Lotus notes
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I'm in the process of starting a new project involving migrating Lotus Notes applications to a Microsoft platform and I was curious how many organizations are still using Lotus Notes. I thought it had fallen off long ago.
No comment
Currently I'm working on my company's client network and the company still uses Lotus Notes. The company is in the process of migrating it to microsoft, but many (like me) are still on Lotus Notes. It's a huge worldwide financial corporation. I was surprised too when I first saw it.
"To alcohol! The cause of, and solution to, all of life's problems" - Homer Simpson
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I work for a large corporation. IT just started rolling out a Lotus Notes upgrade (from 6.5 to 8.5). It's even slower and more bloated now. Did I mention that I HATE NOTES!!!
I think we work for the same corporation, just got Lotus 8.5 X|
"To alcohol! The cause of, and solution to, all of life's problems" - Homer Simpson
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I'm in the process of starting a new project involving migrating Lotus Notes applications to a Microsoft platform and I was curious how many organizations are still using Lotus Notes. I thought it had fallen off long ago.
No comment
nope, still heavily in use. I worked for a dev shop that used it. The current version is build in Java on eclipse (I believe) and it crashes a lot. The navigation is totally un-user-friendly. Makes you appreciate Outlook, which is a bloated whale.
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Yeah, it's still in use... By many big organisations.. You can thank the brilliant IT managers (that is, the people who have no clue how to use a computer, but who get fancy dinners, golf invites, and other freebies from Lotus vendors).
the longer I live the more I find that just because you're in charge doesn't mean you can think.
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nope, still heavily in use. I worked for a dev shop that used it. The current version is build in Java on eclipse (I believe) and it crashes a lot. The navigation is totally un-user-friendly. Makes you appreciate Outlook, which is a bloated whale.
long live web mail!!!
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Our huge, international corp. just got off Lotus Notes and gave us all outlook, this year. It was like being able to see for the first time. Presumably.
I wonder what makes you feel so bad about Lotus Notes? :doh:
Regards, Jwalant Natvarlal Soneji
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I'm in the process of starting a new project involving migrating Lotus Notes applications to a Microsoft platform and I was curious how many organizations are still using Lotus Notes. I thought it had fallen off long ago.
No comment
What are the options apart from Outlook?
Regards, Jwalant Natvarlal Soneji
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I'm in the process of starting a new project involving migrating Lotus Notes applications to a Microsoft platform and I was curious how many organizations are still using Lotus Notes. I thought it had fallen off long ago.
No comment
You're a bit late to ask: about 15-17 years ago I was part of a team that developed a management system for Mobile network maintenance orders. it took ~20 people 3 years to develop, and we had another client ask for it. All it would have taken was a few adaptions and maybe 2-3 months of time. But then the manager of the client was swapped out for another who decided all this could be done in Lotus Notes just as well. I don't recall that company's name, and that's just as well, because a few months later you stopped hearing from them (it was big enough to be the subject of news reports on a regular basis). For all I know it went down the drain. And real fast too!
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And you helped by killing one yourself. Stand in the corner, and repeat: "I believe in fully integrated solution technologies" 100 times.
Ideological Purity is no substitute for being able to stick your thumb down a pipe to stop the water
Surprisingly, Lotus Notes is more of a fully integrated solution technology than certain well known packages from certain well known suppliers; and cheaper per seat and more secure and more flexible. It has had scheduling (calendars / meetings), mail, customisable / tailor-made enterprise applications and groupware etc from day 1. However, it's history mitigates against it - as newer platforms (e.g. Windows, TCP/IP, the Internet, mobile devices) have come along, it has had to absorb them into its environment but has had to maintain backwards compatibility. It is that backwards compatibility that is its pain point. The old gripes about it - you need to have a large client application - no longer apply as it can be run on any browser / smartphone / PC without the client (although the client s/w is the best way to run it). It has kept me in a job for over a decade!
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I work for a large corporation. IT just started rolling out a Lotus Notes upgrade (from 6.5 to 8.5). It's even slower and more bloated now. Did I mention that I HATE NOTES!!!
Not only you:mad: Been using 8.5 for some time now and it sucks