Monday, January 21st, 2008
Ubuntu and IBM bring enterprise collaboration to a user friendly Linux desktop

I read this news release with great excitement and will take a shameless opportunity to plug what I think is a fantastic partnership. The news? IBM’s Lotus group has announced support of its Open Collaboration Client Solution (OCCS) for Ubuntu Linux. OCCS is a layer of rich client communications apps including IBM Lotus Notes 8.5 (Calendaring, Email), Sametime 7.x (Instant Messaging), and Symphony (OpenOffice in an Eclipse RCP form). I’ve switched to Ubuntu for my primary system at home for well over a year now and while I took a very short break to dabble in Fedora 8, I’m back on Ubuntu again. I’ve been using a RHEL5 base at work for over a year as well but now that we have Ubuntu support coming, I’ll probably switch to Ubuntu once the OCCS solution is released (yes, I work in a strategy group in IBM and I don’t use Windows or MS Office – and most people can’t tell). The thing about working in IBM is that everyone uses Notes, Sametime, and ODF is even becoming more popular so there’s very little that prevents anyone from using Linux (or a Mac). Heck, many users can probably get away with an iPhone.
IBM also expanded the OCCS platform support with Red Hat EL Desktop and announced more partners around OCCS on Novell’s Suse Linux Enterprise Desktop (SLED).
What makes all this even better? Enterprise applications delivered in a rich client environment. Take for instance SAP, who today announced a joint product set with IBM that will be delivered through Lotus Notes (which we now know runs well on Linux)
The product, codenamed Atlantic, will allow users to access SAP’s Business Suite applications for workflows, reporting and analytics through IBM’s Lotus Notes desktop software.
So the ecosystem and vision is starting to come together. It’s early, but I would be remiss if I didn’t mention again that 2008 will be the year of the enterprise Linux client ;-) How many users will we be saying this for? :-) (Note, I didn’t say ‘desktop’ specifically, and I said ‘enterprise’). As we’ve been saying all along, there are certain segments of users that can easily do their work on a Linux client (many won’t even know it’s not Windows). Those companies who take advantage of user segmentation have a lot to benefit from both on pure cost alone, but also in the next round of negotiations on your non-Linux client systems ;-)
January 22nd, 2008 at 6:20 pm
Simon Scullion » links for 2008-01-22 said:
[...] Ubuntu and IBM bring enterprise collaboration to a user friendly Linux desktop IBM’s Lotus group has announced support of its Open Collaboration Client Solution (OCCS) for Ubuntu Linux. (tags: IBM Lotus Ubuntu linux Open Collaboration Client Solution lotus+notes sametime symphony) SHARETHIS.addEntry({ title: “links for 2008-01-22″, url: “http://www.simonscullion.com/2008/01/22/links-for-2008-01-22/” }); [...]
June 4th, 2008 at 2:56 am
tools for freedom said:
[...] on Ubuntu. This is great news for anyone whose company uses Lotus tools… yet another option, andhttp://www.michaeldolan.com/1083China: Circumvention tools-To the Point ? FACT – Freedom Against …May 20, 2008 … These freedom [...]
March 17th, 2009 at 12:23 pm
Anonymous said:
Any idea about internal IBM support for Notes on Ubuntu? I’m a contractor at IBM, and at the moment using Notes on Ubuntu is not easy. The ISSI doesn’t seem to support Ubuntu at all, and although from what I’ve read it should be possible to install Notes 8.0.x from ISSI on Ubuntu, it seems like a lot of hard work. At the moment I’m using the version from the Ubuntu repository at https://answers.launchpad.net/~occs/+archive/ppa but that only provides a 90 day trial, and as far as I can tell there is no formal channel to obtain a license key to use this version for IBM internal business. I would love to get this working properly and enabled, otherwise my Notes install will presumably come to a grinding halt in a couple of months and I’ll have to reinstall somehow!
March 24th, 2009 at 6:18 am
Anonymous said:
Replying to myself here, after a bit of looking I found something on the IBM intranet called OCDC (“Open Client for Debian Community”). It’s still in beta, but seems to work pretty well in Ubuntu Hardy. It includes Notes and Linux versions of a load of other IBM internal software. Hope that helps people in a similar situation!