CASA's plans for unified communications

 

Tender out to replace Ericsson/Aastra PABX with IP networking.

The Civil Aviation Safety Authority will replace its private branched exchange with unified communications in 11 national offices.

The air safety regulator said its offices in Canberra, Brisbane and Perth ran hybrid analogue and IP telephone systems.

And it wanted to give its other offices the same abilities.

It was seeking information from vendors on the costs and time to do the project.

Its current voice system was based on Aastra and Ericsson.

"It is envisaged that this implementation will involve the replacement of the existing PABX-based systems with a purely Internet Protocol voice communication system," the agency said in tender documents.

It needed to function with the agency's virtualised Exchange 2010 email system and corporate BlackBerry Enterprise server.

And it had to work with Windows 7: "CASA is moving towards the use of Windows 7 as the standard operating environment and intend to commence deployment to laptop users in the second half of 2010 with a desktop deployment in 2011".

The agency will roll out Microsoft Office 2010 by the first half of next year.

CASA said it wanted the system to integrate with its Tandberg videoconferencing kit and be used in its call centre.

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CASA's plans for unified communications
"@ace: I ack my comment is off theme, however so few CASA articles ever appear in itnews I could not resist the opportunity to bring this to the attention of computer folk who have lots of ..."
By johnpro2
 
 
 
Comments: 4
johnpro2
Sep 24, 2010 12:17 PM
I see huge security problems with real time aviation communications.
The present radios to pilots cannot send and receive at the same time.It would be very easy for a terrorist with a few hand held VHF radios to make communications between ATC and aircraft impossible. ..or the very least, large scale confusion at a large airport during peak times.

Jp
realitybites
Sep 24, 2010 12:57 PM
I have a friend who is a pilot(recreational), I'll get his take on it tonight when we have our weekly nerdfest(as the wife puts it, cold beer included) :)
Ace
Sep 24, 2010 3:47 PM
Ah @jp, the phone are in offices, not on planes. Am I the only one struggling to understand what your comment has to do with the superb article penned by Mr Crozier?
johnpro2
Sep 24, 2010 9:48 PM
@ace: I ack my comment is off theme, however so few CASA articles ever appear in itnews I could not resist the opportunity to bring this to the attention of computer folk who have lots of experience with comm security.

Jp
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