Mobile UC Product Reviews
CounterPath Enterprise Mobility Gateway
Recent developments in the life of the offering have included new GUI for the BlackBerry and Windows smartphone clients, support for the iPhone, basic services for single mode mobile phones such as Message Waiting Indicator, Caller ID, Automatic Answer, Call Logs, IM, handoffs, hold and call. The company has also released its mid-call intercept using DTMF with both visual and audio progression prompts.
One of the annoying issues with other gateway implementations is that the user would invoke the mid-call intercept process, put the phone to their ear to hear the audio prompt, move the phone into visual range to see the key to depress, press the key, put the phone to their ear to hear the next audio prompt, move.... and so on. All this up and down motion is such an annoying process. Being able to instruct the mid-call intercept process by key stroke and visual response is hugely useful.
From an administrator perspective, the new implementation makes life considerable easier enabling zero-touch provisioning, and over-the-air download through a URL. This accelerates large scale implementation.
And, for dual-mode cellular and Wi-Fi or Wi-Fi only devices, access to the more-famous VoIP client portfolio helps make the case for a stable voice over WiFi client for Nokia E-series devices, developed and supported by CounterPath.
In contrast, Microsoft's efforts over the past three or four years at tightly controlling the VoIP client features have made their offering less attractive to software developers and enterprise users that need tight control of the VoIP client for their application suites and value sets. By cowtowing to the mobile operators who detest mobile VoIP clients that they don't control, Microsoft have lost their innovative edge and created a performance laggard. CounterPath has to use a native client client API, to enable an integration that will be at a sub-par user experience, as compared to the CounterPath client on Nokia E-series.
CounterPath doesn't sell it products in the classic direct or channel model. Instead, the company has a focus on the OEM channel having won business with both Nortel and NEC, CounterPath is likely to dominate these segments because of the tight integration, support and sales through existing Nortel and NEC channels. CounterPath leaves the Avaya, Cisco and other customer segments alone which is where these other players predominantly fight it out.
The latest release of the EMG is generally available now for Nortel CS 1000 and NEC Univerge platforms.
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