Fixed Mobile Convergence

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Fixed Mobile Convergence

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November 21, 2008

Adding Cell Phones to Your PBX

By Michael Stanford


(This article originally appeared in the October issue of Internet Telephony magazine.)
Businesses looking to bring mobile phones under the umbrella of their corporate voice systems have an array of options. They can keep their PBX (News - Alert) on-premises or they can go with an IP-Centrex solution. Similarly, they can get their PBX-to-cellular integration capability through an equipment vendor or through a service provider. This column looks at some examples of getting the cell phone integration from a service provider while keeping the PBX on-premises.

 
There are two basic flavors: first, extending the capabilities of the PBX over the cellular network; second, doing this plus using a dual-mode cell phone’s WiFi (News - Alert) connection to make VoIP calls.
 
Verizon’s PBX Mobile Extension service is an implementation of RIM’s Ascendant Mobile Voice System. This is one of a class of solutions that makes the cell phone behave like an extension to the corporate PBX, while still using only the cellular connection (never WiFi) to carry the call. Its primary benefit is that you have all the PBX features even when you are away from the office. RIM’s solution has the further benefit that this PBX functionality is built into the Blackberry user interface seamlessly, while competitive solutions of this type usually need add-on software in the phone. It lacks all the benefits associated with running calls over WiFi, like improved coverage inside the office, which benefits the customer, and network offload, which benefits the carrier. Using the cellular connection for in-office calls is normally more expensive than WiFi, but this example is a service provider offering; Verizon (News - Alert) may choose to meter on-premises calls differently than off-premises to mitigate this disadvantage. As for the improved coverage and network offload benefits of WiFi, soon femtocells may offer a carrier-oriented alternative. So it can be argued that WiFi would not be much extra help.
 
RIM is not the only company offering mobile network providers equipment that integrates cell phones with corporate PBXs; there are several, for example OnRelay (News - Alert) and Tango Networks, which (like RIM) have products that work with many different PBXs. Unlike RIM’s MVS, these products also work with cell phones from multiple vendors. But it is very tough to do an elegant user interface to PBX features that works on multiple handset platforms.
 
A few equipment vendors go the extra step of combining the benefit of PBX feature extension to cellular with WiFi calls, and add the further benefit of seamless handover of calls in progress between the cellular and WiFi networks. These vendors tend to focus directly on enterprise customers, but some, like DiVitas and Varaha, are also beginning to get traction with specialist service providers.
 
 

Michael Stanford (News - Alert), an entrepreneur and strategist in the VoIP industry, writes the Packet Voice Over Wireless column for TMCnet. To read more of Michael�s articles, please visit his columnist. page.

Edited by Greg Galitzine


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Fixed Mobile Convergence

encompasses a wide range of mobile services that converge elements of fixed communications infrastructure to complement the core mobile service. In most cases fixed mobile convergence (FMC) services allow the user or the network to take advantage of higher speed, cheaper local unlicensed access networks in local environments for lower value, high volume transactions.
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An exclusive Computerworld online survey offers insight into how companies can develop cost-effective strategies for implementing or improving mobile applications and foster an efficient workplace.
Who Needs a Desk Phone?
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FMC Press Releases
FMC Convergence Showcase
BlackBerry® Mobile Voice System (BlackBerry MVS) BlackBerry® Mobile Voice System (BlackBerry MVS) converges office desk phones and BlackBerry® smartphones, allowing users to access standard enterprise voice features whether at their desks or on the go*. BlackBerry MVS encompasses BlackBerry® MVS Client software for BlackBerry smartphones, BlackBerry MVS Services of BlackBerry® Enterprise Server, and the Ascendent Voice Mobility Suite.

With BlackBerry MVS, BlackBerry smartphone users can access enterprise desk phone options directly from the menu interface of the BlackBerry phone application, while at the same time securely authenticating to the organization’s enterprise telephony system (PBX). BlackBerry MVS also gives IT administrators the control to set voice policies on the BlackBerry smartphone, so that inbound and outbound calls use the enterprise line. This allows for all mobile calls to be logged or recorded for compliance with regulatory or corporate standards.
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