Last year I attended the UC Expo at London’s Olympia sharing a stand with an IBM business partner. From our stand most of my field of vision was taken up by Microsoft’s presence… not a stand, more like a small village. There was a customer immersion zone, a theatre demonstrating Lync 2010 (which was full and overflowing all day) and stands manned by a number of Microsoft Unified Communication partners such as Polycom. I remembered feeling dwarfed and slightly embarrased – IBM were barely there at all. I took some photos and back at the office complained bitterly.
Ironically, this year, IBM have a keynote speaker in the form of Luis Suarez and they’re a sponsor, so maybe someone listened (I don’t know if I can take the credit). Anyway, Microsoft are also a sponsor this year, we’ll once more have a huge presence (showing Lync and also Exchange, Office 365 and mobile solutions), representation from a number of partners, and a number of theatre speaker slots featuring some of my learned colleagues. I have it on good authority that Nokia will also be there showing the much-praised Lumia phones.
Dates are 6th and 7th of March – you can register here, which is a good idea because it’ll cost £30 if you just turn up on the day. And one other tip, take a packed lunch because the price of sandwiches in the venue is something to gasp at.
Obviously the viability of working from home depends on your job role, but advancements in technology (such as broadband and corporate-grade real-time collaboration incorporating document / desktop sharing and co-authoring) have made the premise of working from home more realistic and achievable over the past few years. A business adopting unified communications – offering integrated telephony, video and embedded presence awareness – further promotes the experience for home or mobile workers.
Upon joining Microsoft I was extremely impressed by the fact that Microsoft Lync 2010 with telephony was rolled out right across the whole organisation. There’s no phones on any desks (other than some demo SIP phones) and a headset is part of the standard ‘welcome pack’ along with a new laptop and a Windows Phone. No-one asks if someone can take a Lync call, it just happens. All conference calls use Lync (unless it’s set up by an external party). It’s a way of life and it just works.