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Microsoft aims to end 'phone tag'

Microsoft has some products it says will bring us closer to that reality of unified messaging.

Ina Fried Former Staff writer, CNET News
During her years at CNET News, Ina Fried changed beats several times, changed genders once, and covered both of the Pirates of Silicon Valley.
Ina Fried
2 min read
For a long time now, Microsoft has been touting the end of phone tag.

Next week, the company may finally take a step in that direction. For several years, Microsoft has shown demos in which people can choose who contacts them, and when--and through the miracle of software, we are seamlessly connected to those with whom we want to communicate. It's one of the company's favorite technology-of-the-future demos, right up there with the one in which the computer dutifully responds to our every spoken command.

Decent voice-command, however, still seems a bit far off. But Microsoft has some products it says will bring us closer to that reality of unified messaging.

The company has scheduled an event Monday in San Francisco where business division president Jeff Raikes and unified messaging VP Anoop Gupta will launch several new products.

"Imagine a world without jet lag, without phone tag, and without time wasted waiting for feedback," the software maker said in an invitation to reporters. "Join us as Microsoft reveals its strategy for delivering Unified Communications--a new way to collaborate, communicate and get things done across a global work force."

Microsoft has already announced some steps in this direction. Earlier this year, the company combined its Exchange unit with the real-time communications group that handles its Live Communications Server for instant messaging and presence management--software that detects whether you are online or offline. The company has also said that the next version of the Exchange e-mail server will be able to handle voice mail and allow workers to check e-mail by phone.

Meanwhile, the company's efforts are being aided by the move of telephony--particularly business telephony--off of traditional phone lines and onto computer networks, through Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) technology.

Microsoft has said to expect new products in the unified messaging area but has not yet said just what it will offer. Chairman Bill Gates touted Monday's event during his speech last week in which he announced plans to scale back his full-time work at Microsoft over the next two years.

"We'll have an event here in the next couple weeks where we talk about the breakthrough things we're going to do there," he said. "And a lot of what you'll hear is stuff that just no one else is doing."