Eric Swift, Sr. Director of the Unified Communications Group at Microsoft gives a live demonstration of Microsoft's new Unified Communications software.
@TechSupport100 lol. I've been in the industry infinity and I'm an astronaut too so therefore I know even more. Take a hike kid. Invite every to come onsite and ask your users about your solutions. Tell them to bring ear plugs, as they will hear non-stop complaints about how "the IT guy doesn't listen, doesn't respond in a timely manner, his solutions don't QUITE work, everything's usually slow, etc, etc, etc". Run along now kiddie. Save your fairy tales for other children.
@kenfo0: I've been in the industry much longer than 15 years, and in my experience people who know anything about the subject at hand don't need to resort to name-calling when others disagree with them.
Now, returning to your ORIGINAL hypothesis (to which I had replied): You have suddenly changed your hypothesis from TEN people to TEN THOUSAND people. It's a cheap trick to change the ground of an argument after the conditions have been specified, but it's not one that surprises me.
@TechSupport100 lol. voice, fool. 10k people doing all you listed is a big problem. You know, I've been in the industry for 15 yrs, and it never ceases to amaze me when you know-it-alls have your pithy, cute answers. Visit a site you support, and people find out the truth of your "solutions". Today, a tech support department took 40 minutes to clear a print queue. They think they're witty and bright too...
the one problem with this tech, no matter the provider, is disparate connection speeds. Whenever tech is demo'd, people pretend you are always going to have some huge, private pipe. The issue becomes 10 different people with 10 different connections each waiting differing amounts of time for voice and data to come through, making communication more difficult. Within a private, properly proportioned business network, this can be minimized. Make sure you check performance in real conditions!
Dear TechSupport get over your anger and start living. If you don't like what you see then don't look... pfffff you are tiring me
TheMarcMiddendorp 4 days ago
@TechSupport100 lol. I've been in the industry infinity and I'm an astronaut too so therefore I know even more. Take a hike kid. Invite every to come onsite and ask your users about your solutions. Tell them to bring ear plugs, as they will hear non-stop complaints about how "the IT guy doesn't listen, doesn't respond in a timely manner, his solutions don't QUITE work, everything's usually slow, etc, etc, etc". Run along now kiddie. Save your fairy tales for other children.
kenfo0 6 months ago
@kenfo0: I've been in the industry much longer than 15 years, and in my experience people who know anything about the subject at hand don't need to resort to name-calling when others disagree with them.
Now, returning to your ORIGINAL hypothesis (to which I had replied): You have suddenly changed your hypothesis from TEN people to TEN THOUSAND people. It's a cheap trick to change the ground of an argument after the conditions have been specified, but it's not one that surprises me.
TechSupport100 6 months ago
@TechSupport100 lol. voice, fool. 10k people doing all you listed is a big problem. You know, I've been in the industry for 15 yrs, and it never ceases to amaze me when you know-it-alls have your pithy, cute answers. Visit a site you support, and people find out the truth of your "solutions". Today, a tech support department took 40 minutes to clear a print queue. They think they're witty and bright too...
kenfo0 6 months ago
@kenfo0: Actually, IM, email and even compressed voice require very little bandwidth.
TechSupport100 6 months ago
the one problem with this tech, no matter the provider, is disparate connection speeds. Whenever tech is demo'd, people pretend you are always going to have some huge, private pipe. The issue becomes 10 different people with 10 different connections each waiting differing amounts of time for voice and data to come through, making communication more difficult. Within a private, properly proportioned business network, this can be minimized. Make sure you check performance in real conditions!
kenfo0 7 months ago
OK, its official,
Microsoft Fails.
jeroeniskoning 2 years ago
This is a prime example of the services now offered in the cloud by Apptix.
RickRumbarger 2 years ago
Nice feature to drag and drop someone into an online meeting
lovehorrordotde 2 years ago
the future of advertising is mashed up tv material with advertising mashed into it
the future of advertising is mashed up tv material with advertising mashed into it
rickortreat 3 years ago