IBM has unveiled a new commercial mashup
maker, Lotus Mashups, designed to give non-technical users an easy way to create
enterprise mashups without the support of their IT team.
A browser-based tool which allow users to easily assemble new mashups and a
catalogue supply of widgets is planned to get the ecosystem started. Users can
then create an environment based on widgets and also put the widgets on a server
that others can build on, said the firm.
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The launch of Mashups can be seen as another step in the firms composite
applications strategy, whereby business users can now create widgets that access
enterprise systems with builder tools.
IBM further announced a new version of Lotus Connections in the Web 2.0
space, intended to be easier to customise than the earlier version, with a new
homepage based on Lotus mashup technology.
Jeff Schick, Lotus social computing software vice president, said, “As we
employed version one, we found that people wanted to customise the capability in
Connections by modifying the profile information and the community and
integrating an extensive set of services.”
In addition, Lotus Connections 2.0 will allow users to create widgets to
connect to other social networks, and enhancements are being made to the
community component of Lotus Connections to integrate wiki services from Quickr,
SocialText and Atlassian.
IBM announced updates to Quickr intended to bring Quickr technology in line
with the rest of the portfolio. Quickr 8.1 will accelerate personal file
sharing, including content libraries, team discussion forums, blogs and wikis.
Steps are also being been made by the firm to connect Quickr with FileNet P8 and
IBM content manager.
During a Lotusphere keynote, IBM announced its strategy to unlock the
knowledge of workers in ways unlike that which traditional knowledge management
systems aim to do.
“Rather than focussing on command and control models, we need to give workers
more power to socialise,” said Michael Rhodin, Lotus Software general manager.
In line with these announcements, Research In Motion previewed BlackBerry
Client for Lotus Connections. The new software application will run on
BlackBerry smartphones and provide user’s access to Lotus Connections, while
Voltage Security announced Voltage SecureFile for Quickr. SecureFile will bring
information encryption to documents in the Lotus environment.
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