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{{Short description|Voice message storage and retrieval}}
{{cleanup|date=September 2008}}
{{other uses}}A '''voicemail''' system (also known as '''voice message''' or '''voice bank''') is a computer-based system that allows callers to leave a recorded message when the recipient has been unable or unwilling to answer the [[Telephone|phone]]. Calls may be diverted to voicemail manually or automatically. The caller is prompted to leave a message and the recipient can retrieve the message at a later time.
'''Voicemail '''(or '''voice mail, voice-mail, vmail or VMS''', sometimes called '''messagebank''') is a centralized system of managing [[telephone]] messages for a large group of people. The term is also used more broadly, to denote any system of conveying voice message, including the answering machine.


Voicemail can be used for personal calls and more complex systems exist for companies and services to handle customer requests. The term is also used more broadly to denote any system of conveying stored telecommunications voice messages, including using an [[answering machine]].
==Features==
In its simplest form it has only the functions of an [[answering machine]], using a standard telephone handset for the user interface, but it can use a centralized, computerized system rather than equipment at the individual telephone. Voicemail systems can be much more sophisticated than answering machines in that they can:
* answer many phones at the same time
* store incoming voice messages in personalized mailboxes associated with the user’s phone number
* enable users to forward received messages to another voice mailbox
* send messages to one or more other user voice mailboxes
* add a voice introduction to a forwarded message
* store voice messages for future delivery
* make calls to a telephone or [[paging]] service to notify the user a message has arrived in his/her mailbox
* transfer callers to another phone number for personal assistance
* play different message greetings to different callers.


==Storage==
== Features ==
[[Image:System poczty glosowej.jpg|thumb|Drawing of how the voicemail system interacts with the [[Business telephone system|PBX]]]]
Voicemail messages are stored on hard disk drives, media generally used by computers to store other forms of data. Messages are recorded in digitized natural human voice similar to how music is stored on a [[CD]]. To retrieve messages, a user calls the system from any phone, logs on using [[DTMF|Touch-tones]] (clearing security), and his messages can be retrieved immediately. Many users can retrieve or store messages at the same time on the same voicemail system.


Many voicemail systems also offer an [[automated attendant]] facility. Automated attendants enable callers to a “main” business number to access directory service or self-route the call to various places such as a specific department, an extension number, or to an informational recording in a voice mailbox, etc.


Voicemail systems are designed to convey a caller's recorded audio message to a recipient. To do so they contain a user interface to select, play, and manage messages; a delivery method to either play or otherwise deliver the message; and a notification ability to inform the user of a waiting message. Most systems use phone networks, either cellular- or landline-based, as the conduit for all of these functions. Some systems may use multiple telecommunications methods, permitting recipients and callers to retrieve or leave messages through multiple methods such as PCs or smartphones.
==History of voicemail==
Voicemail systems are often associated with office telephone systems or [[Private branch exchange|PBXs]]. They may also be associated with public telephone network services such as residential phones or cellular phones. [[Mobile phone]]s generally have voicemail as a standard network feature. The most modern implementations of voicemail support fax delivery to personal voice mailboxes and retrieval via printers, are integrated into e-mail systems for shared directories and shared message storage (also called Unified Messaging), and use [[Touch-tone|touch tone]] voice user interfaces ([[Voice User Interface|VUI]]), speech technologies, and/or visual, screen-based graphical user interfaces ([[Graphical User Interface|GUI]]) user interfaces.


Simple voicemail systems function as a remote [[answering machine]] using [[touch-tone]]s as the user interface. More complicated systems may use other input devices such as [[Voice user interface|voice]] or a [[Graphical user interface|computer]] interface. Simpler voicemail systems may play the audio message through the phone, while more advanced systems may have alternative delivery methods, including email or text message delivery, message transfer and forwarding options,<ref>{{Cite web |last=Manning |first=Cara |date=2023-09-22 |title=Deciphering 'Call Forwarded Unconditionally' |url=https://callexperts.com/blog/deciphering-call-forwarded-unconditionally-how-to-set-it-up/ |access-date=2024-09-15 |website=CALL EXPERTS |language=en-US |quote=Call forwarding typically comes in the three main variations...Call Forwarding Unconditional (CFU)...Call Forwarding on Busy (CFB)... Call Forwarding on No Answer (CFNA)}}</ref> and multiple mailboxes.
===The need for voicemail===
In the 1970s and early 1980s, the cost of making a phone call decreased and more business communication was done by phone. As corporations grew and labor rates increased, the ratio of secretaries to employees decreased. With multiple time zones, fewer secretaries and more communication by phone, real-time phone communications were hampered by callers being unable to reach people. Some early studies showed that only 1 in 4 phone calls resulted in a completed call and half the calls were one-way in nature (that is, they did not require a conversation). This happened because people were either not at work (due to time zone differences, being away on business, etc.), or if they were at work, they were on the phone, away from their desks in meetings, on breaks, etc. This bottleneck hindered the effectiveness of business activities and decreased both individual and group productivity. It also wasted the caller’s time and created delays in resolving time-critical issues.


Almost all modern voicemail systems use digital storage and are typically stored on [[computer data storage]]. Notification methods also vary based on the voicemail system. Simple systems may not provide active notification at all, instead requiring the recipient to check with the system, while others may provide an indication that messages are waiting.
===First solutions did not work===
Neither email messaging nor cellular phones were widespread in the 1970s and 80s, and did not really begin to flourish until the mid-1990s. The initial solution to the phone communication problem for businesses was the “message center.” A message center or “message desk” was a centralized, manual answering service inside a company manned by a few people answering everyone’s phones. Extensions that were busy or rang “no answer” would forward to the message center onto a device called a “call director”. The call director had a button for each extension in the company which would flash when that person’s extension forwarded to the message center. A little label next to the button told the operator whose extension it was.


More advanced systems may be integrated with a company's PABX, with a call center ACD for automatic call distribution; with mobile or paging terminals for message alert; and computer systems/data bases for delivering information or processing orders. [[Interactive voice response]] (IVR) systems may use digital information stored in a corporate data base to select pre-recorded words and phrases stored in a voicemail vocabulary to form sentences that are delivered to the caller.
While it was an improvement over earlier systems, the message center had many disadvantages. Operators were busy, and volumes of calls would come in simulataneously at peak periods, such as lunch time. This left message attendants with little time to take each message accurately. Often, they also weren’t familiar with employees' names or how to spell or pronounce them. Messages were written on pink slips and distributed by the internal mail system. The messages often arrived at people’s desks after lengthy delays, contained little content other than the caller’s name and number, and were often inaccurate, with misspelled names and wrong phone numbers.


==History==
Tape-based telephone answering machines had come into the residential telephone market, but they weren’t used much in the corporate environment due to physical limitations of the technology. One answering machine was needed for each telephone; messages couldn’t be recorded if the user was using the phone; messages had to be retrieved in sequential order; and messages couldn’t be retrieved remotely, selectively discarded, saved, or forwarded to others. Further, the manufacturers of PBXs ([[private branch exchange]]s — the name for corporate phone systems) used proprietary digital phone sets in order to increase the functionality and value of the PBX. These phone sets were, by design, incompatible with answering machines.
[[File:Icons8 flat voicemail.svg|thumb|A common icon to represent voicemail (an abstraction of [[cassette tape]], which were historically popular for use in voicemail recording before the 2000s)]]The term ''Voicemail'' was coined by Televoice International (later Voicemail International, or VMI) for their introduction of the first US-wide Voicemail service in 1980. Although VMI trademarked the term, it eventually became a [[generic term]] for automated voice services employing a telephone. Voicemail popularity continues today with Internet telephone services such as Skype, Google Voice and ATT that integrate voice, voicemail and text services for tablets and smartphones.


Voicemail systems were developed in the late 1970s by [[Voice Message Exchange (VMX)]]. They became popular in the early 1980s when they were made available on PC-based boards.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.everyvoicemail.com/vm-history.htm |title=The History of Voicemail |publisher=Everyvoicemail.com |date=2002-02-23 |access-date=2013-04-30}}</ref> In September 2012 a report from ''[[USA Today]]'' and [[Vonage]] claimed that voicemail was in decline. The report said that the number of voicemail messages declined eight percent compared to 2011.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://tucsoncitizen.com/usa-today-news/2012/09/03/voice-mail-in-decline-with-rise-of-text/ |title=Voice Mail in Decline with Rise of Text |website=tucsoncitizen.com}} {{dead link|date=April 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Moscaritolo |first=Angela |url=https://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2409269,00.asp# |title=Poll: Is Voicemail Dead? Weigh In &#124; News & Opinion |publisher=PCMag.com |date=2012-09-04 |access-date=2013-04-30}}</ref>
==How voicemail solved the business communication problem==
Voice mail’s introduction enabled people to leave lengthy, secure and detailed messages in natural voice, working hand-in-hand with corporate phone systems. The adoption of voicemail in corporations improved the flow of communications and saved huge amounts of money. [[General Electric|GE]], one of the pioneer adopters of voicemail in all of its offices around the world, claimed that voicemail saved, on average, over US$1,100 per year per employee.


=== Message centers ===
Voicemail has two main modes of operation: ''telephone answering ''and ''voice messaging''. Telephone answering mode answers outside calls and takes a message from any outside caller (either because the extension was busy or rang no-answer). Voice messaging enables any subscriber (someone with a mailbox number) to send messages directly to any or many subscribers’ mailboxes without first calling them. Both of these modes are described below.
{{Unreferenced section|date=February 2024}}
The conventional solution to efficient handling of telephone communication in businesses was the "[[message center]]". A message center or "message desk" was a centralized, manual answering service inside a company staffed by a few operators who answered all incoming phone calls. Extensions that were busy or rang "no answer" would forward to the message center using a device called a "call director". The call director had a button for each extension in the company which would flash when that person's extension forwarded to the message center. A little label next to the button told the operator the person being called.


While it was an improvement over basic multi-line systems, the message center had many disadvantages. Many calls would come in simultaneously at peak periods, such as lunch time, and operators were often busy. This left message attendants with little time to take each message accurately. Often, they were not familiar with employees' names and "buzzwords" and how to spell or pronounce them. Messages were scribbled on pink slips and distributed by the internal mail system and messages, often arrived at people's desks after lengthy delays, contained little content other than the caller's name and number, and were often inaccurate, with misspelled names and wrong phone numbers.
===Telephone answering mode===
One of the advantages of a PBX is its ability to forward calls. If a person is using his phone or does not answer it, calls to his extension are forwarded automatically by the PBX to another extension, presumably someone (like a secretary) who can answer the call and take a message. With a voicemail system installed, the PBX is programmed to forward busy or unanswered extensions to a machine — the voicemail system.


Tape-based telephone answering machines had come into the residential telephone market, but they were not used much in the corporate environment due to physical limitations of the technology. One answering machine was needed for each telephone; messages could not be recorded if the user was using the phone; messages had to be retrieved in sequential order; and messages could not be retrieved remotely, selectively discarded, saved, or forwarded to others. Further, the manufacturers of PBXs ([[private branch exchange]]s—the name for corporate phone systems) used proprietary digital phone sets in order to increase the functionality and value of the PBX. These phone sets were, by design, incompatible with answering machines.
Suppose an outside caller, Willma, calls someone in a company, Fred. If Fred’s phone rings "no answer" or "busy", the PBX will forward the call to the voicemail system. Somehow the PBX needs to tell the voicemail system that Fred’s phone is the one that the call is being forwarded to so that the voicemail system can answer with Fred’s personal greeting. Without this information, the voicemail system would have no idea whose phone it was answering. Once a message is left, the voicemail system illuminates the message waiting light on Fred’s phone. It does this by sending a signal to the PBX to tell it which light to light. When Fred returns to his desk and calls the voicemail system (or calls in remotely) he is presented only with the messages in his personal mailbox even though thousands of messages belonging to other people are stored on the same system. Once the messages are played, the voicemail system signals the PBX to turn off the message waiting light on Fred’s phone.


In the 1970s and early 1980s, the cost of long-distance calling decreased and more business communications were conducted by telephone. As corporations grew and labor rates increased, the ratio of secretaries to employees decreased. With more communication by phone, multiple time zones, and fewer secretaries, real-time phone communications were hampered by callers being unable to reach people. Some early studies showed that only 1 in 4 phone calls resulted in a completed call and half the calls were one-way in nature (that is, they did not require a conversation). This happened because people were either not at work (due to time zone differences, being away on business, etc.), or if they were at work, they were on the phone, away from their desks in meetings, on breaks, etc. This bottleneck hindered the effectiveness of business activities and decreased both individual and group productivity. It also wasted the caller's time and created delays in resolving time-critical issues.
Early voicemail systems (notably those made by [[IBM]] and [[VMX]]) could not answer outside calls — that is, they could not automatically answer a call originally destined to an extension on the PBX which rang busy or was not answered. As subsequent voicemail systems emerged (notably ROLM and Octel which later merged with Boston Technology), the systems could answer outside calls. However, most PBX’s did not provide signaling to tell the voicemail system which extension it was forwarding, nor did they support telephones with message waiting lights. This signaling would come later, but until it did it created a major challenge for voicemail systems for many years.


===Voice messaging===
=== Invention ===
The first public records describing voice recording were reported in a New York newspaper and the Scientific American in November 1877. [[Thomas A. Edison]] had announced the invention of his "phonograph" saying "the object was to record telephone messages and transmit them again by telephone." Edison applied for a US patent in December 1877 and shortly thereafter demonstrated the machine to publishers, the US Congress and President [[Rutherford B. Hayes]]. In an article outlining his own ideas of the future usefulness of his machine Edison's list began with "Letter writing, and all kinds of dictation without the aid of a stenographer." In other words, "voice messages" or "Voice-mail". By 1914, Edison's phonograph business included a dictating machine (the [[Phonograph cylinder|Ediphone]]) and the "Telescribe", a machine combining the phonograph and the telephone, which recorded both sides of telephone conversations.<ref>{{Cite web |title=About this Collection {{!}} Inventing Entertainment: The Early Motion Pictures and Sound Recordings of the Edison Companies {{!}} Digital Collections {{!}} Library of Congress |url=https://www.loc.gov/collections/edison-company-motion-pictures-and-sound-recordings/about-this-collection/ |access-date=2024-02-13 |website=Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA}}</ref>
This mode is to phones what [[email]] is to computers. Messages are sent to other users by calling the voicemail system rather than the user’s phone. For example, suppose two employees, Fred and Mary, are working on a project. Fred has some information that Mary should have, but does not want to phone her and talk to her — he just wants to give her the information. Rather than phone her, Fred calls the voicemail system, logs on with his number and password, and records a message to Mary in his own voice. He tells the voicemail system to send it to Mary by keying in her mailbox number (same as her extension) or spelling her name using Touch-tone keys. The message is immediately put in Mary’s voice mailbox without her phone ever ringing. The message waiting light on her phone immediately comes on telling her there is a message. Fred can send this message just to Mary, to Mary and any number of additional employees, or to group lists which contain any number of pre-programmed names and numbers. The same message can be sent to thousands of people. Additional features are available, like marking a message urgent, private or asking for notification when the message has been picked up.


For nearly one hundred years, there were few innovations or advances in telephone services. Voicemail was the result of innovations in telephone products and services made possible by developments in computer technology during the 1970s. These innovations began with the [[Motorola Pageboy]], a simple "pager" or "beeper" introduced in 1974 that was generally offered in conjunction with answering services that handled busy&nbsp;/ no-answer overloads and after hours calls for businesses and professionals. Operators wrote down a caller's message, sent a page alert or "beep" and when the party called back, an operator dictated the message.
Voice messaging does not always have to be sent between individuals on the same voicemail system. Messages can be transferred using [[Audio Messaging Interchange Specification|AMIS]] ([[Audio Messaging Interchange Specification]]) or [[VOIP]] (Voice Over Internet Protocol) technologies; both allow messages on one computer system to be forwarded to the target system. Like email, this method of delivering voice messages can be subject to abuse such as spam or [[vishing]]. There are Federal and State laws and regulations designed curb these abuses, such as the [[United States National Do Not Call Registry]].


With the introduction of "voice" pagers, like the [[Motorola Pageboy II]] operators could transmit a voice message directly to the pager and the user could hear the message. However, messages arrival was often untimely and privacy issues, as well as the high cost, eventually caused the demise of these services. By the mid 1970s digital storage and analog to digital conversion devices had emerged and paging companies began handling client messages electronically. Operators recorded a short message (five to six seconds, e.g. "please call Mr. Smith") and the messages were delivered automatically when the client called the answering service. It would only take a short step for the first voicemail application to be born.
==History of voicemail==
There is often some discussion about who invented voicemail. Invention of a device is normally defined as who first created a viable design for a product and reduced it to practice, not who first had the seed of an idea (since that is impossible to prove). Beyond invention is the concept of who brought the product to the world most effectively, or, in other words, who was the first to make it commercially viable and widely used. In those terms, voicemail was invented simultaneously at IBM by Dr. Steven J. Boies (c.1975)<ref>“Speech Filing System Reference Manual”, 1975, by J. W. Schoonard and S. J. Boies, IBM Research Center, Yorktown Heights, NY, 10598<br>
According to paper co-authored by Boies in 1983,[http://www.research.ibm.com/compsci/spotlight/hci/p273-gould.pdf] this is an unpublished manuscript.</ref>{{Fact|date=March 2008}}<!-- if we cannot read the paper, we cannot verify that the source supports the statement --> and at the [[Xerox Palo Alto Research Center]] (PARC) by Stan Kugell and Edward McCreight.{{Fact|date=September 2007}}
Both implementations employed front end systems to manage telephone and user interfaces (IBM System /7 and Xerox [[Alto]]), with larger file services attached (IBM's [[VM370]] and Xerox's Network File System and [[Ethernet]]). Despite promising internal deployments, neither company successfully commercialized voicemail.


Computer manufacturers, telephone equipment manufacturers, and software firms began developing more sophisticated solutions as more powerful and less expensive computer processors and storage devices became available. This set the stage for a creation of a broad spectrum of computer based Central Office and Customer Premises Equipment that would eventually support enhanced voice solutions such as voicemail, [[audiotex]], [[interactive voice response]] (IVR) and [[speech recognition]] solutions that began emerging in the 1980s. However, broad adoption of these products and services would depend on the global proliferation of touch tone phones and mobile phone services which would not occur until the late 1980s.
Paul Finnigan and Rene Beusch are recognized worldwide as the founders of the Industry. Finnigan was the CEO of Voicemail International (VMI) and Beusch was Vice President of Engineering and Telecommunications for Radio Suisse, known today as Swiss Telecom.
VMI introduced its trademarked Voicemail® service in 1980, the first electronic messaging service offered in the U.S.. Radio Suisse, a telecommunications leader in Europe, introduced the first Voicemail service in Europe in 1983. [http://www.finniganusa.com/voicemail.html]


==== Inventor controversy ====
Paul Finnigan and Rene Beusch organized the The International Association for Enhanced Voice Services (the VMA) and served as Chairman and President respectively from 1983 until 2000. The VMA sponsors semi-annual conferences that are attended by service providers and equipment vendors worldwide. The VMA continues today as a forum for the exchange of experiences and ideas within the voice services industry. [http://www.thevma.com]
Many contributed to the creation of the modern-day voicemail. Legal battles ensued for decades.<ref>{{cite web
|url=https://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/1985/10/28/66509/
|title=The Legal Battles Over Voice Messaging: A young inventor from Florida says the technology is his. So does a small company in Texas. Both have sued to protect it.
|author=Dexter Hutchins
|work=Fortune
|date=October 28, 1985
}}</ref> The {{citation needed span|true first inventor|date=October 2021}} of voicemail, patent number 4,124,773 (Audio Storage and Distribution System), is Robin Elkins.<ref>{{cite web
|url=http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO1&Sect2=HITOFF&d=PALL&p=1&u=%2Fnetahtml%2FPTO%2Fsrchnum.htm&r=1&f=G&l=50&s1=4124773.PN.&OS=PN/4124773&RS=PN/4124773
|title=United States Patent: 4124773
|publisher=United States Patent and Trademark Office
}}</ref> "Though Elkins received a patent in 1978, telecommunications giants began offering voicemail without paying Elkins a penny in royalties."<ref>{{cite news
|url=http://www.inventone.com/articles/survive_herald.asp
|title=How to Survive the Road from Invention to Marketplace
|author=Mimi Whitefield
|work=The Miami Herald
|date=February 5, 1996
}}</ref> "Elkins never expected to spend 10 years of his life battling some of the world's largest corporations, either. But once he patented his system, he figured he should protect it."<ref>{{cite news
|url=http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/1995-08-07/business/9508030727_1_elkins-points-soul-saxophonist-lasers-cost
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120916210059/http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/1995-08-07/business/9508030727_1_elkins-points-soul-saxophonist-lasers-cost
|url-status=dead
|archive-date=September 16, 2012
|title=Inventor Battles to Protect Patents
|author=Viki McCash
|work=Sun Sentinel
|date=August 7, 1995
}}</ref> Later, Elkins successfully licensed his patented technology to IBM, DEC, and WANG, among many others. Unfortunately, his patent did not address simultaneity of voice message access and storage and the application for patent was filed after the patent application of the system patented by Kolodny and Hughes, as described below.


=== Early applications ===
Corporate Voicemail was broadly commercialized by [[Octel Communications]] (founded in 1982 by Bob Cohn and Peter Olson). ROLM Corporation (founded in 1969 by Gene Richeson, Ken Oshman, Walter Loewenstern and Robert Maxfield and later owned by IBM before IBM sold it to [[Siemens]]) was the first PBX manufacturer to offer integrated voicemail with its PhoneMail system, and also played a major role commercializing voicemail.
One of the first modern day voicemail applications was invented by Gerald M. Kolodny and Paul Hughes, which was described in an article in the medical journal, Radiology (Kolodny GM, Cohen HI, Kalisky A. Rapid-access system for radiology reports: a new concept. Radiology. 1974;111(3):717–9) A patent was applied for by Kolodny and Hughes in 1975, prior to the patent applications of both Elkins and Matthews and was issued in 1981 (US patent 4,260,854). The patent was assigned to Sudbury Systems of Sudbury Massachusetts who proceeded to market and sell such systems to corporations and hospitals. IBM, Sony and Lanier, as well as several smaller makers of voicemail systems, licensed the Sudbury patent for their voicemail systems. A patent suit, brought by Pitney Bowes, claiming prior art to the Sudbury patent, was denied by the US District Court, District of Connecticut on November 8, 2000. A similar suit brought byVDI Technologies against the Kolodny and Hughes patent claiming prior art was dismissed by the US District Court in New Hampshire on December 19, 1991.


==== IBM Audio Distribution System ====
IBM’s product, initially called the SFS (Speech Filing System) was developed as an intensive research project at the IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center.<ref>{{cite journal
The {{citation needed span|first|date=October 2021}} voice-messaging application, the Speech Filing System, was developed at the [[IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center]] in 1973 under the leadership of [[Stephen Boies]].<ref>{{cite journal
|url=http://domino.watson.ibm.com/tchjr/journalindex.nsf/1be2fd38b451963885256547004c00c8/e82d3ca81c74648b85256bfa00685b80?OpenDocument
|url=http://domino.watson.ibm.com/tchjr/journalindex.nsf/1be2fd38b451963885256547004c00c8/e82d3ca81c74648b85256bfa00685b80?OpenDocument
|title=Speech filing-office system for principals
|title=Speech Filing&nbsp;– An Office System for Principals
|author=J. D. Gould, S. J. Boies
|last1=Gould
|first1=J.&nbsp;D.
|publisher=IBM Systems Journal
|volume=23
|last2=Boies
|pages=65
|first2=S.&nbsp;J.
|journal=IBM Systems Journal
|date=1984
|volume=23|number=1
}}</ref>
|page=65
It was meant to mimic the concept of email, but using the telephone as the input device and the human voice as the medium for the message. Work on the system began in 1973 and the first operational prototype was made available to users in 1975. Four people could use it at once. From 1975-1981, about 750 IBM executives, mainly in the U.S., used various SFS prototypes in their daily work. Those prototypes ran on an IBM System /7 computer attached to an [[VM (operating system)|IBM VM370]] for additional storage. The prototype was converted to run on a [[IBM Series/1|Series /1]] computer in 1978. In September, 1981, IBM announced this product as the “Audio Distribution System” (ADS) with the first customer installation being February, 1982. It was marketed directly by IBM and for a short while by AT&T. IBM’s ADS required special attention as a computer (special room, special power, air conditioning, etc.) ADS was richly featured for voice messaging, the result of IBM’s enormous research in human factors and observing SFS in real operational use. However, ADS had major limitations which resulted in its failure as a commercial product: for example, it was physically large, expensive, limited to 1,000 users, had no telephone answering mode (could not answer outside calls), and had to be taken out of service to make administrative changes to the user data base (called “MAC”, for “moves, adds and changes”).
|year=1984
|doi=10.1147/sj.231.0065
|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081212061202/http://domino.watson.ibm.com/tchjr/journalindex.nsf/1be2fd38b451963885256547004c00c8/e82d3ca81c74648b85256bfa00685b80?OpenDocument|archive-date=2008-12-12
}}</ref> It was later renamed the Audio Distribution System (ADS).


ADS used the human voice and the fixed-line [[Push-button telephone|touch-tone telephones]] that predated computer screens and mobile phones. The first operational prototypes were used by 750 IBM executives mainly in the US for their daily work. Those prototypes ran on an [[IBM System/7]] computer attached to an [[VM (operating system)|IBM VM370]] for additional storage.
Another company, Delphi Communications of California, deserves some partial credit for invention of voicemail. Under the leadership of Jay Stoffer, Delphi developed a proprietary system (called Delta 1) that picked up incoming calls directly from the telephone company. Stoffer presented the Delphi concept publicly to the association of Telephone Answering Services around 1973 and the prototype system was launched in San Francisco in 1976 by a Delphi company called VoiceBank. Delphi developed Delta 1 as a purely service-oriented voice messaging system to answer subscriber telephones for businesses and professionals. Delta 1 required human intervention for message deposit. While three machines were built, only one machine was put into operational service. The completely automated voice messaging system (Delta 2) was developed for initial operational use in Los Angeles in 1981. Apparently Delta 2 was built, installed and operational for a short while, but unfortunately Delphi’s major early investor, Exxon Enterprises, abruptly shut down Delphi in July, 1982. Nothing further was done with Delphi’s technology. A [[patent]] was applied for and issued for Delphi’s Automated Telephone Voice Service System. The patent, U.S. Patent No. 4,625,081, was issued after Delphi’s closure, but Delphi’s assets (and the patent) were transferred to another [[Exxon]] company, Gilbarco, which made equipment for gas pumps at filling stations. Gilbarco is now owned by GEC in the [[United Kingdom]].


In 1978 the prototype was converted to run on an [[IBM Series/1]] computer. In September 1981 IBM started marketing ADS in America and Europe: the first customer installation was completed in February 1982.
In 1979, five years after IBM’s SFS (ADS) system and three years after Delphi’s Delta 1 system were first operational, a company was founded in [[Texas]] by [[Gordon Matthews]] called ECS Communications (the name was later changed to VMX). According to Jay Stoffer, founder of Delphi Communications, Gordon Matthews learned about Delphi’s voicemail prior to his founding VMX. Regardless of how he was inspired, Matthews eventually founded VMX which developed a 3,000-user voice messaging system called the VMX/64. VMX was arguably the first company to offer voicemail for sale commercially for corporate use. Matthews was able to sell his system to several notable large corporations, such as [[3M]], [[Kodak]], [[American Express]], [[Intel]], [[Hoffman La Roche]], [[Corning Glass]], [[Arco]], Shell Canada and [[Westinghouse Electric (1886)|Westinghouse]].
This impressive list of early adopters started the ball rolling on corporate voicemail. While some claim that VMX and Gordon Matthews invented voicemail, this claim is not true. The first inventor of record was Stephen Boies of IBM years before VMX was founded.


ADS,<ref name="ReferenceB">Eight editions of IBM UK's "Talking lines" magazine with a print run of over 10,000</ref> marketed by IBM and briefly by [[AT&T Corporation]], was well featured for voice messaging, the result of IBM's considerable human-factors research plus observation of operational use. Using a 1980s computer requiring air conditioning, it was expensive and physically large. With further development it grew to handle up to 3000 users, 100 hours of messages, multiple languages, message notification to a host computer, and 16 simultaneous users.<ref name="ReferenceA">IBM UK 1980s publicity material researched and written by Duncan Ogilvie</ref>
While VMX began with a good start, it failed at developing the market, and the company was not a commercial success. It took many years before its products could answer outside calls (and then only under certain circumstances), they were physically enormous, expensive, light on important user features and had serious reliability issues. In addition, the user interface was cumbersome, requiring the users to remember non-intuitive multi-digit Touch-tone commands. Matthews, a prolific entrepreneur and patenter, applied for and was granted a patent on voicemail (patent number 4,371,752) which issued in February, 1983. The patent was promoted as the pioneering patent for voicemail.


ADS could be connected to exchange lines and private exchanges including the [[IBM 1750, 2750 and 3750 Switching Systems|IBM 2750 and 3750 Switching Systems]] available in Germany, France, Italy, Belgium, and the UK.
Shortly after the development of the first voicemail systems, several companies sprang up to develop their own systems including [[Wang computers]], [[ROLM]], [[Opcom]], [[Octel]], [[Centigram]], Genesis, and many others. Wang Computers, under the leadership of Dr. Larry Bergeron, developed a voicemail system modeled after the IBM system. Wang called its system the DVX. It too could not answer outside calls but was smaller and less expensive than the IBM system.


IBM sold many systems,<ref name="ReferenceB"/> Installations<ref name="ReferenceA"/> including the 1984 [[1984 Summer Olympics|Los Angeles Olympic Games]] "Olympic Message System" <ref>"IBM Connection" UK newsletter issue 3 of 5 October 1984</ref>
Matthews was quite astute at the way he used his patent. Matthews tried to assert his patent with IBM, [[AT&T]] and then Wang, but all three companies reportedly would have been able to invalidate the Matthews patent because of prior art. Matthews cleverly achieved a settlement where the patent was let stand, not challenged in court and IBM, Wang and AT&T (in separate settlements) received royalty-free licenses to all VMX patents. Wang, the last of the majors to get such a license, essentially paid $20,000 and cross licensed a few patent applications (not issued patents). IBM and AT&T also cross-licensed a number of patents to VMX, most of which were obsolete or outdated. VMX could claim that several major companies licensed the patent (even though they paid almost nothing to VMX for the rights), but that part wasn’t disclosed. The patent was never challenged in court and VMX then continued to assert (incorrectly) that it had invented voicemail and that Matthews was the father of voicemail. Following the settlement with Wang, VMX settled with Octel. In exchange for a small payment and Octel’s agreeing not to litigate any VMX patent, Octel received a paid-up, royalty-free license on all existing and future VMX patents.
==== Delta 1 ====
Another company, Delphi Communications of California, deserves some partial credit for invention of voicemail. Delphi developed a proprietary system called ''Delta 1'' that picked up and coming calls directly from the telephone company. Delphi presented the concept publicly to the association of Telephone Answering Services around 1973 and the prototype system was launched in San Francisco in 1976 by a Delphi company called VoiceBank. A [[patent]] was applied for and issued for Delphi's Automated Telephone Voice Service System. The patent, US Patent No. 4,625,081, was issued after Delphi's closure, but Delphi's assets (and the patent) were transferred to another [[Exxon]] company, Gilbarco, which made equipment for gas pumps at filling stations. Gilbarco is now owned by GEC in the [[United Kingdom]].{{Citation needed|date=February 2024}}


==== AT&T ====
ROLM (one of the first makers of digital PBX’s) was the first company to offer integrated voicemail through its product called PhoneMail, which name is a registered trademark. PhoneMail offered impressive recording quality of its digitized messages. ROLM’s digital PBX (called a CBX, for Computerized Branch eXchange) was the first PBX to provide signaling to indicate which extension was being forwarded to a voicemail system (the first PBX to do so). However, the signaling was proprietary and intended only for use by its voicemail product, PhoneMail. ROLM’s CBX also provided signaling to enable PhoneMail to illuminate a message waiting light on ROLM’s electronic phones and later standard phones equipped with message waiting lights (also a studder dialtone is used with analog and digital phones). PhoneMail worked with most but not all models of ROLM’s CBXs, would work with some other brands of PBXs such as Nortel's Option Meridian (with adaptors and loss of some features), and was heavily promoted by ROLM. PhoneMail is still a commercial success. Siemens still offers PhoneMail in various configurations/sizes (including a micro-sized version) and its unified messaging successor, Xpressions 470; along with the same pleasing female voice most ROLM techs have nicknamed, Silicon Sally.
AT&T developed a system called 1A Voice Storage System to support custom services including voicemail for the public telephone system.<ref>{{cite journal
|title=1A Voice Storage System: Software
|journal = Bell System Technical Journal
|volume=61
|issue = 5|page=863
|year=1982
|doi=10.1002/j.1538-7305.1982.tb04318.x
|s2cid = 20023290
|last1 = Gates
|first1 = G. W.
|last2 = Kranzmann
|first2 = R. F.
|last3 = Whitehead
|first3 = L. D.
}}</ref> It worked in conjunction with the companies 1A ESS and 5ESS systems. Development started in mid-1976,<ref>{{cite journal
|title=1A Voice Storage System: Voice Storage in the Network - Perspective and History
|journal = Bell System Technical Journal|author=E. Nussbaum
|volume=61
|issue = 5|page=811
|year=1982
|doi=10.1002/j.1538-7305.1982.tb04318.x
|s2cid = 20023290}}</ref> with first deployment in early 1979. Friendly user service started in March 1980. The service was terminated in 1981 as a result of the US FCC Computer Inquiry II, which prohibited enhanced services from being provided by the regulated network.


==== VMX ====
Opcom, a company started by David Ladd, was another maker of voicemail which also pioneered and patented the feature of [[Automated attendant|automated attendant ]](U.S. Patent numbers 4,747,124 and 4,783,796 both of which issued in 1988). Opcom developed a voicemail system primarily marketed to smaller enterprises. Automated attendant enables callers to direct calls by pressing single digit keys. For example, “If you are making domestic reservations, press ‘1’; for international reservations, press ‘2’; for frequent flier information, press ‘3’, etc.” Automated attendant is not technically voicemail, but all the features to enable automated attendant are already part of a voicemail system so it is a natural feature to add to it. Opcom was an innovative company and also pioneered the concept of Unified Messaging (to be discussed later in this article). Opcom’s voicemail product was a commercial success with smaller companies and some large ones. Around 1991, VMX was on the verge of bankruptcy and was acquired by Opcom. Since Opcom was private and VMX was public, the transaction was done as a reverse merger and the surviving company was called VMX. Little of the original VMX Company was retained. Within a few years, VMX was acquired by Octel and David Ladd became Octel’s Chief Technology Officer.
In 1979, a company was founded in [[Texas]] by [[Gordon Matthews (inventor)|Gordon Matthews]] called ECS Communications (the name was later changed to VMX, for Voice Message exchange). VMX developed a 3000-user voice messaging system called the VMX/64. Matthews, a prolific entrepreneur and patentor, applied for and was granted a patent on voicemail (patent number 4,371,752) which issued in February 1983. The patent was promoted as the pioneering patent for voicemail. However, the patent application was filed on November 26, 1979, five years after, and issued in 1983.


VMX asserted infringement first with IBM, AT&T and then Wang, but all three companies reportedly would have been able to invalidate the patent on the basis of prior art and their licenses from Sudbury Systems Inc, for their Kolodny and Hughes patent.
Octel Communications Corporation was founded in Silicon Valley in 1982 by Bob Cohn and Peter Olson. Octel’s voicemail system (developed during the period from 1982-1984 and first sold in 1984), became the clear market leader fairly quickly. While Octel benefited from the work and experiments of others, it was the first stand-alone voicemail company to build a strong business and strategy to win at this important market. In addition, Octel innovated substantially new technology which contributed heavily to its success. Octel’s differentiated hardware and software architecture enabled its systems to be physically smaller, faster, more reliable, and much less costly to build than any other vendor. These features, many of which were patented, gave Octel market leadership:
* User-friendly user-interface (other systems were not intuitive and had no help prompts).
* Error-free Touch-tone detection (other systems falsely detected a Touch- tone out of human voice, or didn’t detect Touch-tones when users pressed the buttons).
* Scrambled messages so no one could hear anyone else’s messages (other systems could accidentally get other people’s messages if the system failed at the right time).
* Telephone answering, voice messaging and automated attendant.
* Moves, adds and changes could be done while the system was running.
* Large amounts of message storage.
* Physically small size (about the size of a 2-drawer filing cabinet, compared to ROLM’s original PhoneMail being about 5' × 5' × 5' and VMX’s system filling a computer room). No requirement for special environment.
* Locatable anywhere. Octel systems could be located in any office environment and they were not susceptible to electrical shocks (often common on carpeted floors in offices, especially during winter).
* High reliability (being the first voicemail system to achieve up-time of 99.9% with its first system).
* Compatible with virtually all brands of PBX (voicemail offered by PBX vendors could only work with that vendor’s PBX system).
* Telephone answering with all PBXs, even those which had no method of providing [[caller ID]].
* Message notification (phoning subscribers at various locations pre-programmed by the subscriber, when messages were received).
* Range of capacities. Small, medium, large and extra large capacity systems that addressed the needs of major companies (For example, Octel’s systems had 50% greater port capacity than VMX’s largest system). Small systems went in branch offices, medium systems went in district offices, large systems went in regional offices, and extra large systems could handle large corporate headquarters with over 10,000 people.
* Networking between voicemail systems so companies could have their voicemail systems operate as one large virtual network.


==== IVR Voice Recognition ====
Octel’s strategy addressed needs of major accounts which other vendors did not until much later: advanced training, customer service, sales and market education. Octel’s system could identify the extension number of calls being forwarded to it and light message-waiting lights on most PBXs. This was possible because Octel’s engineers reverse engineered the major brands of PBX (legally) and often figured out ways to communicate with the PBX in ways the PBX manufacturer had not. Eventually most makers of PBX chose to work cooperatively with Octel. Octel integrated with almost 100 brands of PBX worldwide. As a result of Octel’s worldwide leadership, its user interface (which was done in more than 75 languages and dialects) became the most widely known in the world.
In 1985, Voice Response Inc. (formerly Call-It Co) a subsidiary of Lee Enterprises, Davenport IA, entered the fast-growing Interactive Voice (IVR) response market under the direction of Bob Ross, President.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.fundinguniverse.com/company-histories/Lee-Enterprises-Inc-Company-History.html |title=History of Lee Enterprises Inc. – FundingUniverse |publisher=Fundinguniverse.com |access-date=2013-04-30}}</ref> About a year later, VRI introduced one of the first "successful" IVR applications that utilized voice recognition (rather than touch tone) to capture caller responses. Voice recognition technology had great difficulty with regional and ethnic differences and nuances which resulted in a high incidence of error. VRI discovered that hesitation (delayed response) signaled caller confusion or misunderstanding which often resulted in an inaccurate response. VRI developed proprietary techniques that measured user response times and used the data to make real-time changes to the application's dialog with the caller. VRI found that the confidence level of a "suspect" caller response could be increased by asking "Did you say (Chicago), Yes or No", a standard question heard in order taking or reservation making IVR applications today. VRI pioneering applications, including subscription fulfillment for ''Time'' and ''Life'' magazines, proved faster and less expensive than call centers using live operators and although VRI did not survive, their voice recognition processes became industry standards and VRI's patent USPTO – patent RE34,587 was eventually licensed by Intel/Dialogic and Nuance.


==== PC-based Voicemail ====
Toward the late 1990s, Octel introduced the concept of Visual Mailbox and ''Unified Messaging''. Visual Mailbox enabled users to manage their voice mailboxes through their PCs, although the messages were still stored on the Octel system. Unified Messaging integrated voicemail into [[Microsoft Exchange]], the corporate email system made by [[Microsoft]]. Unified Messaging had actually been invented by Roberta Cohen, Kenneth Huber and Deborah Mill at AT&T Bell Labs. The patent for Unified Messaging was received in June, 1989 (Patent number 4,837,798).
Amidst the booming popularity of the IBM [[IBM Personal Computer/AT|PC-AT]], a variety of companies popped up to market add-in boards to the AT. These companies aimed to use the PC as an inexpensive hardware platform for hosting add-in boards and software providing voice mail functionality for small businesses that wanted something more sophisticated than an answering machine but could not afford pricey conventional voice mail solutions. Among these was The Complete PC, founded in 1986 in Silicon Valley.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1991/01/27/business/all-about-answering-machines-for-yuppies-now-plain-folks-too.html|title=All About/Answering Machines; For Yuppies, Now Plain Folks, Too|last=Ramirez|first=Anthony|date=1991-01-27|work=The New York Times|access-date=2020-01-21|language=en-US|issn=0362-4331}}</ref> The Complete PC was sold to publicly-listed Florida-based [[Boca Research]] Inc., in 1993.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Lunan |first=Charles |date=17 May 1993 |title=Boca Research Acquisition Likely to Boost Delray Plant |url=https://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/fl-xpm-1993-05-17-9302120384-story.html |access-date=2020-01-21 |website=Sun-Sentinel.com |language=en-US}}</ref>


==International Voicemail Association==
[[Image:Unified Messenger Screen Shot.png|600px]]
In 1987, voicemail service providers in the US and Europe joined to form the Voice Mail Association of Europe (VMA) with René Beusch, Radio-Suisse and Paul Finnigan, Finnigan USA<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.finniganusa.com/|title=Finnegan USA LLC|website=www.finniganusa.com}}</ref> serving as VMA Chairman and President respectively. The first VMA meeting was held in Stockholm Huddinge by Voicemail Svenska AB in 1987, organized by its founder Lars Olof Kanngard. The tech team in Voicemail Svenska AB was granted the right to port the Voicemail from PDP systems to their own PC-board solution, which become known as the MiniVoice, later become ESSELTE VOICE AB. The VMA invited service providers, vendors and consultants to attend semi-annual conferences that included presentations, discussions and reporting of experiences. VMA membership was eventually expanded to include representatives from telecommunication organizations worldwide and became "The International Voice-mail Association". By the late 1980s, the Bell Operating companies, Tigon and other independent service providers in the US had joined the VMA. In 1992, VMA members conducted an "Information Week Tour of the U.S.", sharing ideas with major telecom operators. VMA working groups promoted collaboration and adoption of industry standards to the ITU and CCITT and at the 1999 CCITT conference in Geneva, Switzerland, demonstrated worldwide exchange of messages between the major voicemail vendors' platforms using the VPIM networking standard. Beusch and Finnigan led the VMA until 1998 and 1999 respectively and the organization continues to serve the voice services industry today.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.thevma.com/|title=VMA home page|url-status=dead|access-date=2011-05-25|archive-date=2019-07-09|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190709095644/http://www.thevma.com/}}</ref>
==Public telephone services==


In the US, the Bell Operating Companies and their cellular divisions had been prohibited by the FCC from offering voicemail and other enhanced services such as paging and telephone answering services (no such prohibition existed in foreign countries). A ruling by Judge Harold H. Greene on March 7, 1988, removed this barrier and allowed the BOCs to offer voicemail service, however, they were not allowed to design or manufacture equipment used to provide voicemail services.{{Citation needed|date=February 2024}}
''The figure above shows a screen shot from an early Unified Messaging system (GUI). Emails are identified with the icon of an envelope; voicemails are identified with the icon of a phone handset. This system fully integrated voicemail into Microsoft Exchange so both voicemails and emails could be displayed and accessed via Microsoft Outlook. Users could also call into the system by phone and hear both voicemails and machine-read emails (TUI).''


The opportunity created by the Greene decision, plus Voicemail International's abandonment of its market lead for carrier-grade systems, created a new opportunity for competing manufacturers and those who had been focusing on the corporate market. [[Unisys]], Boston Technology, and [[Comverse Technology]] were quick to address the BOC and PTT marketplace. Octel, who had high capacity systems in use internally by all seven Regional Bell Operating companies, launched a new generation of its large system specifically designed for carriers and was compliant with "[[Network Equipment-Building System|NEBS]] standards", the tight standard required by phone companies for any equipment located in their central offices.
''Unified Messaging'': With Unified Messaging, users could access voice and email messages using either the graphical user interface (GUI) on their PC, or using the telephone user interface (TUI) with any telephone in the world. On the PC, users could see voicemails and emails mixed together in their email inbox. Voice mails had a little telephone icon next to them and emails had a little envelope icon next to them (see figure below). For voicemail, they’d see the “header information” (sender, date sent, size, and subject). Users could double-click a voicemail from their email inbox and hear the message through their PC or a phone next to their desk. Using any phone in the world, users could listen to voice messages like they normally did, plus have emails read to them (in synthesized voice). Voice messages could be sent using email or telephone addressing schemes, and the data networking infrastructure was used to send messages between locations rather than the public switched telephone network. Unified Messaging was not a commercial success at the time because in the late 1990s email did not enjoy a huge market share, email servers were not very reliable, internet connections were slow (voice messages were large files) and most PCs did not have speakers or microphones.


==Unified messaging==
==History of voicemail services for small businesses, residences, and cellular services==
{{Main|Unified messaging}}
Until 1988, telephone companies and the newly formed cellular phone companies were barred by law from offering voicemail to their subscribers. This was done by the FCC to protect the telephone answering businesses around the country. This prohibition continued with the decree which broke up AT&T in 1984. A subsequent ruling by Judge Harold H. Greene on [[March 7]], [[1988]], reversed this barrier. Phone companies were allowed to offer voicemail as a service, but they were barred from designing or manufacturing the machines that could provide the service.
[[Unified Messaging]] integrated voicemail into [[Microsoft Exchange Server|Microsoft Exchange]], the corporate email system made by [[Microsoft]]. Unified Messaging had been invented by Roberta Cohen, Kenneth Huber and Deborah Mill at AT&T Bell Labs. The patent for Unified Messaging was received in June 1989 (Patent number 4,837,798).


Unified Messaging allowed users to access voicemail and email messages using either the graphical user interface (GUI) on their PC, or using the telephone user interface (TUI). For voicemail, they'd see the "header information" (sender, date sent, size, and subject). Users could double-click a voicemail from their email inbox and hear the message through their PC or a phone next to their desk. Voice messages could be sent using email or telephone addressing schemes, and the data networking infrastructure was used to send messages between locations rather than the public switched telephone network.
VMX’s large system was used by a few carriers (telephone companies), but severe reliability and cost issues prevented VMX from expansion to the carrier market. Octel already had very high capacity systems for corporate use and by 1988 all seven Regional Bell Operating companies were using Octel for internal use. Octel first adapted its largest system for the carriers, which enabled them to offer reliable voicemail to their subscribers. Within a year, Octel launched a new generation of its large system specifically designed for carriers which was compliant with “[[NEBS]] standards,” the tight standard required by phone companies for any equipment located in their central offices. A few other manufacturers entered the voicemail market for carriers including [[Unisys]], Boston Technology (founded by [[Greg Carr]] and [[Scott Jones]]), and [[Comverse Technology]] (an Israeli based company founded by Kobi Alexander). These vendors did not offer voicemail to corporations but they focused on the potentially large and lucrative carrier market. Unisys secured PacBell’s residential voicemail services, and Boston Technology was the mainstay of Bell Atlantic’s residential voicemail offering. None of the other corporate voicemail manufacturers had notable success with the carrier market because their systems’ capacities were too small and the equipment wasn’t reliable enough. Selling to carriers also required a different method of sales and marketing than selling to the corporate market, and only Octel succeeded at both.


==Virtual telephony==
Perhaps the first cellular carrier in North America to offer voicemail successfully to its subscribers was Bell Cellular, the Canadian carrier serving Ontario and Quebec (Bell Cellular later changed its name to [[Bell Mobility]]). Bell Cellular’s success with voicemail caught on, and cellular voicemail spread throughout Canada and then to the US and overseas. Within a few years, 100% of Canadian cellular companies ultimately used Octel voicemail, followed by virtually all of the major US wireless carriers (including the seven RBOCs, AT&T Wireless and McCaw) and a large percent of the [[Gsm|GSM]] carriers around the world. Comverse Technology was very successful in the GSM market outside the US. The Octel user interface became the most common in the world with carriers, but each carrier made minor variations on the interface.
{{Main|Virtual number}}
Other interesting markets developed from the carrier market including a concept called "[[virtual telephony]]". Virtual Telephony, developed by Octel, used voicemail to provide phone service rapidly in emerging countries without [[Telephone line|wiring for telephones]]. The problem this solved was that emerging countries did not have many telephones. Wiring for telephones was very expensive, and many poorer citizens did not have homes to wire. The economies of emerging countries were held back partly because people could not communicate beyond the area where they could walk or ride a bicycle. Giving them phones was one way to help their economies, but there was not a practical way to do it. In some countries, the wait for a phone was several years and the cost was in the thousands of dollars. Cellular phones were not an option at the time because they were extremely expensive (thousands of dollars per handset) and the infrastructure to install cell sites was also costly.


With virtual telephony, each person could be given a phone number (just the number, not the phone) and a voice mailbox. The citizen would also be given a [[pager]]. If someone called the phone number, it never rang on an actual phone, but would be routed immediately to a central voicemail system. The voicemail system answered the call and the caller could leave a long, detailed message. As soon as the message was received, the voicemail system would trigger the citizen's pager. When the page was received, the citizen would find a pay phone and call in to pick up the message. This concept was used successfully in [[South America]] and [[South Africa]].
Other interesting markets developed from the carrier market including a concept called “''virtual telephony''.” Virtual Telephony, developed by Octel, used voicemail to provide phone service rapidly in emerging countries without wiring for telephones. The problem this solved was that emerging countries did not have many telephones. Wiring for telephones was very expensive, and many poorer citizens didn’t have homes to wire. The economies of emerging countries were held back partly because people couldn’t communicate beyond the area where they could walk or ride a bicycle. Giving them phones was one way to help their economies, but there wasn’t a practical way to do it. In some countries, the wait for a phone was several years and the cost was in the thousands of dollars. Cellular phones weren’t an option at the time because they were extremely expensive (thousands of dollars per handset) and the infrastructure to install cell sites was also costly.


==Instant messaging in voice==
With virtual telephony, each person could be given a phone number (just the number, not the phone) and a voice mailbox. The citizen would also be given a [[pager]]. If someone called the phone number, it never rang on an actual phone, but would be routed immediately to a central voicemail system. The voicemail system answered the call and the caller could leave a long, detailed message. As soon as the message was received, the voicemail system would trigger the citizen’s pager. When the page was received, the citizen would find a pay phone and call in to pick up the message. This concept was used successfully in [[South America]] and [[South Africa]].


By the year 2000, voicemail had become a ubiquitous feature on phone systems serving companies, cellular and residential subscribers. Cellular and residential voicemail continue today in their previous form, primarily simple telephone answering. Email became the prevalent messaging system, email servers and software became quite reliable, and virtually all office workers were equipped with multimedia desktop PCs.
===Consolidation===
In the early ’80s there were over 30 companies vying for the corporate voicemail market including many companies no longer in business today. Among the many contenders were IBM, VMX, Wang, Octel, ROLM, AT&T, Northern Telecom, Delphi Communications, Voice and Data Systems, Opcom, Commterm, Genesis, Brook Trout, Glenayre, BBL, AVT, AVST, Digital Sound, Centigram, Voicemail International, [[Active Voice Building|Active Voice]],<ref>{{cite web
|url=http://www.voicemailinc.com/products/active_voice/
|title=Voice Mail, Inc. &ndash; Active Voice
|accessdate=2008-02-14
}}<br>Founded in 1983, now part of [[NEC]].</ref> and many others. Virtually all contenders in the corporate voicemail market were based in the United States.


The increase in wireless mobility, originally through cellular services and today through IP-based Wi-Fi, was also a driver for messaging convergence with [[mobile telephony]]. Today,{{As of?|date=November 2023}} it is not only fostering the use of speech user interfaces for message management, but increasing the demand for retrieval of voice messages integrated with email. It also enables people to reply to both voice and email messages in voice rather than text. New services, such as GotVoice, SpinVox and YouMail, are helping to blur the boundaries between voicemail and text by delivering voicemails to mobile phones as [[SMS text message]]s.
By the mid 1990s, IBM and Wang exited the voicemail market because they couldn’t get enough traction. ROLM was purchased by IBM in the mid 1980s (which was a financial disaster for the profitable ROLM, as IBM clearly could not grasp the laid back, "think outside the box" attitude of ROLM, which was the #2 PBX supplier in the US from the mid 70s to late 80s), then sold half interest to the German company, Siemens.{{Fact|date=January 2008}} In 1992, Siemens bought ROLM entirely from IBM and the original ROLM product line was done for, except for PhoneMail (the only product Siemens did not destroy).{{Fact|date=January 2008}} VMX suffered from poor product and ineffective management and was about to fold when Opcom merged with it. The surviving company was called VMX, but VMX was all but erased by Opcom except for its name and [[patent portfolio]]. In 1994, Octel bought VMX. By the early 90s, AT&T/Lucent created its version of voicemail for the corporate market (called [[Audix]]) but it would only work on AT&T/Lucent PBXs.{{Fact|date=January 2008}} [[Northern Telecom|Nortel]] developed [[Meridian Mail]] and followed the same strategy as AT&T in that Meridian Mail only worked with Northern Telecom PBXs.{{Fact|date=January 2008}} As a result, neither company achieved much market share with large national or multi-national accounts (because few major companies, if any, used only one brand of PBX, though Nortel had been the major leader since the late 1970s with ROLM a close second and poised to overtake Nortel until IBM bought ROLM).{{Fact|date=January 2008}} AT&T spun off its equipment business into a company called [[Lucent Technologies]], and Northern Telecom changed its name to [[Nortel]]. Several small companies offering voicemail folded because of inadequate product or management.


The next development in messaging was in making text messaging real-time, rather than just asynchronous store-and-forward delivery into a mailbox. Although in the 1980s [[Minitel]] in France was extremely popular and [[Teletext]] was widely used in the US, [[instant messaging]] on the Internet began with the [[ICQ]] application developed in 1996 as a public Internet-based free text "chat" service for consumers, but soon was being used by business people as well. It introduced the concept of [[Internet Protocol]] "presence management" or being able to detect device connectivity to the [[Internet]] and contact recipient "availability" status to exchange real-time messages, as well as personalized "Buddy list" directories to allow only people you knew to find out your status and initiate a real-time text messaging exchange with you. Presence and [[Instant Messaging]] has since evolved into more than short text messages, but now can include the exchange of data files (documents, pictures) and the escalation of the contact into a voice conversational connection.
By the mid-1990s, Octel had become the number one supplier of voicemail both to corporations and to carriers. It had about a 60% market share in the U.S., [[Canada]], [[Europe]] and [[Japan]] (for large corporations) and between a 30% and 100% of the carrier market, depending on the country. By 1997 Octel’s biggest competitors were Audix, made by Lucent, and Meridian Mail, made by Nortel. In July 1997, Octel was purchased by Lucent Technology. Lucent’s AUDIX division was merged into Octel to form the Octel Messaging Division. In the same year, Boston Technology was acquired by Comverse Technology making it the second largest supplier to carriers after Octel. In a few years Comverse became the largest supplier to carriers with Lucent holding its leadership in the corporate market and second place with carriers. By 2000, some estimate that there were over 150,000,000 active users of corporate and carrier voicemail made by the Octel Messaging Division. Shortly thereafter, Lucent spun off its corporate business, including the Octel Messaging Division, into a company known as [[Avaya]].<ref>{{cite web
|url=http://www.voicemailinc.com/products/octel/
|title=Avaya Octel
|date=2008
|publisher=Voice Main, Inc.
|accessdate=2008-01-09
}}</ref> Comverse today retains its leadership of voicemail systems sold to carriers around the world.


==Unified messaging with VoIP==
==Voicemail today and tomorrow==
[[File:Cisco SPA303 индикация.jpg|thumb|Voicemail indication]]
By the year 2000, voicemail had become a ubiquitous feature on phone systems serving companies, cellular and residential subscribers. Cellular and residential voicemail continue today in their previous form, primarily simple telephone answering. Email became the prevalent messaging system, email servers and software became quite reliable, and virtually all office workers were equipped with multimedia desktop PCs.
Corporate voicemail did not change much until the advent of [[Voice over IP]] (VoIP—voice being transmitted over the internet) and the development of [[Internet Protocol]] (IP) telephony applications to replace legacy [[Private branch exchange|PBX]] telephony (called [[time-division multiplexing|TDM]] technologies). IP telephony changed the style and technology of [[private branch exchange|PBXs]] and the way voicemail systems integrated with them. This, in turn, facilitated a new generation of [[Unified Messaging]], which is now likely to catch on widely. The flexibility, manageability, lower costs, reliability, speed, and user convenience for messaging convergence is now possible where it was not before. This might include intra- and inter-enterprise contacts, mobile contacts, proactive application information delivery, and customer contact applications.


The corporate IP telephony-based voicemail [[customer premises equipment]] market is served by several vendors including [[Avaya]], [[Cisco|Cisco systems]], Adomo, [[Interactive Intelligence]], [[Nortel]], [[Mitel]], [[3Com]], and AVST.<ref>{{cite web | url= http://www.frost.com/prod/servlet/market-insight-top.pag?docid=101501095| title= Customers Attest to the Value of Flexible Independent Messaging Solutions | first= Elka | last= Popova | publisher= [[Frost & Sullivan]] | date=2007-07-05 | access-date=2009-05-12}}</ref> Their marketing strategy will have to address the need to support a variety of legacy PBXs as well as new [[Voice over IP]] as enterprises migrate towards converging IP-based telecommunications. A similar situation exists for the carrier market for voicemail servers, currently dominated by Comverse Technology, with some share still held by Lucent Technologies.
''Instant messaging in voice'': The next development in messaging was in making text messaging real-time, rather than just asynchronous store-and-forward delivery into a mailbox. It started with Internet service provider America Online (AOL) as a public Internet-based free text “chat” service for consumers, but soon was being used by business people as well. It introduced the concept of [[Internet Protocol-based|Internet Protocol]] “presence management” or being able to detect device connectivity to the [[Internet]] and contact recipient “availability” status to exchange real-time messages, as well as personalized “Buddy list” directories to allow only people you knew to find out your status and initiate a real-time text messaging exchange with you. Presence and [[Instant Messaging]] has since evolved into more than short text messages, but now can include the exchange of data files (documents, pictures) and the escalation of the contact into a voice conversational connection.


VoIP telephony enables centralized, shared servers, with remote administration and usage management for corporate (enterprise) customers. In the past, carriers lost this business because it was far too expensive and inflexible to have remote managed facilities by the phone company. With VoIP, remote administration is far more economical. This technology has re-opened opportunities for carriers to offer hosted, shared services for all forms of converged [[Internet Protocol|IP]] telecommunications, including IP-PBX and voicemail services. Because of the convergence of wired and wireless communications, such services may also include support of a variety of multi-modal handheld and desktop end user devices. This service, when offered for multiple extensions or phone numbers is sometimes also called [[Unified voicemail|Unified Voice-mail]].
===Voice messaging with mobile devices===
The increase in wireless mobility, originally through cellular services and today through IP-based [[Wi-Fi]], was also a driver for messaging convergence with mobile telephony. Today it is not only fostering the use of speech user interfaces for message management, but increasing the demand for retrieval of voice messages integrated with email. It also enables people to reply to both voice and email messages in voice rather than text. New services, such as [[GotVoice]] and [[SpinVox]], are helping to blur the boundaries between voicemail and text by delivering voicemails to mobile phones as SMS text messages.


==Benefits==
===Unified messaging with voip/ip telephony===
Corporate voicemail, however, did not change much until the advent of [[Voice over IP|Voice over IP ]](VoIP — voice being transmitted over the internet) and the development of IP telephony applications to replace legacy PBX telephony (called [[Time-division multiplexing|TDM]] technologies). IP (Internet Protocol) telephony changed the style and technology of PBXs and the way voicemail systems integrated with them. This, in turn, facilitated a new generation of [[Unified Messaging]], which is now likely to catch on widely. The flexibility, manageability, lower costs, reliability, speed, and user convenience for messaging convergence is now possible where it wasn’t before. This might include intra- and inter-enterprise contacts, mobile contacts, proactive application information delivery, and customer contact applications.


Voicemail's introduction enabled people to leave lengthy, secure and detailed messages in natural voice, working hand-in-hand with corporate phone systems. The adoption of voicemail in corporations improved the flow of communications and saved huge amounts of money. [[General Electric|GE]], one of the pioneer adopters of voicemail in all of its offices around the world, claimed that voicemail saved, on average, over US$1,100 per year per employee. Needless to say, the ability to tell someone something without talking to them, can be a powerful reason to choose voicemail for delivery of a particular message.
The corporate IP telephony-based voicemail [[Customer premises equipment|CPE ]]market is served by several vendors including Avaya, [[Cisco|Cisco systems]], Adomo, Interactive Intelligence[http://www.inin.com], Nortel, Mitel, [[3Com]], and AVST. Their marketing strategy will have to address the need to support a variety of legacy PBXs as well as new [[Voice over IP]] as enterprises migrate towards converging IP-based telecommunications. A similar situation exists for the carrier market for voicemail servers, currently dominated by Comverse Technology, with some share still held by Lucent Technologies.


==See also==
VoIP and IP telephony enable centralized, shared servers, with remote administration and usage management for corporate (enterprise) customers. In the past, carriers lost this business because it was far too expensive and inflexible to have remote managed facilities by the phone company. With VoIP, remote administration is far more economical. This technology has re-opened opportunities for carriers to offer hosted, shared services for all forms of converged IP telecommunications, including IP-PBX and voicemail services. Because of the convergence of wired and wireless communications, such services may also include support of a variety of multi-modal handheld and desktop end user devices.
{{Portal|Telecommunication}}
* [[Visual voicemail|CDMA]]
* [[IP telephony]]
* [[Visual voicemail]]


==References==
There are a few technologies which have made a directly dramatic impact on people’s lives. Some of these rose from total obscurity to ubiquity relatively quickly, such as [[computer]]s, [[telephone]]s, [[cellular phone]]s, [[personal computer]], [[photocopying]], voicemail, [[e-mail]], [[integrated circuits]], to name a few. Voicemail has become a standard part of everyone’s life and now is taken for granted. It is everywhere, both as a simple telephone answering system and as a more complex unified messaging system. Voicemail has touched everyone’s life differently: it has enabled businesses to operate more efficiently, propagated humor, advanced romantic relationships, saved lives, and enabled commerce to blossom in the poorest areas of the worlds. It went from nothing to ubiquity in less than 15 years. As long as people use their voice to communicate, some form of voicemail will live on for many years to come.
{{Reflist}}


==How voicemail systems work==
== Further reading ==
* "A Reactive Telephone Message Network for the Office of the Future", Business Communications Review, July-Aug 1980; "Voice Mail Arrives in the Office", Business Week, June 9, 1980, p.&nbsp;81.

* "The Case for Voice Mail: Confirmed." GE Corporate Telecommunications publication, May 1989, Constance C. Kelly, editor.
This section describes how the original style, standalone, voicemail system worked with a corporate PBX. The principle is the same with Central Office Switches (CO Switches) or Mobile Telephone Switching Systems (MTSOs). More modern voicemail systems work on the same principle, but some of the components may be shared with other systems, such as email systems.
* "IBM Audio Distribution System", IBM publication GX60-0075-0

* "Toward Competitive Provision of Public Record Message Services", Experimental Technology Incentives Program, National Bureau of Standards, Washington, DC. Publication NBX-GCR-ETIP-81-97 October, 1991.
Voicemail systems contain several elements shown in the figure below:
* "Speech Filing System Reference Manual", 1975, by J.&nbsp;W. Schoonard and S.&nbsp;J. Boies, IBM Research Center, Yorktown Heights, NY, 10598.
* A central processor (CPU) which runs the operating system and a program (software) that gives the system the look-and-feel of a voicemail system. This software includes thousands of pre-recorded prompts that “speak” to the users as they interact with the system;
* "How to Shoulder Aside the Titans", Gene Bylinsky, Fortune, May 18, 1992; "Octel Keeps Bringing You Voice Mail", ''Global Telecoms Business'' (UK), February/March 1996, pp.&nbsp;22–24
* Disk controller and multiple disk drives for message storage;
* "Human Factors Challenges In Creating A Principal Support Office System: The Speech Filing System Approach", by John D. Gould and Stephen J. Boies, IBM Tomas J. Watson Research Center, as quoted in a paper presented to the Association for Computing Machinery. See ''ACM Transactions on Office Information Systems'', Vol. 1, No. 4, October 1983, pp.&nbsp;273–298.
* System disks which not only include the software above, but also contain a complete directory of all users with pertinent data about each (name, extension number, voicemail preferences, and pointers to each of the messages stored on the message disk that belong to them);
* "IBM Audio Distribution System Subscriber's Guide" and "IBM Audio Distribution System, Administrator's Guide". IBM Publications SC34-0400-3 and SC34-0400-1
* Telephone interface system that enables many phone lines to be connected to it.
* "Voice Store and Forward for the Automated Office", a presentation by Lawrence E. Bergeron, Dennis B. Howell and Dean Osborne, Wang Laboratories, Inc., Lowell, Mass., transcribed in "Computer Controlled Voice Message Systems and the Office of the Future", Professional Program Session Record (10), Wescon/81, Electronic Show and Convention, September 15–17 September 1981, section 2, pp.&nbsp;1–8.

* "Octel Emerges as Rising Star in Voice Messaging Systems", Peninsula Times Tribune, November 7, 1988, page C-1; "Investors Waking Up to Octel's Leadership", Investor's Daily, February 17, 1989; "Octel's Stock Gamble Has Paid Off", ''USA Today'', February 24, 1989, page 3B.
[[Image:Voice Mail Block Diagram.jpg|600px]]
* "All Your Messages in One Place", Michael H. Martin, Fortune, May 12, 1997, p.&nbsp;172.

* "Toward Competitive Provision of Public Record Message Services", ETIP (Experimental Technology Incentives Program), National Bureau of Standards, Washington, DC, October, 1981; "domestic Public Message Services", FCC publication 71FCC 2d 471; "Telecommunications Competition and Deregulation Act of 1981" (FCC Computer Inquiry II), Docket 20828, December 30, 1980; "Denial of AT&T Petition for Waiver of Section 64.702 of the Commission Rules and Regulations", October 7, 1981, Federal Communications Reports 88FCC 2d.
The drawing below shows how the voicemail system interacts with the PBX. Suppose an outside caller is calling Fred’s extension 2345. The incoming call comes in from the public network (A) and comes into the PBX. The call is routed to Fred’s extension (B), but Fred doesn’t answer. After a certain number of rings, the PBX stops ringing Fred’s extension and forwards the call to an extension connected to the voicemail system (C). It does this because PBXs are generally programmed to forward busy or unanswered calls to another extension. Simultaneously the PBX tells the voicemail system (through signaling link D) that the call it is forwarding to voicemail is for Fred at extension 2345. In this way, the voicemail system can answer the call with Fred’s greeting.
* United States of America (Plaintiff) v. Western Electric Company, Inc., et al. (Defendants). Civil action no. 82–0192, Section VII pp.&nbsp;51–65: "The judge on review considers the threat to possible competition in the voice-mail and storage business to be less real than the opportunities lost to the public welfare by these services not being broadly available. Hence, the BOCs should be able to provide voice-mail."

* GSM (Global System for Mobile Carriers) is one of the various cellular technologies which include TDMA, CDMA, iDEN and others. GSM is currently the technology used by Cingular in the US and is the prevalent technology in over 100 countries around the world.
[[Image:Voice Mail-PBX Block Diagram.jpg|600px]]
* ''Investor's Business Daily'', February 1, 1996. "Octel's Robert Cohn: CEO of Voice-Messaging Firm Puts Premium on Speed", by Kathleen Doler.

* "Lucent Is Set to Buy Leader in Voice Mail", Seth Schiesel, ''The New York Times'', July 18, 1997, Page C1.
There are many [[microprocessors]] throughout the system since the system must handle large amounts of data and it’s unacceptable to have any wait times (for example, when the system is recording or playing your message, it’s unacceptable if the system stops recording momentarily like computers often do while accessing large files).

When Fred’s extension forwards to the voicemail system, the Telephone Interface detects ringing. It signals to the Central Processor (CPU) that a call is coming in. The CPU simultaneously receives a signal on the PBX-Voicemail Data Link (D) telling it that extension 2345 is being forwarded on ring-no-answer to the specific extension that is now ringing. The CPU directs the Telephone Interface (which controls the line interface cards) to answer the call. The CPU’s program realizes that it’s a call for Fred so it looks up Fred’s greeting immediately and directs the Disk Controller to start playing it to the caller. It also plays some system prompts instructing the caller what comes next (for example, “When you have finished recording, you may hang up or press ‘#’ for more options”). All “talking” to the caller is done through prompts that are selected by the CPU according to the program stored in the voicemail system. The CPU selects the prompts in response to the keys the caller presses.

The caller’s message is digitized by the Telephone Interface system and transmitted to the Disk Controller for storage onto the Message Disks. Some voicemail systems will scramble the message for further security. The CPU then stores the location of that message in the System Disk inside Fred’s mailbox directory entry. After the caller hangs up and the message has been stored, the CPU sends a signal to the PBX through the link (D) instructing the PBX to turn on the message waiting light on Fred’s phone.

When Fred comes back to his desk and sees the light on his phone, he calls a designated extension number for the voicemail system (an actual extension number assigned to the lines in “C” in the figure above).

Again the Telephone Interface alerts the CPU that a call is coming in on a particular line, but this time the signaling from the PBX-Voicemail Data Link (D) indicates that Fred is calling directly, not being forwarded. The CPU directs the Telephone Interface to answer the call.

Since the CPU “knows” it is Fred (from the signaling on the Data Link D), it looks up Fred’s information on the System Disk, specifically his password. The CPU then directs Disk Controller to play a log-on prompt to the user: “Please enter your password.” Once the password is entered (via Touch-tones), the CPU compares it to the correct one and, if entered correctly, allows Fred to continue.

The CPU then determines (from Fred’s directory entry) that Fred has a new message. The CPU then presents Fred his options (e.g., “You have a new message. To listen to your new message, press 1; to record a message, press 2” etc.) The options are presented by the CPU directing the Disk Controller to play prompts, and the CPU listens for Touch-tones from Fred. This interaction of playing prompts and responding with Touch-tones enables Fred to interact with the voicemail system easily.

If Fred presses 1 to listen to his message, the CPU looks up the location of Fred’s new message in his mailbox directory (on the System Disk), and directs the Disk Controller to play that message. The Disk Controller finds the message on the Message Disks, and sends the data stream directly to the Telephone Interface. The Telephone Interface then converts the data stream to sound and plays it to Fred through the Line Interface Card which Fred is connected to.

Playback controls (like rewind, pause, fast forward, changing volume, etc) are all input via Touch-tones, are “read” by the CPU, and the appropriate actions are taken based on the stored program in the system. For example, if Fred wants to pause message playback, he might press 2. Since the CPU is constantly listening for Touch-tones from Fred, his command causes the CPU to direct the Disk Controller to stop playing the message. A variety of playback controls and options are available on most sophisticated voicemail systems so that users can control message playback, store messages in archives, send messages to groups, change their preferences, etc.

The better designed voicemail systems have a user-friendly interface with clear and meaningful prompts so the interaction with the voicemail system is quick and easy.

==Notes==
{{reflist}}

==References==
#Touch-tones are the tones generated by pushing buttons on a telephone with push-button dialing. The term Touch-tone was coined by AT&T (Western Electric). The official name for the tones that are generated are DTMF, or dual-tone multi-frequency. The buttons collectively are referred to as the “Touch-tone dial” or the “Touch-tone keypad”. Each button generates two tones.
#“A Reactive Telephone Message Network for the Office of the Future”, Business Communications Review, July-Aug 1980; “Voice Mail Arrives in the Office”, Business Week, [[June 9]], [[1980]], p. 81.
#“The Case for Voice Mail: Confirmed.” GE Corporate Telecommunications publication, May, 1989, Constance C. Kelly, editor.
#“IBM Audio Distribution System”, IBM publication GX60-0075-0
#“Toward Competitive Provision of Public Record Message Services”, Experimental Technology Incentives Program, National Bureau of Standards, Washington, DC. Publication NBX-GCR-ETIP-81-97 October, 1991.
#“Speech Filing System Reference Manual”, 1975, by J. W. Schoonard and S. J. Boies, IBM Research Center, Yorktown Heights, NY, 10598.
#“How to Shoulder Aside the Titans”, Gene Bylinsky, Fortune, [[May 18]], [[1992]]; “Octel Keeps Bringing You Voice Mail”, ''Global Telecoms Business'' (UK), February/March 1996, pp. 22-24
#“Human Factors Challenges In Creating A Principal Support Office System — The Speech Filing System Approach”, by John D. Gould and Stephen J. Boies, IBM Tomas J. Watson Research Center, as quoted in a paper presented to the Association for Computer Machinery. See ''ACM Transactions on Office Information Systems'', Vol. 1, No. 4, October 1983, pp. 273-298.
#“Speech Filing — An Office System For Principals”, by J.D. Gould and S.J. Boies, ''IBM Systems Journal'', Volume 23, Number 1, 1984, p. 65.
#“IBM Audio Distribution System Subscriber’s Guide” and “IBM Audio Distribution System, Administrator’s Guide”. IBM Publications SC34-0400-3 and SC34-0400-1
#Correspondence with Jay Stoffer, [[March 26]], [[2006]]: “… As to Gordon Matthews, I was introduced to him by a Venture Capitalist that later invested in Delphi. I met with Gordon and his wife at their home in Dallas with the objective of ascertaining if he could contribute to our product planning process. I concluded that he would not be likely to add value in that activity but that my colleagues should evaluate his potential contribution to Engineering. To that end, we flew Gordon back to LA where he was interviewed by members of our technical team. It was at this time (1973/1974) that he would have seen a demonstration of the voice application. He had definitely been thinking about a voicemail system prior to this visit but he had definitely not established his company or raised the capital to do so. Furthermore, his product plan was still very much in the formative stage and never reached the sophistication of the Delphi offering.” Needless to say, there was no employment offer made to Matthews by Delphi.
#Transcriptions of various seminars sponsored by Probe Research, Inc., September, 1982:
#*“Voice Message Service,” Proceedings of Voice Processing Seminar, [[September 15]], [[1982]];
#*“BBL Industries, Inc.,” Proceedings of Voice Processing Seminar, [[September 15]], [[1982]];
#*“Wang Laboratories,” Proceedings of Voice Processing Seminar, [[September 16]], [[1982]];
#*“American Telephone and Telegraph, Inc.,” Proceedings of Voice Processing Seminar, [[September 16]], [[1982]];
#*“Commterm, Inc.,” Proceedings of Voice Processing Seminar, Sep. 16, 1982.
#“Voice Store and Forward for the Automated Office”, a presentation by Lawrence E. Bergeron, Dennis B. Howell and Dean Osborne, Wang Laboratories, Inc., Lowell, Mass., transcribed in “Computer Controlled Voice Message Systems and the Office of the Future”, Professional Program Session Record (10), Wescon/81, Electronic Show and Convention, [[September 15]]-[[17 September]], [[1981]], section 2, pp. 1-8.
#“The PhoneMail System for the ROLM CBX”, publication by ROLM Corporation.
#“Octel Emerges as Rising Star in Voice Messaging Systems”, Peninsula Times Tribune, November 7, 1988, page C-1; “Investors Waking Up to Octel’s Leadership”, Investor’s Daily, [[February 17]], [[1989]]; “Octel’s Stock Gamble Has Paid Off”, USA Today, Friday, [[February 24]], [[1989]], page 3B.
#“Octel Communications Corporation”, filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission for its prospectus for secondary public offering, [[August 15]], [[1989]]; Various internal manuals and publications from Octel Communications Corporation.
#“All Your Messages in One Place”, Michael H. Martin, Fortune, [[May 12]], [[1997]], p. 172.
#“Toward Competitive Provision of Public Record Message Services”, ETIP (Experimental Technology Incentives Program”, National Bureau of Standards, Washington, D.C., October, 1981; “domestic Public Message Services”, FCC publication 71FCC 2d 471; “Telecommunications Competition and Deregulation Act of 1981” (FCC Computer Inquiry II), Docket 20828, December 30, 1980; “Denial of AT&T Petition for Waiver of Section 64.702 of the Commission Rules and Regulations”, [[October 7]], [[1981]], Federal Communications Reports 88FCC 2d.
#United States of America (Plaintiff) v. Western Electric Company, Inc., et al (Defendants). Civil action no. 82-0192, Section VII pp. 51-65: “The judge on review considers the threat to possible competition in the voice mail and storage business to be less real than the opportunities lost to the public welfare by these services not being broadly available. Hence, the BOCs should be able to provide voice mail.”
#AT&T Wireless ultimately bought McCaw Cellular. The combined company was eventually bought by Cingular.
#GSM (Global System for Mobile Carriers) is one of the various cellular technologies which include TDMA, CDMA, iDEN and others. GSM is currently the technology used by Cingular in the US and is the prevalent technology in over 100 countries around the world.
#''Investor’s Business Daily'', [[February 1]], [[1996]]. “Octel’s Robert Cohn: CEO of Voice-Messaging Firm Puts Premium on Speed”, by Kathleen Doler.
#“Lucent Is Set To Buy Leader In Voice Mail”, Seth Schiesel, ''[[New York Times]]'', [[July 18]], [[1997]], Page C1.


[[Category:Voicemail|*]]
[[Category:American inventions]]
[[Category:Calling features]]
[[Category:Calling features]]
[[Category:Computer-mediated communication]]
[[Category:Voice over IP]]


[[de:Anrufbeantworter]]
[[fr:Système de messagerie vocale]]
[[nl:Voicemail]]
[[he:מענה קולי]]
[[pl:Poczta głosowa]]
[[ja:留守番電話]]
[[pt:Correio de voz]]
[[es:Buzón de voz]]
[[th:จดหมายเสียง]]

Latest revision as of 08:36, 19 September 2024

A voicemail system (also known as voice message or voice bank) is a computer-based system that allows callers to leave a recorded message when the recipient has been unable or unwilling to answer the phone. Calls may be diverted to voicemail manually or automatically. The caller is prompted to leave a message and the recipient can retrieve the message at a later time.

Voicemail can be used for personal calls and more complex systems exist for companies and services to handle customer requests. The term is also used more broadly to denote any system of conveying stored telecommunications voice messages, including using an answering machine.

Features

[edit]
Drawing of how the voicemail system interacts with the PBX


Voicemail systems are designed to convey a caller's recorded audio message to a recipient. To do so they contain a user interface to select, play, and manage messages; a delivery method to either play or otherwise deliver the message; and a notification ability to inform the user of a waiting message. Most systems use phone networks, either cellular- or landline-based, as the conduit for all of these functions. Some systems may use multiple telecommunications methods, permitting recipients and callers to retrieve or leave messages through multiple methods such as PCs or smartphones.

Simple voicemail systems function as a remote answering machine using touch-tones as the user interface. More complicated systems may use other input devices such as voice or a computer interface. Simpler voicemail systems may play the audio message through the phone, while more advanced systems may have alternative delivery methods, including email or text message delivery, message transfer and forwarding options,[1] and multiple mailboxes.

Almost all modern voicemail systems use digital storage and are typically stored on computer data storage. Notification methods also vary based on the voicemail system. Simple systems may not provide active notification at all, instead requiring the recipient to check with the system, while others may provide an indication that messages are waiting.

More advanced systems may be integrated with a company's PABX, with a call center ACD for automatic call distribution; with mobile or paging terminals for message alert; and computer systems/data bases for delivering information or processing orders. Interactive voice response (IVR) systems may use digital information stored in a corporate data base to select pre-recorded words and phrases stored in a voicemail vocabulary to form sentences that are delivered to the caller.

History

[edit]
A common icon to represent voicemail (an abstraction of cassette tape, which were historically popular for use in voicemail recording before the 2000s)

The term Voicemail was coined by Televoice International (later Voicemail International, or VMI) for their introduction of the first US-wide Voicemail service in 1980. Although VMI trademarked the term, it eventually became a generic term for automated voice services employing a telephone. Voicemail popularity continues today with Internet telephone services such as Skype, Google Voice and ATT that integrate voice, voicemail and text services for tablets and smartphones.

Voicemail systems were developed in the late 1970s by Voice Message Exchange (VMX). They became popular in the early 1980s when they were made available on PC-based boards.[2] In September 2012 a report from USA Today and Vonage claimed that voicemail was in decline. The report said that the number of voicemail messages declined eight percent compared to 2011.[3][4]

Message centers

[edit]

The conventional solution to efficient handling of telephone communication in businesses was the "message center". A message center or "message desk" was a centralized, manual answering service inside a company staffed by a few operators who answered all incoming phone calls. Extensions that were busy or rang "no answer" would forward to the message center using a device called a "call director". The call director had a button for each extension in the company which would flash when that person's extension forwarded to the message center. A little label next to the button told the operator the person being called.

While it was an improvement over basic multi-line systems, the message center had many disadvantages. Many calls would come in simultaneously at peak periods, such as lunch time, and operators were often busy. This left message attendants with little time to take each message accurately. Often, they were not familiar with employees' names and "buzzwords" and how to spell or pronounce them. Messages were scribbled on pink slips and distributed by the internal mail system and messages, often arrived at people's desks after lengthy delays, contained little content other than the caller's name and number, and were often inaccurate, with misspelled names and wrong phone numbers.

Tape-based telephone answering machines had come into the residential telephone market, but they were not used much in the corporate environment due to physical limitations of the technology. One answering machine was needed for each telephone; messages could not be recorded if the user was using the phone; messages had to be retrieved in sequential order; and messages could not be retrieved remotely, selectively discarded, saved, or forwarded to others. Further, the manufacturers of PBXs (private branch exchanges—the name for corporate phone systems) used proprietary digital phone sets in order to increase the functionality and value of the PBX. These phone sets were, by design, incompatible with answering machines.

In the 1970s and early 1980s, the cost of long-distance calling decreased and more business communications were conducted by telephone. As corporations grew and labor rates increased, the ratio of secretaries to employees decreased. With more communication by phone, multiple time zones, and fewer secretaries, real-time phone communications were hampered by callers being unable to reach people. Some early studies showed that only 1 in 4 phone calls resulted in a completed call and half the calls were one-way in nature (that is, they did not require a conversation). This happened because people were either not at work (due to time zone differences, being away on business, etc.), or if they were at work, they were on the phone, away from their desks in meetings, on breaks, etc. This bottleneck hindered the effectiveness of business activities and decreased both individual and group productivity. It also wasted the caller's time and created delays in resolving time-critical issues.

Invention

[edit]

The first public records describing voice recording were reported in a New York newspaper and the Scientific American in November 1877. Thomas A. Edison had announced the invention of his "phonograph" saying "the object was to record telephone messages and transmit them again by telephone." Edison applied for a US patent in December 1877 and shortly thereafter demonstrated the machine to publishers, the US Congress and President Rutherford B. Hayes. In an article outlining his own ideas of the future usefulness of his machine Edison's list began with "Letter writing, and all kinds of dictation without the aid of a stenographer." In other words, "voice messages" or "Voice-mail". By 1914, Edison's phonograph business included a dictating machine (the Ediphone) and the "Telescribe", a machine combining the phonograph and the telephone, which recorded both sides of telephone conversations.[5]

For nearly one hundred years, there were few innovations or advances in telephone services. Voicemail was the result of innovations in telephone products and services made possible by developments in computer technology during the 1970s. These innovations began with the Motorola Pageboy, a simple "pager" or "beeper" introduced in 1974 that was generally offered in conjunction with answering services that handled busy / no-answer overloads and after hours calls for businesses and professionals. Operators wrote down a caller's message, sent a page alert or "beep" and when the party called back, an operator dictated the message.

With the introduction of "voice" pagers, like the Motorola Pageboy II operators could transmit a voice message directly to the pager and the user could hear the message. However, messages arrival was often untimely and privacy issues, as well as the high cost, eventually caused the demise of these services. By the mid 1970s digital storage and analog to digital conversion devices had emerged and paging companies began handling client messages electronically. Operators recorded a short message (five to six seconds, e.g. "please call Mr. Smith") and the messages were delivered automatically when the client called the answering service. It would only take a short step for the first voicemail application to be born.

Computer manufacturers, telephone equipment manufacturers, and software firms began developing more sophisticated solutions as more powerful and less expensive computer processors and storage devices became available. This set the stage for a creation of a broad spectrum of computer based Central Office and Customer Premises Equipment that would eventually support enhanced voice solutions such as voicemail, audiotex, interactive voice response (IVR) and speech recognition solutions that began emerging in the 1980s. However, broad adoption of these products and services would depend on the global proliferation of touch tone phones and mobile phone services which would not occur until the late 1980s.

Inventor controversy

[edit]

Many contributed to the creation of the modern-day voicemail. Legal battles ensued for decades.[6] The true first inventor[citation needed] of voicemail, patent number 4,124,773 (Audio Storage and Distribution System), is Robin Elkins.[7] "Though Elkins received a patent in 1978, telecommunications giants began offering voicemail without paying Elkins a penny in royalties."[8] "Elkins never expected to spend 10 years of his life battling some of the world's largest corporations, either. But once he patented his system, he figured he should protect it."[9] Later, Elkins successfully licensed his patented technology to IBM, DEC, and WANG, among many others. Unfortunately, his patent did not address simultaneity of voice message access and storage and the application for patent was filed after the patent application of the system patented by Kolodny and Hughes, as described below.

Early applications

[edit]

One of the first modern day voicemail applications was invented by Gerald M. Kolodny and Paul Hughes, which was described in an article in the medical journal, Radiology (Kolodny GM, Cohen HI, Kalisky A. Rapid-access system for radiology reports: a new concept. Radiology. 1974;111(3):717–9) A patent was applied for by Kolodny and Hughes in 1975, prior to the patent applications of both Elkins and Matthews and was issued in 1981 (US patent 4,260,854). The patent was assigned to Sudbury Systems of Sudbury Massachusetts who proceeded to market and sell such systems to corporations and hospitals. IBM, Sony and Lanier, as well as several smaller makers of voicemail systems, licensed the Sudbury patent for their voicemail systems. A patent suit, brought by Pitney Bowes, claiming prior art to the Sudbury patent, was denied by the US District Court, District of Connecticut on November 8, 2000. A similar suit brought byVDI Technologies against the Kolodny and Hughes patent claiming prior art was dismissed by the US District Court in New Hampshire on December 19, 1991.

IBM Audio Distribution System

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The first[citation needed] voice-messaging application, the Speech Filing System, was developed at the IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center in 1973 under the leadership of Stephen Boies.[10] It was later renamed the Audio Distribution System (ADS).

ADS used the human voice and the fixed-line touch-tone telephones that predated computer screens and mobile phones. The first operational prototypes were used by 750 IBM executives mainly in the US for their daily work. Those prototypes ran on an IBM System/7 computer attached to an IBM VM370 for additional storage.

In 1978 the prototype was converted to run on an IBM Series/1 computer. In September 1981 IBM started marketing ADS in America and Europe: the first customer installation was completed in February 1982.

ADS,[11] marketed by IBM and briefly by AT&T Corporation, was well featured for voice messaging, the result of IBM's considerable human-factors research plus observation of operational use. Using a 1980s computer requiring air conditioning, it was expensive and physically large. With further development it grew to handle up to 3000 users, 100 hours of messages, multiple languages, message notification to a host computer, and 16 simultaneous users.[12]

ADS could be connected to exchange lines and private exchanges including the IBM 2750 and 3750 Switching Systems available in Germany, France, Italy, Belgium, and the UK.

IBM sold many systems,[11] Installations[12] including the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games "Olympic Message System" [13]

Delta 1

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Another company, Delphi Communications of California, deserves some partial credit for invention of voicemail. Delphi developed a proprietary system called Delta 1 that picked up and coming calls directly from the telephone company. Delphi presented the concept publicly to the association of Telephone Answering Services around 1973 and the prototype system was launched in San Francisco in 1976 by a Delphi company called VoiceBank. A patent was applied for and issued for Delphi's Automated Telephone Voice Service System. The patent, US Patent No. 4,625,081, was issued after Delphi's closure, but Delphi's assets (and the patent) were transferred to another Exxon company, Gilbarco, which made equipment for gas pumps at filling stations. Gilbarco is now owned by GEC in the United Kingdom.[citation needed]

AT&T

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AT&T developed a system called 1A Voice Storage System to support custom services including voicemail for the public telephone system.[14] It worked in conjunction with the companies 1A ESS and 5ESS systems. Development started in mid-1976,[15] with first deployment in early 1979. Friendly user service started in March 1980. The service was terminated in 1981 as a result of the US FCC Computer Inquiry II, which prohibited enhanced services from being provided by the regulated network.

VMX

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In 1979, a company was founded in Texas by Gordon Matthews called ECS Communications (the name was later changed to VMX, for Voice Message exchange). VMX developed a 3000-user voice messaging system called the VMX/64. Matthews, a prolific entrepreneur and patentor, applied for and was granted a patent on voicemail (patent number 4,371,752) which issued in February 1983. The patent was promoted as the pioneering patent for voicemail. However, the patent application was filed on November 26, 1979, five years after, and issued in 1983.

VMX asserted infringement first with IBM, AT&T and then Wang, but all three companies reportedly would have been able to invalidate the patent on the basis of prior art and their licenses from Sudbury Systems Inc, for their Kolodny and Hughes patent.

IVR Voice Recognition

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In 1985, Voice Response Inc. (formerly Call-It Co) a subsidiary of Lee Enterprises, Davenport IA, entered the fast-growing Interactive Voice (IVR) response market under the direction of Bob Ross, President.[16] About a year later, VRI introduced one of the first "successful" IVR applications that utilized voice recognition (rather than touch tone) to capture caller responses. Voice recognition technology had great difficulty with regional and ethnic differences and nuances which resulted in a high incidence of error. VRI discovered that hesitation (delayed response) signaled caller confusion or misunderstanding which often resulted in an inaccurate response. VRI developed proprietary techniques that measured user response times and used the data to make real-time changes to the application's dialog with the caller. VRI found that the confidence level of a "suspect" caller response could be increased by asking "Did you say (Chicago), Yes or No", a standard question heard in order taking or reservation making IVR applications today. VRI pioneering applications, including subscription fulfillment for Time and Life magazines, proved faster and less expensive than call centers using live operators and although VRI did not survive, their voice recognition processes became industry standards and VRI's patent USPTO – patent RE34,587 was eventually licensed by Intel/Dialogic and Nuance.

PC-based Voicemail

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Amidst the booming popularity of the IBM PC-AT, a variety of companies popped up to market add-in boards to the AT. These companies aimed to use the PC as an inexpensive hardware platform for hosting add-in boards and software providing voice mail functionality for small businesses that wanted something more sophisticated than an answering machine but could not afford pricey conventional voice mail solutions. Among these was The Complete PC, founded in 1986 in Silicon Valley.[17] The Complete PC was sold to publicly-listed Florida-based Boca Research Inc., in 1993.[18]

International Voicemail Association

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In 1987, voicemail service providers in the US and Europe joined to form the Voice Mail Association of Europe (VMA) with René Beusch, Radio-Suisse and Paul Finnigan, Finnigan USA[19] serving as VMA Chairman and President respectively. The first VMA meeting was held in Stockholm Huddinge by Voicemail Svenska AB in 1987, organized by its founder Lars Olof Kanngard. The tech team in Voicemail Svenska AB was granted the right to port the Voicemail from PDP systems to their own PC-board solution, which become known as the MiniVoice, later become ESSELTE VOICE AB. The VMA invited service providers, vendors and consultants to attend semi-annual conferences that included presentations, discussions and reporting of experiences. VMA membership was eventually expanded to include representatives from telecommunication organizations worldwide and became "The International Voice-mail Association". By the late 1980s, the Bell Operating companies, Tigon and other independent service providers in the US had joined the VMA. In 1992, VMA members conducted an "Information Week Tour of the U.S.", sharing ideas with major telecom operators. VMA working groups promoted collaboration and adoption of industry standards to the ITU and CCITT and at the 1999 CCITT conference in Geneva, Switzerland, demonstrated worldwide exchange of messages between the major voicemail vendors' platforms using the VPIM networking standard. Beusch and Finnigan led the VMA until 1998 and 1999 respectively and the organization continues to serve the voice services industry today.[20]

Public telephone services

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In the US, the Bell Operating Companies and their cellular divisions had been prohibited by the FCC from offering voicemail and other enhanced services such as paging and telephone answering services (no such prohibition existed in foreign countries). A ruling by Judge Harold H. Greene on March 7, 1988, removed this barrier and allowed the BOCs to offer voicemail service, however, they were not allowed to design or manufacture equipment used to provide voicemail services.[citation needed]

The opportunity created by the Greene decision, plus Voicemail International's abandonment of its market lead for carrier-grade systems, created a new opportunity for competing manufacturers and those who had been focusing on the corporate market. Unisys, Boston Technology, and Comverse Technology were quick to address the BOC and PTT marketplace. Octel, who had high capacity systems in use internally by all seven Regional Bell Operating companies, launched a new generation of its large system specifically designed for carriers and was compliant with "NEBS standards", the tight standard required by phone companies for any equipment located in their central offices.

Unified messaging

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Unified Messaging integrated voicemail into Microsoft Exchange, the corporate email system made by Microsoft. Unified Messaging had been invented by Roberta Cohen, Kenneth Huber and Deborah Mill at AT&T Bell Labs. The patent for Unified Messaging was received in June 1989 (Patent number 4,837,798).

Unified Messaging allowed users to access voicemail and email messages using either the graphical user interface (GUI) on their PC, or using the telephone user interface (TUI). For voicemail, they'd see the "header information" (sender, date sent, size, and subject). Users could double-click a voicemail from their email inbox and hear the message through their PC or a phone next to their desk. Voice messages could be sent using email or telephone addressing schemes, and the data networking infrastructure was used to send messages between locations rather than the public switched telephone network.

Virtual telephony

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Other interesting markets developed from the carrier market including a concept called "virtual telephony". Virtual Telephony, developed by Octel, used voicemail to provide phone service rapidly in emerging countries without wiring for telephones. The problem this solved was that emerging countries did not have many telephones. Wiring for telephones was very expensive, and many poorer citizens did not have homes to wire. The economies of emerging countries were held back partly because people could not communicate beyond the area where they could walk or ride a bicycle. Giving them phones was one way to help their economies, but there was not a practical way to do it. In some countries, the wait for a phone was several years and the cost was in the thousands of dollars. Cellular phones were not an option at the time because they were extremely expensive (thousands of dollars per handset) and the infrastructure to install cell sites was also costly.

With virtual telephony, each person could be given a phone number (just the number, not the phone) and a voice mailbox. The citizen would also be given a pager. If someone called the phone number, it never rang on an actual phone, but would be routed immediately to a central voicemail system. The voicemail system answered the call and the caller could leave a long, detailed message. As soon as the message was received, the voicemail system would trigger the citizen's pager. When the page was received, the citizen would find a pay phone and call in to pick up the message. This concept was used successfully in South America and South Africa.

Instant messaging in voice

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By the year 2000, voicemail had become a ubiquitous feature on phone systems serving companies, cellular and residential subscribers. Cellular and residential voicemail continue today in their previous form, primarily simple telephone answering. Email became the prevalent messaging system, email servers and software became quite reliable, and virtually all office workers were equipped with multimedia desktop PCs.

The increase in wireless mobility, originally through cellular services and today through IP-based Wi-Fi, was also a driver for messaging convergence with mobile telephony. Today,[as of?] it is not only fostering the use of speech user interfaces for message management, but increasing the demand for retrieval of voice messages integrated with email. It also enables people to reply to both voice and email messages in voice rather than text. New services, such as GotVoice, SpinVox and YouMail, are helping to blur the boundaries between voicemail and text by delivering voicemails to mobile phones as SMS text messages.

The next development in messaging was in making text messaging real-time, rather than just asynchronous store-and-forward delivery into a mailbox. Although in the 1980s Minitel in France was extremely popular and Teletext was widely used in the US, instant messaging on the Internet began with the ICQ application developed in 1996 as a public Internet-based free text "chat" service for consumers, but soon was being used by business people as well. It introduced the concept of Internet Protocol "presence management" or being able to detect device connectivity to the Internet and contact recipient "availability" status to exchange real-time messages, as well as personalized "Buddy list" directories to allow only people you knew to find out your status and initiate a real-time text messaging exchange with you. Presence and Instant Messaging has since evolved into more than short text messages, but now can include the exchange of data files (documents, pictures) and the escalation of the contact into a voice conversational connection.

Unified messaging with VoIP

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Voicemail indication

Corporate voicemail did not change much until the advent of Voice over IP (VoIP—voice being transmitted over the internet) and the development of Internet Protocol (IP) telephony applications to replace legacy PBX telephony (called TDM technologies). IP telephony changed the style and technology of PBXs and the way voicemail systems integrated with them. This, in turn, facilitated a new generation of Unified Messaging, which is now likely to catch on widely. The flexibility, manageability, lower costs, reliability, speed, and user convenience for messaging convergence is now possible where it was not before. This might include intra- and inter-enterprise contacts, mobile contacts, proactive application information delivery, and customer contact applications.

The corporate IP telephony-based voicemail customer premises equipment market is served by several vendors including Avaya, Cisco systems, Adomo, Interactive Intelligence, Nortel, Mitel, 3Com, and AVST.[21] Their marketing strategy will have to address the need to support a variety of legacy PBXs as well as new Voice over IP as enterprises migrate towards converging IP-based telecommunications. A similar situation exists for the carrier market for voicemail servers, currently dominated by Comverse Technology, with some share still held by Lucent Technologies.

VoIP telephony enables centralized, shared servers, with remote administration and usage management for corporate (enterprise) customers. In the past, carriers lost this business because it was far too expensive and inflexible to have remote managed facilities by the phone company. With VoIP, remote administration is far more economical. This technology has re-opened opportunities for carriers to offer hosted, shared services for all forms of converged IP telecommunications, including IP-PBX and voicemail services. Because of the convergence of wired and wireless communications, such services may also include support of a variety of multi-modal handheld and desktop end user devices. This service, when offered for multiple extensions or phone numbers is sometimes also called Unified Voice-mail.

Benefits

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Voicemail's introduction enabled people to leave lengthy, secure and detailed messages in natural voice, working hand-in-hand with corporate phone systems. The adoption of voicemail in corporations improved the flow of communications and saved huge amounts of money. GE, one of the pioneer adopters of voicemail in all of its offices around the world, claimed that voicemail saved, on average, over US$1,100 per year per employee. Needless to say, the ability to tell someone something without talking to them, can be a powerful reason to choose voicemail for delivery of a particular message.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Manning, Cara (2023-09-22). "Deciphering 'Call Forwarded Unconditionally'". CALL EXPERTS. Retrieved 2024-09-15. Call forwarding typically comes in the three main variations...Call Forwarding Unconditional (CFU)...Call Forwarding on Busy (CFB)... Call Forwarding on No Answer (CFNA)
  2. ^ "The History of Voicemail". Everyvoicemail.com. 2002-02-23. Retrieved 2013-04-30.
  3. ^ "Voice Mail in Decline with Rise of Text". tucsoncitizen.com. [dead link]
  4. ^ Moscaritolo, Angela (2012-09-04). "Poll: Is Voicemail Dead? Weigh In | News & Opinion". PCMag.com. Retrieved 2013-04-30.
  5. ^ "About this Collection | Inventing Entertainment: The Early Motion Pictures and Sound Recordings of the Edison Companies | Digital Collections | Library of Congress". Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA. Retrieved 2024-02-13.
  6. ^ Dexter Hutchins (October 28, 1985). "The Legal Battles Over Voice Messaging: A young inventor from Florida says the technology is his. So does a small company in Texas. Both have sued to protect it". Fortune.
  7. ^ "United States Patent: 4124773". United States Patent and Trademark Office.
  8. ^ Mimi Whitefield (February 5, 1996). "How to Survive the Road from Invention to Marketplace". The Miami Herald.
  9. ^ Viki McCash (August 7, 1995). "Inventor Battles to Protect Patents". Sun Sentinel. Archived from the original on September 16, 2012.
  10. ^ Gould, J. D.; Boies, S. J. (1984). "Speech Filing – An Office System for Principals". IBM Systems Journal. 23 (1): 65. doi:10.1147/sj.231.0065. Archived from the original on 2008-12-12.
  11. ^ a b Eight editions of IBM UK's "Talking lines" magazine with a print run of over 10,000
  12. ^ a b IBM UK 1980s publicity material researched and written by Duncan Ogilvie
  13. ^ "IBM Connection" UK newsletter issue 3 of 5 October 1984
  14. ^ Gates, G. W.; Kranzmann, R. F.; Whitehead, L. D. (1982). "1A Voice Storage System: Software". Bell System Technical Journal. 61 (5): 863. doi:10.1002/j.1538-7305.1982.tb04318.x. S2CID 20023290.
  15. ^ E. Nussbaum (1982). "1A Voice Storage System: Voice Storage in the Network - Perspective and History". Bell System Technical Journal. 61 (5): 811. doi:10.1002/j.1538-7305.1982.tb04318.x. S2CID 20023290.
  16. ^ "History of Lee Enterprises Inc. – FundingUniverse". Fundinguniverse.com. Retrieved 2013-04-30.
  17. ^ Ramirez, Anthony (1991-01-27). "All About/Answering Machines; For Yuppies, Now Plain Folks, Too". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-01-21.
  18. ^ Lunan, Charles (17 May 1993). "Boca Research Acquisition Likely to Boost Delray Plant". Sun-Sentinel.com. Retrieved 2020-01-21.
  19. ^ "Finnegan USA LLC". www.finniganusa.com.
  20. ^ "VMA home page". Archived from the original on 2019-07-09. Retrieved 2011-05-25.
  21. ^ Popova, Elka (2007-07-05). "Customers Attest to the Value of Flexible Independent Messaging Solutions". Frost & Sullivan. Retrieved 2009-05-12.

Further reading

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  • "A Reactive Telephone Message Network for the Office of the Future", Business Communications Review, July-Aug 1980; "Voice Mail Arrives in the Office", Business Week, June 9, 1980, p. 81.
  • "The Case for Voice Mail: Confirmed." GE Corporate Telecommunications publication, May 1989, Constance C. Kelly, editor.
  • "IBM Audio Distribution System", IBM publication GX60-0075-0
  • "Toward Competitive Provision of Public Record Message Services", Experimental Technology Incentives Program, National Bureau of Standards, Washington, DC. Publication NBX-GCR-ETIP-81-97 October, 1991.
  • "Speech Filing System Reference Manual", 1975, by J. W. Schoonard and S. J. Boies, IBM Research Center, Yorktown Heights, NY, 10598.
  • "How to Shoulder Aside the Titans", Gene Bylinsky, Fortune, May 18, 1992; "Octel Keeps Bringing You Voice Mail", Global Telecoms Business (UK), February/March 1996, pp. 22–24
  • "Human Factors Challenges In Creating A Principal Support Office System: The Speech Filing System Approach", by John D. Gould and Stephen J. Boies, IBM Tomas J. Watson Research Center, as quoted in a paper presented to the Association for Computing Machinery. See ACM Transactions on Office Information Systems, Vol. 1, No. 4, October 1983, pp. 273–298.
  • "IBM Audio Distribution System Subscriber's Guide" and "IBM Audio Distribution System, Administrator's Guide". IBM Publications SC34-0400-3 and SC34-0400-1
  • "Voice Store and Forward for the Automated Office", a presentation by Lawrence E. Bergeron, Dennis B. Howell and Dean Osborne, Wang Laboratories, Inc., Lowell, Mass., transcribed in "Computer Controlled Voice Message Systems and the Office of the Future", Professional Program Session Record (10), Wescon/81, Electronic Show and Convention, September 15–17 September 1981, section 2, pp. 1–8.
  • "Octel Emerges as Rising Star in Voice Messaging Systems", Peninsula Times Tribune, November 7, 1988, page C-1; "Investors Waking Up to Octel's Leadership", Investor's Daily, February 17, 1989; "Octel's Stock Gamble Has Paid Off", USA Today, February 24, 1989, page 3B.
  • "All Your Messages in One Place", Michael H. Martin, Fortune, May 12, 1997, p. 172.
  • "Toward Competitive Provision of Public Record Message Services", ETIP (Experimental Technology Incentives Program), National Bureau of Standards, Washington, DC, October, 1981; "domestic Public Message Services", FCC publication 71FCC 2d 471; "Telecommunications Competition and Deregulation Act of 1981" (FCC Computer Inquiry II), Docket 20828, December 30, 1980; "Denial of AT&T Petition for Waiver of Section 64.702 of the Commission Rules and Regulations", October 7, 1981, Federal Communications Reports 88FCC 2d.
  • United States of America (Plaintiff) v. Western Electric Company, Inc., et al. (Defendants). Civil action no. 82–0192, Section VII pp. 51–65: "The judge on review considers the threat to possible competition in the voice-mail and storage business to be less real than the opportunities lost to the public welfare by these services not being broadly available. Hence, the BOCs should be able to provide voice-mail."
  • GSM (Global System for Mobile Carriers) is one of the various cellular technologies which include TDMA, CDMA, iDEN and others. GSM is currently the technology used by Cingular in the US and is the prevalent technology in over 100 countries around the world.
  • Investor's Business Daily, February 1, 1996. "Octel's Robert Cohn: CEO of Voice-Messaging Firm Puts Premium on Speed", by Kathleen Doler.
  • "Lucent Is Set to Buy Leader in Voice Mail", Seth Schiesel, The New York Times, July 18, 1997, Page C1.