News
New Lotus GM unveils 'Next Gen'
- By Rich Seeley
- February 3, 2003
Ambuj Goyal, the newly named general manager of IBM's Lotus Development unit,
introduced himself and a new portfolio of open-source Lotus and Domino products
to attendees at Lotusphere 2003 in Orlando, Fla., last week.
Goyal, previously general manager of solutions and strategy in the IBM
Software Group, gave a rousing keynote talk at the annual Lotus users forum that
featured the unveiling of the unit's so-called Next Generation or ''Next Gen''
products, which he said were based on open standards.
Chiding rival Microsoft sometimes by name and sometimes by implication for
still using what he termed ''proprietary'' technology, Goyal contended that
corporate technology groups are starting to share what IBM executives call the
IBM/Lotus vision of open standards.
''Customers want freedom of choice,'' he told the audience, which applauded him
loudly.
Goyal contended that IBM is investing $1 billion in research and development
of the Lotus Next Gen products, which are based on a variety of standards,
including XML, SOAP, WSDL and UDDI, as well as Java. Because it is using open
standards technologies, he said, the company also leverages billions of dollars
in research that other companies have put into developing those standards.
Goyal pointed to the new Lotus e-mail as well as a new e-learning application
as the first products in the Next Gen portfolio. The Next Gen Mail product is
designed to increase collaborative business processes and integrates with Domino
and other Lotus environments as well as Microsoft Exchange, he said.
He said Next Gen Mail, which also runs on IBM's WebSphere platform, can meet
the collaboration demands of businesses seeking to ''integrate business processes
with people processes.''
Pledging not to leave Domino users and developers behind, Goyal previewed the
newly announced IBM Lotus Domino Toolkit for WebSphere Studio, which is designed
to help Domino developers to migrate their skills and applications to J2EE.
This is the first toolkit from Lotus for the WebSphere Studio environment,
and in keeping with the new general manager's commitment to open standards, it
is built on the Eclipse open-source platform.
For more information on Lotusphere and Lotus Next Gen, please go to http://www.lotus.com/lotusphere2003
About the Author
Rich Seeley is Web Editor for Campus Technology.