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Lotus Domino Still Standing







Lotus Domino Still Standing

Lotus Domino Still Standing 01/16/2004 11:03 AM

Ambuj Goyal GM leads ibm's recommitment to core products.




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Lotus Domino Still Standing

Grok Headline matches for Lotus Domino Still Standing

Remote Buffer Overflow in Lotus Domino


Remote Buffer Overflow in Lotus Domino 04/12/2005 11:07 PM
Posted by Next Generation Insight Security Research (NGS Software), Apr 12 2005

IBM Plugs Security Holes in Lotus Notes,
Domino


IBM Plugs Security Holes in Lotus Notes,
Domino
04/15/2005 06:17 PM
The company rolls out patches for several "highly critical" flaws which could cause denial of service, crashes or browser poisoning for the Lotus Notes and Domino product lines.

Microsoft Exchange Expected To Widen
Lead Over IBM Lotus Domino


Microsoft Exchange Expected To Widen
Lead Over IBM Lotus Domino
06/28/2004 10:07 AM
The Radicati Group, Inc.'s latest whitepaper, "IBM Lotus & Microsoft -- Corporate Messaging Market Analysis," examines the messaging strategies and product plans of market leaders IBM Lotus and Microsoft. Over the next four years, IBM Lotus' corporate messaging software installed base market share is expected to fall sharply from 24% to 17%. The installed base of Lotus Domino will peak in 2005 and decline thereafter, while the study predicts that the new Workplace platform will not experience significant uptake for several years to come.

Lotus Notes Domino 6.0.2 (linux) faulty
default permissions


Lotus Notes Domino 6.0.2 (linux) faulty
default permissions
01/06/2004 01:03 PM
Rene (Jan 05 2004)

iDEFENSE Security Advisory 04.06.05: IBM
Lotus Domino Server Web Service DoS
Vulnerability


iDEFENSE Security Advisory 04.06.05: IBM
Lotus Domino Server Web Service DoS
Vulnerability
04/06/2005 05:45 PM
Posted by iDEFENSE Labs, Apr 06 2005

R7-0011: Lotus Notes/Domino Web
Retriever HTTP Status Buffer Overflow


R7-0011: Lotus Notes/Domino Web
Retriever HTTP Status Buffer Overflow
03/13/2003 03:22 PM
Rapid 7 Security Advisories (Mar 13 2003)

R7-0012: Lotus Notes/Domino R6-beta
PROTOS LDAP Denial of Service Regression


R7-0012: Lotus Notes/Domino R6-beta
PROTOS LDAP Denial of Service Regression
03/13/2003 02:12 PM
Rapid 7 Security Advisories (Mar 13 2003)

Ibm Lotus Domino for the Blackberry:
Lan2lan Enhances Blackberry 'Push'
Technology, Silencing 3G & Gprs Signal


Ibm Lotus Domino for the Blackberry:
Lan2lan Enhances Blackberry 'Push'
Technology, Silencing 3G & Gprs Signal
06/15/2004 05:14 AM
PA News via The Scotsman Online Jun 15 2004 8:46AM GMT

C-Search Announces the Release of
C-Search and C-Search for Domino.Doc
R1.1 – Search Multiple Domino Databases
across Multiple Servers Simultaneously


C-Search Announces the Release of
C-Search and C-Search for Domino.Doc
R1.1 – Search Multiple Domino Databases
across Multiple Servers Simultaneously
04/16/2005 01:58 AM
C-Search today announced the release of C-Search and C-Search for Domino.Doc R1.1. - C-Search brings for the first time web crawling techniques to the Domino domain allowing organizations to build a fast and lightweight index of quality materials. Unlike web crawlers however, C-Search has built in design and location awareness to ensure users are presented with meaningful results and to guarantee that users are always routed to the nearest instance of information from the search results. [PRWEB Apr 16, 2005]

Re: DoS against Domino 6.5.1


Re: DoS against Domino 6.5.1 07/24/2004 12:50 PM
Andreas Klein (Jul 23 2004)

DoS against Domino 6.5.1


DoS against Domino 6.5.1 07/01/2004 03:52 PM
Andreas Klein (Jun 30 2004)

a quiet domino


a quiet domino 03/14/2005 05:42 PM
Our cat Felix, who's been slowly losing his kidney function for the last couple of years, has gotten really sick....

XML and Domino (Advisor.com)


XML and Domino (Advisor.com) 08/12/2002 10:48 AM

IBM Notes Domino concerns


IBM Notes Domino concerns 01/27/2004 10:23 AM
vnunet.com Jan 27 2004 2:11PM GMT

'A Domino Effect' at Computer
Associates?


'A Domino Effect' at Computer
Associates?
01/29/2004 01:59 PM
Business Week Jan 29 2004 5:49PM GMT

The DOMINO Theory: How to Thwart Wi-Fi
Cheats


The DOMINO Theory: How to Thwart Wi-Fi
Cheats
06/10/2004 07:54 AM

IBM readies Notes, Domino updates


IBM readies Notes, Domino updates 08/05/2004 12:16 PM
DB2 database connections and Web applications tools top list for next version.

IBM Unveils New Domino, Workplace
Products


IBM Unveils New Domino, Workplace
Products
01/26/2004 04:13 PM
At Lotusphere, IBM pushed its next-generation Workplace messaging and collaboration product while announcing the latest version of Notes and Domino.

Symantec secures Domino servers


Symantec secures Domino servers 04/20/2004 07:09 AM

Domino/JBoss Single Sign On 1.00.06


Domino/JBoss Single Sign On 1.00.06 07/01/2004 08:46 PM
A single sign on tool for Lotus Domino and JBoss J2EE apps.

Symantec introduces security for Domino


Symantec introduces security for Domino 04/19/2004 07:07 PM
globetechnology.com Apr 19 2004 10:20PM GMT

Domino tool could knock down wi-fi
cheats


Domino tool could knock down wi-fi
cheats
06/10/2004 08:05 AM
Computer Weekly Jun 10 2004 12:31PM GMT

Workplace Impresses, but Domino is Still
Tops


Workplace Impresses, but Domino is Still
Tops
02/10/2004 02:53 AM
While IBM envisions greater ties between its venerable Lotus Notes messaging and collaboration platform and its next-generation Workplace software, many Lotus customers are hoping for a future that continues to revolve around Notes and the Domino application server.

Standing by their man


Standing by their man 04/08/2005 09:27 AM
Conservatives may worry privately about the scandal-plagued majority leader, but publicly they're denying he did anything wrong and blaming the "liberal media."

Last Man Standing


Last Man Standing 04/21/2004 02:26 PM
Dark Horse releases Star Wars: Empire #18 today, which concludes the three-part tale starring the soldiers of the Empire. "To the Last Man" is by Welles Hartley, Davidé Fabbri, and Christian Della Vecchia, and features the final confrontation of the Imperial army and the Amanin primitives. With the casualties piling up on both sides, which side will emerge victorious? Find out this issue! All under a fantastic cover by David Michael Beck and Brad Anderson. You can check out an online preview here< /a>.

Trilog eases Domino to Java transition


Trilog eases Domino to Java transition 08/27/2004 09:27 PM
Trilog Group this week rolled out an integrated J2EE development framework designed to let IBM Lotus Notes developers use their existing skills for J2EE development projects.

Unprevileged user can change quota on
Domino


Unprevileged user can change quota on
Domino
07/01/2004 10:30 AM
Andreas Klein (Jun 30 2004)

Domino shop dumps Windows for Linux


Domino shop dumps Windows for Linux 05/27/2004 06:11 PM

iAnywhere puts Domino apps onto devices


iAnywhere puts Domino apps onto devices 05/04/2004 07:51 AM
Developers have a new option for extending Lotus Domino applications to mobile devices thanks to a new version of iAnywhere Solutions Inc.'s Pylon Application Server released on Monday.

Standing at the Gate


Standing at the Gate 05/05/2004 05:03 PM
Churchill Downs' earnings projections fall flat.

Standing room


Standing room 06/23/2004 05:12 PM
Like some other well-known bloggers before her, Chris Nolan is working on turning her blog into more of a revenue-generati ng business. I like Chris's stuff, even as I sometimes disagree with it, because it's sharp and unpredictable and rooted in her years of experience as a reporter, and so I wish her well in her efforts to sell ads and subscriptions.

Lord knows it's not an easy road. Reading Chris's manifesto for "Stand-Alone Journalism" -- she argues that's a better label for what she does than "blogging" -- brought me back to some distant memories from the dawn of the Web. After learning HTML and participating in the San Franciso Free Press experiment, I thought to myself, hey, there's nothing to stop me from starting my own publication on the Web!

So I did. In January 1995 I took a week's vacation time from my job at the SF Examiner and published a site. I focused on what was then quaintly known as "multimedia"; I called it Kludge, as a nod to its essential clumsiness and improvised nature, and I posted an issue. This was years before personal content management software, needless to say; it's all just cruddy hand-coded HTML and crude self-designed graphics. But the articles weren't so bad (hey, here's an interview with Marc Canter! Here's a satirical take on the CD-ROM explosion/implosion!).

What I quickly realized was that, as much fun as writing, editing and designing all that material was -- bringing me back as it did to my teenage roots in mimeograph publishing -- it was just the beginning of getting a Web site going. If I was serious about making it something more than a labor of love -- if I wasn't going to do all that work on my vacation days -- I'd need to figure out how to get people to visit the site, and how to sell ads, and so forth. My best efforts involved dumping a pile of flyers in the lobby of a multimedia conference at Moscone Center. (While I was doing that, a couple of guys named Jerry Yang and Dave Filo stood at a booth under a big Yahoo banner, giving away T-shirts.)

After briefly toying with the notion of applying to AOL's Greenhouse program for funding, I thought, nah. When David Talbot started talking about a new publication he wanted to create, I helped persuade him that he should do it on the Web instead of in print. Salon turned out to be a great place for me to write and edit and build Web sites without having to wear all the hats myself (though there have certainly been times during the last decade when my pate has felt a little crowded).

Today, would-be "Stand-Alone Journalists" can rely on much better software tools to create and publish their work. They can plug into far better organized online networks to spread the word of their activities. And they can even turn to simple plug-in approaches to advertising, like AdWords or BlogAds, to try to bring in some cash. But being a "Stand-Alone Journalist" still requires a combination of journalistic and entrepreneurial traits that's rare. Being a good journalist requires the ability to not mind pissing people off sometimes (Nolan, whose career has had its share of controversy, is no shirker in this regard); being a good entrepreneur demands the ability to charm people as often as possible. Both pursuits, of course, demand persistence, patience, and, in the face of indifference, a stubborn belief in the value of one's undertaking.

When I read Nolan's proposed label for the solo-blogger-journalist, the first thing that popped into my mind was the famous quote from Ibsen's Dr. Stockman in "Enemy of the People": "The strongest man in the world is the one who stands most alone." Standing alone has many wonderful advantages -- it's a stirring posture. But remember what happens to old Dr. Stockman: He is right to blow the whistle about the polluting of his town's waters, but he's dreadfully naive about the world around him, he's ultimately ineffective, and he fails to accomplish much besides his own martyrdom.

So I'm not sure the "Stand-Alone Journalist" label is one that will stick. The linked nature of the Web is ultimately even more important than the independence of the blogger. Standing alone is useless without being connected.

Chinese Standing Up


Chinese Standing Up 04/02/2005 01:52 PM
When the Chinese Civil War ended in 1949, Mao Zedong famously said “China has stood up.” While it took another forty years to get started, the recent economic explosion has been a world-changer. But that story isn’t over; there’s a remarkable piece in the NY Times this morning outlining how the Chinese are doing a bit of standing up on their own, economically. They’re walking away from those “cheap labour” manufacturing jobs that have served as one of the main economic drivers of the last couple of decades. At the end of the day, cheap labour doesn’t stay cheap. And while there are probably some more “cheap labour” places for businesses to move—India, Africa—the consequences for China have to be profound. And I can see the day coming, maybe not in my lifetime but not that much further out, when the whole notion of moving businesses around the world so you can pay people less has become, finally, self-defeating. What happens then?

Operators Standing By


Operators Standing By 06/16/2004 04:50 PM
You Too Can Profit From The War on Terra "You’d think with both the Iraq and Afghanistan wars well under way and with the war on terrorism being more than two years old that the share price of any bullet proof vest manufacturer would be fully valued. Not so! The company that manufactures the amazing life saving bullet proof vests that Sgt. Travis L. McKinney wrote to from the Iraq front line is not only undervalued but is a screaming takeover candidate that is poised to enjoy an up to 450% increase in its stock price." Operators are standing by...

Standing firm


Standing firm 09/13/2004 11:52 PM
CNET Asia Sep 14 2004 4:22AM GMT

IBM: Notes Domino Express 'Our Microsoft
Killer'


IBM: Notes Domino Express 'Our Microsoft
Killer'
07/14/2004 01:30 AM
CRN Canada Jul 14 2004 6:13AM GMT

Notes, Domino Upgrade to Tighten
Workplace Ties


Notes, Domino Upgrade to Tighten
Workplace Ties
09/07/2004 08:34 AM
Users of IBM's Lotus Notes and Domino Groupware can look forward to a host of new capabilities in Version 7 of the product.

DYS Will Embrace Lotus Applications


DYS Will Embrace Lotus Applications 01/16/2004 11:03 AM
DYS Analytics expands its offerings for Lotus applications.

Microsoft Zeros In on Lotus


Microsoft Zeros In on Lotus 01/19/2004 11:45 AM
A cadre of former Lotus software employees is leading a reinvigorated push at Microsoft Corp. to lure Lotus customers to .Net with new products and services. Over the next six to eight months, the Redmond, Wash., company plans to roll out a series of initiatives, including a tool kit, due this summer, that allows Domino developers to create Notes- and Domino-based Web services using Microsoft development tools such as Visual Studio .Net and Visual Basic.

IBM Puts Lotus On The Server


IBM Puts Lotus On The Server 05/10/2004 01:06 PM
Internet News May 10 2004 5:14PM GMT
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Lotus Domino Still Standing

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