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It would be great if I could send/receive email, SMS, IM, Tweets, MMS, voice mail and other written forms of communication right in my Lotus Notes client. Currently I have an email client, instant message client, blackberry, iphone, telephone and on and on... they all essentially send and receive various forms of written or voice communication.
If Lotus Notes could bring all these forms ot communication into one client inside my inbox that would truly be amazing. Imagine being able to SMS or broadcasting a tweet right from your inbox.
We don't need a Designer client for the Mac or Linux. We need one for the people.
Yes, make the Notes client as it once was in the days before R5 when the ability to create applications was an integral part of the Notes client. What would it include? View development (which is already there), Formula language (which is already there in some capacity), and form development. Some agent development probably too. Provide people with enough to be able to serve their own basic needs without overwhelming them with complexity.
Why do this? Simple. Empower the people. Power users have always existed. They were what made the early versions of Notes so successful. It was easy for them to create their own tools in Notes and they loved it. LOVED IT! I can recall many times in the R3/R4 days when users came to me with a database that they had created or made a copy and modified it and wanted to share it with other people on their team. I took it, maybe cleaned it up a bit, and put it on the server where their whole team benefited. This was the root meaning of collaboration: Not just sharing data, but sharing solutions. By the users, for the users. It was truly Rapid Application Development (RAD). Before they had Notes, people were doing this in 1-2-3, Access, FoxPro, etc. It is no coincidence that the Notes client began losing favor among end users as soon as they lost their ability to explore what Notes can do by creating their own applications. The greatest advocates of Lotus Notes are those who can create applications in it.
People did not stop creating their own applications when the designer code was removed from Notes. But now they just do it in other tools like Access and Excel. Sure, there is also Sharepoint and Quickr, but those do not provide for PERSONAL tools. People will not "play" there they way they do with other software. Sadly, while users today are far more computer-savvy than they were in the 1990's, they are being denied the opportunity to apply those skills to their job, at least where Notes is concerned. As a result, Notes has lost its appeal. Users have been driven away to other tools and no longer know (and have no motivation to learn) what could be done in Lotus Notes. To them it is no longer a PERSONAL productivity tool. Now the only way to get an application in Notes is to request it from the gatekeepers of I.T. It's like building a Lego kit and giving it to a kid and then saying they have to bring it to you if they want to build something different with the pieces. Sure, the designer client is "free", but it is not given to employees and for the most part they don't even know it exists or how to get it.
If we are sincere in our belief that the power of collaboration and Open Source is truly for the benefit of all, then it should be made accessible to all. It should not be hoarded by the professional Domino developers of the world. It should not be locked out by the administrator who doesn't want the additional work to manage the applications nor the I.T. director who doesn't want to deal with losing control of application development process and his feeling of importance. Do not waste time defending this practice with the "good ol' boy" mentality claims like "But the users don't know how to create good applications." or "their rights must be restricted for their own good or for the good of the company." This is Social Business. This is the definition of Web 2.0. (See video below) Eliminate the hierarchy, eliminate the red tape. Empower the people. The more you empower the people around you, the more successful you will be. The more they must depend on you, the less you will be able to achieve. It's the axiom of good leadership.
IBM may never feel justified in creating a full-blown designer client for Mac OS or Linux. They may never go back to having the simple developer client for the masses that was so successful. So while you wait for IBM to decide what to do, I suggest this: Let your people know the designer client exists. Make the designer client available to anyone who asks for it. I would even encourage them. If you have any programmers in the company that code in other software, be sure to give it to them.
Notes was founded on the principle of giving people the ability to create and share their own custom applications. (The History of Lotus Notes) http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/lotus/library/ls-NDHistory/ That principle has clearly been forgotten.
More discussion on this was started at my blog: http://blog.thenotesguyinseattle.com/2011/03/12/lotusforgot-designerforpeople/
xDesk by Chris Connor of IBM Business
Partner BSS IT Solutions is the March 2011 OpenNTF Featured Project of
the Month. xDesk can either be run on the web or from a Notes client. xDesk
is an XPages app that can be used for IT Helpdesk, Health and ...
Ever wonder how to really know what the status of your IBM Lotus Sametime environment is? Discover how Lotus Sametime can be monitored, in terms of both function and performance, from the user perspective. This article describes (and provides) a simple lightweight proactive tool to assist administrators in better understanding the Lotus Sametime user experience to reduce outages, respond to issues more quickly, and improve the customer experience. In addition to monitoring capabilities, this tool can assist in debug collection and take the burden off users for problem recreates and data collection. By combining network validation with Lotus Sametime IM, user awareness, user login, and username look-up validation, never before has such a complete picture of the user experience been available.
Table of Contents: Optimizing Lotus Domino AdministrationTable of Contents This article assists you when trying to recover documents that were accidentally deleted within a Domino application or database. It is assumed that you will be restoring a copy of the database prior to the document ...