The company’s SDP strategy, first announced in April, is to attract telecom operators with out-of-the-box services that are easy to implement. SDP promises to enable new network-centric services that can be deployed across IMS-enabled, VoIP and other networks.
The company’s Virtual PBX is among the first of its SDP services. It is a hosted PBX that Oracle acquired when it bought Net4Call earlier this year. The standards-based PBX is a J2EE platform with a set of services to make simple the admin, configuration and management of new services and functionality within an enterprise network.
Features include queues and attendant functionality for incoming calls without the need for an overhaul of an enterprises’ existing network architecture.
Network operators are finding that the ideal way to address fixed/mobile convergence is to build their infrastructures and services on top of standards-based IT platforms like the Oracle SDP, said Oracle VP of development Vittorio Viarengo, in a statement.
Oracle SDP also supports SIP, SIP Servlets and Parlay/Parlay X.