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A necessary evolution: new standards ease personal and business transitions to unified communications. (Guest Column).


In the early 1990s, adoption of e-mail communication-first internally, then externally-grew with increased Internet usage. Use of voice mail and fax messages also continued to grow. Amalgamating the three message types was first attempted by large email providers that saw an opportunity to capture all an organization's messaging requirements and to simplify the message-management process. Threatened, voice-mail manufacturers began to develop their own unified messaging Having access to e-mail, voice mail and faxes via a common computer application or by telephone. For example, unified messaging may send faxes and digitized voice mail to a mail server that turns them into e-mail attachments.  (UM) solutions.

Among the reasons why UM was never widely adopted was that product development was largely driven by e-mail and voice-mail vendors, not by customer needs. In large enterprises, telecom experts looked after voice mail, and IT staff handled e-mail. Neither wanted to lose "turf," and both had legacy platforms that worked. Why invest more capital into new systems when enterprise customers were not asking for it? With 1998's Y2K See Y2K problem and Y2K compliant.

Y2K - Year 2000
 concern, any consideration of new services went to the back burner Noun 1. back burner - reduced priority; "dozens of cases were put on the back burner"
precedence, precedency, priority - status established in order of importance or urgency; "...
.

Fast forward to 2001. Message volume continues to rise, rapid adoption of wireless creates a mobile workforce from whom demand for responsiveness is growing, and the workday is encroaching into home life. Manufacturers still think that enterprises will be early adopters of UM; however, the UM products of the 1990s no longer fit business needs. The need for real-time connectivity to meet demands of a mobile workforce led to new product development under the name unified communications The real time redirection of a voice, text or e-mail message to the device closest to the intended recipient at any given time. For example, voice calls to desk phones could be routed to the user's cellphone when required.  (UC). Meanwhile, market drivers are changing, as well.

Manufacturers are building solutions based on open standards Specifications for hardware and software that are developed by a standards organization or a consortium involved in supporting a standard. Available to the public for developing compliant products, open standards imply "open systems;" that an existing component in a system can be replaced , as are traditional voice-mail vendors now abandoning proprietary ones. As mobility increases and business and personal communications overlap, marketers must focus on the needs of the individual vs. the whole enterprise. Evolving Internet protocol See Internet and TCP/IP.

(networking) Internet Protocol - (IP) The network layer for the TCP/IP protocol suite widely used on Ethernet networks, defined in STD 5, RFC 791. IP is a connectionless, best-effort packet switching protocol.
 is being integrated into messaging and telecom solutions. Wireless communication is integrating with the Internet. Bandwidth continues to rise in wired and wireless domains.

In this fast-changing environment, a sensible definition for unified communications is necessary. The Telemessaging Industry Association's (TMIA TMIA Three Mile Island Alert
TMIA The Messaging Industry Association
TMIA TeleMessaging Industry Association
) UC committee, with experts from many vendors and service providers, concluded that there should be no single product called unified communications.

UC is to be considered a vision rather than a product, focusing on providing users with an environment for maximum communication flexibility. Such an environment would include all aspects of unified messaging, with the added benefit of real-time call control, accessibility by multiple devices and many combinations of benefits targeted at a variety of markets.

TMIA research indicates that both consumers and enterprises are ready to adopt UC-type services. Interestingly, consumers want services focused on the ability to know rather than to act. They need to maintain privacy and prevent certain messages and callers from accessing them.

Conversely con·verse 1  
intr.v. con·versed, con·vers·ing, con·vers·es
1. To engage in a spoken exchange of thoughts, ideas, or feelings; talk. See Synonyms at speak.

2.
, enterprise workers want to be able to act on their messages from anywhere, including managing messages from their laptops or mobile devices while on the road, or ensuring that important callers can reach them. What the reseach shows is the increasing attachment that individuals have to their connectivity as our society becomes ever more mobile.

Next-generation platforms are capable of supplying an array of UC benefits to enterprises. Service provider Sprint PCS (1) (Personal Communications Services) Refers to wireless services that emerged after the U.S. government auctioned commercial licenses in 1994 and 1995. This radio spectrum in the 1.  introduced "Wireless Office;" others, like Verizon, TELUS TELUS Telemetric Universal Sensor  and TDS TDS

total dissolved solids.
 Telecom, are introducing their own UC-type products. Application service providers accelerate introductions by reducing the need for capital expenditures.

As bandwidth increases with adoption of 3G in the wireless market and broadband in wireline, multimedia messaging is gradually replacing the term unified communications. Technology now allows video, pictures, music and other media to enhance messaging products.

Incorporating many technologies into messaging products, users will be able to find people from online directories, wherever they might be, with presence management to determine their accessibility for a live call, implement voice instead of buttons to make the call and manage all types of messages, access Internet information from any device, and personalize per·son·al·ize  
tr.v. per·son·al·ized, per·son·al·iz·ing, per·son·al·iz·es
1. To take (a general remark or characterization) in a personal manner.

2. To attribute human or personal qualities to; personify.
 all of these services to communicate how, when and where they want.

For more information from TMIA: www.rsleads.com/303cn-261
COPYRIGHT 2003 Nelson Publishing
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

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Article Details
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Author:Harper, Tom
Publication:Communications News
Article Type:Industry Overview
Date:Mar 1, 2003
Words:646
Previous Article:Enterprises continue network upgrades. (Trends).
Next Article:Look doc, no wires: hospital CEO Curtis James selects a wireless network as a no-headache remedy for physician care. (Cover Story).
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