Lync est la seule offre à combiner en une seule solution Visio, Vidéo conférence, Web Conférence, partage de contenu riche accessible depuis tout type de périphérique : PC, Mac, Smartphones, tablettes, salles avec les Lync Room System, en mode service ou serveur… Découvrez dans cette session la stratégie et roadmap de Microsoft, puis en théorie et en pratique toutes les possibilités de Lync dans la vidéo, l'écosystème associé et les bonnes démarches de mise en œuvre.
Speakers : Eudes Olivier Robert (Nextiraone), Natacha Miko (Microsoft France), Daniel Monier-Reyes (Microsoft)
Le business veut tout, tout de suite ? Etes-vous passé en mode IT as a Service ?
Stratégie, mise en œuvre de la vidéo dans Lync
1.
2. COL 202 : Stratégie, mise
en oeuvre de la vidéo dans
Natacha MIKO
EudesLync
Olivier
Premier Field
Engineer
Microsoft
ROBERT
Consultant PS / MVP
NextiraOne
namiko@microsoft.com eudes-olivier.robert@nextiraone.eu
www.eudaele.net
@eudesolivier
Infrastructure, communication & collaboration
4. Microsoft Lync 2013
Lync est disponible sur la plateforme de votre choix
PC
Mac
Smartphones
Tablettes
Navigateurs
Lync Room System
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Infrastructure, communication & collaboration
5. La video est partout !
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Infrastructure, communication & collaboration
7. VIDÉO MULTIPARTIE
Réunion planifiée
En mobilité
Lync Desktop, Lync Mobile, Lync Web App
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Infrastructure, communication & collaboration
Design/UX/UI
8. Améliorations vidéo
• CoDecs Standards
H.264 AVC/SVC
• Appel video P2P HD
• Pont video Lync HD
HD Video
HD + CIF Video
Alan
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Infrastructure, communication & collaboration
Brian 720p
CIF Video
AVMCU
Heidi (CIF)
9. Contrôle : Stratégie Lync
Création de profils d’utilisation
• Autorisation ou non de la video en P2P, Conférence
• Réglage de la resolution autorisée
• Application en fonction de l’utilisateur, du site
• Autorisation ou non du multifenêtrage
• Autre
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9
10. Contrôle : QoS
QoS supporté par Lync
•
•
•
•
Non nécessaire mais recommandé
Marqué par les clients et les serveurs Lync (DSCP)
Ou par le réseau (ports/IP)
Classes différentes pour l’Audio, Vidéo, Partage…
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10
11. Contrôle : Call Admission Control
Limite l’impact de la solution sur le réseau
•
•
•
•
•
Fourni une meilleure expérience utilisateur
Limite le nombre de sessions simultanées
Gestion séparée de l’audio et de la video
Basé sur le subnet IP du client
Reroutage des flux possible sur le PSTN et ou sur Internet
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11
12. Statistique: Monitoring QoE
Métriques Vidéo Multipoint et P2P
– Rapport de performance spécifique aux Codec
– Métriques pour chaque flux vidéo (Multifenêtrage)
– Métriques agrégées pour évaluer la performance vidéo
globale
– Métriques supplémentaires pour identifier les sessions vidéo
de mauvaise qualité
– Métriques identifiant l’utilisation ou non de la correction
d’erreur (FEC)
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12
14. VIDÉO EN FÉDÉRATION
Faire se connecter des partenaires Lync
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Design/UX/UI
15. Lync Room System : It’s Lync !
Espace "au Bureau"
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16. Pour aller plus loin : sessions
Date
Titre
11/02/2014 11:00 Etendez votre Lync
12/02/2014 11:00 De la qualification à la conduite du changement : Réussir son projet Lync
12/02/2014 14:00 Améliorer le TCO de Lync grâce aux solutions globales Orange Business Services : offre managée, interconnexion voix Sip
12/02/2014 15:15 Stratégie, mise en œuvre de la vidéo dans Lync
12/02/2014 16:30 Cloud, Lync, Téléphonie : comment faire un bon ménage à trois
12/02/2014 17:45 Architecture Lync - Deep dive avec nos experts - FAQ
13/02/2014 11:00 L’innovation pour la ville de demain, guidée par les usages
13/02/2014 11:00 #fail : comment planter un projet UC
13/02/2014 12:15 L'entreprise, demain : les technologies sociales au service d'une organisation agile
13/02/2014 12:15 Hôpital et Patient, la donnée connectée au service du soin
13/02/2014 14:00 La marque blanche et la plate-forme de marché comme outil du DSI pour donner de la souplesse à son SI ?
13/02/2014 15:15 Vivez une nouvelle expérience de travail avec les technologies sociales et collaboratives de Microsoft : Yammer, Skydrive, Lync
13/02/2014 16:30 Le nouveau B2X : Du client, patient, citoyen à vos applications métier
13/02/2014 16:30 Comment associer la BI avec les données d’historiques de Lync ?
13/02/2014 11:00 Social Media : Lorsque le DSI s'en empare
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17. Pour aller plus loin :
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Infrastructure, communication & collaboration
18. Pour aller plus loin : Web
• Twitter : #microsoftlyncfr
• Web : http://aka.ms/lyncfr
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21. NOTEZ LES SESSIONS 2014 ET TENTEZ DE GAGNER
DES CLAVIERS ET DES BONS D’ACHAT DE 25€ ET
50€ !*
Directement via l’url:
http://notes.mstechdays.fr
Sur le site mobile http://www.mstechdays.fr
Ou en flashant les QR codes présent à
l’entrée de chaque salle
*Jeu gratuit sans obligation d’achat. Règlement déposé auprès de la Société Civile Professionnelle Raynald PARKER et Raphaël PERROT, Huissier de Justice associés. Détail des
lots et du règlement disponible en cliquant ici.
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Slide Objective:Set context, discuss the status quo of enterprise communications, the impact consumerization has on the discussion and present the Microsoft vision for Unified Communications.Initial Build - Communications Today, Talking Points:Technology has brought us a very long way in terms of how we communicate in the business world. But as communication and collaboration technologies have evolved, they have done so independently, in parallel with one another, creating communication silos. In the meantime, the way we work is changing; business is operating at a faster pace and frequently across time zones. As a society we are more mobile, have greater access to technology outside of the workplace and have expectations to match. Today’s Information Workers are using a variety of products and services to meet all of these needs in their professional and personal lives. For most companies today, telephony and voice mail, e-mail, IM, audio conferencing, video conferencing, Web conferencing, and group communication tools all live in their own disconnected silos. Each has evolved a separate operating platform—often with proprietary third-party technology—separate clients,authentication, separate administration, and separate storage and compliance. Add to that all of the consumer oriented tools and services we are using in our daily lives - the result is an enormous headache for the end user, who has to remember separate phone numbers, account names, and passwords. Plus, these users have limited communication with each device—for example, not being able to make audio calls from their computers. Ultimately, their communication is disconnected, and their collaboration and innovation are hindered. These independent silos, which now encompass enterprise and consumer, have led to redundancies and inefficiencies for the IT administrator as well. It has become difficult and expensive to maintain them and to ensure each is in compliance with business and government regulations, is secure and manageable in the long term. Final Build - The Microsoft Unified Communications Vision, Talking Points:Microsoft® Lync® 2013 is an enterprise-ready unified communications platform. Lync connects hundreds of millions of people everywhere, on Windows 8 and other devices, as part of their everyday productivity experience. Lyncreduces complexity by putting people at the center of the communications experience. Our goal is to integrate all of the ways we contact each other in a single environment— using a single client, identity – while providing businesses with the power to choose how they provision those services—whether on their own premises, as cloud services, or in a hybrid mode.Lync provides a consistent, single client experience for presence, instant messaging, voice, video and a great meeting experience. Lync delivers an experience that is differentiated from any other Unified Communications solution in the industry with best-of-breed integration in the Office family of apps. Lync users focus less on how to use the tools and direct their energy to meeting the needs of their business. With Lync as the UC platform, IT administrators are able to modernize their operations and simplify administration with Active Directory, common data store, and a shared set of archive and compliance tools, across multiple UC components (e.g. email and instant messaging).
Rajouter photo VVX600
These images are provided as examples, and do not represent the final UI, and are subject to change.
Slide Objective: Describe new video codec and new capabilities.CoDecs Standards H.264 AVC/SVCOptimisé pour les réseaux mobiles (3G, 4G, and Wi-Fi networks)Support pour toutes les plateformes client (Microsoft Windows®, Windows Phone, Mac, iOS, Android)Intéropérabilité video simplifiéeLync 2013 reste : rétro compatible RTVideoAppel video P2P HDSupport du 1080p, 30fpsEncodage/décodageoptimisé (DXVA, GPU, Camera)Pont video Lync HDSupport du multifenêtrageJusqu’à 5 flux simultanés en conferenceSmart CroppingChoix des flux affichésSpotlightPhoto HD si pas de vidéodisponible Notes:Market and customer expectations force investment on video enhancementMultiview video requiredH.264 SVC using temporal scalability—different frame rates out of one stream. Temporal (frame rate) scalability: the motion compensation dependencies are structured so that complete pictures (i.e., their associated packets) can be dropped from the bitstreamH264 AVC/SVC codec allows to adapt video stream depending on different kinds of devices, networks, and of screen sizesHD 1080p video now available in conferencesTelepresence integration through gateways without transcoding if the device is ever compliant with H264 AVC/SVCAV MCU has to be correctly sized according to capabilities required because it is at the center AV MCU receive multiple stream and send the correct stream based on the device capability of the participant
Title: What Is Call Admission Control?Length: 1 minuteInstructor Notes:Explain the purpose of Call Admission Control. Basically:QoS will help you allocate bandwidth in a Network that is restricted. If you make more calls than the available bandwidth is capable of, quality will be poorCAC will help you not to oversubscribe the bandwidth allocated and guarantee good callsLimit the number of calls:Provide a better user experienceManages bandwidth for audio and videoBased on subnet of endpoint:Enforce policies on links between sitesProvide seamless support for roaming users of Lync Server 2013who are moving between different sitesRerouting behavior when bandwidth limited exceededCall admission control (CAC) – only available from Lync Server 2010 up – is a solution that determines whether or not a real-time session can be established based on the available bandwidth to help prevent poor quality of experience (QoE) for users on congested networks.Lync Server 2013 CAC controls real-time traffic only for audio and video, but does not affect data traffic. CAC may route the call through an Internet path when the default WAN path does not have the required bandwidth. Real-time communications are sensitive to latency and packet loss that can occur on congested networks. CAC determines, based on available network bandwidth, whether to allow real-time communications sessions, such as voice or video calls. The CAC design in Lync Server 2013 offers four main attributes:It is simple to deploy and manage without requiring additional equipment, such as specially configured routers.It addresses critical Unified Communications (UC) scenarios, such as roaming users and multiple points of presence. CAC policies are enforced based on where the endpoint is located, not where the user is homed.In addition to voice calls, it can be applied to other traffic, such as video calls and conferencing sessions.It provides the flexibility to define a logical network that is different from your physical network topology.
Title: What Is Call Admission Control?Length: 1 minuteInstructor Notes:Explain the purpose of Call Admission Control. Basically:QoS will help you allocate bandwidth in a Network that is restricted. If you make more calls than the available bandwidth is capable of, quality will be poorCAC will help you not to oversubscribe the bandwidth allocated and guarantee good callsLimit the number of calls:Provide a better user experienceManages bandwidth for audio and videoBased on subnet of endpoint:Enforce policies on links between sitesProvide seamless support for roaming users of Lync Server 2013who are moving between different sitesRerouting behavior when bandwidth limited exceededCall admission control (CAC) – only available from Lync Server 2010 up – is a solution that determines whether or not a real-time session can be established based on the available bandwidth to help prevent poor quality of experience (QoE) for users on congested networks.Lync Server 2013 CAC controls real-time traffic only for audio and video, but does not affect data traffic. CAC may route the call through an Internet path when the default WAN path does not have the required bandwidth. Real-time communications are sensitive to latency and packet loss that can occur on congested networks. CAC determines, based on available network bandwidth, whether to allow real-time communications sessions, such as voice or video calls. The CAC design in Lync Server 2013 offers four main attributes:It is simple to deploy and manage without requiring additional equipment, such as specially configured routers.It addresses critical Unified Communications (UC) scenarios, such as roaming users and multiple points of presence. CAC policies are enforced based on where the endpoint is located, not where the user is homed.In addition to voice calls, it can be applied to other traffic, such as video calls and conferencing sessions.It provides the flexibility to define a logical network that is different from your physical network topology.
Title: What Is Call Admission Control?Length: 1 minuteInstructor Notes:Explain the purpose of Call Admission Control. Basically:QoS will help you allocate bandwidth in a Network that is restricted. If you make more calls than the available bandwidth is capable of, quality will be poorCAC will help you not to oversubscribe the bandwidth allocated and guarantee good callsLimit the number of calls:Provide a better user experienceManages bandwidth for audio and videoBased on subnet of endpoint:Enforce policies on links between sitesProvide seamless support for roaming users of Lync Server 2013who are moving between different sitesRerouting behavior when bandwidth limited exceededCall admission control (CAC) – only available from Lync Server 2010 up – is a solution that determines whether or not a real-time session can be established based on the available bandwidth to help prevent poor quality of experience (QoE) for users on congested networks.Lync Server 2013 CAC controls real-time traffic only for audio and video, but does not affect data traffic. CAC may route the call through an Internet path when the default WAN path does not have the required bandwidth. Real-time communications are sensitive to latency and packet loss that can occur on congested networks. CAC determines, based on available network bandwidth, whether to allow real-time communications sessions, such as voice or video calls. The CAC design in Lync Server 2013 offers four main attributes:It is simple to deploy and manage without requiring additional equipment, such as specially configured routers.It addresses critical Unified Communications (UC) scenarios, such as roaming users and multiple points of presence. CAC policies are enforced based on where the endpoint is located, not where the user is homed.In addition to voice calls, it can be applied to other traffic, such as video calls and conferencing sessions.It provides the flexibility to define a logical network that is different from your physical network topology.
Title: What Is Call Admission Control?Length: 1 minuteInstructor Notes:Explain the purpose of Call Admission Control. Basically:QoS will help you allocate bandwidth in a Network that is restricted. If you make more calls than the available bandwidth is capable of, quality will be poorCAC will help you not to oversubscribe the bandwidth allocated and guarantee good callsLimit the number of calls:Provide a better user experienceManages bandwidth for audio and videoBased on subnet of endpoint:Enforce policies on links between sitesProvide seamless support for roaming users of Lync Server 2013who are moving between different sitesRerouting behavior when bandwidth limited exceededCall admission control (CAC) – only available from Lync Server 2010 up – is a solution that determines whether or not a real-time session can be established based on the available bandwidth to help prevent poor quality of experience (QoE) for users on congested networks.Lync Server 2013 CAC controls real-time traffic only for audio and video, but does not affect data traffic. CAC may route the call through an Internet path when the default WAN path does not have the required bandwidth. Real-time communications are sensitive to latency and packet loss that can occur on congested networks. CAC determines, based on available network bandwidth, whether to allow real-time communications sessions, such as voice or video calls. The CAC design in Lync Server 2013 offers four main attributes:It is simple to deploy and manage without requiring additional equipment, such as specially configured routers.It addresses critical Unified Communications (UC) scenarios, such as roaming users and multiple points of presence. CAC policies are enforced based on where the endpoint is located, not where the user is homed.In addition to voice calls, it can be applied to other traffic, such as video calls and conferencing sessions.It provides the flexibility to define a logical network that is different from your physical network topology.
These images are provided as examples, and do not represent the final UI, and are subject to change.