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Lotus Notes & Domino 8.5 Vs Microsoft Exchange & Outlook 2010

I found this lotus notes tutorial in fwd mail and it will help someone for make decision.

MICROSOFT (NSDQ:MSFT)’S EXCHANGE SERVER really came of age with the release of version 2007. Exchange 2007 offers a solid and complete messaging platform. The beta release of Exchange 2010 serves up even more features and functionality and looks like it may be the most robust Exchange offering yet.

Exchange has long enjoyed the lion’s share of the business messaging platform market. Does this mean that it is the best e-mail platform offering out there? Some would argue that isn’t the case. Microsoft dominates in the business client/server software market, so it stands to reason that Exchange would be the “best fit” for an organization already running a Windows environment. Perhaps that fact accounts as a major reason Exchange is so widely deployed.

However, IBM (NYSE:IBM)’s Domino platform with Lotus Notes still has a strong following. Die-hard Lotus Notes fans cite stability and security as the primary benefits for eschewing Exchange for Notes. We took a side-by-side view at the two latest releases of each platform: Exchange 2010 and Lotus Domino 8.5 and each e-mail server’s respective clients: Outlook 2007 and Lotus Notes client 8. We assessed each in five key areas: installation and deployment, interoperability and customization, feature set, performance and pricing.

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Why good for use a Lotus Notes/Domino-based as document management solution

Benefits of staying with an all-Domino solution
For many of you, this represents the most cost effective option for document management. There are some serious benefits to staying within Domino.

Leverage your existing Domino infrastructure
There’s no additional infrastructure (and associated cost) required.

Flattens the learning curve
You already know the backend. You already have the Domino admin and development skills, so you just need to focus on the nuances of the application.

Even if you don’t have the skills, the costs to obtain will be less than the equivalent J2EE resource. This is unlike the scenario we discussed last week, where you would have had to learn both a new backend (DB2 and WebSphere) and the document management application.

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