Posts from the Unified Communications category

Opportunity Within the UC spectrum


Welcome to the first post in our new blog series, It Really Can (and Maybe Should) Be Interconnected. We’ll begin the series with a discussion about Unified Communications (UC). Biamp is involved in important areas of the UC spectrum by connecting highly engineered audio technologies to “plain old telephone systems” (POTS), VoIP, and/or soft codec…


Biamp’s approach to Unified Communications


Unified Communications is not a specific technology. The term refers to using technology to take separate elements and make them function better together. In the conference room, for example, video, audio, and data are present. Making those components work well together is Unified Communications in the simplest term. At Biamp, we approach Unified Communications from…


The Impacts of Sound


We’ve all probably experienced dinner at a restaurant that’s so noisy you can’t hear the conversation around the table, or been in an airport terminal with announcements so loud you have to plug your ears, or a train station where you had to strain to understand announcements that sound like they’re being made by Charlie…


What Exactly Is Networked Audio?


Last week we discussed the anatomy of a network–what it’s made of, but what exactly is networked audio? Simply stated, networked audio is the transporting of audio from one endpoint to another over an Ethernet network. The major benefits include: High quality, low latency, multiple channel count. Time syncing and data transfer management. Dynamic control…


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