SOURCE: IBM
June 03, 2008 11:04 ET
ODF Comes of Age: IBM Lotus Symphony Turns 1.0
Nearly One Million Beta Users, 24 Languages, Web 2.0 Extensions, New Technical Support Services for Enterprises
ARMONK, NY--(Marketwire - June 3, 2008) - Open Document Format (ODF) comes of age today as
IBM (NYSE: IBM) announces the commercial-grade, general availability of
Lotus Symphony (http://symphony.lotus.com/software/lotus/symphony), a suite
of free,
ODF-based software tools for creating and sharing documents, spreadsheets
and presentations.
This announcement affirms IBM's commitment to evolving office productivity
software from static, financially draining software to a dynamic,
cost-effective tool that allows businesses to invest in more innovative
pursuits.
While Lotus Symphony remains a free, easy download from the Web with free
online, moderated support, IBM is also announcing fee-based services to
support the needs of large organizations. This optional service, IBM
Elite Support for Lotus Symphony 1.0, delivers unlimited remote technical
support at a level consistent with other IBM software products via an
annual subscription to IBM's Passport Advantage or Passport Advantage
Express volume licensing programs.
Lotus Symphony could save a company with 20,000 employees $8 million in
software license fees or potentially more than $4 million in software
renewal fees. If it chose to switch to Symphony for only half of its
employee population, it could still save several million dollars in license
or renewal fees, even if it subscribed to IBM's Elite Support services at
$25 per user for 1,000 employees.
Launched in September 2007, Lotus Symphony has been downloaded by nearly
one million individuals in an open public Beta program. Lotus Symphony is
a truly global product, available in 24 languages, developed by a worldwide
team anchored in Beijing, China, and improved through the community of
individual users on the Symphony Web site.
"Major technology vendors are lining up to support ODF -- even those
previously opposed to it," said Steve Mills, SVP of IBM Software.
"Symphony -- backed by enterprise customer support services -- is ready for
business."
A growing number of businesses are considering decisions to renew their
Office licensing agreements, and move up to Office 2007 and Vista. Lotus
Symphony 1.0 provides a timely and cost-effective alternative tested by
nearly one million people worldwide and backed by IBM.
Plugging Into the Power of Web 2.0
Another noteworthy benefit of Lotus Symphony is aligned with Web 2.0 -- the
newest Internet technology -- not the fading era of the personal computer.
In the spirit of Web 2.0, Lotus Symphony individual users have the ability
to influence the development of the software through feedback on the
Symphony site, much the way that content is continuously revised and
updated through Wikipedia.
More importantly, IBM offers a set of powerful, open APIs for extending
Lotus Symphony with a wide range of plug-ins -- including Eclipse and
Universal Network Object component model and others. This can empower
business people to harness powerful business processes such as enterprise
resources planning and customer relationship management directly from their
desktop. Companies and governments can integrate Lotus Symphony tools into
their custom applications and connect to myriad data sources that allow
individuals to work in a single view while presenting and updating data
from multiple sources instantly.
IBM is offering a free developer toolkit on the Symphony site that enables
individual users of Lotus Symphony, as well as independent software
developers, to create plug-ins, or software adaptors, and composite
applications, or mashups. These can transform static documents into living
information streams capable of managing primary business functions such as
shipping, sales and fulfillment.
The three core tools comprising Lotus Symphony -- Lotus Symphony Documents,
Lotus Symphony Spreadsheets and Lotus Symphony Presentations -- handle the
majority of office productivity tasks that most people perform. Quick
reading reference cards and online tutorials on the Lotus Symphony Web site
show how easy it is to transfer documents between Symphony and Word,
PowerPoint or Excel.
Symphony Provides a Foundation for SMBs
In a related development, Lotus Symphony is being extended to small
businesses within a new turnkey collaboration product called IBM Lotus
Foundations (www.ibm.com/lotus/products/foundations), commercially
available today. Lotus Symphony will serve as the office productivity
software within Lotus Foundations, which also includes Lotus Notes and
Domino mail, file management, directory services, firewall, back-up and
recovery, anti-virus, and anti-spam features. Lotus Foundations is part
of a broad IBM initiative code-named "Blue Business Platform" to simplify
information technology for small businesses.
Local IBM Business Partners are the primary route to market for Lotus
Foundations. A variety of third parties, such as Linux distributors,
media companies and IBM Business Partners from North America, Europe and
the Asia-Pacific region are offering Lotus Symphony either as a free,
standalone download off the Web or for sale with customized applications.