Race to set the standard: IBM's Lotus purchase is first volley in groupware war.No one could accuse Louis V Louis V, king of France Louis V (Louis the Sluggard), c.967–987, last French king of the Carolingian dynasty; son of King Lothair. His father had him crowned in 979, but he did not become king until Lothair's death in 986. . Gerstner Jr., IBM's pugnacious pug·na·cious adj. Combative in nature; belligerent. See Synonyms at belligerent. [From Latin pugn new chairman and CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board. , of lacking a historical perspective. When Gerstner engineered IBM'S uncharacteristically aggressive $3.5 billion cash buyout of Lotus Development in july, it was a scene reminiscent of the takeover-laden '80s, when junk bonds ruled the world and barbarians stormed the gate. But '80s greed was not the driving force behind this deal. IBM's purchase of Lotus ended Big Blue's decade-long search for a signature product--a so-called killer application--that would allow it to set software industry standards and better compete with Microsoft for market share. IBM (International Business Machines Corporation, Armonk, NY, www.ibm.com) The world's largest computer company. IBM's product lines include the S/390 mainframes (zSeries), AS/400 midrange business systems (iSeries), RS/6000 workstations and servers (pSeries), Intel-based servers (xSeries) is betting that by acquiring Lotus Notes Messaging and groupware software from IBM Lotus that was introduced in 1989 for OS/2 and later expanded to Windows, Mac, Unix, NetWare, AS/400 and S/390. Notes provides e-mail, document sharing, workflow, group discussions and calendaring and scheduling. in the largest takeover bid Noun 1. takeover bid - an offer to buy shares in order to take over the company two-tier bid - a takeover bid where the acquirer offers to pay more for the shares needed to gain control than for the remaining shares in the history of the computer industry, it has secured itself a role in determining the future of computing. The point is clear: The rush is on for control of standards in a still-coagulating industry. The Lotus Notes application allows computer users to share information over a local or wide-area network. Notes allows a company's employees to edit documents using a shared "work space," integrate graphics and send electronic mail--no matter which computer hardware platform or operating system operating system (OS) Software that controls the operation of a computer, directs the input and output of data, keeps track of files, and controls the processing of computer programs. is in use. This versatile software, a fast-emerging favorite in business circles, is called groupware. Lotus Notes is rapidly becoming the standard among groupware products for small businesses. During the second quarter of this year, Lotus sold 330,000 Notes packages, double the figure of a year ago. While groupware competitors, such as Microsoft, continue to develop products for the future, Lotus Notes has captured more than 2 million users, an impressive 70% of the small but growing market. IBM hopes that businesses will continue to embrace Lotus Notes as the definitive collaborative software This is a list of collaborative software (or list of groupware) applications. Wiki software is on a list of wiki software. Open source or free software The following are open source or free software applications. in the market. In fact, Gerstner and many industry analysts believe that groupware is the next big business application that will change the way companies do business--much in the same fashion that Microsoft changed the business and home computer markets with MS-DOS MS-DOS in full Microsoft Disk Operating System Operating system for personal computers. MS-DOS was based on DOS, developed in 1980 by Seattle Computer Products. Microsoft Corp. bought the rights to DOS in 1981, and released MS-DOS with IBM's PC that year. and Windows. Industry analysts expect IBM to use Lotus to turn the tables against Microsoft, which has beaten IBM to the punch on everything from operating systems to spreadsheets. Now for the first time, IBM has the upper hand in a computer software category--an advantage that may entice some small businesses to consider switching from Microsoft operating systems The following is a list of Microsoft operating systems. For the codenames that Microsoft gave their operating systems, see Microsoft codenames. Before Windows
Industry insiders, however, don't see this happening in great numbers. Although OS/2 is a powerful operating system, it hasn't fared well competing with Windows. While 88% of all home computers and 50% of all businesses use Microsoft's Windows, only 10% of each market uses OS/2. In addition, Lotus Notes has competition on the horizon. Microsoft is developing Exchange, a groupware application that it believes will cut into Lotus Notes' market share soon after its release. IBM is, however, aggressively positioning Lotus Notes. It has already launched a massive marketing campaign via the Internet to attract businesses that use networking software. It will also attempt to create a "mandate" in the market by bundling Lotus Notes with hardware systems from manufacturers such as Hewlett-packard, as well as including Lotus Notes with all IBM hardware systems. Such moves could make Lotus Notes cheaper for most businesses. The overall intent is to entice business owners into the IBM camp. The company has set an extremely optimistic goal of 20 million Notes users by 1997. Will this strategy get the job done? Stay tuned. |
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