I am sitting on a plane returning from Lotusphere 2007. Thought about live blogging, but decided that it's better to pay attention during the presentations. Besides a laptop gets very heavy by the end of the day. For the first time in years, I can say that IBM finally "gets" Notes. What I mean is that Notes now finally has a decent roadmap for the future.
Because of my work, I was looking to see the plans for the future of Notes. I well remember the collective groan that went up at the opening session of Lotusphere a few years ago when Lotus introduced the "dual lane" approach. So I was very interested in where Notes is going. My real interest is "How effectively can I use this tool to solve business problems that other tools haven't been able to solve.
With that in mind, I attended a designer session. It was mildly interesting until last 15 minutes when Maureen Leyland arrived and demoded where the Designer client is going; based on Eclipse, the Designer now has an open architecture. Same for the Notes client, also based on Eclipse. Finally, I saw IBM with a decent, logical, plausible future for Notes.
With these new directions, I think Microsoft finally has a reason to look over their shoulder. When IBM and Microsoft battle it out, I score as a customer. Remember how long IE6 was Microsoft's browser? Years. Only when Firefox appeared and started taking market share did Microsoft start improving IE. I see the same thing happening with the Apple / Windows race. These races are ones that we, as customers, do not want any vendor to win! As long as these companies are competing we score.
Much to my surprise, I bumped in Gary Devendorf at the Dolphin on Wednesday. Gary used to be "Mr LotusScript" until IBM laid him off. A few months later he was working at Microsoft, helping them integrate their products with Notes. It was very interesting to hear his comments on the culture, and on how people relate at Microsoft, compared to IBM. Personally, I think IBM rather shot themselves in the foot letting someone like Gary go.
This year my favorite presentation was "Worst Practices" by Bill Bucan & Paul Mooney. When you put an Irishman and a Scot of doubtful sobriety on the stage together you will have an interesting banter. I hope to post a video on this soon...