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Avistar Predicts Desktop Videoconferencing Trends
[December 18, 2009]

Avistar Predicts Desktop Videoconferencing Trends


Dec 18, 2009 (Close-Up Media via COMTEX) -- Avistar Communications Corp., a company specializing in unified visual communications solutions, announced it has predicted upcoming trends in videoconferencing.

The company said it expects videoconferencing will become easier to use, more available and ubiquitous, while significantly contributing to business productivity.

According to a release, the company predictions include: - More communications-enabled business processes (CEBP). Companies will see long-term rewards, including decreased cycle times, increased productivity and growth by injecting unified communications into their business processes. By integrating conferencing capabilities into existing business applications, decisions get made faster, in a more collaborative environment.



- Free consumer applications will prompt consumers to try videoconferencing - an option more viable when webcams become standard accessories on computers, as they already are on netbooks. But big organizations will be worried about manageability of bandwidth. Companies will look for business-class videoconferencing that doesn't overwhelm their networks.

- Hang up on phone numbers. In five years, people will move away from phone numbers. They'll demand single-click buttons to reach the people they want to communicate with - whether it be from a computer or smartphone, from their places of business, on the road or in their home - and all through audio, video or multimedia. Within five years, business cards will hold a single address for contact voice and video information.


- Thin continues to be in. Expect to see more thin devices, lower power consumption and virtual desktop environments as they continue to gather steam. But that demand leads to a key question: What happens to communication applications when applications go to the data center, rather than sit on the client? Voice and video communications architectures need to be fundamentally changed to adapt to VDI deployments.

- Video goes social. Although it seems natural, videoconferencing will be an added feature of social networks within the next 24 months. Social networks will continue to be text- and link-based. The challenge for social networks is not bandwidth but storage: how to store videoconferencing messages on servers.

More Information: www.avistar.com ((Comments on this story may be sent to [email protected]))

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