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Google Businesses

Whirlpool Ditches IBM Collaboration Software, Moves To Google Apps 101

cagraham writes "Appliance maker Whirlpool has decided to stop using IBM's "Notes" collaboration software, and instead move to Google Apps for Business. The Wall Street Journal reports that the decision was based on both worker's familiarity with Google Apps, and lessening the IT workload. Because most workers have used (or use) apps like Google Calendar and Google Docs, Whirlpool's IT staff won't have to devote as much time to initial software training. This move lines up with recent enterprise reports, which largely forecast an increasing move to cloud based software. Whirlpool's contract with Google will cover all of their 30,000 employees."
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Whirlpool Ditches IBM Collaboration Software, Moves To Google Apps

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  • by i kan reed ( 749298 ) on Monday October 07, 2013 @12:15PM (#45059937) Homepage Journal

    Oh look, normal IT operations in a large corporation just happened. I don't see what's special here.

  • Re:Whirlpool (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday October 07, 2013 @12:24PM (#45060053)
    It's one company that has sent most of its manufacturing to Mexico switching away from another company that has outsourced most of its IT to India.
  • by stenvar ( 2789879 ) on Monday October 07, 2013 @12:26PM (#45060093)

    Whether you like Google or not, it's "noteworthy" because this sort of thing means that "system manager" and "IT staff" may more and more become a thing of the past; you know, the kind of job a significant percentage of Slashdot readers actually hold.

  • Lotus suite sucks (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday October 07, 2013 @12:34PM (#45060197)
    I've worked for IBM and had to use notes and other stuff. Everyone that was forced to switch from outlook to notes wanted desperately to switch back. Notes should die already, it's junk!
  • Wrong headline... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by rickb928 ( 945187 ) on Monday October 07, 2013 @12:35PM (#45060209) Homepage Journal

    Shouldn't this be titled "Whirlpool ditches Notes, doesn't choose Exchange"?

  • by rickb928 ( 945187 ) on Monday October 07, 2013 @12:37PM (#45060267) Homepage Journal

    We switched from Notes to Exchange/Outlook a few years ago. I would take Notes back in a heartbeat.

    And of course all the Notes databases and apps got ported over about 2 years late. And don't work very well. And go down regularly.

    Notes was an elegant solution before anyone else got there, and it takes 2-3 major services to replace Notes. But, hey, it's progress, and getting IBM GS out of your app dev is worth it.

  • by interval1066 ( 668936 ) on Monday October 07, 2013 @01:19PM (#45060835) Journal

    ...racist crowd who demand everything be done domestically and think that foreigners are inferior.

    What are you, a child? Outsourcing labor to other countries is about MONEY, and no other reason. If you think it has ANYTHING to do with rascism you need to put down your comic book, put away the skatebaord, put on your big-boy pants, and figure out how the world really works.

  • by div_2n ( 525075 ) on Monday October 07, 2013 @02:03PM (#45061453)

    This is a bit of an overblown notion.

    The need for system admins isn't going away anytime soon. The only thing that might go away are heavily specialized admins that don't diversify. Hint: if your resume title is "Notes Admin" then yeah, you are working on borrowed time.

    There is still longevity in system admins for those that have diverse skill sets. Just browse job listings and you'll see it -- qualification listings are getting longer and longer. This DOES mean, however, that the number of admin positions that could be open at any one particular time is probably not growing as fast as other jobs.

    What I personally have noticed is that the mid-range jobs have just about dried up. Companies either want someone fresh out of college that will work long hours for peanuts or they want seasoned experts that are worth the money. Maybe it was this way before the dot com era, but that's when I hit the workforce, so I only know how things were from then to now.

  • by Belial6 ( 794905 ) on Monday October 07, 2013 @02:08PM (#45061493)
    No, tons of people like Notes. It is just trendy in IT to hate it. People actually doing work like it just fine. One of the current reasons that Notes gets a bad rap is that it takes so much less resources to run it. You might have 1 or 2 guys running your Notes platform where it takes 6 or 8 guys to run other platforms within the company. So, when you sit down for a meeting, and there is a platform clash, you have 6 guys pointing out the flaws of Notes, with one point out the flaws of the competing product. This makes it look like Notes is inferior.

    I'm not saying that Notes/Domino are perfect, but if you look at most of the complaints, it will be about versions from over a decade ago. Then most of those complaints will fall into 4 categories:

    1) It was slow. This was a somewhat legitimate complaint. Notes was a big application with a lot of functionality. Almost the entire server code base was included with the client. This had the downside of making the application bloated. The upside was that your server based applications ran just as well locally, and would replicate to the server as soon as you connected. This is less critical today, and the added weight is less of an issue.
    2) It would crash. This was true, although it didn't crash any more than most applications of the day. Complaints about Notes crashes fall into the same category as complaints about Win95's blue screen of death. Historical trivia.
    3) It didn't follow standards. This is only sort of true. What it didn't do was follow 'Windows' standards. This is because Notes/Domino both predated Windows, and thus it's standards, and it was cross platform. Lotus had to decide whether to standardize it's application to itself, or to each of the platforms it ran on. It also had to decide whether to make a major revamp of it's interface or not. That is not a minor decision. Personally, I think they waited too long. At one point, the only OS the client was produced for was Windows. (Today it is Windows, Linux, and OSX) The day they decided to have the client be Windows only, they should have revamped the UI and key bindings. They eventually gave in, but they took a big hit by waiting as long as they did.
    4) It wasn't pretty. It look good now, but when it was first put on Windows, Lotus created a UI that matched the Windows 3.1 look of the day. By the time that Windows 95 came around, The graphics were horribly out of date. The functionality was top notch, but we know how much people like their shiny.

    All of these are legitimate complaints, but not only are they outdated, they are the kinds of complaints that would apply to any of Notes/Domino's competitors. I use that in the present tense, because the back when the complaints were valid, Notes/Domino had no competitors.

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