| Number | Key | Space | Headline | Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | This IBM Redbook presents the strategic and market benefits of IBM Lotus Domino over Microsoft Exchange and provides an overview of the tools and strategies that are available to help you with that migration. It also includes instructions for how to perform the migration process. The beginning of the book explores common business drivers, considerations, benefits, and scenarios that organizations find themselves in when faced with a migration decision, such as migrating from Exchange to Lotus Domino. The remainder of the book discusses the architectural planning and technical activities associated with that migration decision. For business or IT managers, the strategic portion of this book provides essential information about the what and why of migration. The remainder of the book focuses on the how of migration and the how of coexistence strategies. This IBM Redbook gives you the confidence that your organization can achieve the results you expect--and deserve--from the migration process from Exchange to Domino.
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2006-11-28 | ||
| 2. | Strong security has always been part of the family of Lotus software products. More notably, it has been a feature that has made Lotus Notes and Domino an industry leader for security-rich messaging, calendar, and scheduling capabilities. with a robust platform for collaborative applications. With Lotus Notes and Domino 7, IBM extends the reach of Lotus Domino messaging and collaboration solutions while continuing to leverage your IT and application investments. The new version offers capabilities to support more people with fewer servers, to simplify administration, and to provide tighter integration with Web standards. In this IBM Redbook, we discuss specific security and anti-spam enhancements that have been incorporated into Notes and Domino 7.0. This publication is the fourth in a series about IBM Lotus security to be published. The previous IBM Redbooks about the topic are, in chronological order, "The Domino Defense: Security in Lotus Notes 4.5 and the Internet," SG24-4848, "Lotus Notes and Domino R5.0 Security Infrastructure Revealed," SG24-5341, and "Lotus Security Handbook," SG24-7017. The primary goal of these publications was to focus on the strong security that has always been part of the family of Lotus products. The present publication continues down the path set by these previous Redbooks, offering, as with each previous release, information about key features and functionalities pertaining to the security aspects of Lotus Notes and Domino Release 7.0.x, as well as best practices to implement th
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2006-03-20 | ||
| 3. | IBM Lotus Domino Web Access 6.5 (IBM Lotus iNotes Web Access) is a sophisticated Web client that gives end users many of the messaging and collaboration features previously available only with a Lotus Notes client. Beginning with Domino 6.5, you can access Lotus Domino on a Linux server while using Domino Web Access on a Linux desktop, giving you a leading-edge, end-to-end collaborative solution for Linux. Browser users will be able to take full advantage of Domino services through an ultra-intuitive, easy-to-use interface, both online and offline, seamlessly. Domino Web Access was architected using the latest Web application development technologies and can be administered centrally, helping organizations to drive down deployment costs and, potentially, reduce Total Cost of Ownership. This IBM Redbook provides a detailed technical overview of Domino Web Access 6.5 and discusses how to install, configure, and deploy an end-to-end Linux solution for Domino. In addition to setting up DWA 6.5, it also covers how to integrate Lotus Sametime for real-time collaboration and awareness. Finally, we discuss key deployment considerations, integration points between Domino Web Access and IBM WebSphere Portal, and some approaches and techniques to customizing Domino Web Access 6.5.
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2004-04-29 | ||
| 4. | iNotes Web Access is a next-generation Web client that allows you to use many of the messaging and collaboration features of Domino through a Web browser. You can work with mail, calendar, to do lists, or a journal-like notebook from any client with Web browser access -- without requiring a Lotus Notes client. You also have the option to work offline, without a permanent connection to the Domino server, or to work online seamlessly. iNotes Web Access on the IBM eServer iSeries server is not a platform-specific implementation. At the time when this IBM Redbook was written, only the redbook "iNotes Web Access Deployment and Administration", SG24-6518, which is based on general platform information, was available. This IBM Redbook extends the topics written in that redbook from an iSeries server platform perspective. It also includes other general iNotes Web Access topics such as single sign-on, using LDAP for authentication, and URL redirection. You can download the redbook, "iNotes Web Access Deployment and Administration", SG24-6518, from the IBM Redbooks Web site (http://www.redbooks.ibm.com). You should also refer to the Lotus white paper, "iNotes Web Access Deployment Guide 5.0.9", which is available for download from the Web site (http://notes.net). We strongly recommend that you use these materials, along with this redbook, for a complete guideline on how to deploy and implement iNotes Web Access on the iSeries server.
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2002-02-11 | ||
| 5. | iNotes Web Access is a next-generation Web client that allows you to utilize the most popular Domino functionality with a Web browser. You can work on your mail, use your calendar for personal and group scheduling, and do some advanced task management. In addition, you have access to your contact information and a journal-like notebook. iNotes Web Access also has a customizable Welcome page. This IBM Redbook offers you information on how to best install, deploy, and configure iNotes Web Access for your environment. It describes how to make your installation secure, keeping unwanted visitors outside of your iNotes Web Access installation yet allowing your users to access their mail files from outside the corporate firewall. If your organization uses Notes clients to access mail and other services of Domino, you will still find iNotes Web Access useful. A scenario where these clients coexist is explained, and upgrading to such an environment is described in detail. All the functionality of iNotes Web Access is available for you online as well as offline. How to enable offline access to iNotes Web Access with Domino Off-Line Services is presented. This redbook gives you details for capacity planning so you can size your environment correctly and describes how to get the best performance out of your servers. It also gives you information on how to integrate Lotus Sametime into your iNotes Web Access environment. We describe the architecture of iNotes Web Access and, finally, offer some examples of how to make mo
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2001-12-18 | ||
| 6. | This IBM Redbook tells you how to run Lotus Domino R5.0.8 on the Sun Solaris 8 Operating Environment. (It contains information that has been revised and updated from the previous edition, which addresses Domino R5.0.2a and Solaris 7.) While the Lotus Domino server is platform-independent, each platform it runs on requires some additional platform-specific knowledge and configuration in order to ensure it operates efficiently and at maximum capability. The primary focus is to explain the installation, configuration, and performance tuning of Domino R5 in this environment. We take you through all the steps required to run a Domino R5 server on Solaris 8, from choosing the right hardware, installing Solaris and Domino, tuning the OS and the Domino server and performing administrative tasks, through to problem determination and troubleshooting.
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2001-11-21 | ||
| 7. | Make migration simple for your end users with Lotus iNotes Access for Microsoft Outlook. You can maintain your Microsoft Outlook end-user experience while replacing the Microsoft Exchange server with Lotus Domino. Each user, with a Microsoft Outlook client, benefits from iNotes' simple plug-in technology that maps server requests to a Lotus Domino format. Simply stated, Microsoft Outlook assumes it is communicating to a Microsoft Exchange server. The iNotes plug-in intercepts the conversation between the client and server and translates to and from the Lotus Domino format. This IBM Redbook walks you through the migration of Microsoft Exchange to Lotus Domino for iSeries. It explains how your end users can continue using their Microsoft Outlook clients via the Lotus iNotes Access for Microsoft Outlook support. This redbook also shows you how to configure a coexistence environment between Microsoft Exchange and Domino for iSeries for use during the migration process. The chapters in this redbook begin with an overview of the products and explain the details of the process requirements. Then they guide you through the migration and show you how to install Lotus iNotes Access for Microsoft Outlook. Finally, they show you how to coexist between the Microsoft Exchange and Lotus Domino for iSeries environments. The appendices provide additional migration information, as well as details on national language support and the Common Migration Tool from BinaryTree.com. With all of this information, you never knew it could
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2001-09-13 |
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