Archive for: ‘Oktober 2012’

DNUG Arbeitskreis Anwendungsentwicklung: Veranstaltung mit XPages Schwerpunkt am 7. November 2012 in Fulda vor der 37. Konferenz

25. Oktober 2012 Posted by Roswitha Boldt

ABLAUF

13:00 Uhr
Begrüßung durch die Arbeitskreisleiter

13:10 Uhr
Tipps und Tricks beim Einsatz von XPages für Einsteiger und Aufsteiger
Uwe Jandt, Helvetia Versicherungen

Diese Fragestellungen werden u.a. aus Sicht von Projekterfahrungen behandelt:
-    Was sind die "Best Practices" im Domino Designer, XPages-Einsatz?
-    Gibt es typische Hürden und Fallen beim Einsatz von XPages, die man vermeiden kann?
-    Wie modernisiere ich alte Anwendungen mit XPages?
-    Was kann ich mit herkömmlichen Notes-Mitteln nicht, aber mit XPages gut umsetzen?
-    Rapid Application Development mit XPages
-    Verwendung von vorhandenen (aber vielleicht nicht jedem bekannten) Werkzeugen aus den Bibliotheken, die IBM  liefert; Hauptstichwort - Benutzung der XPages Extension Library
-    …

ca. 14:45 Uhr
Kaffeepause

anschließend
Offene Diskussion


Leitung der Veranstaltung
Uwe Brahm, Max-Planck-Institut für Informatik
Sigrun Greber, GWDG Ges. für wissenschaftliche Datenverarbeitung Göttingen

 

Anmeldung zum Arbeitskreis Anwendungsentwicklung

 

 

 

37. DNUG Konferenz in Fulda: Social Project Management @ IBM Connections 4.0 — Trilog ProjExec im Kernprozess des Projektmanagements

25. Oktober 2012 Posted by Roswitha Boldt

 

Social Project Management ist die Nutzung des Web 2.0 und auf dieser technologischen Grundlage die Integration des Projekt-Teams in ein größeres (soziales) Netzwerk (Project Community). Bereits auf den letzten DNUG Konferenzen hat die Projektgruppe das Thema aus mehreren Blickwinkeln beleuchtet: organisatorisch, methodisch und mit einem praktischen Beispiel zum Einsatz der IBM Connections Kernfunktionen im Projekt.

Durch Zusatzanwendungen, wie die Lösung Trilog ProjExec, erweitern sich darüber hinaus die Einsatzszenarien in Projekten. Die Project Wall von ProjExec führt beispielsweise die Kommunikationsströme an einem zentralen Punkt zusammen, so dass die Mitglieder des Projektteams jederzeit von beliebigen Endgeräten Zugang zu allen projektrelevanten Informationen haben und damit ihr soziales Projektnetzwerk für sich nutzbar machen. Herr Volker Arendt (SUVO Consulting) wird die Lösung vorstellen und in den Social Project Management Kontext einordnen.

Die Integration in IBM Connections zeigt sich an vielen Stellen:

  • die Nutzung der Profil-Informationen bei der Besetzung von Projektteams,
  • die Verknüpfung von Communities mit Projekten,
  • der Zugriff auf Dateien in IBM Connections aus ProjExec heraus,
  • das Anlegen von Aktivitäten auf Grundlage eines Projekt-Arbeitspaketes durch die Mitarbeiterin als persönliche Ebene der Projektarbeit,
  • die Integration des Projektkalenders mit der Kalenderfunktionalität eines Lotus Domino Server sowie
  • die Workplace-Integration mit Lotus Notes und nicht zuletzt der Mobile Platform Support.


Die umfassende Integration in die führende Social Business Plattform auf der Grundlage herausragender Projektmanagement-Funktionalität macht Trilog ProjExec zur führenden Social Project Management Software.

Wir freuen uns auf die lebhafte Diskussion mit Ihnen zum Thema Social Project Management
DNUG Projektgruppe - pm-community[at]dnug.de - mit:

Werner Alten, holistic-net GmbH
Hermann Ballé, TIMETOACT Software & Consulting GmbH
Dr. Olav Behrens, PAVONE AG
Gunter Friedmann, Haus Weilgut GmbH
Manfred Teske, Decisio Unternehmensberatung GmbH

 

Mehr zur Konferenz in Fulda

 

 

[EN] HR and Social Business – Kindred Spirits?

24. Oktober 2012 Posted by StefanP.

In large companies, employees and the HR department have a conflicted relationship. On the one hand, HR is a good place that deals with salaries, vacation slips and promotions. On the other, it is a bad place that tells you things you don’t want to hear, organizes appraisals, and produces time-consuming bureaucracy.

But whatever comes out of the HR department, it always affects me personally and aims in some way to relate my human qualities to my role as an employee within an organization. The primary objective of any HR department is to bring people, their roles and relationships as employees, and the aims of the organization into harmony with one another.

And this is exactly why the interests of HR correspond almost 100 percent with the aims of a social business.

The idea that social business and HR are kindred spirits therefore makes perfect sense. Indeed, on closer inspection the overlap between the two areas is so glaring that HR departments would be well advised to champion the idea of social business within their company. You could even go so far as to say that social tools should set up permanent residence in the HR department – just as the accounting department has its financial programs, distribution its CRM systems, purchasing its procurement software, and engineers their CAD applications.

An HR department adopting a social business model can create a wealth of synergies:

Attractive working environments: In view of the noticeable and ubiquitous lack of highly qualified employees, businesses everywhere are now courting Generation Y – otherwise known as digital natives. For them, the e-mail era is a distant memory; they shifted their private lives to Facebook long ago. Employers who offer an infrastructure and working culture that appeal to these lifestyles will therefore be far more attractive to this group. There is no question that this is a matter for HR.

Knowledge transfer and further training: By their very nature, social tools are the tools of knowledge management. Things like social networks, wikis, blogs, professional profiles, and bookmarks primarily serve to pass on information and assist learning. Ensuring these two processes happen as effectively as possible has always be the responsibility of HR. Social tools can provide clear advantages in this endeavor. For example, they can help transfer knowledge during employee onboarding – such as during company takeovers – or when training global workforces.

Human capital: HR is also tasked with acquiring a deep understanding of each employee’s value to the company and with making the best possible use of it. Existing tools for this seem almost prehistoric when compared to the profiling functions used in a social business. What is more, combining these functions with analysis tools makes it possible to get a much more comprehensive measure of human capital than with more conventional methods, such as twice yearly appraisals.

Change management: There is no question that implementing changes within an organization is one of the main competences of an HR department. Indeed, you could say that HR is constantly managing change. Social business offers excellent tools for this process. Plus, becoming a social business is in itself an extensive change process, which overcomes silo and departmental thinking, flattens hierarchies, creates new roles and responsibilities, and changes a company’s working culture. For this transformation to succeed, HR professionals must be involved.

Global workforce: Global interdependencies have vastly increased the complexity of administrative HR tasks. Social tools are already indispensable for managing a global workforce and for actively using knowledge spread around the world. Once again, HR is responsible for making this happen.

This list of advantages could go on and on. However, the message will prove fruitless if HR departments fail to grasp the huge opportunity that social business presents. By becoming a driving force behind the transformation to a social business, HR staff can markedly increase their own value within an organization.

HR departments already have everything they need to make this happen: an assigned role within the organization, a central position with links to all company divisions, the legal expertise, the social competences and, perhaps most importantly, a direct line to the executive floor.

If HR takes up this opportunity, it will also have to redefine its own role. Here again, the social business model and the great value it places on relationships can provide a useful guide. The HR departments of the future will no longer focus on efficiently managing people as resources. Rather, they will have to be much more concerned with helping to create networks inside and outside the organization. Human resource management is set to become human relationship management.


HR and Social Business — Kindred Spirits?

24. Oktober 2012 Posted by Stefan Pfeiffer

In large companies, employees and the HR department have a conflicted relationship. On the one hand, HR is a good place that deals with salaries, vacation slips and promotions. On the other, it is a bad place that tells you things you don’t want to hear, organizes appraisals, and produces time-consuming bureaucracy.

But whatever comes out of the HR department, it always affects me personally and aims in some way to relate my human qualities to my role as an employee within an organization. The primary objective of any HR department is to bring people, their roles and relationships as employees, and the aims of the organization into harmony with one another.

And this is exactly why the interests of HR correspond almost 100 percent with the aims of a social business.

The idea that social business and HR are kindred spirits therefore makes perfect sense. Indeed, on closer inspection the overlap between the two areas is so glaring that HR departments would be well advised to champion the idea of social business within their company. You could even go so far as to say that social tools should set up permanent residence in the HR department – just as the accounting department has its financial programs, distribution its CRM systems, purchasing its procurement software, and engineers their CAD applications.

An HR department adopting a social business model can create a wealth of synergies:

Attractive working environments: In view of the noticeable and ubiquitous lack of highly qualified employees, businesses everywhere are now courting Generation Y – otherwise known as digital natives. For them, the e-mail era is a distant memory; they shifted their private lives to Facebook long ago. Employers who offer an infrastructure and working culture that appeal to these lifestyles will therefore be far more attractive to this group. There is no question that this is a matter for HR. 

Knowledge transfer and further training: By their very nature, social tools are the tools of knowledge management. Things like social networks, wikis, blogs, professional profiles, and bookmarks primarily serve to pass on information and assist learning. Ensuring these two processes happen as effectively as possible has always be the responsibility of HR. Social tools can provide clear advantages in this endeavor. For example, they can help transfer knowledge during employee onboarding – such as during company takeovers – or when training global workforces. 

Human capital: HR is also tasked with acquiring a deep understanding of each employee’s value to the company and with making the best possible use of it. Existing tools for this seem almost prehistoric when compared to the profiling functions used in a social business. What is more, combining these functions with analysis tools makes it possible to get a much more comprehensive measure of human capital than with more conventional methods, such as twice yearly appraisals.

Change management: There is no question that implementing changes within an organization is one of the main competences of an HR department. Indeed, you could say that HR is constantly managing change. Social business offers excellent tools for this process. Plus, becoming a social business is in itself an extensive change process, which overcomes silo and departmental thinking, flattens hierarchies, creates new roles and responsibilities, and changes a company’s working culture. For this transformation to succeed, HR professionals must be involved.

Global workforce: Global interdependencies have vastly increased the complexity of administrative HR tasks. Social tools are already indispensable for managing a global workforce and for actively using knowledge spread around the world. Once again, HR is responsible for making this happen.

This list of advantages could go on and on. However, the message will prove fruitless if HR departments fail to grasp the huge opportunity that social business presents. By becoming a driving force behind the transformation to a social business, HR staff can markedly increase their own value within an organization.

HR departments already have everything they need to make this happen: an assigned role within the organization, a central position with links to all company divisions, the legal expertise, the social competences and, perhaps most importantly, a direct line to the executive floor.

If HR takes up this opportunity, it will also have to redefine its own role. Here again, the social business model and the great value it places on relationships can provide a useful guide. The HR departments of the future will no longer focus on efficiently managing people as resources. Rather, they will have to be much more concerned with helping to create networks inside and outside the organization. Human resource management is set to become human relationship management.

IBM is Sponsor of the HR Tech Europe taking place Oct. 25 & 26 in Amsterdam. These are some thoughts around HR and Social Business.

Quick-n-Dirty: Use your own Factory classes in XPages(2) – The VirtualPageTransformer

24. Oktober 2012 Posted by Sven Hasselbach

While playing a little bit with core XPages functionality I found the interesting VirtualPageTransformer interface. With this interface it is possible to implement “virtual” XPages, and this allows to do something which can be described like an url mapping (the $$OpenDominoDocument.xsp url for example was implemented this way).

To do create your own transformations you have to do the following:

1. Read the first article about using Factory classes in XPages and create the required /WEB_INF/com.ibm.xsp.factories.properties file in your database

2. In this file add a new entry for the page transformer class to use:

PageTransformer=ch.hasselba.factory.PageTransformer

You can choose every key name you want for the factory. The class will be identified from the XPages runtime by the implemented interface com.ibm.xsp.page.VirtualPageTransformer.

3. Create a java class which implements this interface:

package ch.hasselba.factory;

import com.ibm.xsp.page.VirtualPageTransformer;
import com.ibm.xsp.FacesExceptionEx;
import javax.faces.context.FacesContext;

public class PageTransformer implements VirtualPageTransformer {

    public boolean isVirtualPage(FacesContext fc, String pStr) {
        return (pStr.indexOf("$$VirtualPage$$") > (-1));
    }

    public String transformPageName(FacesContext fc, String pStr) {
        try {
            return "/Test.xsp";
        } catch (Exception e) {
            throw new FacesExceptionEx("Error! " + e.getMessage());
        }
    }
}

This adds the “virtual” page handler “$$VirtualPage$$” to your database.

This means that every request to your  database is checked if the keyword is contained in the url. For this test, the method isVirtualPage is called with the current url as parameter. If this method returns true, the method transformPageName is called; this method must return a string which identifies the XPage to use. In this case, it is the XPage “Test.xsp

If you open this URL…

http://localhost/Factories.nsf/$$VirtualPage$$.xsp/blahblahblah/blubb/blubb/?etc=etc

… the XPage “Test.xsp” is rendered instead.

You can add as much VirtualPageTransformers you want to a database.

P.S. Keep in mind that this article has been posted in the “Quick-n-Dirty” category.

Probleme mit dem Zugriff auf den eigenen Host

24. Oktober 2012 Posted by Ralf Petter

Zur Eröffnung eines sockets für den Zugriff auf den Localhost habe ich bisher immer die Methode getLocalHost() der InetAddress Klasse verwendet.
Socket socket=new Socket(InetAddress.getLocalHost(),5146);
PrintWriter out = new PrintWriter(socket.getOutputStream(), true);
BufferedReader in = new BufferedReader( new inputStreamReader(socket.getInputStream()));
out.println("Test");
parameter=in.readLine();

Bisher hat das auch immer relativ gut funktioniert, bis der Code auf einem Client gelaufen ist der den Cisco VPN Client verwendet hat. Sobald ein Cryptotunnel aufgebaut wurde, wird die lokale Adresse des Clients auf eine Adresse aus dem VPN Pool umgestellt und bei Ausführung des oben genannten Codes kommt es zu keiner Verbindung mehr, sondern es kommt ein Timeout. Der Grund ist, dass getLocalHost() nicht etwa das loopback (127.0.0.1) Interface zurück gibt, sondern die IP Adresse der Netzwerkkarte. Diese wechselt nach VPN Einwahl und schon verbindet man sich mit der falschen Adresse. Eine einfache Möglichkeit das Problem zu lösen ist folgenden Code zu verwenden.
Socket socket=new Socket(InetAddress.getByName("localhost"),5146);
PrintWriter out = new PrintWriter(socket.getOutputStream(), true);
BufferedReader in = new BufferedReader( new InputStreamReader(socket.getInputStream()));
out.println("Test");
parameter=in.readLine();
Das bietet aber noch immer die Gefahr das in der Hostsdatei localhost nicht richtig definiert ist und es dann wieder zu Problemen kommt. Nach einiger Recherche in der Dokumentation der Klasse Intnetadress habe ich dann den richtigen Weg gefunden. Die Methode getByName() darf man mit einem null Wert aufrufen und dann gibt sie automatisch und immer das loopback interface zurück.
Socket socket=new Socket(InetAddress.getByName(null),5146);
PrintWriter out = new PrintWriter(socket.getOutputStream(), true);
BufferedReader in = new BufferedReader( new InputStreamReader(socket.getInputStream()));
out.println("Test");
parameter=in.readLine();

IBM’s Journey to Becoming a Social Business

24. Oktober 2012 Posted by Lars Basche

Here's a nice case study about IBM and the company's own way to becoming a Social Business. IBM is talking about Social Business and the benefits for organisations since more than three years now. But the company itself has started this Social Business journey even a couple of years before (also probably before they even thought about a "Social Business" in that context themselves...).

This case study by Rowan Hetherington from IBM Australia describes this journey:

1. A driver of innovation: Mobile offices and the need for collaboration

2. Developing tools for social networking

3. The journey

4. Social Business at IBM today

5. IBM Connections

6. IBMs Social Business statistics (as at September 2012)

7. Business impacts

 

 

Quick-n-Dirty: Disable Validation for FileDownload control

24. Oktober 2012 Posted by Sven Hasselbach

If you are using the file download control,  you sooner or later want to allow your users to delete an existing file. But if you have some required fields on your XPage, a deletion is not possible because the validation is always fired before the attachment is removed.

To disable to validation you can use this little SSJS snippet which sets the “disableValidators” property for all events of the UIFileDownload control. Just add the following code to the beforeRenderResponse event of your XPage and change the id of the component to fit your requirements.

<xp:this.beforeRenderResponse>
   <![CDATA[#{javascript:
      /***
       * disable validation for UIFileDownload control
       * 
       * @param UIFileDownload component
       * @author Sven Hasselbach
       * @category SSJS
       * @category UI
       * @version 0.2
       */
      function disableFileDownloadValidation( fDownload:com.ibm.xsp.component.UIFileDownload ){
         if( fDownload === null )
            return;

         rekDisableFileDownloadValidation( fDownload );
      }

      function rekDisableFileDownloadValidation( component:javax.faces.component.UIOutput ){
         try{
            var children:java.util.List = component.getChildren();
            var it:java.util.Iterator = children.iterator();
            var curChild:javax.faces.component.UIOutput;

            while( it.hasNext() ){
               curChild = it.next();
               if( typeof( curChild ) === 'com.ibm.xsp.component.xp.XspEventHandler' )
                  curChild.setDisableValidators( true );

               rekDisableFileDownloadValidation( curChild );
            }
         }catch(e){}    
      }

      disableFileDownloadValidation( getComponent( 'fileDownload1' ) );
   }]]>
</xp:this.beforeRenderResponse>

P.S. Keep in mind that this article has been posted in the “Quick-n-Dirty” category.

Interview zum Thema "Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA)"

23. Oktober 2012 Posted by Thomas Wedel

 
ThW:   Im Februar 2012 konkretisierte die US-Steuerbehörde mit der Veröffentlichung der Proposed Regulation seine komplexen Regelungen des Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA). Was kommt da auf die Unternehmen zu?
 
Dirk Pohla:  FATCA ist eine Ausweitung der Meldepflicht an die US-amerikanische Steuerbehörde IRS, die etwaige Steuerschlupflöcher schließen soll. Im Klartext bedeutet das: Von Juli 2013 an sind global alle Finanzinstitute dazu verpflichtet, Konten von US-steuerpflichtigen Personen zu identifizieren und Daten zu Konten und Zahlungen an die IRS zu übermitteln. Werden die Vorgaben des FATCA nicht erfüllt, fällt eine 30-prozentige Strafsteuer auf alle Zahlungen, die auf einen US-Vermögenswert zurückzuführen sind, an. Die Umsetzung der FATCA-Anforderungen erfordert eine umfassende Anpassung der Geschäftsprozesse sowie der unterstützenden IT, die deutsche Geldinstitute vor große Herausforderungen stellt.
 
ThW: Welche konkreten Anforderungen sind damit verbunden? 
 
Dirk Pohla:  Die Anforderungen beziehen sich auf verschiedene Bereiche: Beim Kunden-Screening werden Konteninhaber gemäß definierter Regeln auf FATCA-Relevanz geprüft. Per Transaktions-Screening wird überprüft, ob die jeweilige Zahlung aus einer US-Quelle stammt und an nicht-kooperative FATCA-relevante Kunden geht. In einem solchen Fall muss die Bank die Steuern einbehalten und an die IRS beziehungsweise die deutschen Steuerbehörden abführen. Im dritten Block, dem Reporting, muss die Bank ihre US-steuerpflichtigen Kunden an die Behörden melden. Hierfür muss zunächst die Zustimmung des Kunden eingeholt werden. Die FATCA Regeln sind dann natürlich auch auf Neukundenprozesse anzuwenden.
 
ThW:  Wie kann BPM den Geldinstituten helfen, dieses neue Regelwerk möglichst wirtschaftlich und verlässlich umzusetzen?
 
Dirk Pohla: Hier helfen sowohl BPM-, als auch ODM-Lösungen: der IBM WebSphere Operational Decision Manager und der IBM Business Process Manager. Erstere ist für das Regelmanagement zuständig, bildet also die FATCA-Prüfkriterien ab. Je nach Ergebnis stößt dann die zweite Software die entsprechenden Geschäftsprozesse an. Beim Screening zum Beispiel werden die Kunden- und Kontendaten anhand eines Prüfalgorithmus in „FATCA-relevant", „FATCA-verdächtig" und „nicht FATCA-relevant" eingeteilt.  Die herausgefilterten Informationen werden in einer FATCA-Datenbank abgelegt und zu Cases aufbereitet, die durch Sachbearbeiter weiterbearbeitet werden können. Ist ein Kontoinhaber als „FATCA-relevant" oder „FATCA-verdächtig" klassifiziert, so löst die Software einen umfassenden Prozess aus: Der Kundenberater der Bank wird informiert, dieser tritt mit dem Kontoinhaber in Kontakt -- kurz gesagt, der Prozess wird teilautomatisiert und damit wirtschaftlich -- abgewickelt. 

Studie: Der Wunsch nach mehr Kundennähe treibt Big Data-Projekte

23. Oktober 2012 Posted by IBM Press Releases - All Topics - Germany

Die neue Studie „Analytics: Big Data in der Praxis“ liefert eine Momentaufnahme, wie Unternehmen weltweit mit dem Thema Big Data umgehen.

Frisch veröffentlicht: Neuer IBM Trainingskatalog 2013

23. Oktober 2012 Posted by IBM Press Releases - All Topics - Germany

IBM Training hat einen neuen Katalog für das Jahr 2013 mit umfassenden IT-Ausbildungsangeboten veröffentlicht.

Erste Schritte und Handwerkszeug für Social Media: Podcast-Workshop am Vortag der DNUG Konferenz in Fulda

23. Oktober 2012 Posted by Roswitha Boldt

 

Erste Schritte in die Welt des Podcastings

Der halbtägige Praxisworkshop ist eine gute Gelegenheit, um Wissen und Fertigkeiten im Umfeld von Social Media eine neue Komponente hinzuzufügen. Die Teilnehmer erfahren, wie Podcasts funktionieren, was man damit erreichen kann und wie einfach ein pragmatischer Einstieg in die Welt des Podcasting ist.

Im Laufe des Workshops werden sowohl theoretisches Hintergrundwissen als auch praktische Erfahrungen vermittelt.
Der Workshop wird von Arnd Layer, IBM, und Tim Pritlove, einem Urgestein der deutschen Podcast-Szene, geleitet.


Zielguppe
Teilnehmen kann jeder, der ein Interesse daran hat, selbst als Podcaster aktiv zu werden.

Erwartete Vorkenntnisse
Abgesehen von einem grundsätzlichen Verständnis des Umgangs mit Computern sind keine technischen Kenntnisse notwendig.

 

Anmeldung
 

Internationale Sonderzeichen in Lotus Notes plugins

22. Oktober 2012 Posted by Ralf Petter

Wenn man in seinem Javacode internationale Sonderzeichen wie z.B. Umlaute in String Literalen verwendet, kann es passieren dass nach dem Export des Plugins die Sonderzeichen falsch angezeigt werden. Dies passiert dadurch, dass beim Kompilieren von Plugins standardmäßig nicht UTF-8 sondern ein nicht Unicode fähiger Characterset verwendet wird. Man kann das Problem einfach lösen, in dem man in die build.properties seines Plugins den Eintrag "javacDefaultEncoding.. = UTF-8" ergänzt.

Eine Beispiel "build.properties" Datei sieht dann folgendermaßen aus:

source.. = src/
output.. = bin/
javacDefaultEncoding.. = UTF-8
bin.includes = META-INF/,\
               .,\
               plugin.xml,\
               icons/


Dann sollte String Literale in diesem Plugin richtig angezeigt werden.

IBM Social Business Solutions – What Belongs Together is now Growing Together: the E-mail and Facebook Generations

22. Oktober 2012 Posted by Stefan Pfeiffer

Although there is meanwhile high acceptance of social software, it’s not unusual to come up against skepticism – people are just much more familiar with using email. They don’t want to use social software; they want their information to go to their local mail address – and not outside the inbox – and to store it in their own folders. In contrast, advocates of social software say that Generation Y (a.k.a. digital natives) is particularly keen to use Facebook-style communication functions in the workplace. They’ve already shifted away from e-mail in their private lives and hang out on Facebook instead, sending messages or chatting in real time there. And of course they’re happiest if they can do it on their smartphone or tablet. If you want to be an attractive employer and win young talent for your business, you have to be prepared to introduce the forms of communication young people use in their private lives to the workplace.

But what does the demographic reality actually look like? Let us take Germany as an example. The TNS Infratest study entitled Die Digitale Gesellschaft 2011 (The Digital Society in 2011) analyzed the segmentation of Germany’s digital society:

According to the study, it looks like the digital society is a divided one. On the one hand we have the Digital Outsiders and Casual Users. They either haven’t yet entered the world of social media, or they only visit it sporadically. The study found that these two user types make up a hefty 52% of the society. Then on the other hand we have the Business Users, Trend Users, Digital Pros and Digital Avant-garde. The Trends, Pros and Avant-gardes are highly active in social networks and often access them on mobile devices.

Both user types – that is, the e-mail generation and the Facebook generation – come into contact in the workplace. This means there is a generation gap to bridge, as companies will benefit if they can get the two sides working together as closely and as efficiently as possible. The latest product developments from IBM have put it in an ideal position to address this situation. IBM Connections is a kind of “Facebook for business” and the ideal working environment for digital natives. It includes all the key features that are already part of the social media world (not just Facebook). There are profiles like on Facebook and LinkedIn, Delicious-style bookmarks, wikis, blogs, communities and much more – all on a single, integrated platform.

IBM Connections V4.0 recently launched with a new addition: Connections Mail. This allows the Facebook generation to manage their e-mails in Connections without leaving the system – just like they can in other social networks. Of course, this doesn’t involve introducing a brand-new e-mail system. Instead, IBM integrates the popular business mail solutions Lotus Notes and Microsoft Exchange. That means it builds on existing environments and gives Exchange users the powerful social platform they have been looking for. IBM Connections thus becomes the central working environment where staff can carry out the majority of their day-to-day tasks.

This capability is also supported by the new Activity Streams, which also launched with IBM Connections V4.0. Activity Streams display the information and processes that are relevant to a given employee.

This doesn’t just apply to information and events from IBM Connections. It’s possible to integrate results from all systems that support the Activity Streams standard. Alongside the systems we’re familiar with from our private use of Web 2.0, these include – and this is crucial for a business platform like IBM Connections – enterprise applications from SAP, Microsoft and other professional software providers.

At first glance, Activity Streams might look like a Facebook wall, or the flow of information that LinkedIn users receive. But it’s actually capable of far more. As well as integrating company applications, an Activity Stream allows users to directly process the results flowing into it. For instance, you can authorize an SAP expense claim in an Activity Stream without having to switch to SAP itself. IBM Connections gives businesses a central working environment that can directly integrate results from other systems.

The system therefore appeals to members of the Facebook generation by reproducing their networked approach to working. But that’s not the only thing the digital natives are looking for. Rather than be chained to their desk and desktop computer all day, they want their professional lives to mirror their private ones – where they can read, share and manage information on their smartphones and tablets while on the go. IBM has responded to this demand and has made IBM Connections available on all major mobile platforms. It has just launched Version 4.0 of the app, which lets users run Activity Streams on iPhones, iPads and Android devices. Other platforms are in the pipeline.

All that should make the Facebook generation happy. But IBM has also never forgotten the e-mail generation – even the third versions of IBM Connections integrated Microsoft tools and Lotus Notes. Particularly worthy of mention is the software’s full support of tools like Microsoft Outlook, Office, SharePoint and Windows Explorer. This – as well as the support for all major mobile systems – shows that IBM is committed to openness and that it has responded to the desire, expressed by many Microsoft users, to work “socially”. IBM’s integrations fulfill this wish, and have thus helped it succeed – beyond the usual discussions of Exchange versus Notes – with customers who use Microsoft products. CIOs like Kurt De Ruwe of Bayer Material Science have good reason for stressing that social software is important for much more than just file sharing.

Meanwhile, work on integrating Notes and IBM Connections is continuing. The next version of Notes, the Social Edition, will significantly expand on the existing integration points. For instance, Activity Streams will be available. This means that users who prefer to work in the Notes environment will have the same access as Connections users to the functions mentioned above. They will be able to follow and directly process results in the Streams. With the Social Edition, IBM is sending a clear signal to existing Notes customers that it is dedicated to continually developing and improving the platform.

IBM Connections V4.0 and the upcoming Notes Social Edition build a bridge between the Facebook and e-mail generations by letting them collaborate without having to leave their preferred environment. Those who have to work together are growing together. On the go, users can choose any mobile device and will have access to e-mail and all the important collaborative functions – from social networking and Activity Streams to chatting and online meetings. Users who work with Microsoft tools also won’t be left out in the cold. IBM remains dedicated to openness in this area. By integrating social functions into Microsoft tools, it is providing a targeted response to the needs of customers who do not currently use IBM software. We are now no longer concerned with discussions of e-mail platforms. We have entered a “social era” where social business is the order of the day, and IBM is setting the pace – as Experton analyst Axel Oppermann put it so well and as IDC market figures show.

[EN] Social Business – What Belongs Together is now Growing Together: The E-mail and Facebook Generations

22. Oktober 2012 Posted by StefanP.

Although there is meanwhile high acceptance of social software, it’s not unusual to come up against skepticism – people are just much more familiar with using email. They don’t want to use social software; they want their information to go to their local mail address – and not outside the inbox – and to store it in their own folders. In contrast, advocates of social software say that Generation Y (a.k.a. digital natives) is particularly keen to use Facebook-style communication functions in the workplace. They’ve already shifted away from e-mail in their private lives and hang out on Facebook instead, sending messages or chatting in real time there. And of course they’re happiest if they can do it on their smartphone or tablet. If you want to be an attractive employer and win young talent for your business, you have to be prepared to introduce the forms of communication young people use in their private lives to the workplace.

But what does the demographic reality actually look like? Let us take Germany as an example. The TNS Infratest study entitled Die Digitale Gesellschaft 2011 (The Digital Society in 2011) analyzed the segmentation of Germany’s digital society:

According to the study, it looks like the digital society is a divided one. On the one hand we have the Digital Outsiders and Casual Users. They either haven’t yet entered the world of social media, or they only visit it sporadically. The study found that these two user types make up a hefty 52% of the society. Then on the other hand we have the Business Users, Trend Users, Digital Pros and Digital Avant-garde. The Trends, Pros and Avant-gardes are highly active in social networks and often access them on mobile devices.

Both user types – that is, the e-mail generation and the Facebook generation – come into contact in the workplace. This means there is a generation gap to bridge, as companies will benefit if they can get the two sides working together as closely and as efficiently as possible. The latest product developments from IBM have put it in an ideal position to address this situation. IBM Connections is a kind of “Facebook for business” and the ideal working environment for digital natives. It includes all the key features that are already part of the social media world (not just Facebook). There are profiles like on Facebook and LinkedIn, Delicious-style bookmarks, wikis, blogs, communities and much more – all on a single, integrated platform.

IBM Connections V4.0 recently launched with a new addition: Connections Mail. This allows the Facebook generation to manage their e-mails in Connections without leaving the system – just like they can in other social networks. Of course, this doesn’t involve introducing a brand-new e-mail system. Instead, IBM integrates the popular business mail solutions Lotus Notes and Microsoft Exchange. That means it builds on existing environments and gives Exchange users the powerful social platform they have been looking for. IBM Connections thus becomes the central working environment where staff can carry out the majority of their day-to-day tasks.

This capability is also supported by the new Activity Streams, which also launched with IBM Connections V4.0. Activity Streams display the information and processes that are relevant to a given employee.

This doesn’t just apply to information and events from IBM Connections. It’s possible to integrate results from all systems that support the Activity Streams standard. Alongside the systems we’re familiar with from our private use of Web 2.0, these include – and this is crucial for a business platform like IBM Connections – enterprise applications from SAP, Microsoft and other professional software providers.

At first glance, Activity Streams might look like a Facebook wall, or the flow of information that LinkedIn users receive. But it’s actually capable of far more. As well as integrating company applications, an Activity Stream allows users to directly process the results flowing into it. For instance, you can authorize an SAP expense claim in an Activity Stream without having to switch to SAP itself. IBM Connections gives businesses a central working environment that can directly integrate results from other systems.

The system therefore appeals to members of the Facebook generation by reproducing their networked approach to working. But that’s not the only thing the digital natives are looking for. Rather than be chained to their desk and desktop computer all day, they want their professional lives to mirror their private ones – where they can read, share and manage information on their smartphones and tablets while on the go. IBM has responded to this demand and has made IBM Connections available on all major mobile platforms. It has just launched Version 4.0 of the app, which lets users run Activity Streams on iPhones, iPads and Android devices. Other platforms are in the pipeline.

All that should make the Facebook generation happy. But IBM has also never forgotten the e-mail generation – even the third versions of IBM Connections integrated Microsoft tools and Lotus Notes. Particularly worthy of mention is the software’s full support of tools like Microsoft Outlook, Office, SharePoint and Windows Explorer. This – as well as the support for all major mobile systems – shows that IBM is committed to openness and that it has responded to the desire, expressed by many Microsoft users, to work “socially”. IBM’s integrations fulfill this wish, and have thus helped it succeed – beyond the usual discussions of Exchange versus Notes – with customers who use Microsoft products. CIOs like Kurt De Ruwe of Bayer Material Science have good reason for stressing that social software is important for much more than just file sharing.

Meanwhile, work on integrating Notes and IBM Connections is continuing. The next version of Notes, the Social Edition, will significantly expand on the existing integration points. For instance, Activity Streams will be available. This means that users who prefer to work in the Notes environment will have the same access as Connections users to the functions mentioned above. They will be able to follow and directly process results in the Streams. With the Social Edition, IBM is sending a clear signal to existing Notes customers that it is dedicated to continually developing and improving the platform.

IBM Connections V4.0 and the upcoming Notes Social Edition build a bridge between the Facebook and e-mail generations by letting them collaborate without having to leave their preferred environment. Those who have to work together are growing together. On the go, users can choose any mobile device and will have access to e-mail and all the important collaborative functions – from social networking and Activity Streams to chatting and online meetings. Users who work with Microsoft tools also won’t be left out in the cold. IBM remains dedicated to openness in this area. By integrating social functions into Microsoft tools, it is providing a targeted response to the needs of customers who do not currently use IBM software. We are now no longer concerned with discussions of e-mail platforms. We have entered a “social era” where social business is the order of the day, and IBM is setting the pace – as Experton analyst Axel Oppermann put it so well and as IDC market figures show.