Microsoft Office Communications Server 2007 R2 Standard, OLP-NL, GOV KNA-00534 User Manual
Product codes
KNA-00534
Office Communications Server 2007 R2 Product Overview – v 2009.1.30
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No hassle conference calls
A user engaged in a one-to-one phone conversation can easily invite additional participants to create an
impromptu multi-party conference (see Figure 44).
impromptu multi-party conference (see Figure 44).
Figure 44
Using the Invite button, a user can search for and add a person from their contact list and company
directory, send an invitation via e-mail, or enter a phone number to be dialed and added. Users can also
perform a drag-and-drop operation to add contacts from Office Communicator 2007 R2 or other active
conversations. Users can initiate a conference call by selecting a group of contacts within Office
Communicator or by scheduling a conference call in advance using an Office Outlook 2007 add-in.
directory, send an invitation via e-mail, or enter a phone number to be dialed and added. Users can also
perform a drag-and-drop operation to add contacts from Office Communicator 2007 R2 or other active
conversations. Users can initiate a conference call by selecting a group of contacts within Office
Communicator or by scheduling a conference call in advance using an Office Outlook 2007 add-in.
Richer communications with other Office Communicator users
When in a conversation with another Office
Communicator participant, users have more
options than with a traditional phone call. With
Office Communicator 2007 R2, users can add text,
video, or desktop sharing to the call (see Figure
45).
Communicator participant, users have more
options than with a traditional phone call. With
Office Communicator 2007 R2, users can add text,
video, or desktop sharing to the call (see Figure
45).
In addition, because of the use of wideband
codecs, the audio between Office Communicator
users is more natural and intelligible than the
audio most people are used to from traditional
PSTN, cellular, and IP telephony systems. This high
quality is available at a low bandwidth (about 28
kilobytes per second), making it ideal whether
making calls from inside corporate networks,
during travel, or from a home PC.
codecs, the audio between Office Communicator
users is more natural and intelligible than the
audio most people are used to from traditional
PSTN, cellular, and IP telephony systems. This high
quality is available at a low bandwidth (about 28
kilobytes per second), making it ideal whether
making calls from inside corporate networks,
during travel, or from a home PC.
Figure 45