Lotus Notes On Linux?
From Groklaw:
At the end of the presentation, Andreas Pleschek revealed that the laptop he used for the presentation was running a pre-release of their new platform, the Open Client. It is actually a Red Hat work station with IBM's new Workplace Client, which is built in Java on top of Eclipse. Because of Eclipse, it runs on both Linux and Windows, and they have been able to reuse the C++ code in Lotus Notes for Windows to run it natively on Linux via Eclipse. Internally in IBM, for years, they have had a need to run Lotus Notes on Linux, and now they can. And they will offer it to their customers. Workplace uses Lotus Notes for mail, calendar, etc. and Firefox as their browser. For an office suite, they use OpenOffice.org.
Does anyone know more details about how the C++ code in Lotus Notes for Windows is magically turned into native Linux code via Eclipse? I don't entirely understand what they've done here. Maybe the backend is the original C++ with a new frontend built using SWT?
NP: Liquid Swords, GZA
New Phone, SyncML Hell
Yesterday my new phone, a Nokia 6230i, arrived. This morning I tried to use Multisync to restore the backup of the contacts I took trivially (via IrMC) from my old K700i.
Well, that wasn't trivial. The 6230i uses SyncML which is groovy and everything, but is also hell to configure. Has anyone actually made this work? Ideally I'd have the phone as the SyncML server so that I can start syncs from my laptop running Multisync, but the manual for the phone doesn't exactly make it obvious how I'm supposed to connect to a machine via something other than GPRS (I want to use Bluetooth of some sort).
Help!