Turning Blue

ibm_20110616091015_320_240I am pleased to announce that from Monday 18th March I will have joined IBM to further my career in Social Business.

I am joining the world-wide ICS SWAT/Tiger team as a Social Business Consultant, focused on the UK, Ireland and Nordics.

I am really looking forward to some new challenges and perspectives having spent nearly 20 years in the IBM Business Partner community, so I hope you continue to follow my blog.

 

 

Microsoft: Late to the Party Again

Microsoft recently published a white paper, “The new world of social collaboration” where they set out their vision for

“cultural, technological, business and industry trends that are driving social collaboration in the enterprise”

I invite you to have a read of it, if only for two reasons:

  1. To recognize the same facts and phenomena which IBM and others have been evangelizing about for a very long time;
  2. For the quote “Today, Yammer and SharePoint are connected through Web Parts and Open Graph capabilities. We’re developing deeper connections that will involve integrated document management, feed aggregation plus unified identity”

Their own graphic admits that “Today” they only have “Basic Integration”. “Tomorrow” will have “Deeper Connections” and in the “Future” there will be “Connected Experiences”.

I realize I am partisan in this argument, but I would like this blog post to stand as my testimony towards this fact: In Microsoft’s terms, IBM delivers the Future Today.

Please, dear reader, explore what Microsoft actually offers in the socially-collaborating enterprise against the announcements of REAL software made by IBM last week.

IBM Connect Opening General Session – My Photos


Collection of photos and videos from the Opening General Session of IBM Connect 2013

Something for #noemailday

Today is a special day for lots of reasons, not least because it’s the last time for a very long time that we’ll see a perfectly repeating date: 12/12/12.

It’s also No Email Day – a day when us social types use social networks, twitter and all other “social” communication methods to show that email is less useful these days for collaborating with our colleagues than other media available to us now.

With this in mind, I have prepared the attached which you might want to use for your desktop background or something similar. Enjoy.

20121212-083608.jpg

IBM Champion for 2013

hidef-champion

I’m very pleased to have been nominated and awarded the status of IBM Champion for Collaboration Solutions for 2013. It’s a great honour and I’m very grateful to everyone who nominated me.

The IBM Tech Trends Report

If like me you enjoy working with technology as much as encouraging others to use it, you should find IBM’s Tech Trend report interesting reading.

It presents the findings of a survey conducted by IBM with over 4000 IT professionals from 93 countries and 25 industries.

In summary it highlights the following technologies as being key in the next 24 months:

  • Business Analytics
  • Mobile computing
  • Cloud computing
  • Social business

Its a short-ish document and well worth a read by Business Partners and customers of IBM alike.

Take a look at the results here.

IBM XWork Server

Why XWork Server unleases Social Business for any organisation IBM very recently announced a subtle shift and rebirth of the Lotus Domino server into something which any organisation interested in truly gluing together their organisation should consider.

Until that announcement IBM Lotus Domino Utility Server provided a server environment which took the best parts of the Notes/Domino infrastructure and provided it in a non-user-licenced-based manner. Using Processor Value Units you could buy Utility Server to serve up Domino applications in much the same way as WebSphere or similar java servers. IBM’s recent announcement, whilst continuing to bury the Domino name in history, makes the “Domino” server the born-again collaboration and social business server ANY organisation can benefit from – not just those with an installed base of Domino. Now, any organisation can work with documents, workflow, email, Social Business, IBM Connections, Profiles, instant messaging, document repositories and web services in the kind of mature way which any java developer would clamor for.

The IBM XWork Server is a Domino Utility server with a reworked licensing model which grossly simplifies the way any organisation can buy and benefit from the product. Together with a very firm focus on XPages – the standards based development structure – and of course decades of tried-and-tested backend technology which goes from LDAP, mail routing, multi-site replication and huge scalabiltity, IBM XWork Server is a compelling platform for a wide range of applications. So what would you want to build with XWork? Well, anything, frankly, that you have been forced to wrestle with a stack of barely-compatible technologies with. No more apache mods for SSL, no more separate LDAP databases for authentication, no more obscure SQL commands and worrying about large binary objects. XWork offers a comprehensive way of providing a browser-based platform for integration and application-serving.

When you combine XWork Server with IBM’s Social Business Toolkit you unlock the doors to the wider Social Business world. Wouldn’t a simple structure to integrating a customer service application with your organisation’s knowledgebase improve communications? How about being able to produce a stock control system which showed you whether a particular operator was online? How about being able to centralize the distribution of multiple web applications which are used around the world? While XWork is a new product and shows where IBM is going, organizations anywhere should consider the heritage in the product and realize that while many other vendors provide parts of the same equation, IBM provide the whole thing with XWork. IBM even now gives away all the developer tools you need to get you started.

Time to leave the Notes client behind?

I have recently started using the Developer Preview of Apple OS X 10.7 (Lion) and have been surprised by the huge advances in the operating system and in particular with Apple’s own web browser – Safari.  In many respects it has become an internet client more than an internet browser.  With the advent of HTML5 and Apple’s well-known adversity towards Adobe Flash it seems that web browsers (including Firefox and Chrome) are now basically the place where a full day’s work can be done.

The impact of this never ending rush towards cloud computing and HTML in particular is both a good and bad thing.

For us as users it means that we can more or less turn up to any computer in the world and get access to the things we use on our laptops, tablet or home computers.  No longer are we chained to using a bespoke or proprietary client application to access some specific business application.

For IT departments in organisations they no longer have to maintain complicated pre-built images for desktop computers and rolling out updates to client applications is no longer a six-month project and a major undertaking.

The downside to this innovation is of course the dependency on network.  If you’re not connected you’re not working.  OK, getting connected is easier than ever but for those of us who grew up marvelling at the ability of a computer to talk down a telephone line to another computer at apparently dazzling speeds, the concept of always requiring a network connection to do anything seems downright wasteful.  And that’s not to consider the fact that processor speeds are always going up, RAM on board is always greater yet the one thing that seems to throttle our experience is beyond most of our control – the speed of our internet connection.  It’s like having a Bugatti Veyron and driving it around school zones – sure it’s nice to sit in, but a bit of a waste when you can only do 20 mph.

Coming back to the Mac for a moment, but it is true of Linux and Windows, the new operating system from Apple is documented as not including a java virtual machine (or a flash plugin).  Both of these can be downloaded but clearly Mr Jobs has decided to follow suit with the others (who never included it anyway) that code like Java is outmoded for desktop computers and is something which is consigned to developers who will run it as part of an application on a server.

This brings into sharp focus, therefore, IBM’s decision to use the Eclipse framework for the Notes client.  Underneath all of the IBMness is a java virtual machine (or several if you’re running Sametime Connect and Symphony too).  On the Mac this is well know to be slow and very un-Mac-like.  Lotus Notes on the Mac sticks out like a sore thumb from any other application on the platform.  Although IBM have gone to enormous lengths to make it look like other Notes clients out there it is still very slow, prone to crash and consumes enormous amounts of RAM.

So with all these innovations in browsers (including full screen mode for Safari – hooray), the disappearance or non-existence in the base operating systems of Java and the poor user experience performance-wise of the Notes client, is it time to abandon our native client and move to a browser solution?

GBS have recently announced their latest iteration of their Transformer application which converts Notes databases into XPages applications and therefore browser-based solutions.  IBM’s own efforts are clearly heading towards a browser world with the latest release of Sametime 8.5.2 providing client-less presence awareness and meetings.  Indeed the whole Project Vulcan offering from IBM uses HTML not a Notes client.

If there is anyone out there who has not experienced iNotes 8.5.2 as a possible contender to their Notes client experience then I strongly urge them to consider it.  You will find it responsive, complete and a joy to use.  When you ask your admin to implement Transformer to convert those long-loved Notes apps to a browser and implement Single Sign On across your server estate you will wonder why you ever bothered installing software on your computer.

The only question remaining for you will be what you will do with your Bugatti Veyron of a computer on a ropey 3G internet connection at that airport!

Welcome

Thanks for stopping by my new blog.  This has come about after I started to get interested in what IBM is doing around social business, analytics and collaboration.  In these pages I hope to express my thoughts and comments about what IBM and the computer industry in general is doing in social business, collaboration and analytics to see whether or not a true revolution in how businesses communicate internally and externally can occur.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 823 other followers

%d bloggers like this: