Domino, Lotus roadmap revealed
The next version of Lotus Notes and Domino will ship in February and will feature
an array of updates, including a new Web 2.0-style feature called My Widgets,
IBM said Monday during its Lotusphere show in Orlando, Florida.
Lotus users will have a new panel for different types of widgets. Their interaction
with the mini-programs will be enhanced through a technology, Live Text, that
can analyze text, spot patterns and phrases and then link them to a widget that
could be useful. For example, users could receive information about flights
after clicking a flight number in an e-mail, IBM said in a statement.
The Lotus Notes and Domino 8.0.1 release will also include Lotus Notes Traveler.
The application will be able to push e-mail -- including associated content
like attachments and calendars -- to Windows Mobile devices, IBM said.
In addition, IBM unveiled a new e-mail security appliance, IBM Lotus Protector
for Mail Security; and said the fourth beta of its free desktop software suite,
Lotus Symphony, will be available by the end of this month.
Symphony has seen more than 400,000 users download the English version, IBM
said. The software is available in 24 languages overall. IBM said a new plug-in,
WebSphere Translation Server, will be available on the Symphony community site.
The tool can provide real-time translation of content created in Symphony, according
to IBM.
IBM also looked further down the road, saying that Lotus Domino Designer 8.5
will feature more Web 2.0-style capabilities, such as AJAX (Asynchronous JavaScript
and XML) programming, and RSS or ATOM content feeds.
The company's news comes as rival Microsoft is crowing
about its success in luring Lotus users to its unified communications and
collaboration platform.
Also Monday, IBM company also announced its Open Collaboration Client Solution
will come in a version compatible with the Linux-based Ubuntu operating system.
The Open Collaboration Client Solution bundles together Lotus Notes; the Lotus
Sametime messaging platform; Lotus Symphony; WebSphere Portal; the Lotus Connections
social networking software; Lotus Quickr, document management and collaboration
software for teams; and Lotus Expeditor, an Eclipse-based development environment.
In addition, IBM and Red Hat announced a new partnership aimed at SMBs. The
companies plan to sell an offering that combines Red Hat's Enterprise Linux
Advanced Platform and Enterprise Linux Desktop with IBM's Lotus Notes client,
Symphony and Domino server.
IDG News Service
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So where's the actual link
So where's the actual link to the roadmap for IBM Lotus Notes Domino? Why only link the MS story?