August 24, 2007 11:54 AM PDT
IBM follows Microsoft with unified communications push
- Related Stories
-
Cisco, Microsoft: Cozy competitors
August 20, 2007 -
IBM software geared to reduce PC costs
February 12, 2007 -
Microsoft, Nortel: Businesses, talk amongst yourselves
January 17, 2007 -
IBM targets Microsoft developers with new tools
November 1, 2006 -
Microsoft takes on Cisco with Nortel alliance
July 18, 2006
IBM has joined forces with Siemens to turn its Lotus Sametime software into a product family that will include new telephony integration software.
The move comes as
Unified communications pull together voice, video and data communications and a multitude of applications to allow employees to communicate more easily with a range of endpoint devices.
IBM said the new
The central new product in IBM's vision is the Lotus Sametime Unified Telephony software, which is heavily reliant on Siemens' OpenScape communications technology.
The choice of Siemens by IBM has raised many eyebrows because Siemens has, up to now, been a close unified communications partner to IBM's rival Microsoft.
IBM seems to be hedging its bets as to which network suppliers it comes to rely on, as Cisco is also a close partner in getting its Lotus Sametime collaboration offering into the enterprise market.
In addition, IBM is working with Nortel to get yet another unified communications platform into the marketplace by the end of the year.
"IBM chose Siemens OpenScape technology because of its interoperability with multiple PBX systems and track record of innovation and vision in this field," said Bruce Morse, vice president for unified communication and collaboration at IBM. "Our companies share the goal of developing extensible unified communications solutions that are based on open standards and integrate seamlessly into business processes."
Current OpenScape customers include SAP, Accenture and PepsiCo.
Mixed-vendor environments
Lotus Sametime Unified Telephony will allow users to manage incoming calls, see who is available to communicate with, and connect with a variety of back-end and legacy systems, said IBM. The platform is designed to work in mixed-vendor environments with multiple business telephone systems, enabling businesses to provide a common look and feel for their users, regardless of back-end systems.
Since it will be based on the common SIP (session initiation protocol) standard, Lotus Sametime will integrate within new and legacy environments, eliminating the need for businesses to rip and replace systems.
The reliance on the Siemens OpenScape technology comes after an announcement earlier this year that IBM and Cisco were to deliver a joint open unified communications and collaboration platform.
The unified communications platform promises to accelerate application development by enabling developers to easily include a set of communications and collaboration capabilities in their solutions. At the core of the offering is an open set of APIs (application programming interfaces) offered by IBM as a subset of the Lotus Sametime collaboration capabilities, along with communication APIs provided by Cisco to access communications functionality such as voice and video services.
The Lotus Sametime collaboration capabilities are built on
Despite Siemens' arrival on the scene, the development work between IBM and Cisco is set to continue, with both Lotus Sametime and Cisco's Unified Personal Communicator client using their joint platform.
A number of customers, developers, distributors and communications providers have already expressed their support for this so-called UC2 Client Platform. These include Citrix Systems, Coca-Cola Enterprises, Nokia and Research In Motion.
Ray Repic, chief technology architect at Coca-Cola Enterprises, said earlier this year: "The announced platform by Cisco and IBM will allow us to more fully integrate core applications as well as build additional applications to work with them via open APIs."
IBM said its Lotus Sametime Unified Telephony solution will be available in mid-2008.
Antony Savvas of
See more CNET content tagged:
IBM Lotus SameTime,
Siemens HiPath OpenScape,
Siemens AG,
IBM Corp.,
telephony





I've seen my fair share of software from both of these organizations and the results have been far short of impressive.
http://www.lyrics-ru.com/tekct/the-beatles/index.php
http://www.lyrics-ru.com/tekct/neil-young/index.php