Zultys of Sunnyvale CA is proof that good ideas can survive Chapter 11. Founded in 2001, in the height of the dot-com collapse, the company focused on developing a SIP-based IP PBX long before that was a popular idea. Sadly, the company went bankrupt in 2006 and is now re-financed, re-energized and re-staffed with talented executives (like Steve Morrison) determined to make a difference in the slow changing business communications market.
Today Zultys offers an extensive array of capabilities:
Customers can purchase hardware for 4 and 8 port FXO cards, Dual T1/E1 cards, redundant hard drives, and license bundles for MXIE, fax, call recording, SIP trunking, auto attendant, voicemail access, operator groups and paging groups. To make it easier to configure basic systems, the company introduced Zultys ONE packages which bundle appropriate licensing for each of these typical features.
MXmobile was introduced at the IT Expo and I saw a demonstration by Marketing Director John Cunningham on his BlackBerry. The MXmobile client for BlackBerry complements the simultaneous ring feature of the MX-series IP PBX and extends several of the MXIE features into the mobile domain, specifically, presence, visual voice mail of enterprise messages, internal 3,4,5-digit extension dialing and corporate directory access. MXmobile also provides Least Cost Routing for mobile devices which signals the IP PBX to initiate a call to the BlackBerry. Although this feature introduces a longer time-before-talking interval since the user has to pass a message to the IP PBX so it can ring the caller first and then places the call to the called party, it can cut costs for the enterprise in markets where caller-party pays and the enterprise has negotiated lower rates with the mobile operator.
Zultys will be releasing the MXmobile client for BlackBerry in the fall of 2009, and expects to introduce the MXmobile for iPhone in early 2010.
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