TheVoIPDir.com

Archive for the ‘Video Conferencing’ Category

Switchvox IP PBX from Asterisk

Tuesday, March 24th, 2009

The next generation of business phone systems

Find out more about Switchvox today!

Switchvox is everything that you don’t expect from a PBX. It’s truly affordable, easy to set up, simple to configure, and a breeze to maintain.

It has features that let your business run more effectively and with fewer hassles. And it does all of this for a fraction of the cost of the PBX dinosaurs of the past.

Switchvox is so much more than just an office phone system. Its a revolution in business communications, putting you in control of your most important asset in business, your voice.

With this incredible leap in technology comes astounding cost-savings for your business, integration capability that you never thought possible, and the flexibility to meet the needs of whatever industry that you’re in.

Top 10 benefits to move to the IP PBX

Tuesday, March 24th, 2009

An IP PBX is a telephony system that provides telephone calls over IP based data networks. All calls are sent as data packets over the network. It is a software based IP telephony system connects more than one IP/SIP softphone or hardware based phones registered with IP PBX system to route the internal as well as external calls.

1. Easy to Set-up
An IP PBX is software on installed a computer and can manage the advanced processing power of the computer and user interface as well as operating system’s features. Anyone, who has basic knowledge of networking and computers can install and manage an IP PBX.

2. Cost Saving
You can easily use VoIP service provider’s facility for long distance and international calls that significantly saving in your monthly communication expenses. You can reduce communication cost between your branch offices and also save money that you might need to pay for hardware based PBX system to each and every office location.

3. Roaming & Hot Desking
You can roam anywhere with your IP PBX and able control, manage each and every call and you can keep yourself connected with your office buddies, family and friends while you are moving.
You can easily move your office location according to task and functions. Simply take your phone and your desk anywhere in the world and work as you where working. No new-setup and patching required as you were doing with your traditional PBXs.

4. Scalability
An IP PBX telephony system can easily manage a large numbers and variety of phone lines and extensions with no more extra efforts or expenses to expand your communication network.

5. Better Service & productivity
You can deliver better customer services and productivity using less expensive IP PBX system. Using IP PBX advanced features i.e. click-n-call, Voicemail, integration with other related software etc. you can improve and expand your service to satisfy your clients and customers.

6. Bye-Bye to ‘vendor lock in’
All IP PBXs are open standard therefore you can mix softphones, SIP/IP based hardware, PSTN gateways and VoIP providers to reach out to your communication needs.

7: Easy to Administer
An IP PBX can be administered via a GUI based web based control panel. It allows you to maintain and fine tune your entire phone system for better utilization of your available communication resources.

8. More Features with No Extra Price.
Since your IP PBX comes with lots of easy to use and customizable rich feature sets including voice mails, group calling, interactive voice response system and more without paying more money for each feature you use.

9. Better phone usability
No need to learn and train to configure and use IP PBX if you know computer basics and some sort of knowledge of networking. It has very easy and user friendly GUI interface with step-by-step wizards. You can utilize all of your communication resources to reach out your tasks and can have better control over all VoIP devices using IP PBX.

10. No More Wire Web
Software based IP PBX system allows you to connect softphone installed devices or IP/SIP hardware based phone devices using standard ports that eliminate cable webs in and around your office locations.

Thames Valley Police chooses LifeSize to provide force-wide HD video communications

Monday, March 9th, 2009

Austin, Tex. – Feb. 16, 2009 – Thames Valley Police, one of the largest Home Office police services in England, selected LifeSize Communications, the global leader in high definition video communications, to provide high definition video conference & telepresence solutions to connect the service’s 16 police stations, improve force-wide operations and increase community security.

“LifeSize has really proven itself by expanding our ability to communicate with the right people at the right time,” said Mick Walsh, Systems and Information Supervisor for Thames Valley Police. “There has been lots of mileage saved and the uses for the technology continue to grow.”

Thames Valley Police covers an area of over 2200 square miles and a population of 2.1 million. The force currently employs over 8,000 people and is made up of 16 police stations split into five Basic Command Units (BCUs) - Oxfordshire, Berkshire West, Berkshire East, Buckinghamshire and Milton Keynes.

With the large number stations and staff, three to four daily briefings between locations is an absolute necessity to keep operations running smoothly. A limited video conferencing system was deployed nearly a decade earlier, but due to the poor video quality, choppy audio and overall unreliability, the systems went virtually unused. Thames Valley contacted local authorized reseller Quadrant Visual Solutions Ltd to demonstrate the LifeSize HD video conferencing solution.

Using high definition, easy to use LifeSize systems, Thames Valley conducts routine operations briefings over video, plus numerous ad hoc meetings throughout the day. And through the use of the built-in H.239 data sharing capability, documents and evidence can be shown to a solicitor of the court for a case involving an accused party being held at the police station, eliminating the need for high-risk, labor-intensive prisoner transfers.

“LifeSize is honored to be chosen by the Thames Valley Police as their provider of high definition video communications systems,” said Craig Malloy, CEO, LifeSize Communications. “When public safety officials put LifeSize products to work in daily mission-critical operations, it demonstrates confidence in the quality and reliability of our products and showcases the value and utility of HD video. The true power of video is realized when it can be deployed widely and used easily, and with more than 20 LifeSize systems installed, the Thames Valley Police are at the leading edge of the HD video revolution.”

A complete case study detailing the Thames Valley Police implementation of LifeSize high definition video conferencing equipment can be found at:

http://www.lifesize.com/solutions/case_studies

Hosted PBX Systems: The Guide

Monday, March 2nd, 2009

hosted_pbx

A hosted PBX system is a VoIP phone system that you can have by rent or on lease on a monthly or yearly basis, removes the need to buy costly devices. Most of the devices are hosted by the service provider, and all communication is routed through that provider to and from your company’s site. Normally, this system has the advantage of being very easy to predict in terms of cost of operation, and it is also easier to install and get up and running than all competing systems. A hosted PBX solution can also be cheaper to operate, but as usage and number of users increases, the cost advantages of hosted PBX systems typically disappear.
PBX is the switching system that manages calls between internal or local users. It also shares a number of lines that connect to the external public phone system and parcels them out as needed to the local users. In addition, enterprise PBX systems have other features that allow them to take incoming calls, send them to the correct extensions, connects calls to answering services and so on.

The PBX was typically a piece of device at the company’s physical location, hidden in a storage cupboard. Connections came in to the PBX from the external phone system and lines ran from it to all the phone extensions in the business. In a hosted PBX system, that model is extended, with the PBX itself stored at a remote location by the service provider. The service provider manages the system and the business just needs phones — usually obtained from the service provider.

Hosted PBX systems run on IP networks, meaning that they use the same circuitry and wiring as your company’s data network. They pass information back and forth via the same ways as any office network or the Internet itself. The advantages of this setup are that your company only needs one set of cabling in its office for all communication needs, data and voice networks can cross-communicate with one another more easily, and you probably only need one person to administer and maintain the voice and data networks.

With a hosted PBX, your company will typically be provided with a special router or switch that attaches to the network and is then connected to the outside world. This switch or router communicates directly with the hosting service that provides the hosted PBX. Sometimes this connection is made over the public Internet using secure protocols, and other services provide a dedicated connection that operates just like the Internet. However, this connection is private and restricted to provide better bandwidth, security and service levels.

When a call is made, the phone connects to the IP network, and then gets switched out to the remote hosted service, which launches what number is being called and creates a connection via VoIP protocols across IP networks or via the traditional phone system. The remote service can also create other connections, interact with the call in other ways and, in general, provide enhanced services.

The benefits of this system are that it is easy for the service provider to upgrade the system and that very little local infrastructure is needed at your office location. The drawbacks are that your company loses some control and that a staff member cannot easily customize the system.

The specific benefits of a hosted PBX solution are:
•    A cleaner and simpler infrastructure
•    Lower operating costs
•    Simplified devices and maintenance
•    Unified communications
•    Improved scalability and growth
•    Improved features for business operations
•    Cost
Hosted PBX systems differ considerably in cost, but prices have been coming down for the past couple of years, due to rapidly increasing competition in the small-business market. Even so, they’re very unlikely below the current lower end of the price range, as that is forthcoming parity with common low-end pricing for the most basic residential phone systems. Prices typically range from about $25 per month, per user to as high as $200 per month, per user for expensive, high-end solutions. There are often additional one-time setup costs, and the lower costs do not always include device. Some vendors give device on hire bases, some include the rental in the monthly fee and others require companies to buy device.
If your business is upgrading from a traditional phone system, it will certainly save money with a hosted PBX solution. If there is any uncertainty in terms of call volume, growth, scalability and usage pattern, your company is likely to be better off with a hosted PBX solution. Hosted PBX solutions are also usually best for small businesses (those with 20 or fewer employees).

Hosted PBX systems come in a number of types. The simplest solutions just require an administrator to plug phones in to the network, add or configure the VoIP router and set the required options via a web-based tool. More complex PBXes provide specialized devices to attach to the network, as well as additional features and services.

Make sure that you know what additional devices and services you choose requires and exactly how much it will cost to buy or lease it. Hosted VoIP providers should be able to furnish you with an exact quote quickly. You should also have a list of telephony features that your company must have and would like to have. The aforementioned resource, The Definitive VoIP-News Guide to Hosted PBX, will  give you an idea of possible features.

In order to get the most from a hosted VoIP system, your business also needs to make sure that its IP network and connection to the Internet has enough bandwidth. You’ll also want to know if you can use existing IP phones, if you have, or whether you must buy or lease proprietary IP phones. Think about the ability of the service to manage multiple locations if your business has remote offices, and find out how easy the system is to install and operate, which will determine whether an on-staff administrator will be necessary. Finally, consider whether the system provides the kinds of tracking, metrics and reporting tools that your company needs.