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Technologies for enterprise IP-telephony and convergence are undergoing massive and rapid change – new products, new services and new players. While VoIP promises to offer feature-rich communications service at lower cost, legal, financial and technological challenges confront the next generation of communications providers.

The IP Voice Meeting 2006 focuses on the convergence of the Telecom and Internet Industries. It is the meeting place for the IP Communications Community and we focus on the issues affecting the VoIP Revolution.

The agenda at the IP Voice Meeting creates a unique opportunity for you to hear informed debate and thorough analysis of leading experts.

This conference brings enterprise voice decision-makers together with the industry’s leading innovators, vendors and consultants to focus on the issues central to enterprise voice networks and the migration to IP Telephony and VoIP.

This event will be held from 8.2.2006 until 9.2.2006 at the CentroCultural de Belém in Lisbon, a top-quality meeting facility.

Download the PDF brochure for more information -> brochure.pdf (322 Kb)

 

 

The VoIP Meeting 2006 will discuss:

>> Has IP-telephony achieved "mainstream" status? How much of the
market has IP telephony really captured, and what is the forecast?

>> What level of performance-e.g., latency, voice quality and resiliency-
can IP-PBXs offer?

>> What can businesses do with IP telephony that they couldn’t with
TDM, and at what price?

>> What are the costs for IP telephony-initial and ongoing? What do
we know about total cost of ownership?

>> How is the migration to IP telephony being affected by the trend
toward greater end user mobility? How does IP foster greater mobility?

>> Is SIP ready for prime time, in the enterprise, and does it really
change the model for voice networking?

>> What are the major security threats to converged/IP networks, and
what are the vendors doing to shore up security?

>> Which migration strategies offer investment protection without
compromising features and functions?

>> Is "five nines" for voice network availability a necessity or a luxury?

>> What QoS (quality of service) mechanisms are most effective for
handling converged traffic on both the LAN and WAN?