Microsoft, Nortel hook up for VoIP and more

One comms platform to rule them all...

By Marguerite Reardon, 19 July 2006 08:25

NEWS

Microsoft announced on Tuesday it has formed a strategic partnership with Nortel Networks to develop and market unified-communications products.

Together, the companies plan to transition traditional business phone systems into software that integrates Microsoft communications software with Nortel internet telephony hardware and software.

As part of the deal, the companies will enter a four-year alliance. Nortel will be Microsoft's strategic partner as its pushes its unified-communications products. Nortel will also become the systems integration partner for the advanced unified-communications solution.

The companies plan to jointly develop products for large companies, the mobile market and wireline phone carriers. They also plan to cross-license their communications intellectual property.

Microsoft has been pushing the idea of unified communications - enabling people to integrate all their business communications applications: telephony, instant messaging, email and others - into a single platform. With a central platform, people can choose who contacts them, and when. They can also determine over which type of communications they get contacted - whether it be email, phone or IM.

Microsoft has already announced some unified-communications products. Earlier this year, it combined its Exchange unit with the real-time communications group that handles its Live Communications Server for instant messaging and presence management - software that detects whether you are online. The company has also said the next version of the Exchange email server will be able to handle voicemail and allow workers to check email by phone.

Nortel, which has been selling voice equipment to large phone companies for years, also sells voice over IP software and hardware to large businesses.

Marguerite Reardon writes for CNET News.com

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