IBM Challenges Microsoft With an Ad Campaign 210
Rytis writes "IBM is about to spend $300 Million dollars on a campaign to win customers and to convert them from Microsoft Exchange to Lotus Notes and Domino under Linux. IBM is also said to offer resellers a bounty of $20,000 for switching customers to its Linux-based e-mail programs from Microsoft server software. It seems that the concurrence Microsoft Corp. is facing is getting tighter and tighter. The Penguin gets more and more support from the two biggest rivals that Microsoft have ever had."
IBM, anymore trustworthy in this? (Score:5, Interesting)
Sometimes I'm not sure what IBM is thinking. I don't "get" this campaign. IBM is spending $300M on a campaign to convince customers to switch from MS' propietary to their propietary message product? Wow!
From the Seattle PI article:
I'm not sure I see this as a clarifying move. I see it only as another product offering. I've used Lotus Notes and worked with it many times. It has lots of interesting features, but I found it obtuse and overloaded at least in the context of an e-mail/calendaring product... the business world probably doesn't need or care about yet another e-mail.
And, IBM is couching this under the comforting and (maybe) enticing siren of Linux and open systems? Wow! A paragraph from the Bloomberg article:
I find this invitation disingenuous, dishonest, and ethically bankrupt at best. I'm a huge fan of Linux, and hope for its eventual place in the business world (which I would submit it already has... except we all still have to whisper about it), but I think IBM is miscalculating on this.
And even if they are dead on in their marketing campaign, I'm not sure I'm entirely comfortable they piggyback so strongly on Linux. I know IBM has been a contributor to Linux -- has their backing been that strong?
I've worked with IBM throughout the years and my experience has been they are not too much different than Microsoft in their commitment to Unix platforms, i.e., it's a pill they'll swallow or pretend to swallow if it makes them look willing to play in the Open Source community.
IBM has diverted Unix technology before (anyone played with AIX before???), I fear they're using it today for personal (corporate) gain. I know corporation's responsibilities are to be as profitable as possible, but this smacks of lip service.
Re:IBM, anymore trustworthy in this? (Score:5, Informative)
Where have you been? If it was not for IBM sco would be suing other linux users for a scosource license. see: groklaw.org
They have only contributed to 94 linux projects... you can see the very small list here:http://www-128.ibm.com/developerworks/views/
For email/calendaring, Exchange is easier. (Score:4, Interesting)
Unfortunately, most companies just want something that will handle the email and calendaring with Outlook.
Instead of putting $300 million into this stupid ad campaign, spend $250 million on a basic corporate email server that handles email and calendaring that works with Outlook (or clone the Outlook
Start small and build up. Lotus Notes is anything but small.
Re:For email/calendaring, Exchange is easier. (Score:5, Informative)
Domino Access for Microsoft Outlook.
http://www-142.ibm.com/software/sw-lotus/products
Keep the Outlook client, but use Domino as the back end, and you can scale up to hundreds of thousands of users on a single server, rather than crapping out at 3000 or so.
(Disclaimer: I work for IBM. Opinions mine, not IBM's.)
Re:IBM, anymore trustworthy in this? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:IBM, anymore trustworthy in this? (Score:2)
Re:IBM, anymore trustworthy in this? (Score:2)
Re:IBM, anymore trustworthy in this? (Score:2)
IBM's Linux port of Domino is notoriously, spectacularly, unforgettably BAD. But, hey, you have the source for the operating system -- fat lot of good that'll do you.
Re:IBM, anymore trustworthy in this? (Score:3, Insightful)
Well duh. Who would've thought that a corporation would spend money to get people to use their product. And no, they probably aren't any more trustworthy. They are after all a large multinational trying to increase profits.
Re:IBM, anymore trustworthy in this? (Score:5, Informative)
Umm. What do you expect? They have a product. They're advertising it. This is shocking?
I find this invitation disingenuous, dishonest, and ethically bankrupt at best.
As far as proprietary is concerned, as far as I can see it plays nice with standards where standards exist for the things it does. It does not extend standards in a noncompatible way either. This seems reasonable for a proprietary program. I think it's clear that IBM is selling Domino, so I don't see what your beef is.
overloaded at least in the context of an e-mail/calendaring product..
Bingo. The problem is that it has always been more than email and calendar; trying to position it as a competitor to Exchange has only made the product confusing. The situation has only become more confusing as new product categories evolve that conver part of what Notes does, for example content management. Notes just isn't a clean fit into any of the product categories people are accustomed to.
IBM pushing Lotus is surprising. (Score:2)
Umm. What do you expect? They have a product. They're advertising it. This is shocking?
Yes. IBM has been extremely reluctant to market Domino. The last effort was in 1999 when Lotus Notes 6 was released. Lotus Notes 6.5 and 7 have since been released with almost no marketing.
Look at "IBM software by products b
Re:IBM, anymore trustworthy in this? (Score:2, Interesting)
Getting a non-windows server environment supported in an enterprise greatly increases the liklihood of moving away from proprietary protocols and methods of connecting to said environment.
Right now, our enterprise is MS biatch (sorry, I can't think of any other way of explaining it that so perfectly illustrates our IT and MS). My Mac (bought under the radar) doesn't properly display our I
Re:IBM, anymore trustworthy in this? (Score:5, Informative)
I know IBM has been a contributor to Linux -- has their backing been that strong?
I'm not sure the exact details of IBM's direct support of Linux, but they develop tools for it and on it. The ServeRAID Manager CD and other bootable tools run on Linux kernels, and the latest ServeRAID-8i adapter runs Linux onboard as well. The DSA tools will run on Red Hat, SUSE, and Novell server editions. Apparently an entire IBM division is considering switching to Linux [slashdot.org]. And of course, as mentioned in the article, their commercial software offerings run on Linux.
There are various ways of supporting things. Giving money is one way, and actually using and promoting the use of them is another.
Re:IBM, anymore trustworthy in this? (Score:2)
Re:IBM, anymore trustworthy in this? (Score:2)
Unfortunately, yes.
Our project is trying desperately to migrate away from AIX to Linux wherever we can.
Unfortunately, there are still a few hold-out application servers on which we're running proprietary software, and can't migrate due to vendor lock. Evil bastards. If there truly is a Satan, and if he is acting in this world, it is through AIX.
Domino/Notes (Score:4, Insightful)
Unless you have a killer-app that only runs under domino, I'd stay away from it.
Re:Domino/Notes (Score:5, Insightful)
I've never used Outlook, so I cannot really compare. I just know that there has to be something better than Lotus Notes.
*(If you are actively doing something in Lotus Notes when an email arrives, such as clicking somewhere - even on the inbox refresh button - then you get the audible alert and the "You have new mail" notice on the status bar. However, you don't actually get the email, and the refresh button does not work. I have only found success by putting it to the side and waiting for the next auto refresh, usually a few minutes later. This is with Lotus Notes 6.5.3, the latest version I'm allowed to use.)
Re:Domino/Notes (Score:3, Interesting)
The simplest of things just do not work in Lotus Notes's email client. And their flat file "databases" aren't too impressive e
Re:Domino/Notes (Score:3, Interesting)
Microsoft has Bob, IBM has notes. Notes is better than Bob, therefore IBM is better. The comparison being both were amazingly bad things to try and market so aggressively.
However after coming out with both barrels blasting like this, IBM has really boxed themselves into a corner they can
how to refresh the Notes inbox (Score:3, Informative)
Re:how to refresh the Notes inbox (Score:4, Interesting)
Good - but to Notes? (Score:5, Interesting)
Exchange is good for what it does, and users scream loudest when their email goes down. So I expect companies will be loath to change their entire messaging system. Especially to Notes.
Re:Good - but to Notes? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm working at an IBM shop right now, meaning that we use Notes for email, and everybody hates it. The users hate it because it's difficult to use. The network administrator hates it because it's a pain in the ass to do simple tasks like, for example, changing a user's name. The accounting department hates it because it's expensive.
And yes, this is where the Notes supporters will chime in to remind me that Notes is more than just an email client-- it's also a network-aware database host ala Access. Except there's two major problems with this:
1) IBM advertises that Notes is an email client.
2) It's a crappy DB host also.
Look, supporting Linux is one thing, but nobody should be supporting Notes. If the free market worked at all in the computing industry, this program would have died out years ago because it's too crappy for anybody to purchase. If you want to support Linux, do it in such a way that you're not also supporting a horrible piece of software like Notes.
As an aside, why do all groupware products suck? Groupwise sucks. Domino/Notes sucks. Exchange/Outlook sucks. Why doesn't someone like Adobe create a groupware product to completely blow these suckers away?
Re:Good - but to Notes? (Score:3, Interesting)
In the company I work for, we moved from Lotus to Exchange/Outlook, and I have to say, even though I would rather not use MS stuff, I wholeheartedly embraced the change. I think the last version of the client I used was 4 or 5, so it may be th
Re:Good - but to Notes? (Score:2)
Re:Good - but to Notes? (Score:2)
Because these types of systems are usually installed to RAID systems, and we all know how Adobe LOVES RAID setups, dont we? Dont get me started on Adobe's activation disaster with RAID setups last year.
Re:Good - but to Notes? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Good - but to Notes? (Score:2)
Apparently, their activation works off the serial number of a single hardrive, and that drive must also have Windows installed. Once activated, if you do so much as upgrade the RAID driver, or do a system restore, you are fucked as activa
Re:Good - but to Notes? (Score:2)
I don't normally do this, but QFT!
I make a good living with it, and its VERY robust (Score:2)
It only requires 15 people to support the entire environment.
They have had no downtime in 5 years.
They have never had a worm.
Re:I make a good living with it, and its VERY robu (Score:3, Informative)
How much time is spent managing email folders and r
Oh, I hear you about the UI. Really. (Score:2)
Re:I make a good living with it, and its VERY robu (Score:2)
Re:I make a good living with it, and its VERY robu (Score:3, Interesting)
We use Exchange to support email and calendaring for at least twice that number, and it takes 1-2 of us to support it part time. It pretty much takes care of itself. The only downtime we've had since upgrading to 2003 was when a third-party backup app started locking up one of the servers every weekend.
I'm not a huge MS fan, and I do tend to like IBM, but Notes is a pile of shit. The only thing I ever liked about it was the hieroglyphics when I en
Sort by subject; reliable mail rules (Score:2)
Re:Sort by subject; reliable mail rules (Score:3, Insightful)
But even if you're using 7, you have to think to yourself: "It took them until version 7 before Notes could sort by subject line? One of the MOST BASIC FUNCTIONS of a list box, and Notes couldn't manage it without 6 revisions?" Mail.app from Apple could sort by subject line in version 1.0... amazing!
It only t
Re:Good - but to Notes? (Score:2)
Re:Good - but to Notes? (Score:2)
I wonder if perhaps email and calendar function just don't belong together in the same interface.
-matthew
Re:Good - but to Notes? (Score:4, Insightful)
As an aside, why do all groupware products suck? Groupwise sucks. Domino/Notes sucks. Exchange/Outlook sucks.
Maybe because software in and of itself has become a "necessary" part of business in industries that as recently as 10 years ago didn't have to rely on software.
Much of the chatter encouraged by such communication systems is just background noise and a lot of corporate activity is just busywork. For really important projects (I mean building a bridge, process plant or skyscraper) you don't want to rely on being able to reach one critical person via email or groupware. You use the phone for that.
Re:Good - but to Notes? (Score:2)
It's a product that just needs some polish, a bit of a Volvo app.
I liked v6.5 Notes client. (Score:2)
Re:Notes is history, Workplace is its successor (Score:2)
Re:Notes is history, Workplace is its successor (Score:2)
I some how assume you are referring to the dead horse argument that "java is slow". Well it totally depends on what you are trying to do and how you use the Java framework. Some points on which to compare C and runtimes such as Java.
Re:Notes is history, Workplace is its successor (Score:2)
I'm just saying that Linux with a mail server written in C/C++ would be a much better idea in my eyes.
Re:Notes is history, Workplace is its successor (Score:2)
As for code maintenance, I couldn't comment.
Have the april fools started yet? (Score:5, Funny)
Probably will avoid slashdot for about 36 hours just in case.
Re:Have the april fools started yet? (Score:2)
Some of the stories [slashdot.org] were actually pretty funny.
Re:Have the april fools started yet? (Score:2)
Dupe? (Score:3, Funny)
Lotus Notes? (Score:5, Funny)
Whoa, IBM wants people to switch from the at-least-ok proprietary MS solution to their own we-have-the-worst-software-in-the-world, a-thousand-interface-designers-sacrified-every-day , lotus-notes-making-your-brain-melt-since-1996, interface-standards-are-not-for-us-goddamit Lotus Fucking Notes?
Woohoo, fucking win, that's not even being between a rock and a hard place, that's being in an erupting volcano and seeing a frigging Chicxulub-class asteroid falling on you (that'd be a 10km diameter asteroid, 6mi for our metrically challenged american friends).
And don't listen to anyone telling you that Notes is great and that it rocks your socks, it's been proven that only Notes developers can utter praises for that piece of donkey poo, they're merely trying to keep their jobs.
Re:Lotus Notes? (Score:2)
Where art thou, editors... (Score:2, Informative)
Concurrence?
I imagine that competition was meant. You don't talk about "tight concurrence"--"tight" is usually used in conjunction with "competiti
Re:Where art thou, editors... (Score:2)
Re:Where art thou, editors... (Score:2)
And um... "The Penguin gets more and more support from the two biggest rivals that Microsoft have ever had." is not a fragment, although it should be "Microsoft has".
Perhaps you should go back to elementary school?
Re:Where art thou, editors... (Score:2)
Re:Where art thou, editors... (Score:2)
"Concurrence" in Spanish/Portuguese=="competition" (Score:2)
Maybe the writer speaks Spanish, Portuguese, or some other Latin-based language. In such languages, the word that naturally would be translated into English as "concurrence" really means "competition".
Take a look at concorrencia [priberam.pt], choose the link "concorrencia" from there, and you'll see this definition: espécie de luta pela vida que é baseada nos fenómenos de selecção natural e que defende a ideia de que esta é efectuada através da escolha do mais apto e não do m
Re:Where art thou, editors... (Score:2)
In Deutschland sagt man "Konkurrenz."
rj
Re:Where art thou, editors... (Score:2)
They only have to edit a dozen at most per day. (Using "edit" in the sense of "adding smart-arse 'from XXX dept' intro and pressing "publish".)
This is a damn good idea (Score:5, Insightful)
We sold Apples to folks who wanted PCs cause we'd make $100 spiff on a Mac box but 5% of the profit off the sale with PCs. Considering stuff was sold at or near or sometimes under cost, it was flog the extended warranty, sell Macs or starve. Got good at selling Macs....
Our Dell rep came in with squishy toys wondering with his rah rah speech why we weren't selling all Dells, to which we said sorry pal, we make nothing off selling a Dell, show us the money and we'll flog as many as you can make.
This was lost on him, he was trying to sell Dell on its technical merits... what the hell did the other salespeople care, they knew nothing about computers, and their customers wanted the "Color TV" one where the "hard drive" lay flat so you could put the "TV" on it.
I hear Lotus Notes blows. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:I hear Lotus Notes blows. (Score:2)
IBM's Workplace. [ibm.com]
It's a (supposedly) light-weight, run-everywhere java client.
*shrug*. I dunno, haven't played with it myself, but the concept sound damn good.
Some people would pay to get away from exchange (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Some people would pay to get away from exchange (Score:2)
In terms of Exchange vs Notes, I just can't get past the past 5 years of absolute misery and horror that Notes has inflicted on me to even fight against Microsoft on this one. IBM needs to just dump Notes and come
Re:Some people would pay to get away from exchange (Score:3, Informative)
I have. I had an implementation with approximately 50,000 users spread around the world at 20+ sites. And while it was expensive to license we didn't really have any performance problems. In my experience, many people run Exchange because it's easy to get installed and has GUI tools for the most common mana
Fun With Lotus Notes (Score:2, Interesting)
For a better world, we should all do it! (Score:5, Funny)
Give up Sex for Video Games
Give up Kobe Beef for Bean Sprouts
Give up SUVs for Hybrids
Give up TV for a walk in the park.
Give up music for the sound of waves on the beach
Give up Logic for Scientology
You too can have an episode of South Park devoted to your madness!
Re:For a better world, we should all do it! (Score:2)
Re:For a better world, we should all do it! (Score:2)
Give up emacs for vi!
Give up C++ for Java!
Give up Mozilla for Firefox!
Give up Notepad for Wordpa- wait, who said that? Where am I? who are you?
Notes? Wah? (Score:2, Informative)
Notes is great for _some_ things (Score:2)
If you are doing workflow-enabled applications, and you have good Notes developers, it's a damn good product and you'll find that you can roll out apps very quickly (detractors, please note that I said you need good developers).
Understand the Penguin (Score:3, Funny)
It isn't so much that the Penguin has powerful friends, but that Microsoft has powerful enemies. How about a Warcraft scenario: Bill in Borg weeping as he runs through the swamp, pursued by big war trolls and a very angry penguin!
As a daily user of Lotus Notes (Score:3, Informative)
Outlook may be pretty evil, what with sending RTF e-mails.. But then.. so does Lotus Notes! It manages to 'retain' formatting from other applications when copy-pasting when it's entirely inappropriate, even (like, pasting some text from a webpage, bam! different font). It doesn't download attachments when you get your mail, but when you do download it, it doesn't add it to its 'local mail database', but let's you save it somewhere. Get the attachment from e-mail again because you deleted it from your filesystem, you have to download again. Calendering, sure, nice. But buggy as hell. Rescheduling usually doesn't work, you can read invites from Outlook users, but (sometimes) not accept them, or when you accept them, they don't get notified. "Replicating" databases takes ages, and doesn't in fact allow you to work offline. The client isn't noticibly multithreaded, you have to wait for a download to finish before being able to do something else. The client is a huge bloated binary, and it writes huge ass 'database' files to your disk. When you kill the client (which you often have to do as some actions lock the client up completely, though you'd like to cancel them), you have to log off and login again to restart it. It comes with transparant encrypted connections to its server - but it's not on by default. There is no clear way to mark a message unread!! I had to endure a few weeks of "tip of the day" messages to find out the INSERT button marks messages read/unread. No context menu option for that. Making a todo note? Not by using a menu option in the To-Do part of your screen, but you have to focuse the ToDo canvas, and then go to the client's main menu and select "create Todo". It uses proprietary mail protocols that don't add the usual RFC 2822 headers, and RFC 2822 headers from internet mail are really hard to get at. It makes you confirm unicode (utf-8) encoding for a message TWICE, even though it selects it by default when you type an accented character. It's slow and unresponsive. Did I mention the address books don't work properly? And no auto-complete?
This might all be fixed in later and greater versions (i have no idea what version I'm on now, I think 6.5 or something).. But compared to Lotus Notes, Outlook is a godsend!
Yeah. Compared to Lotus Notes, Outlook is a godsend.. Just imagine how crappy Lotus Notes must be, for that comparison to hold!
Hmm (Score:3, Insightful)
Hmm...
Re:Hmm (Score:2)
Re:Hmm (Score:2)
Yeah? Who pays that well?
A very true but funny story (Score:2)
We
Re:Hmm (Score:2)
Uh huh.
Incredible (Score:3, Insightful)
Wow! IBM is open sourcing Lotus Notes and Domino? They really believe in the Open Source development model! That's an absolutely amazing mov...
Oh, what's that? The actual mail product they're selling is every bit as proprietary as exchange?
Gotta love the marketing department that can actually say the above quote with a straight face while being so hypocritical at the same time.
It's because IBM are floundering. (Score:2)
IBM sold off the ThinkPad and ThinkCentre division to concentrate on other things. Chip manufacturing? A major issue to Apple was the availability of the IBM PowerPC G5 chip, with the expanded feature set that Apple so desperately wanted. It just didn't happen fast enough, early enough, because IBM couldn't keep up with the production. IBM also fai
Re:It's because IBM are floundering. (Score:2)
Omitting the revenue from the Lenovo sale, IBM made 52% of their profit last year (2005, before the Apple/Intel shipments started) from services. Hardware sales was a distant second, and software sales was only around 10% of their profits iirc.
IBM's main business is services. Everthing else is just icing on the cake.
Re:It's because IBM are floundering. (Score:2)
Re:It's because IBM are floundering. (Score:2)
No way (Score:3, Informative)
Re:No way (Score:2)
I have been with an org for 6 months and it has been my first Notes experience. Yes it is quirky, but I have never seen any other place that shares its information amongst itself so well. I think it had certainly enhnaced the way they go about their business. I agree there are a lot of quirky things that are deep design flaws.
I'm impressed you didn't post as an AC :)
Re:No way (Score:2)
Just wait until the roll out the WorkPlace Managed Client. Everything you love about Notes combined with everything you love about Eclipse.
Competition (Score:2)
Competition, the word you're looking for is competition. It's a common false friend [wikipedia.org] for many languages.
Anyway, it should also be noted that there is no Lotus Notes client for Linux (although the Windows version supposedly runs in Wine), so I'm assuming the campaign will be all about switching the servers.
Why Domino? (Score:5, Informative)
Domino does a bunch of other stuff but the offline/remerge functionality is the fundamentally cool thing it does that other products don't do. As, say, an email client and calendar, Domino is a pretty horrible.
I used Lotus Notes for several years while working for a big consulting firm. It was one of the worst designed, ugliest programs ever. It had groundbreaking functionality (see above) but even then it was easy to imagine something better, easier to use, and easier to administer.
Domino can still do some very useful things (again, see above) Exchange can't do, or does very poorly (indeed Exchange is worse than either IMAP or POP at dealing with offline clients -- and Notes is substantially better). It seems to me that there ought to be web-based tools that do everything EXCEPT the offline component far better than Domino or Exchange do, and more cheaply and simply, but I don't think Domino has a significant competitor in terms of its offline functionality (more's the pity).
The estimated TCO for a laptop PC back in 1997 was somewhere between $25,000 and $30,000. The estimated TCO for a single Lotus Notes client was $9,000 -- Domino's functionality is great, but it ain't cheap. This would be of academic interest if Lotus Domino had improved substantially in usability or reliability in the nine years since, but by all accounts it is basically the same.
Re:Why Domino? (Score:2)
Re:Why Domino? (Score:2)
Admittedly this was a cool feature back in 1988. Shades of Ted Nelson/Xanadu, etc. But Lotus never effectively integrated it with anything, so Notes largely just became a
With friends like that, who needs enemies? (Score:2)
Please. IBM is OK for Linux in general, but Lotus Notes is the biggest piece of shit ever. All the people INSIDE of IBM hate it, let alone anyone else.
I hate Microsoft, but please, please
Let's hope Mozilla helps... (Score:2)
From a guy who support Lotus Notes (Score:3, Informative)
It would kind of interesting to see Notes take off again... Basically you can use it like outlook and then combine MS access in it for custom databases. However, somethings are still a big pain that make Outlook look good. (no pun intended)
If you need just email, setup an imap and use Thunderbird for your client.
If you just need email and calendering then Outlook might be what you want (or maybe Groupwise if you are old school).
If you need email, calenders, custom database development tied into your email, plus tons of other stuff... Then Notes is your program. Hey they even have a OS X client that is way better than MS's Entourage.
Re:From a guy who support Lotus Notes (Score:2)
I don't see how that's possible. At all.
I am so sick of hearing about Notes sucking (Score:5, Informative)
1. Notes has an odd UI with some challenges, we agree on that. Of course, that's because it was DESIGNED TO BE CROSS PLATFORM. In fact, the next rev includes a LINUX CLIENT.
2. Notes is VERY STABLE. I am personally aware of a major financial firm where 12,000 users are doing mail, calendaring, I.M., discussions, and workflow applications with the support of less than 15 people. They have had no outages. They have had no works.
3. Notes is inherently secure. It was doing public/private key encryption from day 1, back in the late 80's and is still doing so. It even supports PKI plug ins. Apparently, it was the only one because nobody else ever made any.
4. The notes CLIENT is inherently secure. It use execution control lists and design elements are signed. There are not worms or trojans that use Notes to replicate because THEY CAN'T.
5. Notes is OPEN. Yes, it uses a proprietary storage and transport format, but it also FULLY SUPPORTS XML for every design and and data element. It also includes Java (w/ IIOP and CORBA as well) object models, COM object models, and a published XML schema. It FULLY SUPPORTS MIME, SNMP, SMTP, LDAP (as client or server), NTP, HTTP, SSL, DIIOP, WEBDAV, WEB SERVICES (as client or server), ODBC.
6. Notes is PROGRAMABLE. Its objects are openly accessable and it includes full support for JAVA, Javascript, and its own Lotusscript and formula language.
7. Domino (the server) is MULTI-OS cross platform. It runs EQUALLY WELL on Linux, AIX, Solaris (in the past, and soon again) iSeries (OS400). I even know of one web accessible server running on Linux on XBOX! (no, I'm not going to
8. Notes owns roughly 50% of the corporate mail and calendaring marketing. No, not in small business or home use, but in major corporations.
9. Notes & Domino are backward compatible. No rip and replace upgrades. EVER. I can take a version 8 beta client and open a version 2 application (that I have) and it will WORK. Now. It is cheaper to upgrade to Domino 7 from Exchange 5.5 than to upgrade to Exchange 2000 or 2003 from the Exchange 5.5.
---
So, given all these things -- every one of which is something in general
Re:I am so sick of hearing about Notes sucking (Score:3, Interesting)
It was designed to *run* on multiple platforms (which they still screwed up; why did it take so long to get a working Linux version?), but it's definitely not "cross-platform."
Firefox is cross-platform. When it's running on a Mac, the Preferences menu item goes into the application menu where it belongs. It uses sensible font sizes tha
April fools (Score:2)
Anyway, anyone recognised the british medical journal gag this year. It's a "news" story about MoDwD or
Total bullsh*t. April 1st as it should be.
even Outlook is better than Notes (Score:2)
I never thought I would become a Microsoft Outlook advocate, but after using Lotus Notes at work for the past two years, I bought a copy of Outlook and installed the Outlook Notes Connector [microsoft.com] just to avoid Lotus Notes.
The Lotus Notes client provides such a poor user experience. Just to name the most obvious problems: the menus are substantially different from other applications, preferences are hidden several levels deep in weird places, the toolbar buttons and the bookmarks sidebar are pointless, copy a
Why I'm not on a Outlook/Exchange... (Score:3, Interesting)
Because to scale exchange to support the number of users we have, we'd need to deploy *FARMS* of intel boxes.
Oddly, it's been about two years since we had to reboot our iSeries (AS/400). Yeah, it's not as sexy as running 100s of windows or linux servers. As it's just a pair of clustered boxes in the corner, each running multiple LPARs that serve to provide redundancy for the other. But it just works, plain and simple.
Re:Lotus notes, eh? (Score:2)
I don't know. It was obtuse in many ways, but I actually liked the architecture and thought that, while it took getting used to, it had some real cool features (public key authentication, for example). I always got the impression that Domino was designed for higher security environments than Exchange, and that a lot of this complexity came with the territory.