Big Friggin’ Presence Switch


by Dave Uhlir

When Jabber, Inc.’s far-flung road warriors got caught by the recent snowstorms, presence was our first line of communication. Some stranded travelers wrote custom presence messages such as “stuck in Dallas, call my mobile”. Others used mobile IM to see who was available at headquarters to help them make new travel arrangements. In one case, colleagues on separate trips were able to meet up to share a rental car back home. With presence so ingrained into the Jabber, Inc. culture, no one was unaccounted for and people got help in real-time.

With the New Year, Jabber, Inc. enters its eighth year in the presence business, so it isn’t surprising that we use presence technology almost instinctively. What I find surprising is that there are so many organizations that are entirely presence-free. Sure, plenty of people are using enterprise and public IM to get their work done more efficiently, but typically, presence is only used to see if someone is available for a phone call or IM session. This situation is going to change radically in 2007.

I hereby go on the record boldly predicting that 2007 will be the Year of Presence in mainstream IT. Business decision-makers and IT professionals will realize that it is imperative to presence-enable communications and business processes, just as it was imperative to network-, then Web-enable business applications and processes in the 1990s. Be presence-enabled or be square. Don’t say I didn’t warn you.

The principal catalyst will likely be telephony, the technology invented 130 years ago, in the Centennial year of the United States. All forms of real-time communications benefit from presence and phone calls are the mainstream real-time communications medium. As digital telephony makes deeper inroads into the enterprise, presence will tag along and become integrated into the basic infrastructure of business.

While there will be growth in the business use of IM, that isn’t my point. The high-order bit is that from this point forward, real-time presence will be a basic information technology requirement. It all started with the dialtone. In the Web 1.0 era, Scott McNealy coined the term “big friggin’ WebTone switch” to capture the imperative of Web-enablement.

We are now entering the mainstream presence era, where aggregating and pervasively embedding presence becomes a business-critical IT mandate, just as becoming Web-enabled was back when Scott McNealy first spoke about Webtones. Jabber, Inc. has a programmable and scaleable real-time presence engine, which is an excellent foundation for the Big Friggin’ Presence Switch.

Best wishes for a happy, prosperous and presence-enabled New Year!

2 Responses to “Big Friggin’ Presence Switch”

  1. dizzyd Says:

    How do you figure 8 years? As I recall, JINC was founded in Feb 2000.

    Dave Uhlir answers:

    2000 was Jabber, Inc’s first year, 2001 the second…therefore Jabber enters its eighth year in 2007.

  2. 虚拟主机 Says:

    Nice blog. Great news!

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