Ibm Lotus Notes
2021年10月30日Download here: http://gg.gg/wd8l5
Last week, IBM sold off its Domino/Notes software business unit to HCL. While you probably haven’t heard of them, they are a billion dollar Indian tech conglomerate. Sadly, this represents the end of one era for Notes. It certainly has had a long and significant life span.
“Notes’ longevity is amazing,” says David DeJean, who co-wrote one of the first books about it back in 1991. “What other corporate software product has had that kind of run? Notes’ success started with its chameleon-like ability to go into a company and work the way the company worked. It let companies computerize their operations at their own pace. Other software packages have been the software of “No” where Notes was almost always the software of ‘Sure.’”
I was present at its conception in the late 1980s, when Ray Ozzie had the idea for what was then an unknown software category that was labeled at the time as groupware. It was the first time that a PC software program could be used to connect multiple computers in a meaningful way, and be used to create applications that leveraged the group. DeJean recalled that these apps were at the heart of what made Notes work: “During a crucial moment in the computerization of the enterprise in the 1990s, Notes applications proliferated like rabbits. It was very easy for companies to get into Notes, and very hard to get out.”
When Notes came out. I was working as an editor at PC Week. My colleague Sam Whitmore told me that “it took us a while to get our brains around the idea of its replication feature. Most of us found it redundant to email.” That was its biggest challenge, and well into its middle age Notes’ biggest competitor continued to be ordinary email. Many of my press colleagues carried a long-standing hatred for it. Nevertheless, Whitmore also recalls that “Lotus appreciated how technical we were, that we understood what Ray Ozzie was bringing to the world. Perhaps because of this, Lotus offered PC Week a lot of money to produce a special report on Notes.”
*IBM Lotus Notes Training IBM Lotus Notes is an enterprise productivity solution that provides, as one of its many features, an email client. Lotus Notes is one of the most hated email clients when it comes to designing HTML emails. Early versions of Lotus Notes Developer had virtually no support for common HTML and CSS.
*Welcome to the latest release of IBM® Lotus Notes®. Lotus Notes is a powerful, multifaceted software for Microsoft® Windows®, Macintosh, and Linux® computers that gives you instant access to all the information that is important to you. You can use Lotus Notes to send and receive email and Internet mail, schedule appointments, browse the Web, and use powerful.
IBM’s technical support resource for all IBM products and services including downloads, fixes, drivers, APARs, product documentation, Redbooks, whitepapers and technotes. IBM Notes - IBM Support United States.
I had first-hand experience using Notes when I worked at CMP in the early 2000’s when I was an editor at VAR Business and also at EETimes. The CMP IT department had written quite a few Notes applications for various editorial and sales tracking purposes, again showing how extensible it could be.
This is something that many of its critics didn’t really understand, both then and now. One of its earliest customers was PriceWaterhouse, now PwC. Sheldon Laube was running the IT operation there and made the decision to purchase 10,000 copies of Notes back in 1990. He told me that this “started a transformation at the firm. Notes was truly the first personal computer software product that changed the nature of how people used PCs. Until Notes came along, PCs were personal productivity tools, with the majority of uses being spreadsheets, word processing and presentations. Notes created a social use for personal computers and enabled teams of people, spread across geographies, to communicate, collaborate and share information in a way which was not possible previously. It was the tool that moved PCs and networks onto every desk in every office of PW around the world.”
This is an important point, and one that I didn’t think much about until I started corresponding recently with Laube. If you credit Notes as being the first social software tool, it actually predates Facebook by more than a decade. Even MySpace, which was the largest social network for a few years (and had more traffic than Google too), was created in the early 2000s.
Notes was also ahead of its time in another area. “Notes was a precursor to both the web and social media,” says Laube. “It was all about easily publishing and sharing information in a managed way suited to business use. It is the ease of management and the ability to control information access within Notes securely which allowed its rapid adoption by business.” Laube reminded me that back then, information security was barely recognized as necessary by IT departments.
This isn’t completely an accurate picture, mainly because Notes was focused on the enterprise, not the consumer. Notes “mixed email with databases with insanely secure data replication and custom apps,” said David Gewirtz in his column this week for ZDnet. He was an early advocate of Notes and wrote numerous books and edited many newsletters about its enterprise use. “It was enterprise software before enterprise software was cool.” He wrote about how Notes had elements of Salesforce, Dropbox, Atlassian, Zendesk and ServiceNow — years before any of these products were even invented. Another aspect of Notes that doesn’t get much attention is its integrated group calendars and contacts. Now we take these elements for granted — until they don’t work — and expect them in many communications tools. Back in the early 1990s, this was a rare feature. Scott Mace, who runs the site CalendarSwamp, remembers complaining about how hard shared calendars were back in the late 1990s, and how Notes was an early standout then.
Notes has gone through many transitions in its long life: After IBM acquired it, Big Blue extended the software to Domino, which combined Notes with web services and eventually was used to provide a managed hosting solution as well. Ozzie told me that Notes was in essence an amazingly powerful applications server with captive clients. This differed from the web model, where web clients were free and Netscape and others made money from selling their own application servers. IBM added the web server because they had to: Ozzie said if they hadn’t, Notes would have died quickly in the web era. Instead, it still flourishes.
Another thing that doesn’t get much attention is that IBM believed so much in Notes that it made it its corporate communications standard for many years. One of their reasons — and a major motivation for many other customers — is that Notes offered an end-to-end encrypted email system, something that wasn’t common at the time.
Even so, IBM was a poor fit for Notes because it was too slow to innovate. While having a web front-end solved one big problem for Notes (its very thick client software), it wasn’t enough to compete against the world of open source and the rich software development of the web. As the web took over the software world, Notes became more of an anachronism, and more nimble solutions (including one product called Nimble, btw) became more attractive to corporate software developers. Ozzie said, “Shame on IBM for losing the corporate email market” to Microsoft and then Google. He reminded me that back then, we had different email systems that couldn’t connect with each other, even within the same office.
Betsy Kosheff, who did PR for Lotus back when it was sold to IBM, told me, “IBM had no business doing software innovation. That point was very obvious right from the acquisition. It’s not their fault – IBM is just not designed that way. I imagine their India-based buyer will be looking for more operational efficiencies. They’re probably not looking for the next big idea, which is what was so much fun about Notes and being part of that product in the early days. I’m not saying you can’t possibly create an entrepreneurial division with exciting innovations from within a larger company. I’m just saying they didn’t do it at IBM and probably not at any other billion dollar IT company.”
Ozzie reminded me that when Lotus was sold to IBM, they were in a head-to-head battle with Exchange. Microsoft had the edge because they owned the operating system and had majority share with office applications. IBM could offer a broader software portfolio that could attract customers.
Was Notes too early for its time? Ozzie says no: “I am just pleased that things have continued to evolve in collaboration tools.There are still things related to human interaction, such as distributed trust and managing overload that we first learned in Notes that have yet to be embraced by anything in the enterprise social world.”STARTUSINGyour HCL IBM Notes applications on youriPhone, iPad or Android for FREEGet your Notes applications on your mobile at no cost with all functions available in local Wi-Fi. Check pricing for connecting over the Internet.Your IBM NotesMailDiscussionPersonal ContactsDocuments LibraryMail ContactsTeamRoomNotebookDomino Directories
Start using your business apps on your smartphone with no tiresome setup procedures, no obscure guides and no lengthy calls to IT support desk. My Notes brings instant over-the-air access to your business applications from your iPhone, iPad, Android phones and tablets.MailDiscussionPersonal ContactsDocuments LibraryMail ContactsTeamRoomNotebookDomino DirectoriesMobile access to HCL/IBM Notes in a flash
Follow 3 simple steps to get your business applications on your mobile:
*1install on desktop
Install My Notes Desktop application
*2get app for mobile
Get mobile application for your Android or iOS
*3connect and use
Connect device by scanning QR-codeIbm Lotus NotesYour HCL IBM Notes data with youAnywhere & Anytime
Your phone is connected directly to your computer when in a local network. My Notes cloud is used to securely transmit data between your computer and smartphone when on the go. No configuration quirks. No blocking firewalls.Ibm Lotus Notes Mac
*END-TO-END ENCRYPTION
Neither data, nor passwords are stored in My Notes cloud. Data is strongly encrypted with AES and SSL algorithms when transmitted between My Notes Desktop and your phone. Encryption keys are known to the communicating parties.
*WORKS ANYWHERE
Mobile app is connected directly to your computer when in local Wi-Fi networkor in VPN. Connection is automatically switched to My Notes cloud when you’re on the go and connected over the Internet. Always connected, anywhere.
*RANGE OF NOTES APPS
Mail, Contacts, Calendar, Public Directories and Notebook on your familiar workspace. Other applications, such as Discussion/Forum, Documents Library, TeamRoom are coming soon. More apps, more opportunities, better collaboration.
Download here: http://gg.gg/wd8l5
https://diarynote-jp.indered.space
Last week, IBM sold off its Domino/Notes software business unit to HCL. While you probably haven’t heard of them, they are a billion dollar Indian tech conglomerate. Sadly, this represents the end of one era for Notes. It certainly has had a long and significant life span.
“Notes’ longevity is amazing,” says David DeJean, who co-wrote one of the first books about it back in 1991. “What other corporate software product has had that kind of run? Notes’ success started with its chameleon-like ability to go into a company and work the way the company worked. It let companies computerize their operations at their own pace. Other software packages have been the software of “No” where Notes was almost always the software of ‘Sure.’”
I was present at its conception in the late 1980s, when Ray Ozzie had the idea for what was then an unknown software category that was labeled at the time as groupware. It was the first time that a PC software program could be used to connect multiple computers in a meaningful way, and be used to create applications that leveraged the group. DeJean recalled that these apps were at the heart of what made Notes work: “During a crucial moment in the computerization of the enterprise in the 1990s, Notes applications proliferated like rabbits. It was very easy for companies to get into Notes, and very hard to get out.”
When Notes came out. I was working as an editor at PC Week. My colleague Sam Whitmore told me that “it took us a while to get our brains around the idea of its replication feature. Most of us found it redundant to email.” That was its biggest challenge, and well into its middle age Notes’ biggest competitor continued to be ordinary email. Many of my press colleagues carried a long-standing hatred for it. Nevertheless, Whitmore also recalls that “Lotus appreciated how technical we were, that we understood what Ray Ozzie was bringing to the world. Perhaps because of this, Lotus offered PC Week a lot of money to produce a special report on Notes.”
*IBM Lotus Notes Training IBM Lotus Notes is an enterprise productivity solution that provides, as one of its many features, an email client. Lotus Notes is one of the most hated email clients when it comes to designing HTML emails. Early versions of Lotus Notes Developer had virtually no support for common HTML and CSS.
*Welcome to the latest release of IBM® Lotus Notes®. Lotus Notes is a powerful, multifaceted software for Microsoft® Windows®, Macintosh, and Linux® computers that gives you instant access to all the information that is important to you. You can use Lotus Notes to send and receive email and Internet mail, schedule appointments, browse the Web, and use powerful.
IBM’s technical support resource for all IBM products and services including downloads, fixes, drivers, APARs, product documentation, Redbooks, whitepapers and technotes. IBM Notes - IBM Support United States.
I had first-hand experience using Notes when I worked at CMP in the early 2000’s when I was an editor at VAR Business and also at EETimes. The CMP IT department had written quite a few Notes applications for various editorial and sales tracking purposes, again showing how extensible it could be.
This is something that many of its critics didn’t really understand, both then and now. One of its earliest customers was PriceWaterhouse, now PwC. Sheldon Laube was running the IT operation there and made the decision to purchase 10,000 copies of Notes back in 1990. He told me that this “started a transformation at the firm. Notes was truly the first personal computer software product that changed the nature of how people used PCs. Until Notes came along, PCs were personal productivity tools, with the majority of uses being spreadsheets, word processing and presentations. Notes created a social use for personal computers and enabled teams of people, spread across geographies, to communicate, collaborate and share information in a way which was not possible previously. It was the tool that moved PCs and networks onto every desk in every office of PW around the world.”
This is an important point, and one that I didn’t think much about until I started corresponding recently with Laube. If you credit Notes as being the first social software tool, it actually predates Facebook by more than a decade. Even MySpace, which was the largest social network for a few years (and had more traffic than Google too), was created in the early 2000s.
Notes was also ahead of its time in another area. “Notes was a precursor to both the web and social media,” says Laube. “It was all about easily publishing and sharing information in a managed way suited to business use. It is the ease of management and the ability to control information access within Notes securely which allowed its rapid adoption by business.” Laube reminded me that back then, information security was barely recognized as necessary by IT departments.
This isn’t completely an accurate picture, mainly because Notes was focused on the enterprise, not the consumer. Notes “mixed email with databases with insanely secure data replication and custom apps,” said David Gewirtz in his column this week for ZDnet. He was an early advocate of Notes and wrote numerous books and edited many newsletters about its enterprise use. “It was enterprise software before enterprise software was cool.” He wrote about how Notes had elements of Salesforce, Dropbox, Atlassian, Zendesk and ServiceNow — years before any of these products were even invented. Another aspect of Notes that doesn’t get much attention is its integrated group calendars and contacts. Now we take these elements for granted — until they don’t work — and expect them in many communications tools. Back in the early 1990s, this was a rare feature. Scott Mace, who runs the site CalendarSwamp, remembers complaining about how hard shared calendars were back in the late 1990s, and how Notes was an early standout then.
Notes has gone through many transitions in its long life: After IBM acquired it, Big Blue extended the software to Domino, which combined Notes with web services and eventually was used to provide a managed hosting solution as well. Ozzie told me that Notes was in essence an amazingly powerful applications server with captive clients. This differed from the web model, where web clients were free and Netscape and others made money from selling their own application servers. IBM added the web server because they had to: Ozzie said if they hadn’t, Notes would have died quickly in the web era. Instead, it still flourishes.
Another thing that doesn’t get much attention is that IBM believed so much in Notes that it made it its corporate communications standard for many years. One of their reasons — and a major motivation for many other customers — is that Notes offered an end-to-end encrypted email system, something that wasn’t common at the time.
Even so, IBM was a poor fit for Notes because it was too slow to innovate. While having a web front-end solved one big problem for Notes (its very thick client software), it wasn’t enough to compete against the world of open source and the rich software development of the web. As the web took over the software world, Notes became more of an anachronism, and more nimble solutions (including one product called Nimble, btw) became more attractive to corporate software developers. Ozzie said, “Shame on IBM for losing the corporate email market” to Microsoft and then Google. He reminded me that back then, we had different email systems that couldn’t connect with each other, even within the same office.
Betsy Kosheff, who did PR for Lotus back when it was sold to IBM, told me, “IBM had no business doing software innovation. That point was very obvious right from the acquisition. It’s not their fault – IBM is just not designed that way. I imagine their India-based buyer will be looking for more operational efficiencies. They’re probably not looking for the next big idea, which is what was so much fun about Notes and being part of that product in the early days. I’m not saying you can’t possibly create an entrepreneurial division with exciting innovations from within a larger company. I’m just saying they didn’t do it at IBM and probably not at any other billion dollar IT company.”
Ozzie reminded me that when Lotus was sold to IBM, they were in a head-to-head battle with Exchange. Microsoft had the edge because they owned the operating system and had majority share with office applications. IBM could offer a broader software portfolio that could attract customers.
Was Notes too early for its time? Ozzie says no: “I am just pleased that things have continued to evolve in collaboration tools.There are still things related to human interaction, such as distributed trust and managing overload that we first learned in Notes that have yet to be embraced by anything in the enterprise social world.”STARTUSINGyour HCL IBM Notes applications on youriPhone, iPad or Android for FREEGet your Notes applications on your mobile at no cost with all functions available in local Wi-Fi. Check pricing for connecting over the Internet.Your IBM NotesMailDiscussionPersonal ContactsDocuments LibraryMail ContactsTeamRoomNotebookDomino Directories
Start using your business apps on your smartphone with no tiresome setup procedures, no obscure guides and no lengthy calls to IT support desk. My Notes brings instant over-the-air access to your business applications from your iPhone, iPad, Android phones and tablets.MailDiscussionPersonal ContactsDocuments LibraryMail ContactsTeamRoomNotebookDomino DirectoriesMobile access to HCL/IBM Notes in a flash
Follow 3 simple steps to get your business applications on your mobile:
*1install on desktop
Install My Notes Desktop application
*2get app for mobile
Get mobile application for your Android or iOS
*3connect and use
Connect device by scanning QR-codeIbm Lotus NotesYour HCL IBM Notes data with youAnywhere & Anytime
Your phone is connected directly to your computer when in a local network. My Notes cloud is used to securely transmit data between your computer and smartphone when on the go. No configuration quirks. No blocking firewalls.Ibm Lotus Notes Mac
*END-TO-END ENCRYPTION
Neither data, nor passwords are stored in My Notes cloud. Data is strongly encrypted with AES and SSL algorithms when transmitted between My Notes Desktop and your phone. Encryption keys are known to the communicating parties.
*WORKS ANYWHERE
Mobile app is connected directly to your computer when in local Wi-Fi networkor in VPN. Connection is automatically switched to My Notes cloud when you’re on the go and connected over the Internet. Always connected, anywhere.
*RANGE OF NOTES APPS
Mail, Contacts, Calendar, Public Directories and Notebook on your familiar workspace. Other applications, such as Discussion/Forum, Documents Library, TeamRoom are coming soon. More apps, more opportunities, better collaboration.
Download here: http://gg.gg/wd8l5
https://diarynote-jp.indered.space
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