Research in Motion Ltd. today unveiled technology that will allow voice over Wi-Fi calls from its BlackBerry smart phones.
The software, dubbed BlackBerry Mobile Voice System 5 (MVS 5), is expected to ship before the summer. Pricing plans were not announced.
Using the technology, calls from BlackBerry devices in Wi-Fi hotspots would be routed automatically through the the PBX in the headquarters of the caller’s company and then on to a receiver located anywhere in the world. The call would be priced at long distance rates negotiated by the company with a carrier.
Even if a BlackBerry smartphone is operating on a cellular network, MVS 5 can automatically tell the headquarter’s PBX to initiate a long distance call and make the connection at the corporate rate, Goguen said.
RIM said officials said development of the software was “not trivial.”
Corporations have long sought such a mobile unified calling system to cut costs and improve worker productivity.
The RIM system is initially set up to work with Cisco Unified Communicaitons Manager software and Cisco PBXs, but the company is hoping to add support for the PBX offerings of other vendors, said Tom Goguen, vice president of product management for enterprise software.
Various calling systems from other vendors allow voice over Wi-Fi calls, including a service from T-Mobile USA called Wi-Fi Calling with MobileOffice, but Goguen noted that RIM’s approach includes Blackberry Enterprise Server and its lauded security and controls. “It’s a secure data gateway into the enterprise for call set up,” he said. “Other solutions on the market are all basically walled gardens and many can’t use Wi-Fi or are really difficult to use.”
Goguen said that having a BlackBerry smartphone over Wi-Fi means that a worker’s desk and mobile phones can have the same number, which implies that a single unified voice mail system and a single address book and other features would be possible.
“The key to this offer is that it’s stunningly easy to use … and will improve productivity,” he said.