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Motorola Aims at WLAN MarketMotorola Aims at WLAN Market

Motorola builds the infrastructure for the reigning push-to-talk provider, Nextel, and now is bringing push-to-talk (PTT) to its voice over WLAN (VoWLAN) portfolio, along with various data applications as well.

Eric Krapf

November 12, 2008

2 Min Read
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Motorola builds the infrastructure for the reigning push-to-talk provider, Nextel, and now is bringing push-to-talk (PTT) to its voice over WLAN (VoWLAN) portfolio, along with various data applications as well.

Motorola builds the infrastructure for the reigning push-to-talk provider, Nextel, and now is bringing push-to-talk (PTT) to its voice over WLAN portfolio, along with various data applications as well.The company used VoiceCon San Francisco to announce the first products from a product portfolio it calls TEAM, for Total Enterprise Access and Mobility. The new offering uses a pair of servers, the Wireless Services Manager and Network Services Manager, which hang off Avaya, Cisco or Nortel IP-PBXs to provide PTT on the enterprise network, along with text messaging, email, Web browsing and line-of-business applications.

The new offering uses Windows Mobile-based smartphones, also from Motorola.

Imran Akbar, VP and GM of Motorola's Converged Enterprise Communications business unit, told me that Motorola uses unicast rather than multicast for its PTT capability, which avoids placing excessive capacity burdens on a wireless LAN.

Motorola is aiming the new product squarely at verticals that have already become major WLAN adopters, specifically retail and healthcare-type of users, which comprise two-thirds of the VoWLAN market, according to Akbar.

The enterprise can configure users into groups that span locations within a city, country, or across the globe; Motorola uses the capability internally to connect developers in Singapore, Israel, Argentina and the U.S. with PTT capability. Since the call goes through the PBX, it's kept on the internal IP network.Motorola builds the infrastructure for the reigning push-to-talk provider, Nextel, and now is bringing push-to-talk (PTT) to its voice over WLAN (VoWLAN) portfolio, along with various data applications as well.

About the Author

Eric Krapf

Eric Krapf is General Manager and Program Co-Chair for Enterprise Connect, the leading conference/exhibition and online events brand in the enterprise communications industry. He has been Enterprise Connect.s Program Co-Chair for over a decade. He is also publisher of No Jitter, the Enterprise Connect community.s daily news and analysis website.
 

Eric served as editor of No Jitter from its founding in 2007 until taking over as publisher in 2015. From 1996 to 2004, Eric was managing editor of Business Communications Review (BCR) magazine, and from 2004 to 2007, he was the magazine's editor. BCR was a highly respected journal of the business technology and communications industry.
 

Before coming to BCR, he was managing editor and senior editor of America's Network magazine, covering the public telecommunications industry. Prior to working in high-tech journalism, he was a reporter and editor at newspapers in Connecticut and Texas.