Posts Tagged ‘Unity’

Cisco Unified Communications Attendant Console

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

Cisco recently announced that it would stop supporting the built-in free Attendant Console as of Cisco Unified Communications Manager 7.0. Its replacement is Cisco Unified Business Attendant Console which is an OEM from Arc Solutions. For those of you that are not familiar with Attendant Console, it is the software that the front desk receptionist uses to answer and route calls. I have worked with Attendant Console since it was called Web Attendant and it had its short coming, but overall the product worked well for the small and medium-sized business market. That is why I as a little surprised that Cisco decided to remove it from Unified Communications Manager.

If you do a fresh installation of 7.0 you will notice that all the configuration options are still available for Attendant Console, but you will not find the AC installation file under Plug-ins. You can still download it from Cisco.com. If you upgrade to 7.0 from a previous version you will not have an issue.

Cisco Unified Business Attendant Console is supported on the Unified Communications Manager versions 4.3, 5.1, 6.X and 7.0. There is a client and server component to the solution. Server hardware requirements of the Cisco Unified Business Attendant Console are as follow:

• Pentium IV 1 GHz or better

• 1-GB RAM

• 80-GB hard disk drive

• 100/1000 network card

• SVGA (1024 x 768) display card with correct drivers

• Sound card

• Windows 2000 or 2003 Server plus SP2 running Windows English Regional settings

You can install the server software for the Cisco Unified Business Attendant Console to a dedicated hardware server or load it on a desktop PC. For mission-critical installations, a dedicated hardware server is recommended because shutting off the PC server will cause the Cisco Unified Business Attendant Console to lose Cisco Unified Communications Manager connectivity.

Client hardware requirements of the Cisco Unified Business Attendant Console follow:

• Pentium II or III 700 MHz

• 512-MB RAM

• 3-GB available hard disk drive

• 100 network card

• SVGA (1024 x 768) display card with correct drivers

• Sound card

• Windows 2000 Professional or Vista plus SP2 or Windows XP with SP2

The Cisco Unified Business Attendant Console offers a rich set of features, including a call queuing engine, busy status, and directory search capabilities, which are integrated into the Cisco Unified Communications Manager directory and support for Cisco Unified Presence Server. The Cisco Unified Business Attendant Console is available for supporting up to six operator clients per Cisco Unified Communications Manager cluster.

Cisco Unified Communications Manager Express Tricks

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

Here is a quick configuration for configuring direct to voicemail transfer.  In this configuration I am configuring number 1+Extension number as the way to go directly to a users voicemail box.  All my user extensions are in the 7000-7999 range.

First create a voice translation-rule and profile to strip the “1″.

voice translation-rule 1
rule 1 /^17/ /7/
!
voice translation-profile strip1
translate redirect-called 1

!

Then apply the translation profile to voicemail dial-peer:

dial-peer voice 400 voip
description Voicemail
translation-profile outgoing strip1
destination-pattern 2500
session protocol sipv2
session target ipv4:192.168.1.5
dtmf-relay sip-notify
codec g711ulaw
no vad
!

Lastly, create an Directory number that uses wildcards and have it call-forward all to the voicemail number:

ephone-dn  15
number 17…
description transfer directly to VM
call-forward all 2500
!

Check out our free Unified Communications Tutorial at http://www.voip-tutor.com/freetutorial.htm