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Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category
Wednesday, August 11th, 2010
by Mariette Johnson Wharton, VP of Marketing
A report in July-August 2010 Channel Vision Magazine (circulated to nearly 20,000 channel partners and wholesale carriers selling voice, conferencing, IP and other network-based services), points to the growing demand for video conferencing outside of purpose-built room systems.
In the magazine’s “Beyond the Conference Room” report, Martin Vilaboy argues that video outside the conference room “gets really interesting only when sessions can be initiated across all types of endpoints, from telepresence flat screen to an iPad in a hotel room, and vendor brand names attaches to services and endpoints don’t make a difference.” That, and it’s an easy to use, on-demand service. “Only at that point,” Vilaboy maintains, “does it truly become accessible for SMBs to routinely collaborate with partners, customers, mobile workers, suppliers, etc. At this point, for an SMB to achieve interoperability on its own, it would require tens of thousands of dollars in network investments and some degree of IT resources.”
Even though the major video conferencing vendors have made advances towards standards and cross capabilities, seamless connectivity still presents what Vilaboy terms “significant challenges” including firewall traversal and a “market landscape, from Google to Cisco, of proprietary platforms and technologies.” In the report, Vidtel CEO Scott Wharton notes that even when standards are established, it can be hard or impossible to get them to work together since the SIP standard is an interpretive one, meaning interpreted differently by various vendors. This is too much for the average SMB IT department and even the video VARs to handle so they tend to recommend that customers stay with one vendor’s brand and use it for internal use only.
The key to widespread SMB deployment of business-grade video conferencing will be a service provider solution “that can deliver affordable and robust hosted services”, Vilaboy reports. Outside of a hosted solution, SMBs would have to invest in gateways, session border controllers, service bridging, and SIP proxy functionality. Then, there are cases where SIP needs to be integrated with H.323, which is not a simple matter.
Ugh. Most SMBs don’t even know what those terms means, nor should they have to (we think). As an alternative to SMBs undergoing this infrastructure investment, cloud-based service provider Vidtel put all this functionality in the cloud and offers a hosted service for a monthly fee.
Our approach seeks to have SIP, H.323 and proprietary video conferencing systems all work together. The Vidtel network also has the capability of integrating with the PSTN so local phone numbers can be used for regular phone calling as well. Multi-point is easy, too. The bridging function hosted in Vidtel’s data center enables multi-party video conferencing.
Vidtel pursues a channel strategy to deliver service and has announced deals with hosted voice providers to integrate the Vidtel multi-party video conferencing service. Vidtel’s SIP core enables the hosted voice providers to use SIP trunks for bridging to Vidtel. End-customers then dial into the bridge on-demand with a 10-digit number from their Polycom VVX1500, LifeSize Passport, Tandberg E20 or other standard device.
The Channel Magazine report begs the question of how long the lower quality and lack of support of software-based consumer-oriented video conferencing solutions will be tolerated by businesses. Research Now’s study demonstrates that audio quality is as important as the video experience. “With user expectations raised by the popularity of HD everything,” the report quotes Research Now, “video conferencing or video chat without HD voice and HD video usually results in poor user experiences.”
PC-based solutions are limited by processor speed, Wharton points out. It’s the same reason people prefer to watch movies on TV vs. on a handheld device – better processing capability provides better quality.
As video device prices are shrinking and hosted solutions become more available, HD video conferencing will come more into the hands of the SMB market. “Endpoint prices are starting to come down, ” Wharton is quoted, such as from LifeSize, Cisco/Tandberg, Sony and Polycom. “What’s not coming down is the complexity or the need for someone to manage things in the middle.”
All of this is good news for Vidtel.
Tags: Beyond the Conference Room, Channel Vision, Channel Vision Magazine, Cisco/Tandberg, cloud-based service, LifeSize, LifeSize Passport, Mariette Wharton, Polycom, Polycom VVX 1500, Scott Wharton, Sony, Tandberg E20, video conference, Video Conferencing, Vidtel Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Monday, July 19th, 2010
by Mariette Johnson Wharton, VP of Marketing
Rich Tehrani, CEO of TMC, asks Scott Wharton, CEO of Vidtel, about Vidtel’s cloud-based video conferencing service. Scott discusses the vision of the company to provide HD video conferencing for small-to-medium enterprises (SMEs).
The Vidtel service enables SMEs to have business-grade video conferencing without investing in video conferencing infrastructure (e.g., session border controllers, gateways, SIP proxies). Vidtel is device-agnostic, enabling any SIP device (e.g., Polycom, Cisco, Tandberg, LifeSize, Sony) to register to and connect with others over the Vidtel network.
Vidtel’s approach is to provide a hosted service, similar to a telephone monthly service fee, eliminating the need for customers to invest in additional IT support, servers, testing and interoperability.
To gain new customers, Vidtel is pursuing a channel strategy with video conferencing vendors, VoIP providers and and VARs. Vidtel’s service allows VARs and VoIP providers to expand their hosted voice offerings to include hosted video.
In the case of the major video conferencing vendors, Vidtel helps solve the problem of these vendors’ niche focus on the large enterprise. Teaming up with Vidtel enables these manufacturers to address a much wider audience. Without a hosted service such as Vidtel, potential customers would be required to make substantial IT investments to accommodate HD video conferencing.
What’s next? Vidtel has already enabled interoperability between the major players’ equipment (Tandberg, Cisco, Polycom, LifeSize and Sony). H.323 to SIP interoperability is next. Vidtel’s vision also includes gateways from SIP devices to proprietary standards (e.g., Skype, Google, Microsoft, Apple).
See Scott Wharton interviewed on TMCnet.
Tags: Cisco, cloud-based video conferencing service, gateways, H.323, hosted video, LifeSize, Polycom, Rich Tehrani, Scott Wharton, session border controllers, SIP, SMEs, Sony, Tandberg, TMC, TMCnet, Vidtel, VoIP providers Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Monday, July 19th, 2010
by Mariette Johnson Wharton, VP of Marketing
At last, iPhone with both front and rear-facing video cameras…
FaceTime, the iPhone video chat app, coupled with Skype’s Nokia N900 video chat client, means mobile video should finally be going mainstream. GigaOm’s new report predicts 11 billion video calls by 2015.
Couldn’t agree more with Michael Roston’s description of iPhone 4 FaceTime’s shortcomings or rather, the failure of the network to support video conferencing.
While there were high hopes for iPhone 4’s built-in front-facing and back-facing video cameras for video chat, the reality has been disappointing. Although the camera quality is good, the service doesn’t work reliably over WiFi.
Roston points out “a really useful capability would allow you to video chat with someone not only on your iPhone 4 to their iPhone 4 or Mac, but to video chat with anyone over WiFi who has a program on their device that supports video conferencing”.
At Vidtel, we could not agree more. In fact, our vision is to enable any video conferencing-capable device to connect seamlessly with any other. Currently, we are working on connecting standard, proprietary video devices to each other over our network, accessible as a subscription fee.
Today, even standard video conferencing devices do not natively interoperate. You would think this problem would be diminishing over time. In fact, the opposite is true, amplifying the need for a third-party such as Vidtel to launch a type of video conversion engine to seamless connect all standard video devices. A video equivalent of the PSTN (public-switched telephone network or plain ol’ phone network) if you will.
Tags: FaceTime, front and rear-facing video cameras, GigaOm, iPhone 4, iPhone 4G, mobile video, Nokia N900, Skype, Thomas Howe, Vidtel, WiFi Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Tuesday, May 4th, 2010
by Mariette Johnson Wharton, VP of Marketing
Light Reading recently highlighted two obstacles to widespread video conferencing adoption: the interconnection of multiple videoconferencing providers and the traversal of enterprise firewalls, two of Vidtel’s core competencies.
The industry’s largest video conferencing vendors, such as LifeSize Communications, are currently advocating HD video conferencing services that can connect not only high-end telepresence systems, but also video conferencing rooms, PCs, and even mobile devices (via audio or lower-end video), primarily for business purposes. Light Reading quotes Michael Helmbrecht, vice president of product marketing for LifeSize, as seeing “a significant role for service providers in stimulating the market for high-quality videoconferencing and making it more easily accessible to, and cost-effective for, enterprise users.”
Helmbrecht observes that service providers have a substantial role in expanding the high-quality video conferencing market, since they can break down the difficult barriers companies have for video conferencing with employees, partners, customers, suppliers, patients, and students.
Although the article focuses on managed services (operated by large service providers such as Glowpoint and Verizon and targeted to the large enterprise), Vidtel provides hosted services that can help companies of any size overcome hurdles to video conferencing, both from a pricing, usability and interoperability standpoint.
Our outsourced solution enables businesses to connect hassle-free across companies with standards-based, high-definition video conferencing equipment for a simple monthly fee (instead of thousands of dollars of investment in infrastructure and IT support). We provide interoperability with most reasonably-priced ($50-$5000+) standard video conferencing devices, as well as addressing, firewall traversal and server configurations for HD video conferencing.
For the full article on how video conferencing vendors seek to work with service providers to expand the video conferencing market, visit LifeSize Shapes Up for Managed Video Services.
Tags: firewall traversal, Glowpoint, high-quality video conferencing, LifeSize Communications, Light Reading, Michael Helmbrecht, mobile devices, telepresence, Verizon, Video Conferencing, video conferencing rooms, Vidtel Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Monday, March 22nd, 2010
By Mariette Johnson Wharton, VP of Marketing
In TMCnet’s VoIP Quality Feature, industry expert Doug Mohney outlines the troubles facing end-to-end SIP transport and the need for what he terms a ” federation service to link enterprises, enabling them to share UC applications, IM directly and securely, and do all that HD voice and video goodness without having to run down to the corporate IT staff and getting them to hand-craft secure connections through the firewall on a one-off basis.” His view is that, “federation would provide a central hub and one-stop-shop for businesses to interoperate at the applications level without having to worry about security.”

Businesses are considering how they can seamlessly integrate UC applications with their partners since Internet service providers (ISPs) do not offer such a service beyond the controlled VoIP framework.
Mohney explains that Avaya, Cisco, Polycom and other producers of HD voice, video, and UC products are now actively seeking third-party solutions to fill the SIP/federation gap to render their offerings more useful. After all, it’s Metcalfe’s law that the more connected communicating devices in a network, the more valuable the device. (What good is a sole video conferencing solution?)
To overcome this problem, Mohney points to Vidtel: “Vidtel’s laser-beam focus is enabling all those enterprise-based video conferencing devices to seamlessly talk to each other. Third-party interchange points are already working to SIP interconnect ISPs; in most respects, Fortune 500 companies operate as ISPs and “get it” a bit better when it comes to the value of SIP-interconnectivity.”
Tags: Avaya, Cisco, Doug Mohney, enterprise firewall, federation service, integrate UC applications, Polycom, SIP transport, SIP-interconnectivity, telepresence, tmc.net, UC applications, videoconferencing, Vidtel, VoIP Quality Feature Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Monday, March 22nd, 2010
by Mariette Johnson Wharton, VP of Marketing
With the economic recession universally decimating IT departments, demand is on the upswing for managed solutions and outsourced IT functions. Coupled with the trend toward an expansion of unified communications (UC) deployments and the attendant increase in integration challenges, outsourced solutions like Vidtel’s cloud-based hosted video conferencing service become more appealing.
Nearly 60% of enterprises cite UC interoperability and external connectivity as a barrier to adoption, according to recent research by Nemertes. Vidtel’s approach addresses all of these significant concerns as an outsourced, hosted video and voice solution focused on interoperability (devices, networks, enterprises) and external connectivity (our service enables simple, on-demand video and voice connections between external companies, minus IT hassles).
Tags: cloud-based hosted video, hosted video conferencing, Nemertes, outsourced IT, UC interoperability, unified communications (UC), video conferencing service, Vidtel Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Monday, March 22nd, 2010
By Mariette Johnson Wharton, VP of Marketing

Those of us in the video conferencing industry have been anticipating a Polycom reaction to Cisco’s fall 2009 announcement of its acquisition of Tandberg, the leading video conferencing equipment supplier. Today we await no longer.
Tensions have been on the rise with the severance of the Cisco-HP reseller arrangement, the Tandberg acquisition and Cisco’s increasingly aggressively focus on telepresence (the fastest-growing business unit in the firm’s history). What was Polycom to do? Polycom today announced that it’s teaming up with HP to drive interoperability of its video conferencing and telepresence systems with HP Halo telepresence. Under the arrangement, Polycom’s video and voice solutions for unified communications will be sold and delivered through HP’s Unified Communications and Collaboration Services portfolio.
Tags: Cisco, HP Halo telepresence, Polycom, telepresence, unified communications, video collaboration, video conference, Video Conferencing, visual communications Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Monday, March 22nd, 2010
By Mariette J. Wharton, VP of Marketing

A critical problem faces mid-market companies who seek to conduct business-grade multi-point video conferencing.

Almost all small-medium enterprises (SMEs) find acquiring and managing video conferencing servers, handling addressing and dealing with firewall issues too resource-consuming. The Vidtel Multi-Point (Meet Me) Video Conferencing Service is a hosted, outsourced solution that cost-effectively solves this problem. Vidtel has partnered with IP5280, which specializes in business VoIP and cloud-based communications delivered via state-of-the-art unified Internet Protocol (IP) technologies, to deliver this service to IP5280’s customer base. This service provides a hosted unified communications solution (voice and video) as part of IP5280’s best-of-breed cloud computing infrastructure, called “CLOVER,” or “CLOud OVer Enterprise Resources.”
“IP5280 is one of the industry’s best in driving hosted voice, evidenced by their distinctive focus on the value of applications to their SME customers. Their proven capabilities in successfully conveying the value of a hosted application makes them an ideal partner for us,” said Scott Wharton, CEO of Vidtel.
“Vidtel, an industry innovator and leader in the video communications industry, has developed an offer that exemplifies the type of cloud-based unified communication application we seek to offer. Vidtel Meet Me Video Conferencing Service will be the first application provided by a strategic partner who is added into the IP5280 CLOVER network, designed specifically to optimize the performance of interactive cloud-based applications,“ said Jeffrey Pearl, co-founder and managing partner of IP5280.
Vidtel’s multi-point video conferencing service integrates IP5280’s hosted voice offering with Polycom® VVXTM 1500 business media phones and the Vidtel network. The service enables three or more VVX 1500s to connect via a simple dial-in number for on-demand multi-way video conferencing.
Beginning in Q2 2010, IP5280 will offer Vidtel’s Multi-Point (Meet Me) Video Conferencing service to its small-medium-sized enterprise customers. For more information about IP5280, contact Jeff Rundles at 303-952-2565. For Vidtel, contact Mariette Wharton at 650-353-1125.
Tags: cloud computing infrastructure, CLOVER, hosted voice, IP5280, Jeff Rundles, Jeffrey Pearl, managing video conferencing servers, Mariette Wharton, multi-point video conferencing, Polycom VVX1500, Scott Wharton, SMEs, video conferencing service, Vidtel, Vidtel Meet Me, Vidtel Multi-Point Video Conferencing Service Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Wednesday, March 17th, 2010
by Mariette Johnson Wharton, VP of Marketing

International Data Corporation (IDC) announces that it expects enterprise adoption of videoconferencing to blossom over the next few years. Revenues for videoconferencing equipment are anticipated to explode from $1.9 billion in 2009 to more than $8.7 billion in 2014.
Vidtel addresses one of the principal elements that will significantly impact expansion – interoperability (system type to system type, legacy to next generation, vendor to vendor, carrier network to carrier network, business to business).
Tags: IDC, interoperability, Video Conferencing, videoconferencing, Vidtel Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
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