When it comes to improving how people communicate, collaborate and process information, government agencies share many of the same challenges as the private sector. Luckily, IP
telephony technology is helping to address many of these challenges by making possible the delivery of voice-enabled business applications using Web Services.
IP telephony is also making it possible to extend, in an economical way, connectivity for teleworkers. Plus, just as in the private sector, government agencies find it extremely helpful to be able to embed voice capabilities into IT applications. The result is more effective use of resources—lower operational costs, enhanced agility, business continuity.
In order to educate government agencies about these and other IP telephony advantages, BlueNote Networks (News - Alert)—a company that specializes in SOA/Web Services solutions—will be hosting a Webinar titled “Connecting People, Information, and Processes for Government.”
The event, scheduled for 2:00-3:00 p.m. EDT on July 19, 2007, will explain why IP telephony offers benefits ranging from teleworking solutions to efficient systems for public access using voice-enabled Web sites.
The Webinar will be presented by John Thomas Flynn, a partner with ICG Government; Dana Gardner, president and founder of Interarbor Solutions; and Greg Pisano, director of market development at BlueNote. These experts will discuss market trends, challenges and solutions available for voice-enabling business applications.
By attending the event, government agencies can learn how IP telephony presents an opportunity to lower operational costs, maximize ability and continuity and ensure resource efficiency—all by embedding voice functions into IT applications.
To register for the Webinar, please visit https://www.gotomeeting.com/register/916742222.
More information about BlueNote’s SOA/Web Services solutions can be found on the TMCnet.com SOA/Web Services channel.
Mae Kowalke previously wrote for Cleveland Magazine in Ohio and The Burlington Free Press in Vermont. To see more of her articles, please visit Mae Kowalke’s columnist page. Also check out her Wireless Mobility blog.
Internet Protocol (IP) | X |
IP stands for Internet Protocol, a data-networking protocol developed throughout the 1980s. It is the established standard protocol for transmitting and receiving data
in packets over the Internet. I...more |