Solutions -
Voice
3Com IP telephony solutions offer unexcelled flexibility and scalability. They integrate voice services into existing data networking infrastructures, eliminating the expense of separate wiring systems. Thanks to this consolidation, 3Com telephony platforms enable users to integrate their communicationsvoice, e-mail, cell phones, PDAs, pagers, and faxinto one cohesive system, greatly enhancing messaging.
3Com IP telephony solutions can connect all sites via the WAN or the Internet, avoiding long-distance toll charges. Employees working at home can link to the enterprise phone system with the same functionality as if they were in their offices. Workers on the road can use their multimedia laptop computers as handsets, allowing them, in effect, to take their office phones wherever they go. As a result, 3Com voice systems can link all facilities and workers into a seamless, function-rich telephony infrastructure, even across nations or continents, at far less cost than traditional phone systems.
The flexibility of 3Com voice solutions extends to their operation. Employees can customize their handsets without extensive training. They can move, add, or change handsets by simply plugging them into available network jacks, eliminating the costs of contracting vendor technicians for every change. Administrators can centrally control the enterprise-wide phone system with an easy-to-use, built-in management application. Organizations no longer need large IT staffs to manage and optimize phone services. Moreover, 3Com IP telephony systems deliver the versatility of standards-based, open architecture, enabling enterprises to precisely tailor their voice services by deploying third-party applications or developing their own.
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3Com offers the broadest range of IP telephony solutions on the market with systems that cost-effectively support small offices or tens of thousands of users. All deliver the assurance of proven 99.999% availability. 3Com NBX® platforms operate independently of the network operating system, ensuring the continuity of voice services should the network crash. Even if the enterprise WAN crashes, they can offload long-distance services onto the public phone system. Traditional PBXs lack such levels of resiliency.
    
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