posted by: Mark Cortner
The recent announcement from Avaya related to its new virtualized UC offering is an interesting development for the UC industry. The single-server UC solution is based on Avaya’s Aura architecture which was introduced earlier this year. In early 2008, Mitel announced a single-server solution that signified the first application of virtualization technology to enterprise real-time communications applications.
Avaya’s initial virtualization solution, Aura System Platform, is currently targeted to the midsize market with a maximum scalability of 2400 users. The solution includes the core components within Avaya’s Aura architecture—Communications Manager, Voice Messaging, SIP Enablement Services, Application Enablement Services, Utility Services, and Media Services deployed on a single server.
I fully expect more announcements soon from the UC industry that take advantage of virtualization for not only asynchronous applications but also real-time communications and collaboration applications. I also expect the scalability of virtualized UC solutions to rapidly increase; anticipate that single-server offerings will evolve to effectively address enterprise requirements within the next year … and one step closer to cloud-based UC.
The recent announcement from Avaya related to its new virtualized UC offering is an interesting development for the UC industry. The single-server UC solution is based on Avaya’s Aura architecture which was introduced earlier this year. In early 2008, Mitel announced a single-server solution that signified the first application of virtualization technology to enterprise real-time communications applications.
Avaya’s initial virtualization solution, Aura System Platform, is currently targeted to the midsize market with a maximum scalability of 2400 users. The solution includes the core components within Avaya’s Aura architecture—Communications Manager, Voice Messaging, SIP Enablement Services, Application Enablement Services, Utility Services, and Media Services deployed on a single server.
I fully expect more announcements soon from the UC industry that take advantage of virtualization for not only asynchronous applications but also real-time communications and collaboration applications. I also expect the scalability of virtualized UC solutions to rapidly increase; anticipate that single-server offerings will evolve to effectively address enterprise requirements within the next year … and one step closer to cloud-based UC.

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