IBM Lotus Symphony, which is a free suite of office applications for viewing documents, spreadsheets and presentations -- and is an alternative to Microsoft Office, passed the 100,000 downloads mark ...
IBM plans to mount its most ambitious challenge in years to Microsoft's dominance of personal computer software, by offering free programs for word processing, spreadsheets and presentations. The ...
OS-Independent Operation Lotus Symphony, like other OpenOffice.org variants, doesn't care what operating system you use. You can download versions for Windows, the ...
IBM today announced an expanded set of social software tools and capabilities for enterprise collaboration that brings popular features like micro-blogging from the home into the business environment.
eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More. IBM has finished polishing up the software-as-a-service ...
IBM’s Lotus collaboration software division will for the first time offer a Lotus Notes client that runs natively on Linux, perhaps providing a needed kick to IBM’s vision of wider corporate desktop ...
This free productivity application suite is based on OpenOffice.org, with IBM's professional-level interface on top. It's not as flexible or as advanced as MS Office, but it is one of the best desktop ...
The partnerships were announced at BlackBerry's Wireless Enterprise Symposium 2008 this week in Orlando. First, IBM and RIM announced this week that IBM will offer access to a full line of Web ...
Factory workers and flight attendants are among those whom IBM hopes to outfit with the latest additions to its Workplace software line. As expected, the computing giant unveiled several new releases ...
Lotus Symphony has passed the 100,000 downloads mark this week, according to IBM. The download figure is a record for IBM software "surpassing the previous record held by Lotus Notes", IBM said in a ...
This free productivity application suite is based on OpenOffice.org, with IBM's professional-level interface on top. It's not as flexible or as advanced as MS Office, but it is one of the best desktop ...
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