did,
buy office 2007 Standard, as expected, go public at extended final with details about its Office Communications Server (OCS) Release two (R2) merchandise on October 14 at the VoiceCon demonstrate. is actually a “minor” upgrade to OCS 2007, which Microsoft rolled out in the fall of 2007. Microsoft is not going to release a public beta of OCS R2, according to officials. But the final item should be released to manufacturing real soon now (word is December 2008 or so). OCS R2’s official “virtual launch” is February 3, 2009. is billing the R2 update to OCS as furthering its enterprise-voice, conferencing and collaboration and development-platform stories with its unified instant messaging/VOIP/conferencing merchandise. rumored,
office pro plus 32 bit, OCS R2 is 64-bit only. Microsoft is not providing specific migration tools for those running 32-bit OCS,
microsoft office 2010 pro plus cd key, said Yancey,
office Professional Plus 2007, Smith, Director of Solution Management. Smith said Microsoft believes most users will do a side-by-side deployment when moving from OCS to OCS R2, which should reduce migration pains. R2 includes a number of new/enhanced features, including: Dial-in audioconferencing: Users can take advantage of an on-premise bridge that is managed by their IT departments to host their own audio-conferencing calls
Persistent group chat: IM chats across geographic locations can now persist over time. Discussions are periodically archived for compliance-regulation purposes.
Attendant console: Admins and others can more easily manage calls and conferences through new enhancements.
Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) trunking: A new feature allowing the set-up of a direct VOIP connection between a service provider and OCS without requiring on-premise gateways.
Single-number reach: An extension to Office Communicator Mobile for Nokia S40,
win 7 enterprise 64bit key, Motorola RAZR and Windows Mobile users, allowing them access to OCS’ presence, IM and voice features from a unified client.
Integration with Visual Studio at the programming interface level: Microsoft is encouraging developers to build “communications-enabled” apps and to embed communications in existing apps by exposing more OCS APIs. to comment specifically on the next release of OCS — which is anticipated to coincide with the release of Office 14 — other than to say the OCS team is sticking to a roughly every-two-year release plan. That would put OCS “Next” around 2010, which increasingly is looking like the new rollout date for Workplace 14. also wouldn’t discuss Microsoft’s progress on delivering a Microsoft-hosted version of OCS, which Microsoft is anticipated to release this fall.