WHITE PAPER:
Access this exclusive paper to find out how the Communication Manager, once defined as an Entity within the Avaya Aura Session Manager, can be configured as a feature server within a sequenced application.
WHITE PAPER:
This white paper discusses how voice capabilities have transformed in the past few years and explores why SIP and unified communications (UC) play such a big role in the way business is conducted today.
CASE STUDY:
This exclusive case study discusses how a multi-location auction company utilized an SIP solution that enabled them to capitalize on their investments in data and voice communications and maximize the performance of their IP.
EGUIDE:
Part two of SearchUnifiedCommunications.com's three-part guide on collaboration products offers expert insight into gathering pertinent information into the technical information necessary to move forward in the process.
WEBCAST:
Learn the benefits SIP can bring to your organization – helping you provide a heterogeneous UC environment to your users, increase enterprise mobility, ensure the delivery of communications applications, and more!
EGUIDE:
This expert guide from SearchUnifiedCommunications.com highlights how you can best use SIP trunking to reduce costs, focusing on two methods that are not commonly practiced.
WHITE PAPER:
In this paper, we’ll introduce the mechanisms of cost savings with SIP trunk consolidation, using Siemens Enterprise Communications’ OpenScape Exchange overlay solution.
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:
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.
WHITE PAPER:
Many communications infrastructures use multiple platforms for voice and date, which have a complete lack of cohesion. Unfortunately, these legacy infrastructures cannot deal with the demands communications initiatives today put on them.