Home Technology LAN Infrastructure
LAN Infrastructure

maximiser is a true, next-generation Business Telephone System. It was designed at the beginning of the 21st Century to take advantage of all the powerful new advances in recently proven architectures and technologies. Equally as important, it has been developed to work with – and so maximse - your existing investment in IT applications and infrastructure.

 

Your LAN Infrastructure is “maximiser Ready”

maximiser's distributed architecture allows you to overlay it on your existing LAN infrastructure, where it will continue to deliver service, totally independent to any network changes and equipment upgrades you will make as your needs evolve. PBX replacement, separate LANs for voice & data or a fully converged network – maximiser fits all needs. This enables you to enjoy significant cost savings by using your distributed cabling system for phone calls – even if your LAN switches don’t support Quality of Service (QoS). For more details see the IP Telephony page.

 

For True Business Benefits Think “What” Not “How”

The treatment of telephone calls is changing. Whilst telephone systems used to stand alone, totally isolated from computer hardware and software, voice has now moved centre stage in its new role as a key IT application for many forwarded thinking organizations.

 

As with all new technology forms it's very easy to lose sight of the true commercial value in Business Telephony, which lies in what's delivered - not how it's delivered. At SpliceCom, we believe that the ability to take a digital business phone and replace it's 4-wire proprietary interface with a LAN connection, could potentially provide cost savings, but it doesn't provide any significant business benefits. This can only be achieved when IP-Enabled PBXs give way to pure IP PBXs allowing voice to be treated as another, albeit a very significant, IT application. Only then will true convergence, that of voice with web-enabled business applications, become a reality. As such, we still feel that the massive installed base of analogue telephones will still have a significant role to play in this converged future - connected via the LAN and with the ability to be used in conjunction with a platform independent application - until such time that low-cost IP Phones can be delivered at the same, or better, price point.