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  3. Your experience with Lotus Notes

Your experience with Lotus Notes

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  • M Mohammad Tarik

    Hello, I have to decide whether to use (Lotus Notes & Domino Server) OR (Outlook & Exchanges Server) in my company. My Boss wants to stop using a remote e-mail server for security reasons. I've never used Lotus Notes, but some employees in the company have used it. They said that it's more secure than Outlook. On the other hand, I remembered reading about it many times here. Many members said that it has serious problems, and that you don't know how could anyone choose it as a standard e-mail client for a company. So, Do you use it now or have used it before? Is it a GUI problem only? Isn't it more secure than Outlook and other clients? Do you recommend a third option for the client, server or both? Thanks Mohammed

    M Offline
    M Offline
    Mike Dimmick
    wrote on last edited by
    #10

    If you need a highly customisable workflow system, get Notes/Domino. If all you want is an email system, get Exchange. Exchange was intended to be a workflow system but it never really reached this goal. You will need an Active Directory domain. At this point, with Exchange 2007 due to release soon, your domain controllers should be running Windows Server 2003 (SP1 or R2) and the domain should be in Windows Server 2003 Native Mode (no Windows 2000 or NT 4.0 DCs). If you're a small company with relatively few users, and haven't yet deployed a domain, consider using Windows Small Business Server 2003. This allows you to have Exchange on the same box as the DC. This can be done with the full versions of Windows Server 2003 and Exchange Server 2003, but is not recommended. You cannot add an SBS server to an existing Active Directory domain, but you can add additional DCs running Windows Server 2003 to a domain where the first DC is an SBS server.

    Stability. What an interesting concept. -- Chris Maunder

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    • M Mohammad Tarik

      Hello, I have to decide whether to use (Lotus Notes & Domino Server) OR (Outlook & Exchanges Server) in my company. My Boss wants to stop using a remote e-mail server for security reasons. I've never used Lotus Notes, but some employees in the company have used it. They said that it's more secure than Outlook. On the other hand, I remembered reading about it many times here. Many members said that it has serious problems, and that you don't know how could anyone choose it as a standard e-mail client for a company. So, Do you use it now or have used it before? Is it a GUI problem only? Isn't it more secure than Outlook and other clients? Do you recommend a third option for the client, server or both? Thanks Mohammed

      A Offline
      A Offline
      Anna Jayne Metcalfe
      wrote on last edited by
      #11

      If you start using Notes, you'll regret it. It didn't win a place in the User Interface Hall of Shame without reason. X| X| X|

      Anna :rose: Currently working mostly on: Visual Lint :cool: Anna's Place | Tears and Laughter "Be yourself - not what others think you should be" - Marcia Graesch "Anna's just a sexy-looking lesbian tart" - A friend, trying to wind me up. It didn't work.

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      • M Mohammad Tarik

        Hello, I have to decide whether to use (Lotus Notes & Domino Server) OR (Outlook & Exchanges Server) in my company. My Boss wants to stop using a remote e-mail server for security reasons. I've never used Lotus Notes, but some employees in the company have used it. They said that it's more secure than Outlook. On the other hand, I remembered reading about it many times here. Many members said that it has serious problems, and that you don't know how could anyone choose it as a standard e-mail client for a company. So, Do you use it now or have used it before? Is it a GUI problem only? Isn't it more secure than Outlook and other clients? Do you recommend a third option for the client, server or both? Thanks Mohammed

        K Offline
        K Offline
        Kevin McFarlane
        wrote on last edited by
        #12

        I used it briefly six years ago. At that time my impression was that it had better functionality than Outlook/Exchange but that its usability sucked - often a common fault of competitors to MS offerings. Judging from some of the other comments it appears that nothing has changed re: Notes.

        Kevin

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        • M Mike Dimmick

          If you need a highly customisable workflow system, get Notes/Domino. If all you want is an email system, get Exchange. Exchange was intended to be a workflow system but it never really reached this goal. You will need an Active Directory domain. At this point, with Exchange 2007 due to release soon, your domain controllers should be running Windows Server 2003 (SP1 or R2) and the domain should be in Windows Server 2003 Native Mode (no Windows 2000 or NT 4.0 DCs). If you're a small company with relatively few users, and haven't yet deployed a domain, consider using Windows Small Business Server 2003. This allows you to have Exchange on the same box as the DC. This can be done with the full versions of Windows Server 2003 and Exchange Server 2003, but is not recommended. You cannot add an SBS server to an existing Active Directory domain, but you can add additional DCs running Windows Server 2003 to a domain where the first DC is an SBS server.

          Stability. What an interesting concept. -- Chris Maunder

          D Offline
          D Offline
          Daniel Turini
          wrote on last edited by
          #13

          Thanks. I was about to post exactly the same thing, you saved me a lot of typing :) Got my 5.

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • M Mohammad Tarik

            Hello, I have to decide whether to use (Lotus Notes & Domino Server) OR (Outlook & Exchanges Server) in my company. My Boss wants to stop using a remote e-mail server for security reasons. I've never used Lotus Notes, but some employees in the company have used it. They said that it's more secure than Outlook. On the other hand, I remembered reading about it many times here. Many members said that it has serious problems, and that you don't know how could anyone choose it as a standard e-mail client for a company. So, Do you use it now or have used it before? Is it a GUI problem only? Isn't it more secure than Outlook and other clients? Do you recommend a third option for the client, server or both? Thanks Mohammed

            S Offline
            S Offline
            S Douglas
            wrote on last edited by
            #14

            Considering this is the lounge, I have chosen to exercise the utmost in restraint; all I can say about Notes is. Notes has no redeeming qualities.


            I'd love to help, but unfortunatley I have prior commitments monitoring the length of my grass. :Andrew Bleakley:

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            • M Mohammad Tarik

              Hello, I have to decide whether to use (Lotus Notes & Domino Server) OR (Outlook & Exchanges Server) in my company. My Boss wants to stop using a remote e-mail server for security reasons. I've never used Lotus Notes, but some employees in the company have used it. They said that it's more secure than Outlook. On the other hand, I remembered reading about it many times here. Many members said that it has serious problems, and that you don't know how could anyone choose it as a standard e-mail client for a company. So, Do you use it now or have used it before? Is it a GUI problem only? Isn't it more secure than Outlook and other clients? Do you recommend a third option for the client, server or both? Thanks Mohammed

              K Offline
              K Offline
              KarstenK
              wrote on last edited by
              #15

              The GUI of Notes terrible, but if I remember right one of the Key developer of Notes ("Ozzie") is now a major chief in Microsoft. The Question is as often: "What does it mean?":confused: But I think, Notes isnt the major target in spam etc, and has also not the activeX Security issues like MS-products. In our house we run Notes for over 200 people with little downtime, almost normal Soft-/Hardwareservice in the evenings. AFAIK our Notes servers run on Linux. And spam was only one time an issue. Notes isnt a honeypot but it is running solid. :~ I cant compare it with MS Exchange, I only know Exchange 2000 and it was a patchy one, like WinXP. X|

              Greetings from Germany

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              • M Mohammad Tarik

                Hello, I have to decide whether to use (Lotus Notes & Domino Server) OR (Outlook & Exchanges Server) in my company. My Boss wants to stop using a remote e-mail server for security reasons. I've never used Lotus Notes, but some employees in the company have used it. They said that it's more secure than Outlook. On the other hand, I remembered reading about it many times here. Many members said that it has serious problems, and that you don't know how could anyone choose it as a standard e-mail client for a company. So, Do you use it now or have used it before? Is it a GUI problem only? Isn't it more secure than Outlook and other clients? Do you recommend a third option for the client, server or both? Thanks Mohammed

                E Offline
                E Offline
                Ennis Ray Lynch Jr
                wrote on last edited by
                #16

                I will drive to your house and beat you with a large trout. Use sendmail and let users choose their own clients (thunderbird) Lacking that, outlook.


                On two occasions I have been asked [by members of Parliament], 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able rightly to apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question. - Charles Babbage

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                • L Lost User

                  Me experience is the opposite - the firm I worked at for 6 years had it and it was much better. It seems it requires very careful setting up and not many places do this successfully. Elaine :rose:

                  The tigress is here :-D

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                  Dave Kreskowiak
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #17

                  Your experience is one of the few... I've only come acrossed one Notes installation that worked that good. All they used it for was email using nothing but the monolithic client - nothing else. Could be why it stayed working so good! :-D

                  Dave Kreskowiak Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic

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                  • A Anna Jayne Metcalfe

                    If you start using Notes, you'll regret it. It didn't win a place in the User Interface Hall of Shame without reason. X| X| X|

                    Anna :rose: Currently working mostly on: Visual Lint :cool: Anna's Place | Tears and Laughter "Be yourself - not what others think you should be" - Marcia Graesch "Anna's just a sexy-looking lesbian tart" - A friend, trying to wind me up. It didn't work.

                    D Offline
                    D Offline
                    Dave Kreskowiak
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #18

                    I don't think there's a single UI control in the entire application suite that's not custom written, and badly at that! :laugh: Not even a frickin' TextBox is "out-of-the-box" Windows! I think the concept of a "consistent user experience" across Windows applications was totally lost on Lotus.

                    Dave Kreskowiak Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic

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                    • E Ennis Ray Lynch Jr

                      I will drive to your house and beat you with a large trout. Use sendmail and let users choose their own clients (thunderbird) Lacking that, outlook.


                      On two occasions I have been asked [by members of Parliament], 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able rightly to apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question. - Charles Babbage

                      D Offline
                      D Offline
                      Dan Neely
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #19

                      Ennis Ray Lynch, Jr. wrote:

                      I will drive to your house and beat you with a large trout.

                      What's the origin of trouting? Mirc supports it as a default slap, but noone I've talked to knew why/where it came from.

                      E 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • M Mohammad Tarik

                        Hello, I have to decide whether to use (Lotus Notes & Domino Server) OR (Outlook & Exchanges Server) in my company. My Boss wants to stop using a remote e-mail server for security reasons. I've never used Lotus Notes, but some employees in the company have used it. They said that it's more secure than Outlook. On the other hand, I remembered reading about it many times here. Many members said that it has serious problems, and that you don't know how could anyone choose it as a standard e-mail client for a company. So, Do you use it now or have used it before? Is it a GUI problem only? Isn't it more secure than Outlook and other clients? Do you recommend a third option for the client, server or both? Thanks Mohammed

                        M Offline
                        M Offline
                        Michael Dunn
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #20

                        Don't do it. Just don't. Trust me on this one.

                        --Mike-- Visual C++ MVP :cool: LINKS~! Ericahist | PimpFish | CP SearchBar v3.0 | C++ Forum FAQ

                        1 Reply Last reply
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                        • D Dan Neely

                          Ennis Ray Lynch, Jr. wrote:

                          I will drive to your house and beat you with a large trout.

                          What's the origin of trouting? Mirc supports it as a default slap, but noone I've talked to knew why/where it came from.

                          E Offline
                          E Offline
                          Ennis Ray Lynch Jr
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #21

                          A famous feature associated with mIRC even though it predates it is the ability to "slap" another user by right-clicking the target's nickname. This results in the line of text "A slaps B around a bit with a large trout". It serves no other function than to send the message, which is merely an execution of the "/action" ("/me") command in IRC. The sentence "A slaps B around a bit with a large trout" is thought to be a reference to Monty Python's sketch The Fish-Slapping Dance. This function can be removed by editing mIRC's built-in script.


                          On two occasions I have been asked [by members of Parliament], 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able rightly to apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question. - Charles Babbage

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