A Sneak Peek at Future Notes, Domino Features (
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Orlando,
FLA.—When
IBM shipped Lotus Notes 8 in August 2007,
its engineers were confident that the new user interface rendered its
customers' inboxes as valuable integrated workspaces, combining e-mail,
calendar, instant messaging, office productivity tools and collaborative
applications.
The feedback was so positive that
IBM is
taking this integration up another notch in Lotus Notes and Domino 8.0.1, which
are designed to leapfrog Microsoft's SharePoint and Office collaboration and
productivity suites. Due for a February 2008 launch, 8.0.1 will bring widgets
to the Notes client sidebar.
Popularized by Google's Gadgets library, widgets are lightweight
applications that deliver information such as news feeds or stock quotes in
small pop-up windows meant to be informative, fun and unobtrusive.
They are popular because nontechnical users can import or even drag and drop
them into their existing applications without sucking up the time or resources
associated with traditional software downloads.
To wit,
IBM's My Widgets feature uses
IBM
technology called Live Text to find patterns and phrases and associate them
with a pertinent widget.
Users can drag and drop, or import various kinds of widgets such as Google
Gadgets, news feeds and Web pages, into a new widgets panel in the Lotus Notes
sidebar, Penny Scharfman, program director for Lotus Domino products at
IBM,
told eWEEK in a briefing here Jan. 21.
Live Text resembles a URL in that the text is highlighted and underlined in
the body of an e-mail. For example, a manager might click on a purchase order
number in an e-mail and see the real-time status of the order. The idea is to
save users the hassle of leaving Lotus to find information housed on another
site.
IBM is also planning an
IBM
Lotus Notes Traveler feature for Lotus Domino 8.0.1. Scharfman said Traveler is
a push e-mail technology that automatically copies e-mail information—attachments,
calendar, contacts—for Microsoft Windows Mobile wireless devices.
Big Blue is planning a slew of additional features for 8.0.1, including
Domino Web Access Lite Mode, which uses a document compression algorithm that
enables the bits and bytes of the Lotus Notes data to be streamed over dial-up
and other slow Internet connections; a mail quota feature that keeps users up
to speed on megabyte usage; a default to reply without attachments feature; and
a sidebar plug-in for
IBM's Lotus Quickr
document management software.