E911 (enhanced 911) is a technology that’s designed to give ordinary landline telephones the ability to transmit critical location data quickly and transparently, as well as to provide accurate emergency-calling capabilities to nontraditional-telephony devices such as mobile and VoIP phones.
Author: Comtex
Richardson, TX and St. Louis, MO – Samsung Business Communication Systems (BCS) and Voxitas announced a joint marketing agreement that combines the Samsung OfficeServ 7000 Series of converged telecommunications platforms with Voxitas SIP trunking services to provide small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) with cost-effective, Internet-based, telephony solutions.
Samsung does it again with the introduction of some additional features necessary in today’s mobile office keeping employees reachable and accessible. Mobile Extension, Cell Phone Connect and Hot Desking are
For those of us around in the mid-1970’s, the idea of a telephone switchboard may be forever tainted by the Saturday Night Live skit where Lily Tomlin, as a switchboard operator, randomly disconnects calls and infamously declares, “We don’t care, we don’t have to…we’re the phone company.”
Regardless of whether you are establishing VoIP telephony for your home or your business, the VoIP gateway is an essential element in making sure you are able to send and receive calls via IP
In recent years, organizations using Mitel call recording software have begun to recognize the importance of the contact center as a significant source of business intelligence.
The Video Surveillance market is very cost sensitive given the current economic client, however customers and surveillance integrators should not go without the option of remote monitoring.
The 2009 calendar year has had a lack of announcements for new technology. There have been instead, announcement after announcement of lay offs, cut backs and plant closings. Not the case with Samsung
Video technology will greatly reduce the number of video displays required to monitor large scale systems, the number of personnel required to monitor the displays, and the server or recorder capacities needed to record all pertinent action in real-time at full frame rates. These are all contributing factors to further reducing the total cost of ownership for networked systems and incentives
The discussion among security and surveillance video manufacturers, systems integrators, and end-users about the relative advantages and indications for different kinds of video installations is easy to oversimplify.