Thanks all.
The Mitel is SX2000 TDM, redundant main control & expanded pers.
We -do have- a 3300 MXe (Rls 9. somthing) on site that we've been playing with.
There are 40 wiring closets in the building, 200 pr to each from the MDF (ADC High density frame, proprietary punch down). House cables are all 200 pr conventional 26 ga telephone cable, 8 binders. Plans are to eventually abandon this infrastructure.
Horizontal (voice) cabling from each wiring closet to the floor is Cat5E, but fanned and punched down on 66 blocks, all 4 pair each. Plans are to abandon this infrastructure as well.
Horizontal DATA cabling is all in patch panels below new Cisco POE switches. There are at least TWO cat5E data drops to each workstation and office. In some larger offices there are a total of FOUR cat5E data drops.
All data drops are "hot" (plugged into the POE switch) whether they are used or not. Yes, that means there are a lot of wasted ports, though I believe this will work to our benefit.
VoiceMail today is on a separate (Octel) system hosted on the SX2K. In addition to plain vanilla voice mail there are many (about 200) menu trees and specialized apps on the Octel. Going forward user's voice mail will be hosted on a Cisco Unity system. My thinking is leave folks' voice mail where they are now until they get new phones. That should reduce some of the intermachine traffic but will kill the ability to forward voice mail messages back & forth. Sorry, users will just have to suck it up.
I really do not want to ever have two instruments on anyone's desk, so when the Grim Reaper comes to change their phone, that will be that.
The Cisco phones will have their MAC addresses hard-coded in the call manager for reasons I'm not sure I understand. I don't know if that's a limit/requirement of the CM, just that's what we've been told is how it will be done. That sounds to me like a genuine PITA as it means we'll have to physically open every phone or break down every case of phones and then keep track of who we give each one to.
Going forward not everyone will be receiving a physical phone in place of their Mitel phone. Some (as yet undetermined) number of users will be getting softphones (CUP-C clients) and USB headsets. I expect there will be a LOT of pushback on that, as wired headsets cause user fatigue and wireless USB headsets cost more than giving the user a physical instrument. That should prove interesting.
We're wrestling with how best to do the trunking (provisioning) between the Mitel & Cisco during the transitioning phase. Yes, QSIG for sure, here's the rub: Mgmt is wanting to roll out the Cisco to entire departments at a time, but over the past 20 years the number blocks have become horribly fragmented (because everyone gets to keep their number when they move). Mgmt's plan would require explicit ARS entries between the two systems for every person that moves. OUR (tech's) idea is to roll-out the Cisco across fully contiguous number blocks, 100 at a time. That of course will screw-up key appearances for the admins and call pickup groups and will have us running all over the building replacing phones, but is most intuitive from an intermachine routing standpoint. I'm looking for others' input on this.
Mgmt. thinks going forward with IP phones will eliminate MACS. Well certainly it will eliminate the MDF and riser room wiring changes, but I think we're still going to find ourselves physically moving a lot of phones, for a couple reasons: Cooties and attrition.
In this day of heightened awareness of disease NOBODY want's anyone else's phone unless it's been dipped, sanitized, fumagated and put through an Autoclave. It's a fact that many women are slobs. Several of their handsets are caked in makeup and hairspray, and "stink" of the various mixtures of whore-dip that encrust them. Fingernail filings in and around the keypad, etc. Yeccchhhht! As for attrition, our company, like many big companies is a revolving door of retirees, terminations and new hires. Even with 1700 instruments we don't have enough to put a phone everywhere (vacant cubes, etc) and so depend on a certain amount of churn to shuffle our inventory around. To equip every workstation with a phone would take close to 2000 instruments. That's 300 more phones that weren't in the bid.
Original MUG/NAMU Charter Member