Lotusphere 2008 : First impressions

I’m in Orlando Florida at IBM’s Lotusphere conference, an event that is crammed with announcements and news from IBM and its partners. It’s, frankly, too soon to say anything particularly intelligent – while you’re at one of these events there tends to be so much cool-aid sloshing around, that even if you’re good and don’t sip, you’re bound to inhale some of the fumes.

ViolinistThat said – The opening session (which was introduced by the Orlando symphony orchestra – and a superb and very fetching solo violinist) was full of news.

The guest speaker was Bob Costas, an American Sports commentator – I was a teensy bit disappointed, given that in the past they’ve had Neil Armstrong and Walter Cronkite – Bob was a relatively entertaining speaker – but very very US-centric in his outlook and message. I’ve no doubt he’s well known and loved by many of the US attendees – but he’s more or less unknown outside the states.

The formal session was opened by Mike Rhodin, the GM of Lotus who took on the job in 2005, he’s a savvy experienced exec who really does know what he’s talking about – and what’s going on in his business.

The keynote began with a little bit of justified bragging – IBM made a series of product promises at last year’s event – then delivered them early – So early that they announced a “mini-roadmap” update in the third quarter to deliver even more.

There were a bunch of announcements aimed largely at the Lotus faithful, all good and important stuff. But there were also a number of announcements that were very interesting…

// Caveat – This is all pretty fresh, so if I praise or criticise I reserve the right to completely change my point of view when I’ve had more time to mull it over… //

The guys at Lotus have done a very impressive job of componentising the different parts of Lotus, and in integrating many of the Lotus assets with non Lotus IBM software products – Like WebSphere portal. The work they’ve done on making it very (and I mean very) easy to mix and combine components and assets within the Mashup designer is extremely impressive. IBM’s portfolio of products is huge – and the challenge that integrating them represents is equally big – the fact that they’ve achieved this much integration is impressive to say the least.

IBM is continuing to invest a lot in Symphony, IBM’s open office suite which is a very close cousin to Open Office – the product is largely developed in Beijing – and the work is moving apace – Internally there’s a new release every five or so weeks – For a project of that scale that’s noteworthy too. I had a few discussions about how I think Symphony is great… but that I haven’t been sufficiently motivated to break the habit of opening documents using Open Office. There’s a level of inertia when it comes to transition – which means that the alternative can’t just be “better” but has to be dramatically so before someone will really change their habits. Interestingly, the consistent response from a number of IBM’ers was “That’s ok… we just want you to be using the Open Document Format”… which is a pretty smart reaction.

The two announcements that really chime with me were the unveiling of the Lotus Appliance – Now this is memorable because Rhodin pulled a tiny Lotus appliance out of a brown padded envelope – In a reprise of Steve Jobs’s unveiling of the Mac Air… Mac can build a notebook that fits in an envelope – IBM can build a server that does! In truth, while I think a Lotus appliance is a great idea – It was the showmanship that really puts it at “top of mind” – I’ll mull the impact of a Lotus appliance a little more before producing a considered opinion.

Like Rhodin, I’m saving the best till last… The last and by far and away the most important announcement in my view was “IBM BlueHouse” – a hosted Web 2.0 environment for collaboration, communication,email, asset sharing (documents, images, files etc etc), asset creation (editing etc), forums… the list goes on. BlueHouse is still in beta… (rolling out over the next few months) and lots of things still have to be figured out (pricing, go to market etc etc)… but this is ROCKING in terms of its potential. It’s an offering that IBM will be targeting at smaller businesses (and I hope consumers too….).

I’ll be writing about the “open” aspects of the various announcements (mashups, and IBM’s work on an open standard for mashable widgets are two in particular), and about where BlueHouse might go in the next week or so… but for now… Keep an eye out for BlueHouse… it has the potential to be game changing.


You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Leave a Reply