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IBM is going after Microsoft Office users

Lotus Symphony is free
Friday, 11 September 2009, 09:11

IBM IS LOOKING to a new promotion to convert Microsoft Office users to its Lotus Symphony productivity suite.

The company said on Thursday that it would be offering users the Symphony package along with a collection of plug-ins free of charge.

Microsoft users will be able to obtain the Symphony word processing, spreadsheet and presentation tools for Windows, MacOS and Linux systems. Large enterprises can also purchase licensing agreements at a discounted price.

IBM's aggressive new campaign comes as Microsoft faces legal challenges over the lynchpin of its Office suite. Canadian software firm i4i has accused Microsoft of violating its patents on XML components within the word processing application. The case nearly halted sales of Word within the US.

However, Big Blue maintains that the campaign is more about advocating Symphony's use of open standards than taking advantage of Microsoft's legal troubles.

"Today there are more innovative, open alternatives such as Symphony that compare favorably to Microsoft Office," said IBM Lotus general manager Bob Picciano.

"Symphony's open collaboration model can offer businesses limitless options cost-effectively at a time when many organisations are increasingly concerned about investing in Microsoft Office." µ

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Comments
What?

Lotus Symphony? That takes me back 25 years! Not sure my current systems have the required 5.25" floppy drive...

posted by : simon b, 11 September 2009 Complain about this comment
Oh!My Word!

I have an antidote to this double helping of crap..it's called Open Office!

posted by : Anon, 11 September 2009 Complain about this comment
@Anon

if you cared to research, this resurrection of Symphony is built on the OpenOffice codebase

posted by : that guy, 11 September 2009 Complain about this comment
Still has a long way to catch

Even tough I'm all in favour of open source and using free stuff, both Open Office and Symphony (which is built on top of Open Office 2.0) are way behind MS Office 2007 in functionalities and ease of use.
Both still have a long way to go...

posted by : someone, 11 September 2009 Complain about this comment
symphony?

seriously? Would a business look at this? You've got to be kidding me. IBM's been irrelevant for so long now that they don't know what might sell and what won't...

posted by : fredb, 11 September 2009 Complain about this comment
Why?

You know there will be a group of IBM employees that will use it and think its the bees knees and call the rest of us are stupid for not using it. To which I say good for them at least they didn't have to pay for it.

If there is one area that IBM doesn't get its software. Only IBM people like IBM software. The rest of the world cant wait to get as far away from it as possible.

posted by : Mitchell, 11 September 2009 Complain about this comment
Great Move, Big Blue!

People have to install Symphony (Open Office). IBM purged 330.000 Microsoft Office installations from their desktops for this one.

Hit the Ballmer where it hurts! Love it!

posted by : Kill Bill, 11 September 2009 Complain about this comment
What?

I've heard of Lotus Notes, but nothing about this "Symphony" product.

This is the best part about Microsoft: they make competitors give their products for free because they can't make any money actually *selling* them.

posted by : BB, 12 September 2009 Complain about this comment
I love it! Lotue AmiPro will be coming back next!

You go IBM! It's about time a huge company takes the alternative software route to give viability to the rest of the world.

posted by : AC, 14 September 2009 Complain about this comment
Symphony 1.3

I looked at it today and was quite impressed. I'd looked at it in the past and it was very slow. This one is well integrated, looks nice (though there are some resize errors on the far right panel, and performed well. I looked at the file formats that it supports. Pretty good for a free product. I can see why IBM is asking this of their employees.

posted by : Jim B., 14 September 2009 Complain about this comment
Not going to happen!

IBM's offering is still based on the old OpenOffice source code. This means it is still going to be slow on startup, I am not even to mention how long it is going to take to open a document.

Then there is the probem with document compatibility. ODF is not compatible between open source office suites. That goes for the MS Word doc format too(OpenOffice MS Office and back).

This so called poaching is not going to happen, people believe in MS products because they work and are completely stable. The documents keep their formatting when transported between computers unlike ODF in open source office suites.

When it comes to free office suites, you should rather try SSuite Office for a free office suite. They have a whole range of office suites that are free for download.

Their software also don't need to run on Java or .NET, like so many open source office suites, so it makes their software very small and efficient.

You may try these links:

http://www.ssuitesoft.com/index.htm

posted by : George, 15 September 2009 Complain about this comment
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