WHITE PAPER:
IBM WebSphere Application Server, Version 6.1 is the foundation of the IBM WebSphere software platform and is the key building block for a Service Oriented Architecture (SOA).
WHITE PAPER:
Many businesses are investigating new ways to transform your voice now and prepare for the future of communications. This means taking a look, at and moving to, an IP-based communications infrastructure.
EGUIDE:
This expert E-Guide from SearchUnifiedCommunications.com explores three emerging security threats that can leave your UC platform extremely vulnerability to security issues.
PRESENTATION TRANSCRIPT:
Get a holistic view of the potential costs and savings associated with SIP trunk consolidation. Uncover actual costs and savings models, a review of key technical considerations, primary design considerations, and a discussion of a holistic architecture that can take you from SIP trunking to UC easily and economically.
PRODUCT LITERATURE:
Unlicensed mobile access (UMA) technology provides access to GSM and GPRS mobile services over unlicensed spectrum technologies, including Bluetooth and 802.11 (WiFi).
WHITE PAPER:
VoIP with UC can transform a business across four dimensions: lower costs, higher productivity, better customer service, and higher revenues. It can make a small business appear big, and help it outperform larger competitors. There are several ways to implement VoIP. Read this paper to determine which way is best for your business.
WHITE PAPER:
This white paper defines the IBM® Unified Communications and Collaboration (IBM UC2™) vision of making it easy for you to find, reach, and collaborate with others through a unified user experience. This strategy is designed to make it easy for you to access and manage telephone communications from inside the Lotus Sametime or Lotus Notes® client.
CASE STUDY:
Discover how one organization improved reliability, increased employee productivity, and lowered TCO by implementing a new unified communications and VoIP solution to increase communications.
WHITE PAPER:
This case study showcases how, by migrating to an end-to-end IP architecture and implementing SIP trunks, Oracle has significantly consolidated and simplified its telephony infrastructure.