Tuesday, 19 August 2008
 Use OpenOffice.org
Home
Main Menu
Home
News
Blogs
Contact Us
Search
News Feeds
FAQs
Forums
Podcast Episodes
Privacy Policy
Terms of Use
Marketplace
Advertise With Us!
Free Publications
Media Center
Team Bios
User Login





Lost Password?
No account yet? Register
Who's Online
We have 1 guest online
Subscribe
Marketplace latest 5
12 FREE DEMOS !! – MICROSOFT, CompTIA, CISCO AND MORE !
Services (19.06.2008)


 
= Ad with Photo
'Voice Elements' Opens Door for .NET Telephony Application Development

By PRWeb, on Monday, 18 August 2008  

Views : 18

Published in : News, Latest News


Create virtually any automated telephone application by leveraging the .NET framework.

Greenwood Village, CO (PRWEB) August 18, 2008 -- Inventive Labs Corporation, a leading developer of royalty-free .NET telephony application software, officially announced today the release of its new 'Voice Elements' application development toolkit. Designed for companies that need to provide telephony-based products or services, Voice Elements breaks the chain of expensive, proprietary development, and offers companies the opportunity to build voice solutions using languages such as C# and VB.NET.

"Voice Elements is designed to bring the power and control of telephony application development back in-house," said Ron Tanner, President and CEO of Inventive Labs. "We're giving telephony-focused companies a completely new world of development possibilities through tools and technologies they already know and understand."

Built on Microsoft's .NET framework, the Voice Elements Developers Kit includes pre-made voice application modules, sample code tutorials, and reporting features such as call monitoring and logging. "The key to any good toolkit is providing everything the developer needs to get up and running quickly," said Gregg Williamson, Director of Sales and Marketing for Inventive Labs. "Voice Elements not only provides developers with a familiar environment in .NET, it gives them intuitive and ready-made building blocks to create from." Voice Elements provides an easy learning curve, faster application development, and ultimately faster product development.

"I'm very excited to see that, with Voice Elements, telephony application development has finally caught up with the rest of the application development world," said Rick McFarland, CEO of Voice4Net. "This is going to provide a wake-up call to the voice solution companies that continue to insist on custom, proprietary technology."

In keeping with its 'total solutions' approach, Inventive Labs also offers application development, hosting, and support resources for customers who may lack the necessary internal resources. "We've always been a solutions-focused company," says Tanner, "even with a great product like Voice Elements, we recognize that it solves just one part of the problem."

Along with traditional DTMF-based voice solutions, Voice Elements supports speech recognition technology, works with Dialogic hardware and HMP software, and is free to try. For more information and to download, go to: http://www.voiceelements.com/Products/VoiceElements/Details.aspx.

About Inventive Labs:
Inventive Labs is a leading provider of royalty-free telephony application solutions. The company's software products and related services, including Voice Elements, dramatically reduce the time, cost, and complexity of creating voice solutions and empower enterprises and service providers to rapidly develop and deploy voice solutions. Inventive Labs is headquartered in Greenwood Village, Colorado, and can be reached at www.voiceelements.com, (866) 923-5290.


Last update: Monday, 18 August 2008

Keywords : News, Latest News, 'Voice Elements' Opens Door for .NET Telephony Application Development
Editor's review User comments Quote this article in website Favoured Send to friend Save this to del.icio.us Related articles
 
Episode 24 - The Story of OnForce Part 1

By Administrator, on Monday, 11 August 2008

Views : 56    

Published in : The Force Field Podcast, The Force Field Podcast Episodes


This week we're going to talk to Jeffrey Leventhal, an entrepreneur who founded the OnForce platform and learn how he started the company. Part 1 of a two part series.

TechPodcasts Promo Tag :10
Intro 1:17
Billboard 1:52

News and Comment segment 4:51
Microsoft has announced the release of SQL Server 2008. The RTM is now available for download at http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/subscriptions/default.aspx.

System Management News reports that IT jobs are alive, well and growing strong, according to a new survey by the American Electronics Association.

You can read the article in the August 1 issue of System Management News. A single issue of System Management News is $9.95 but a subscription is free to professionals who qualify. if you are an IT professional and would like a free subscription to System Management News you can subscribe at http://theforcefield.tradepub.com/free/smns or simply click on the link in the show notes in the RSS feed for this episode.

Late last month a Superior Court Judge in Alameda County ruled that cell phone carriers that charged customers early termination fees for canceling their contracts did so in violation of state law.

Commercial Break 1:00
Alternageek Podcast Promo :30

CS Techcast promo :30

Intro to Interview 2:53
This week we're going to talk with entrepreneur Jeffrey Leventhal, founder and first CEO of OnForce, Inc. We will learn how he came up with the idea for OnForce, find out how long it took him and his team to develop the platform and hear how it first went live. Part one of a two part story.

Jeff Leventhal Interview 15:40

Wrap up and Close 1:14

©2008 Savoia Computer. All rights reserved.

 


Last update: Monday, 18 August 2008

Editor's review User comments Quote this article in website Favoured Send to friend Save this to del.icio.us Related articles
 

More News
Popular
The Force Field Podcast

Listen to the latest episodes of The Force Field now!

The Force Field Podcast Badge
 
 Proud member of The TechPodcasts Network
 
Listen by Phone!
1 (214) 295-2690
 
Sponsored Links
Polls
Has your ISP installed the DNS patch yet?
 
What do you think of Cuil?