Conference Calls Connect With 21st Century Sound

As experts in the science of sound and human perception, Dolby scientists and engineers have been working with BT to improve the workday conference call, making it sound more like an in-person meeting with BT MeetMe with Dolby Voice.

To better understand the state of audio conferencing, we talked with market experts at Wainhouse Research, who had some head-turning insights.

Wainhouse senior analyst Andy Nilssen gave his perspective on the findings, just published in a new white paper called Ripe for Change—Three Factors Set to Transform Audio Conferencing. [Read more...]

GVN and BT build a virtual airline

There’s a new airline in town. Only, it doesn’t actually fly any aircraft. Instead, Brussels-based Global Videoconferencing Network (GVN) provides an end-to-end videoconferencing solution integrated in travel industry channels. We spoke to Glenn Wastyn, President & CEO of GVN, and Norbert Osselaer, Senior Account Manager at BT Advise.

This is an interesting idea, but why call it a virtual airline when at its core, it’s a videoconferencing solution?

Glenn: The innovative idea here is that we are transforming an IT product – videoconferencing – into a virtual travel service by selling it through traditional travel industry channels. You already rely on your corporate travel agent to book flights and hotels; well, today you can arrange virtual travel using the same channel. As opposed to booking a flight, your travel agent can now also book a tele-presence session at a facility near you, typically a partner hotel.

Corporations make use of commercial airlines because they can’t afford to buy and maintain their own aircraft. The same principle often applies to high-quality tele-presence equipment. GVN allows you to share the hardware and operational costs between many customers and takes out the operational complexity.  It is a managed, pay-as-you-go videoconferencing service, but you can rely on your normal travel channels to use the service.  In that sense you could say we’re a virtual airline.  [Read more...]

Home working – Ahead of the Curve

In my previous IT marketing roles, working from home was the privilege of the few – mainly senior management, sales or technical staff. When I went to work for BT however, home-working was the norm for many employees – irrespective of position. Having been a home-worker for several years now, I’m surprised it hasn’t been adopted more widely across the UK. [Read more...]

The reality of collaboration (INFOGRAPHIC)

Reality-of-collaboration [Read more...]

Healing those hospital blues

Being cooped up in hospital is no fun for anyone, and getting out as soon as possible is a priority for most.

Making sure that can happen are people like Edwina Curtis, senior social worker with Islington Social Services, and Sunniva Longva, acting senior social worker in the Reach intermediate care team at Whittington Hospital, who work hard every day to help get people home. [Read more...]

The art of smart travelling

Millions are spent by companies on business travel – a lot of it quite unnecessary. It’s a waste of time and resources to fly in team members for catch-up meetings and project discussions when many of these can be just as well accomplished without travelling.

With BT audio, HD video and web conferencing, you can enjoy productive meetings involving team members, customers and partners all around the world without any of them stepping out of the office.

A frequent complaint cited against video conferencing is the lack of face-to-face interaction. But withTelepresence and HD video conferencing solutions from BT, you get a lifelike meeting experience, complete with directional audio and lifesize video. [Read more...]

The employee-empowered technological revolution

More and more employees are using their own computer devices at work. Not surprising really when you think how many consumers are buying Apple or Android Tablets and Smart Phones; working from home using their own broadband service; and increasingly using their own data transfer service when travelling. And, when Internet TV’s become commonplace they will use them for business video conferencing. [Read more...]

IDC: popularity of videoconferencing and telepresence grows rapidly

IDC released results from its Worldwide Enterprise Videoconferencing and Telepresence Qview that show a strong fourth quarter of 2011 for the market.

The company also foresees growth over the next several years, bolstered by the impact of video integrated with unified communications and collaboration portfolios. Furthermore, IDC expects an increasing usage of video among small workgroups, desktop users, and even mobile device users.

Senior research analyst Petr Jirovsky says there is little doubt about the success videoconferencing, and telepresence have had over the past few years. [Read more...]

Hacking videoconferencing systems: is it about the systems?

“Cameras may open up the board rooms to hackers”, the New York Times wrote a while back. Indeed, lately several stories have surfaced regarding hacked video endpoints. What’s the weakest link? People or video technology and videoconferencing systems?

In the article, the NYT says video conferencing equipment is often left vulnerable to hackers. However, I wouldn’t really say that these systems have been hacked. It’s rather about poorly implemented and systems that are directly put on the public network systems in auto-answer mode.

This practice makes it probably easier to use, but it’s indeed a very bad idea from a security point of view. [Read more...]

Videoconferencing sales grew strongly in 2011: IDC

Demand for videoconferencing in the enterprise continues to grow strongly, with global sales up 24.6% year-on-year in Q4, IDC reports.

Thanks to the accelerating integration of video with unified communications and collaboration portfolios, the rapid take-up is likely to continue, the research firm says[Read more...]