gustafson.

    "The Mercury Series brings the power of five generations of proven BlueArc technology to the customer who’s unwilling to compromise on price, scalability or performance."

    The Mercury platform is the first to deliver the company’s advanced file system performance and crucial data management functionality at a midmarket price point.

    Mercury’s performance and scalability support greater utilization of storage infrastructure to increase storage efficiency and promote consolidation.

    At the heart of Mercury is SiliconFS, BlueArc’s field-proven and award-winning file system. SiliconFS is the central engine that manages all data movement within Mercury, delivering sustained, predictable performance across the storage infrastructure.

    It includes a comprehensive virtualization tool set which simplifies administration of the file system, as well as enabling BlueArc Intelligent Tiered Storage.

    Intelligent Tiered Storage comprises BlueArc Data Migration and Dynamic Read Caching capabilities, which are supported by policy-based management functionality.

    These advanced features allow administrators to set policies based on common file attributes or access patterns to ensure that data is automatically and transparently migrated to the appropriate tier of storage—optimizing cost and performance.

    Bridget Warwick, vice president of marketing at BlueArc, said more and more, customers have created tiers of storage within their infrastructures in order to match the value of the content being stored to the right-value storage tier.

    "However, what they have found is that it is tremendously difficult, if not impossible, to actually move the data from one tier and system to another," she said.

    "With BlueArc’s built-in intelligent tiering, customers can employ policies to quickly and transparently move data from one tier to another without affecting system performance or requiring administrative time."

    When delivered through the BlueArc Mercury platform, SiliconFS helps customers consolidate their unwieldy legacy storage environments, improve their storage utilization ratios, and simplify the administration of their infrastructure, all of which result in cost savings and reduced complexity.

  • Texas Announces Microsoft Certification of RamSan-500 SSD


    Texas Memory Systems has announced that its RamSan-500 solid state disk system has been certified as interoperable with Microsoft’s Windows Server 2008.

    The RamSan-500 is an enterprise-class cached Flash storage system that delivers high performance, large capacity storage more economically than adding a similar capacity high-end hard disk-based RAID system.

    The SSD system can deliver more than sixteen times the performance while using 50 per cent less power.

    Woody Hutsell, president of Texas Memory Systems, said maintaining interoperability with all major platforms is vital as its customers’ IT environments continue to evolve rapidly.

    He said more demanding applications are being built on the powerful Windows Server 2008 platform.

    "The RamSan’s ability to solve most I/O bottlenecks and improve transaction rate increases customers’ overall IT return on investment by enabling more responsive applications and a richer experience for more concurrent users," he said.

    Hutsell said the RamSan-500 delivers 100,000 I/Os per second (IOPS) sustained random read, 25,000 IOPS sustained random writes, and two gigabytes per second of sustained random read or write bandwidth, yet only consumes 250 watts of power.

    The system can be SAN-attached with up to eight 4-gigabits per second Fibre Channel ports.

    Multiple RamSan-500s can be combined to deliver additional high-performance capacity.

  • Freecom Adds RFID to HDD


    Freecom has launched an external HDD that requires the use of a keycard to get access to its data.

    Admission to the Hard Drive Secure is controlled by an RFID card which has to be swiped over the HDD to lock it – and again to unlock it.

    Freecom said that entry is possible "within seconds". The company provides two RFID cards with the drive.

    Freecom’s Hard Drive Secure is available now in four capacities, ranging from 500GB to 2TB.

    Prices start at USD $120.

  • WhipTail Introduces 6TB SSD Tier 0 Storage Appliance


    WhipTail Technologies has launched a 6TB SSD appliance which it claims provides mid- to large-sized enterprises with the highest-capacity SSD tier 0 appliance with the smallest footprint.

    Manufactured as a 2 rack unit (2U), WhipTail is now available in 1.5, 3.0 and 6.0 TB and varying levels of redundancies.

    It is best suited for enterprises with poorly performing databases, over-taxed virtualization storage pools and underperforming email systems.

    The company said that, when compared with traditional storage, the WhipTail SSD appliance:

    • Accelerates the delivery of data by a factor of 10
    • Reduces report run time by a factor of 10
    • Provides up to a 90 percent energy savings
    • Reduces the data center footprint by 60 percent
    • Reduces database report generation and load time by 90 percent

    WhipTail pricing starts at USD $46,000 for a 1.5 TB system.

    Ed Rebholz, CEO of WhipTail Technologies, said one of Tier 0 storage’s downfalls to date has been the perception within the industry that it’s too expensive.

    "Since WhipTail’s introduction earlier this year, we’ve already made significant strides in helping our industry peers to gain a new perspective," he said.

    "And in introducing the 6TB capacity, not only is WhipTail setting the bar for performance, footprint and affordability, but now we’re the SSD capacity leader."

  • Opt-In Subscriber Database "Crucial" To Mobile Operator Ad Revenues

    INTERVIEW: Mobile operators are searching for new and innovative ways to generate revenues beyond service plans.

    Julien Oudart, sales and marketing director for French mobile advertising company Sofialys, tells smartphone.biz-news about the opportunities open to carriers from opt-in subscriber databases.

    There is no doubt that mobile operators are facing plenty of challenges in today’s rapidly evolving telecommunications ecosystem.

    But Julien Oudart, sales and marketing director for French mobile advertising company Sofialys, believes there are plenty of opportunities for operators to monetize their offerings beyond service plans.

    He said carriers in Europe are still a big part of the value chain and have made steady progress in taking "a piece of the advertising action" through offering services such as mobile video and mobile games.

    "All these things work technically. Now it’s a matter of attracting brands," he said.

    Volumes on games and video are still low for mobile, but Oudart said he was confident this would change.

    "We will get there as more people connect to these services," he said. "Mobile has it all in one device. You get video, games, a phone – different options."

    This opens up opportunities for creating cross-media content, but Oudart said the key element is access to subscribers.

    "I think an opt-in database is crucial," he said.

    Especially so since legislators in the US are saying it is illegal to push campaigns to people without their consent – effectively making it spam.

    By tapping their user base to sell to pan-European advertisers, Oudart said operators were in a good position to generate additional revenues.

    Consumer Attitudes

    He said consumers are willing to opt-in and be exposed to advertising if – and this is the important bit – they get something attractive in return.

    "We always try and be transparent. So when we sign someone up there is no pre-ticked box which will then see them receive spam," he said.

    "We explain to people that they will receive promotions. It is then up to them to say yes or no."

    The lure for consumers, according to Oudart is the promotions and coupons they receive for different brands and goods.

    To be effective these have to be correctly targeted based on people’s user profiles.

    "I don’t think people are against being exposed to brands," he said. "What matters is that relevant brands reach people and to communicate to the right segment."

    Another element to specific targeting is geo-tagging, something the French mobile operator SFR has been trialling with a few thousand subscriber volunteers from its user database.

    Four companies were signed up for the trial, including a restaurant chain and jewellery chain.

    Oudart said everytime a user passes one of the participating businesses, a 20 per cent discount coupon might be pushed to their handset, or they are served an ad for the relevant outlet.

    "Geo-location services will be important," he said.

    However, he stressed that it’s vital not to annoy users by bombarding them with messages – Sofialys always asks how many messages someone wants to receive in a week, according to Oudart.

    Headquartered in Paris, the supplier of mobile marketing and advertising solutions was formed six years ago as a technology provider to help operators and publishers monetize mobile portals across Europe, Asia, Middle East and the US.

    Its biggest customer is SFR, which owns a 20 per cent stake in the company, but it also works with a pool of mobile publishers and agencies.

    Expanding Horizons

    However, Oudart said Sofialys is beginning to expand its operations with other operators and clients around Europe.

    He said there are several possibilities in the UK and they have just signed a partnership contract with Adfrap, a UK-based full service mobile agency.

    "For us it’s an interesting step into the UK market," he said. "It generates between 80-100 million pages views every month.
    "When you reach significant volumes like this it starts to be interesting."

    Oudart said they have also signed up a pool of dot.com publishers and are working with a couple of sales houses in the UK.

    In general terms mobile advertising has not been that badly affected by the economic situation, according to Oudart, and continues to grow at a healthy rate.

    Its buoyancy has been boosted by the iPhone, which he said has "shaken up everything".

    The Apple handset has done a lot to drive up mobile broadband use – something that Oudart believes is both an opportunity and a challenge.

    He said it creates more volumes – but because it is easier for the likes of Google and Yahoo to put ads on the iPhone, the entry barrier has been lowered.

    "We know how mobile works and we can bring value to this," he said. "But more people can now do what we do – that’s why we are trying to differentiate ourselves."