Level,
Microsoft Office Professional Plus 2007 Serial Key, Microsoft’s phone for small-business users, was one of the casualties of Microsoft’s layoffs last year. it wasn’t until May 18, 2010, that Microsoft officially announced the discontinuation of its small-business-targeted VOIP product. cut the majority of the Response Stage team last spring. At that time,
Microsoft Office 2010 Pro, in spite of rumors that Response Point was dead, Microsoft officials insisted on saying the company was continuing to evaluate the future of the product. the official notice regarding the future of Response Stage (which I found via NetworkWorld): transitioning Microsoft Response Level to engineering maintenance status a year ago, Microsoft has made the decision to discontinue the sale, support and development of the Response Position phone system for small businesses, effective August 31, 2010. Current customers will be able to continue to use their Response Level product(s) as per their equipment manufacturer purchase agreement.” Microsoft Web site acknowledged a lack of demand for Response Stage phones. Instead, Microsoft plans to encourage SMB customers to look at its Office Communications Server (OCS) product. Microsoft is currently working on a new version of OCS, expected to be called either OCS 2010 or 2011 (based on when it finally ships). who bought Response Point phones won’t see those phones abruptly stop working in August. The actual cut-off date is up to the OEMs, according to Microsoft. released Response Point 1.0 in October 2007. The software platform,
Microsoft Office 2010 Activation Key, which offered VOIP calling and a voice-activated user interface, is aimed at companies with one to 50 phones. Response Level OEMs — including D-Link, Uniden,
Office 2010 Standard Product Key, Quanta Computer and Aastra, bundle Microsoft’s Response Level software with their phone systems. Microsoft was working on version 2.0 of the platform, codenamed “Austin,
Office Professional Plus 2010 X64,” when the layoffs hit last year.