Enterprise Video That Meets People's Expectations
Thursday, February 27, 2014
11AM (EDT) / 8AM (PDT) / 4PM (GMT)
From the boardroom to the browser, video has become a valuable business tool. When video communications systems work properly, people become more interactive, creative and productive. Conversely, when video systems fail, they cause delays along with angst and frustration in the people trying to use them. While users may want and expect "video that just works," the complexities behind making it work can be challenging. The good news, however, is that video and video infrastructure have evolved to the point such that with some foresight and planning, "making video work" is readily achievable.
This informative discussion will help guide you through the critical steps for designing and planning a video solution that "just works" to give users the most flexibility and utility.
Topics explored will include:
- The infrastructure required to make video work
- Why Session Border Controllers are important in video networks
- Endpoint interoperability challenges
- Security/governance considerations
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From The Expert Corner
February 26, 2014 Who Blinked on the Video Stream? Here is yet another Ford family anecdote. After a particularly frustrating week talking to the FCC, my father came home from shopping at the Giant Food Store, where he had noticed FCC Chairman Fowler buying a chicken. My father thought about going in the back and buying the entrails from that bird, but opted not to as he was well aware of just how difficult it was to find a Soothsayer in those days. These days, though, divining the future is more complicated, what with companies, courts, Congress and the commission conspiring to confuse the seekers and seers of the future. Today I am trying to get my arms around what happened this past weekend, what with Netflix and Comcast making peace. Did Net Neutrality get a eulogy out of the peering relationship? Did Comcast avoid being cast in the pit with Verizon in time to save its bid for Time Warner? Comcast being a content operator, does the agreement mean that Netflix set a marketing precedent that Comcast can use in dealing with its rivals ATT and Verizon? Does it all serve to concede that Europe is right to have carriers and content operators peering together...Read More Edited by Rory J. Thompson |
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