By
Dawn Kawamoto
Monday, July 10 2006 05:25 PM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,39374061,00.htm
IBM plans to unveil this week a version of its Lotus Notes desktop
collaboration software for Linux.
Lotus Notes on Linux 7.0.1, which will be generally available July 24, is
based on the Eclipse open-source framework. That technology will also be used in
the next update to Lotus Notes, code-named
Hannover, which is expected to ship next year.
"Lotus Notes on Linux was going to come out at the same time as Hannover, but
we decided to roll it out earlier. There is a lot of market demand now from our
customers, especially in Germany, India, China and Brazil," said Ed Brill, head of IBM's worldwide Lotus Notes sales.
The new desktop software, tailored to the Linux open-source operating system,
is designed to help corporations that choose not to use proprietary operating
systems such as Microsoft Windows or Mac OS. And once the Hannover version is
released, the software will be able to function as a soup-to-nuts productivity
tool, IBM said.
Lotus Notes users who use a Windows or Macintosh system will be allowed to
swap to a Linux version free of charge, Brill noted. New Lotus Notes licensees
will pay the same rate as Windows or Macintosh customers, he added.