ZDNet UK


Skip to Main Content

ZDNet.co.uk - Winner of Best Business Website 2007
  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Blogs
  4. Reviews
  5. Jobs
  6. Resources
  7. Community
  8. My ZDNet

 

ZDNet UK RSS Feeds


Mail & messaging Toolkit

The groupware Lotus eater

Leader ZDNet.co.uk

Published: 23 Jan 2007 17:34 GMT

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment
The groupware Lotus eater

It's as if the past 10 years had never happened. Over in Orlando, IBM has squared up against Microsoft's Sharepoint with the launch of Lotus Connections, while Redmond has released the Transporter Suite for Lotus Notes to suck people in the other direction. The 1990s Groupware Wars are back.

The battlefield has changed. Groupware's biggest technical bane — incompatible data formats and protocols — seems much less fearsome in the daylight. The bigger problem — that of what it does and why it matters — has also been solved: we are now a connected community at home and at work. The internet has been the perfect laboratory for collaborative and social software, and while we're still a long way from writing the last byte on how to make groups work, there are clear and attractive ways ahead.

Yet something's missing. If mastery of things internet, of communities and of data management are the three abilities needed to compete for the next generation of corporate software, then where on earth is Google? From its armoury of tools to its love affair with the zeitgeist, the company has the A to Z of requirements to compete at the highest level. Everything, that is, except a corporate strategy.

There are hints. Google Apps for Your Domain is a proof-of-concept package that adds some light customisation to a useful suite of free services — but it's not something you can take to the board when the Microsoft Exchange licence falls due.

What corporates need, and what Google does not provide, is a relationship that goes beyond trust into promise. Verifiable security, service levels, roadmaps and backup are required: not ideas naturally associated with a company whose primary groupware app, Gmail, is coming up for three years in beta.

To some extent, this is in keeping with Google's carefully contrived paradox, of being a deeply thoughtful company hiding behind a veil of confusion. As Larry Page told Time magazine last year, "We don't generally talk about our strategy... because it's strategic. I would rather have people think we're confused than let our competitors know what we're going to do. That's an easy trade-off."

It won't last for much longer. Either Google invents a whole new way to deal with corporates, or it gets into their comfort zone and starts speaking their language. If it does neither, it will cede an empire to its enemies — and that's not a strategy for anything but pain.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendlyPrint with Konica

Did you find this article useful?
2 out of 2 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments


Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:









Featured White Papers

See All White Papers

On the Road Blog

Digital Audio Broadcast. Is There a Fu...

Channel 4 are pulling the plug on their DAB radio stations. The reason being that it is an unaffordable enterprise for them. Pull the other one!! It could be more to do with the... More

Post a comment

Another Day, Another Data Loss

Earlier this year the head of Revenue & Customs resigned after his department lost the details of as many as 15 million child benefit claimants in what was believed to be the world’s... More

Post a comment

Wi-Fi Security Is No Longer Secure

A Russian firm’s use of the latest nVidia graphics cards to accelerate Wi-Fi ‘password recovery’ times by up to an astonishing 10,000% proves that Wi-Fi’s WPA and WPA2 encryption systems... More

Post a comment