Vertical Communications, Inc. is a
corporation
A corporation is an organization—usually a group of people or a company—authorized by the state to act as a single entity (a legal entity recognized by private and public law "born out of statute"; a legal person in legal context) and r ...
that specializes in cloud and premises-based
private branch exchanges, i.e., business telephone systems. Vertical Communications changed its name on January 1, 2005 from Artisoft, Inc. after acquiring Vertical Networks in September 2004. In September 2005, Vertical Communications acquired
Comdial
Comdial Corporation was a telecommunications company based in Sarasota, Florida and was headquartered in a former Lockheed plant building shared with L3 Communications. Because of the history of manufacturing at the facility, the grounds surroundin ...
. On December 1, 2006,
Vodavi Technology was acquired by Vertical Communications.
Products
Vertical offers new telecommunications products, as well as products from legacy product lines including:
As of 2018/2019, some of these are sold as refurbished units by equipment brokers.
Partner programs
Vertical sells almost exclusively through a
value-added reseller A value-added reseller (VAR) is a company that adds features or services to an existing product, then resells it (usually to end-users) as an integrated product or complete "turn-key" solution. This practice occurs commonly in the electronics or IT ...
(VAR) channel. Partners must meet certain minimum requirements to become a VAR, including purchasing a demo system and qualifying technical personnel by having them attend online training.
Artisoft
Tucson, Arizona
, "(at the) base of the black ill
, nicknames = "The Old Pueblo", "Optics Valley", "America's biggest small town"
, image_map =
, mapsize = 260px
, map_caption = Interactive map ...
-based Artisoft
was the first company to offer peer-to-peer networking. The name of its
network operating system
A network operating system (NOS) is a specialized operating system for a network device such as a router, switch or firewall.
Historically operating systems with networking capabilities were described as network operating systems, because they al ...
was
LANtastic
LANtastic is a peer-to-peer local area network (LAN) operating system for DOS and Microsoft Windows (and formerly OS/2). The ''New York Times'' described the network, which permits machines to function both as servers and as workstations, as all ...
.
In 1996 the company acquired for $12.8 million. ''Stylus Innovation'', noted for its Barcode-based remote shopping product, was founded in 1991 by
Krisztina 'Z' Holly,
Mike Cassidy and John Barrus.
''Stylus Innovation'' came to public attention by winning the ''Grand-Prize'' in the 1991
MIT $100K Entrepreneurship Competition
The MIT $100K Entrepreneurship Competition is a student-managed business plan competition, where undergraduates and postgraduates from various programs and all levels at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology ( MIT) organize and enter the comp ...
.
Legacy
Artisoft bought TeleVantage, and renamed the latter Artisoft TeleVantage. However, with Microsoft's
Windows for Workgroups
Windows 3.1 is a major release of Microsoft Windows. It was Released-to-manufacturing, released to manufacturing on April 6, 1992, as a successor to Windows 3.0.
Like its predecessors, the Windows 3.1 series ran as a Shell (computing), shell ...
"eating into" LANtastic's lead (as was Novell). and then free "bundled networking software" in Windows 95 and 98, the company "saw the handwriting on the wall."
LANtastic's originator, Artisoft Televantage, sold "Legacy" technology ("LANtastic")
[ t]
Spartacom Technologies
in 2000. The latter, which subsequently was acquired b
PC Micro
continued to market and maintain LANtastic. Version 8.01, released in 2006, can network PCs running MS-DOS (also PC DOS) 5.0 or later and Windows 3.x up to 7.[(For case of Windows XP and 7, some limitations apply).]
Vertical redirect
In September 2004 Artisoft, minus its former LANtastic technology, purchased Vertical and, effective January 2005, renamed itself
Vertical Communications Inc.[
Vertical now had two non-competing main products, Televantage (for firms with under 1,000 phones and "one or more locations"][ and Vertical's "own" InstantOffice, "a ]Voice-over-IP
Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP), also called IP telephony, is a method and group of technologies for the delivery of voice communications and multimedia sessions over Internet Protocol (IP) networks, such as the Internet. The terms Internet t ...
phone system ... for large enterprises with many locations."
References
{{Reflist
Companies traded over-the-counter in the United States
Telecommunications companies established in 1982
Telecommunications companies of the United States
1982 establishments in California