Monday, February 20, 2012

Companies working to increase collaboration in teleconferencing ...

As video conferencing and telepresence developed in various parts of the world through different companies over the past handful of years, enterprises and individuals alike discovered a market of distinct services that offer high function at high costs. Whether the conferencing solution was developed internally, as in some high-power businesses and enterprises, or adopted from existing services such as Cisco?s, Polycom?s, or Microsoft?s, it quickly became apparent that there was no universal form of video conferencing technology in place. As a result, connecting remote parties who use different services can be a real hassle. Generally, collaboration either does not function at all or only works on a low quality, voice-only connection. But some people are working to change that.?Multisource?recently reported on XConnect, a company dedicated to making high-quality remote collaboration between video conferencing technology a reality.

The article explains:

?XConnect is a company dedicated to driving the widespread use of these 21st century services across all networks and at affordable pricing. To achieve this, it has established Peering Hubs to ensure that lavish services run between independent network operators. Just as SMS took off globally because it worked seamlessly between South African and global mobile operators, so innovational, unified communications will become ubiquitous if they work seamlessly across all networks. Both in the fixed and mobile telephone worlds, global industry standards bodies have recognised this need and have created the industry standards on which XConnect?s deployments are based.?

One of the primary concerns with current video conferencing standards is the lack of availability of high-quality products at a decent price. Most of these services are reserved for enterprises that have a substantial amount of their budget devoted to communications technology and can afford to invest in premium services. The disparity between the quality of these higher-end services and the telecommunications used by the average consumer is a gap that must be bridged.

The inclusion of independent network operators could be only the first step of many in creating a sophisticated link between major video conferencing service providers, but XConnect is moving in the right direction. The drive to discover a powerful global communication system should push this project forward in the coming years.

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Source: http://www.whygo.net/wordpress/companiescollaborationteleconferencing/business-video-conferencing/02/19/2012/

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