Unified Communications Interoperability Forum

The Unified Communications Interoperability Forum (UCIF) is a non-profit alliance between communications technology vendors. It was announced on May 19, 2010, with the vision to maximize the interoperability of UC based on existing standards. Founding members of UCIF were HP, Microsoft, Polycom, Logitech / LifeSize Communications, and Juniper Networks.[1][2] On July 28, 2014, UCIF merged with International Multimedia Telecommunications Consortium (UMTC)[3] into one consortium.

Unified Communications Interoperability Forum (UCIF)
MottoMaximizing the value of UC through Interoperability
Merged intoInternational Multimedia Telecommunications Consortium (IMTC)
Founded2010
Extinction2014
TypeNon-governmental organization
FocusCommunications Technology Interoperability
Area served
Worldwide
Members
17 companies
Websitehttp://www.ucif.org

Unified communications

Unified communications (UC) is the integration of real-time communication services such as instant messaging (chat), presence information, Telephony (including IP telephony), video conferencing, call control, and speech recognition with non real-time communication services such as unified messaging (integrated voicemail, e-mail, SMS, and fax). UC is not a single product, but a set of products that provides a consistent unified user interface and user experience across multiple devices and media types.

UC also refers to a trend to offer business process integration, i.e. to simplify and integrate all forms of communications in view to optimize business processes and reduce the response time, manage flows and eliminate device and media dependencies.

Members

The original founding members were HP, Juniper Networks, Logitech / LifeSize Communications, Microsoft, and Polycom.[4] Other members were Acme Packet, Huawei, Aspect, AudioCodes, Broadcom, BroadSoft, Brocade Communications Systems, ClearOne, Jabra, Plantronics, RADVISION, Siemens Enterprise Communications, Teliris, Vidyo, and VOSS Solutions.[4][5][6] At launch, news outlets drew attention to the absence of Cisco and Avaya from the member list, though UCIF has invited them to join as early members.[2][7]

On July 28, 2014, UCIF merged with International Multimedia Telecommunications Consortium (IMTC)[3] into one consortium.

gollark: The basics of service manager-ing aren't massively complex, so I suppose it'd be doable to implement your own.
gollark: It's a shame there wasn't some sort of middle ground where we got a reasonable service manager which didn't take over the entire system.
gollark: systemd does have problems, but at least unit files aren't init scripts...
gollark: I found out that its telnet interface was horribly secured, so I got root access and poked around.
gollark: Actually, come to think of it, I have that one ADSL modem/router which is unused which might be running BSD.

See also

References

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