Lots of news in call recording from the past week, and TMC has the top stories for you.
Inmarsat (News - Alert) FleetBroadband multiple voice calls are immediately available via Global Marine Networks’ RedPort VoIP.
GMN, which specializes in advancing satellite data services, notes that businesses can place up to eight simultaneous voice calls via Inmarsat FleetBroadband terminals, when used with its RedPort satellite VoIP phone service.
RedPort VoIP service leverages Inmarsat VLA and SCAP data rates to deliver several benefits to ship operators including rates to the most commonly called destinations as low as 50 percent off of Inmarsat suggested retail pricing of $0.55/minute.
Also, TMC reported that General Telecom is allowing businesses of all sizes to quickly and inexpensively enter the market and set up a turnkey VoIP company. The company has launched a cost effective, scalable, private label CaaS-enabling solution to this end.
General Telecom is a provider of outsourced telecom solutions to carriers around the world since 1991. The company has build the newly announced white label VoIP partner program leveraging its experience in building and operating carrier grade networks along with managing hosted services and applications.
VARS, interconnects, ISPs, system integrators and other non-traditional service providers can use General Telecom's program to sell hosted IP-PBX (News - Alert) and SIP services under their own brand with a simple, scalable, future proof solution.
And TMC noted that it’s exciting to see traditional B2B solutions taken to a new level, which is what SIP Print (News - Alert) is doing having recently been awarded its General Services Agreement (GSA) contract enabling it to do business with the United States government.
“It allows us to put our product within [the government’s] pricing catalogues,” said Don Palmer (News - Alert), CEO of SIP Print. All federal agencies, as well as state and local, that utilize the GSA schedule, can see that SIP Print’s SIP-based call recording technology is now government-approved.
The contract has been in the works since early 2011 for the company, and enables SIP Print to bring its SIP-based call recording technology to the government level. Palmer continued, “We think that the technology that we’ve always believed in on the commercial side…is not just commercial…SIP is the inevitable technology that everybody is going to be using.”
David Sims is a contributing editor for TMCnet. To read more of David’s articles, please visit his columnist page. He also blogs for TMCnet here.