iPhone/iPod touch users whose offices rely on Lotus Notes for email, calendar, and contacts can now access their information through a customized Safari Mobile interface created by IBM. CNET reports ...
IBM has released a way to get Lotus Notes e-mail on your iPhone that stops short of full support, but gets the job done. IBM's iNotes Ultralite (no trademark fight necessary) will be formally released ...
AI thrives on data but feeding it the right data is harder than it seems. As enterprises scale their AI initiatives, they face the challenge of managing diverse data pipelines, ensuring proximity to ...
IBM has something of an iPhone obsession. If you search the company's site for "iPhone," a surprising wealth of results is returned. The first manifestation of that interest is, iNotes a soon-to-be ...
Lotus iNotes Ultralite uses the iPhone's Safari browser to provide the web-based application, and adds email, calendar and contacts information onto the device. Once installed, Ultralite will let the ...
IBM's announcement of a new hosted entry-level communications offering has led to lots of punditry around how it compares to Google Apps. But I'm not sure that's IBM's main competition here. Google ...
IBM Corp. has launched a competitor to Google Apps which similarly provides email, calendar and contact management. Instead of the $50 per year that Google Inc. (NASDAQ:GOOG) charges for its service, ...
Lotus Notes: the office software everyone loves to hate. Despite the divisive feelings that Notes inspires, many large enterprises rely on Lotus Notes to access their e-mail, group calendars, and ...
Google has put a lot of effort and money into developing and marketing Google Apps as an inexpensive, easy-to-administer webmail, calendaring, and productivity solution. It has a new competitor in the ...
IBM is preparing to launch a Web-based version of its Lotus Notes business email system on Monday. Called LotusLive iNotes, the service will compete with Google Apps, providing access to Webmail, 1GB ...
There are many ways to milk a cloud. IBM (NYSE:IBM) is launching a cloud-based email service that could end up stealing sales from both Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) and Google (NASDAQ:GOOG). The IBM ...