Search DominoPower's 11,441 Lotus-related article archive 
Home
EasyPrint
News details Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
Articles-only Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
Twitter Feed Click here for the Twitter feed.
Four reasons Lotus hasn't done a Linux Notes client (continued)

Actually doing the port is only a small part of the problem. Having done it, it needs to be tested, and that means volumes of test scripts and packages that need to be created and maintained. Once it's been tested to the level where it's product-worthy, then all the documentation, all the training of support staff, and all the other tasks needed to run a program into a saleable product need to be done. Fred Brooks (the Mythical Man Month, (Addison Wesley, ISBN 0-201-83595-9, 1975) pointed out all those years ago that it takes nine times as much effort to create a programming system's product as it does to make a working program.

2. iNotes support is available for Linux users with Domino 6.x
Lotus says that from Domino 6.0.2, Linux is supported as an iNotes Web Access client via Netscape 7.0. The argument is that if Netscape 7 can support iNotes Web Access on Linux, then pretty much any Domino and Notes application can be supported on Linux. So why is a client needed at all? If people can get a mail client application on Linux that's this good, it solves a large chunk of the client need, thus making it harder to justify the client investment to port to Linux.

It's a good argument, to my mind, and for quite a few customer companies, it could be a compelling argument. It helps build Linux market share, which is the next point.

3. There isn't a market.
If there were a market big enough for Lotus to make a profit and a decent market share in selling Linux Notes client licenses, they'd be doing it by now. Having done the server port, as I said in point one above, Lotus should know exactly what the effort and cost of the client port is. I can't believe that they haven't done that analysis in some detail and that they don't revisit it on a regular basis. So the fact that there isn't a native Linux Notes client product now tells us that in Lotus's opinion, there isn't a market yet, or at least, not when the port would be done.

I've heard a suggestion from sources in IBM that the company feels that the window of opportunity for a Linux client port is past. It would take 18 months to do the port, and by the time it's done, nobody would want it any more. That certainly was what happened with the Novell NLM Notes server in the V4 timeframe, and I suspect it also happened with the old Unix clients for Notes. Lots of clamor for them, followed by little take-up when they appeared. This all happened way back in the mid '90s.

But a large part of the reasoning for that was that Windows NT appeared with better server OS for client/server applications than Netware, because it has proper multitasking. Windows 95 appeared in the same timeframe. Whatever you might think now about Win95, it was a whole lot better than Windows 3.1, and good enough to stop any large-scale Unix desktop rollouts at the time. But will Linux be in decline in 18 months time? I don't think so.

4. Notes works under Wine.
Wine is an implementation of much of the Windows API on Linux. See http://www.winehq.com for more information, and in particular, read http://www.winehq.com/?page=why, which discusses the whole reason for Wine's existence. The core argument is that until there are more core business applications like Notes available for Linux, people won't move to Linux. So tools like Wine aim to lower the bar by making Windows applications available on Linux. Linux market share increases, so vendors are encouraged to do native Linux applications. Indeed this may be the reasoning behind Lotus's "support" for Notes R5 under Wine; every little bit helps.


« Previous  ·  1  ·  2  ·  3  ·  4  ·  5  ·  Next »
Other articles you might like
Home > Lotus Technologies > Notes (84 articles)
   A walk down Memory Lane with Lotus Notes
   An application for scanning physical mail and distributing it virtually
   Managing Notes deployments with Teamstudio Build Manager
Home > Strategies > Linux (11 articles)
   Troubleshooting an OpenSuse Notes install
   Four Linux books that'll get you going
   Conversation on Linux and Notes
Get Weekly Email Updates
Subscribe to our regular weekly email newsletter. It's packed with tips, reviews, deep analysis, and the latest news.
 
Recent DominoPower Articles
Application development, William Shatner, and the origin of the universe
Learn Domino Designer 8.5 for free
The (near) future of Sametime, Quickr, Connections, and Symphony
Inside the IBM Innovations lab
Lotusphere 2010: Hot fixes and cool news for Notes, Domino, and LotusLive
Lotusphere 2010: mobility and collaboration
2010: A Lotusphere of change
Latest Lotus Headlines
Xpages not loading? JVM errors? - Solution
How to implement an iCalendar feed into your Notes calendar with XPages
DWA Hotfixes for Domino 8.5.1FP1 - A Gotcha
IBM Adds DB2 to Lotus Foundations SMB Package
SNTT : XPages onclick Ghosts in the machine
Ports used by Lotus Sametime 8.5 servers
Exploring a Domino Date Bug
>> Read all the news
More from the ZATZ journals
Computing Unplugged: The iPad defenders have spoken
David Gewirtz Online: CNN commentary and analysis
OutlookPower: More about disappearing text
-- Advertisement --

Sophisticated Meets Simple For Document Management
Share. Control. Manage.
Documents, emails, and content in the context of how work is done. Native to Lotus Domino. The User Experience unseen for Lotus Domino. Do more with less. Really.

See the possibilities Docova unleashes for Lotus Domino.
-- Advertisement --

Struggling with exporting Notes data to spreadsheets? No More!
Try IntelliPRINT, The world's leading Reporting, Dashboards, and Analysis solution for Notes & Domino

  • Don't spend unproductive time maintaining different versions of the same spreadsheet
  • Preserve data integrity and security in multi-user environments
  • Create reports in minutes INSIDE Notes
  • Get freedom from iterative report requests, deliver self-serve capabilities

Experience Reporting, Dashboards, and Analysis INSIDE Notes.

Try IntelliPRINT NOW!

ZATZ Home  ·  News  ·  Back Issues  ·  Credits/Trademarks ·  Link To Us
Copyright © 1998-2010, ZATZ Publishing. All rights reserved worldwide.
Editor's Login