The Seamless Enterprise

Comprehensive news and discussion of enterprise communications and converged network solutions.

Video is Top Priority among UC Tools

on December 22, 2011 by Editor

We talked the other day about how we disagreed with an analyst’s blog headline that suggested Unified Communications was “failing.” Now we offer Exhibit B, a survey of enterprise IT organizations that reveals some pretty ambitious plans to implement various UC applications not only on desktop and notebook computers, but on mobile devices as well. More...


Taking Time to Think About Unified Communications

on December 14, 2011 by Editor

If you’re lucky, the frenzied pace of business finally starts to drop off about this time of year, and it gives you a rare opportunity to think. Maybe you can finally read that book/e-book you bought/downloaded months ago. Or do some planning for 2012 without as many interruptions. More...


National Wear Your Pajamas to Work Week

on December 09, 2011 by Christopher Glenn

OK, we’ve all had those dreams right? I still remember my nightmares as a six-year-old about getting on the school bus only to realize that I was still wearing my pajamas. This week, a host of companies in Silicon Valley hosted a series of events that I have dubbed “National Wear Your Pajamas to Work Week.”More...


The Spy and the Rogue Infrastructure

on December 05, 2011 by Christopher Glenn

It was a marketing piece, but the pitch for GigaOm’s upcoming “Net:Work” event was hard to dismiss: “Did you get the memo? Your workforce is implementing a multi-billion dollar infrastructure change — by themselves.” I couldn’t put it any more eloquently than that. More...


A Front-Line View of Unified Communications

on November 30, 2011 by Dan Jacobson

There are some interesting findings in a new “Benchmark Report” on Unified Communications from Nemertes Research, especially relative to return on investment and mobility. The report (registration required) is based on interviews with 240 IT leaders, so this is front-line intelligence. More...


All the News Fit to Read

on November 22, 2011 by Christopher Glenn

While the New York Times has a trademark on the term “All The News That’s Fit To Print,” getting a story printed will be less than half the battle going forward. In the future, getting a story read will be the focus of media outlets. The Washington Post recently released a Facebook application it calls a “social reader.” After using it for a while, it is pretty clear that social reading is the wave of the future. More...


Mobility Without Interruption

on November 21, 2011 by Editor

It’s pretty clear that you can’t have truly Unified Communications without mobility. And let’s face it, if you don’t have ubiquitous coverage, you don’t really have mobility.

Now, you may be willing to accept the fact that if you’re hiking in Wyoming, or staying in a darling little bed and breakfast in very rural Maine, your coverage is not going to be sufficient to keep you fully connected to the office. But nowhere is it more frustrating to drop a call than when you’re on your own company’s campus, striding from one meeting to another or trying to use that spare couple of minutes to connect with a customer. More...


Cellular & WiFi = The New Hybrid?

on November 18, 2011 by Christopher Glenn

For the past decade, enterprises have wanted to see more hybrid phones, those that do both cellular and WiFi. While we have been able to demonstrate this approach ad nauseam in the labs, the challenge has been in providing enterprise-class feature/functionality using the technology. My Sprint EVO does both 3G/4G cellular and WiFi, but while I have had Skype client on this phone for a while, I haven’t used it. Let me remedy that… More...


Camera Shy? Maybe So.

on November 14, 2011 by Editor

Videoconferencing on an everyday basis has been something that has been “just around the corner” for close to four decades now, and an interesting piece on why it isn’t more common can be found over at InformationWeek.

Writer Kurt Marko poses the question of “why aren’t we all saying ‘can you see me now?’” and comes up with two answers as to why videoconferencing is still a niche technology. One answer is technological, the other cultural. More...


Five Years of Social Networking

on November 11, 2011 by Christopher Glenn

Five years ago, Time Magazine named “You” as its Person of the Year. Shortly thereafter, I started writing an internal blog at Sprint called “CG’s Soapbox.” The blog’s title paid homage to the days when a person would literally grab a wooden box, plop it down on a local street corner and start speaking freely.More...