Eureka! Just like in geopolitics, you have to understand history to understand the present. Outstanding video, incredibly helpful to Avaya CPE engineers (which I am one). None of the parts discussed were new to me, but I hadn't connected the dots. Thanks for sharing this considerable investment in Avaya tech research Alta3!
Very nice... at first as an Avaya newbie just getting a handle on the components I thought ... holy crap this video is about a bunch of information I don't need because i am on the current system. However by seeing the genesis of how we got to where we are is very important to know in the understanding of the platform. When this video was over i was saying Ah ha, I get the big picture now !
+THEPROUDSON Exactly! One of my professors at grad school always told us that legacy is the root of everything stupid. Hopefully it is clear why things are the way they are with Avaya. Since we teach Avaya, Lync, Cisco, Nokia, and Cisco, SIP, OpenStack, IMS, VoLTE, I have noticed that great clarity always comes from deep dive exposure to into many systems. They all start to look the same when you dig in there far enough. Good luck in your new Avaya career and thanks for the kind words.
Great recap on the evolution of Avaya architecture to introduce the heart of Avaya Aura architecture - Session Manager. Great tool to share the content diagram and video. What tool did you use?
+Mario Cruz The software was Final Cut Pro, screen capture was Camtasia, our own sound studio and green screen plus our video editing person makes us look great. Glad you liked it!
could any one plz help me to resolve the ACR ( avaya call recoder) when I open the internet explorer and want to listen the call it only showing the button,the frequency bar not showing and not able to listen the call
This is a really good Avaya architecture primer. Thanks for taking the time to put it together.
I couldn't skip the video.
It is really interesting.
I watched twice.
Eureka! Just like in geopolitics, you have to understand history to understand the present. Outstanding video, incredibly helpful to Avaya CPE engineers (which I am one). None of the parts discussed were new to me, but I hadn't connected the dots. Thanks for sharing this considerable investment in Avaya tech research Alta3!
Awesome video.. It was very helpful to understand the architecture and the evolution of the Pbxs.
Do u know how give did number in this CM?
Very nice... at first as an Avaya newbie just getting a handle on the components I thought ... holy crap this video is about a bunch of information I don't need because i am on the current system. However by seeing the genesis of how we got to where we are is very important to know in the understanding of the platform. When this video was over i was saying Ah ha, I get the big picture now !
+THEPROUDSON Exactly! One of my professors at grad school always told us that legacy is the root of everything stupid. Hopefully it is clear why things are the way they are with Avaya. Since we teach Avaya, Lync, Cisco, Nokia, and Cisco, SIP, OpenStack, IMS, VoLTE, I have noticed that great clarity always comes from deep dive exposure to into many systems. They all start to look the same when you dig in there far enough. Good luck in your new Avaya career and thanks for the kind words.
Really good video, thanks for share your knowledge
Thanks very much, you were very detailed and excellent.
Great recap on the evolution of Avaya architecture to introduce the heart of Avaya Aura architecture - Session Manager.
Great tool to share the content diagram and video. What tool did you use?
+Mario Cruz The software was Final Cut Pro, screen capture was Camtasia, our own sound studio and green screen plus our video editing person makes us look great. Glad you liked it!
Great video thank you
Nice video. Good history lesson.
Thank you for sharing all this
Oh.. I see now. Great Video!
could any one plz help me to resolve the ACR ( avaya call recoder)
when I open the internet explorer and want to listen the call it only showing the button,the frequency bar not showing and not able to listen the call
Very interesting.
Glad you think so!
5 carriers per port network. 512 timeslots per PN..