Title: This Week
December 13, 2004 Published by  SearchDomino.com

This Week

SearchDomino.com
NEWS     TOPICS     ITKNOWLEDGE EXCHANGE     TIPS     ASK THE EXPERTS     WEBCASTS     WHITE PAPERS    
IN THIS ISSUE:
  > From the Editor: Happy birthday Notes
  > Featured Topic: Domino and Security
  > ITKnowledge Exchange: Help us beta test this new feature!
  > Webcasts: View this week's featured Webcasts
  > More from SearchDomino.com: Expert Jim Mason, Site Exclusives and Tips!


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FROM THE EDITOR


From the Editor
[Jack Vaughan, Editor]

The big
news out of IBM last week was the company's impending exit from the PC business. News, of course, is somewhat relative. IBM's sale of its PC business to China's Lenovo may be big news for old-timers who recall the tremendous impact IBM's first PCs had on computing. For young timers the response may be: "So what?"

But the fact is that the IBM PC set the course for computing as we know it for 25 years; it placed both Intel and Microsoft for some time in the driver seat. That the original IBM PC -- inadvertently for the most part -- provided a standard "cloneable" architecture was a key to its success. But let's not forget that Lotus played a big role too.

The IBM PC snuck Trojan-horse-like into corporations. People were sick of waiting for central IT to create budgets. Power users brought in PCs running 1-2-3 and did their own budgets without IT help, thank you very much.

Lotus had a major hand in the next big step in computing. That was to roll together the power of all these standalone PCs. Some of the original Lotus power users ended up in IT departments, in fact. Notes, which celebrated its 15th birthday last week, played an important role in connecting the many PC "islands of automation."

Notes originator Ray Ozzie spoke last week on the birth of Notes. Truth was, Ozzie and crew were reshaping shared minicomputer applications for the distributed PC platform. Ozzie said that there was a little bit of luck involved in the ascent of Notes. When Notes was introduced, corporate re-engineering was in vogue and "horizontal information sharing" became the mandate.

But Notes was not without its limits. Ozzie expanded on this issue earlier this year when he told SearchDomino his latest software creation, known as Groove, works on the assumption that the nature of business has completely changed -- that companies are really loose aggregations of distributed processes. Groove, as opposed to Notes, he implied, starts at the edge and works in toward the center of the corporation.

Of course, a skeptical examiner might say that, in their first days, the PC, 1-2-3 and Notes all started at the edge. At this desk, we don't see any powerful vogue in place today that will allow IBM's new Workplace software to impact computing as Notes during the first run to corporate re-engineering. Maybe there is something we don't see. What do you think?

Regards,
Jack Vaughan

P.S. Happy Birthday, Notes! Good luck next year when you are old enough to get a driver's license!

FEATURED TOPIC


Domino and Security

Security is a growing challenge for IT infrastructure workers. Developers and administrators alike must adopt new best practices. Here is a collection of useful material on this pressing matter.

ITKNOWLEDGE EXCHANGE


Help us beta test this new feature!

ITKnowledgeExchange is a place where IT professionals can share ideas, expertise and get those difficult technical questions answered by other IT pros. Better than a forum or listserv, it provides the opportunity to collaborate with groups and individual experts who share similar areas of IT expertise. This new feature is currently in beta. Sign up today and help us make it a success! Want to see what it's all about first? Check out this collection of archived threads.
> VISIT ITKNOWLEDGE EXCHANGE

 FEATURED WEBCASTS
Secure your apps for Notes and Web clients -- Expert Webcast
WHEN:   December 15, 2004, 12:00 PM EST (17:00 GMT)
SPEAKER:   Karen Fishwick CLI, PCLP
SPONSOR:   SoftQuest
 
> VIEW ALL WEBCASTS


MORE FROM SEARCHDOMINO.COM


ASK THE EXPERTS: What is the easiest learning path to WebSphere?
[Jim Mason, Domino, WebSphere and iSeries Expert]

Dear Jim: What learning/integration path do you see as the easiest "road" to follow in order to transition our skills from predominately Notes/Domino, to a combination of Notes/Domino and WebSphere?
Click here to read Jim's expert response.

SITE EXCLUSIVE: Phishing on the rise -- spam rules need updating
Spam and malware have long plagued administrators. There is always more to come. Now it is phishing. As a result, server masters must tweak their own rule sets, or look to vendors.

SITE EXCLUSIVE: IM threat service pledges cooperation
To combat attacks on enterprise networks delivered by rogue instant messages, software companies such as Microsoft, McAfee, AOL and Yahoo have thrown their support behind an IM threat center that promises to work in concert with other security centers.

TIP: Notes ID files vs. regular computer accounts
One of the biggest differences between a Notes/Domino system and other software systems is the nature of user accounts. Unlike most computer systems, the Lotus Notes product does not manage user accounts with a centrally stored list of usernames and passwords. Many beginning Notes administrators have been tripped up by this difference.

TIP: Agent tunes 'From' fields for handhelds
The codes provides you with an agent that makes a copy of a new e-mail, strips it of the CC and BCC fields, inserts the original "Send to" field and then sends the e-mail to any e-mail address specified. This lets a user see who the original sender is. Otherwise, if you're forwarding e-mails to a handheld, the "From" field will always be you.



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