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IBM Now Offering Microsoft Customers Lotus Symphony Software with Popular Widgets


ARMONK, N.Y. - 10 Sep 2009: IBM (NYSE:IBM) is now offering Microsoft customers free of charge Lotus Symphony software that is compatible with Microsoft Office formats and supports a wide range of widgets which extend the functionality of the software. IBM and a variety of third parties -- including independent software vendors, individual developers, customers and IBM business partners -- are writing a variety of widgets to take advantage of this new feature.

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Popularized by consumer Web sites and third parties, widgets allow Symphony users to tap into everything from Web-based Google Gadgets, Lotus Sametime, Lotus Quickr, Lotus Connections and popular wikis, to Microsoft SharePoint and MSN, all from within Symphony. Users can easily drag-and-drop widgets directly into Lotus Symphony, distinguishing it from static office productivity tools such as Microsoft Word. This drag-and-drop feature also makes Symphony stand out from other Microsoft Office alternatives, simplifying the use and installation of widgets with just a single click. 

Widgets extend Symphony's capabilities through two commonly-accepted open standards -- Eclipse and Java. Due to their cross-platform nature, Symphony widgets are developed once and run across Symphony's document, presentation and spreadsheet applications. This lowers the cost to bring new capabilities to end users. In contrast, new applications must be built separately for Microsoft Word, Microsoft Office and Microsoft PowerPoint. 

IBM Lotus Symphony leads a growing class of Microsoft Office alternatives, with millions of copies in circulation. The first full version of Symphony appeared on June 3, 2008. 

"Today there are more innovative, open alternatives such as Symphony that compare favorably to Microsoft Office," said Bob Picciano, general manager, IBM Lotus Software. "Symphony's open collaboration model can offer businesses limitless options -- cost-effectively -- at a time when many organizations are increasingly concerned about investing in Microsoft Office." 

Among the more popular widgets supported for Symphony are cloud-based Google Gadgets, such as the Currency Converter Gadget which shows equivalent monetary values; the Unit Converter Gadget, which translates units of measurement; and the Wikipedia Gadget, which provides instant access to information on Wikipedia. These widgets, and many others, are accessible directly from within Symphony. 

IBM is also debuting new widgets designed to extend Symphony from office productivity to interactive collaboration. They include: 

Consumers, students, businesses, governments, universities and non-profit organizations around the world have saved many millions of dollars using IBM Lotus Symphony. While Symphony is free of charge to download and use by consumers and organizations, large businesses can opt to buy contracts for help desk support for a flat fee of just over $26,000 per year -- which still represents a significant savings over a Microsoft Office licensing agreement. Depending upon the environment, Lotus Symphony could save a company millions of dollars in software license fees or software renewal fees.  

It the most recent version, Lotus Symphony 1.3, enhancements were added such as support for Microsoft Office 2007 file formats. This allows most Office users to easily access and transfer company information into Symphony or work seamlessly with a Microsoft user. Symphony also has DataPilot (also known as pivot table) improvements that allow people to easily drill down and analyze data. In addition, new Mail merge and envelope printing enhancements will appeal to organizations that need cost-effective ways to correspond with customers. 

Lotus Symphony is also packaged with Lotus Notes and Lotus Foundations with support already included, at no extra charge. Symphony is available on a wide range of devices and platforms, including Apple Macintosh, Microsoft Windows, Ubuntu Linux, Red Hat Linux and Suse Linux. 

IBM Lotus Symphony software provides word processing documents, spreadsheets and presentations -- effectively replacing Microsoft Word, Microsoft Excel and Microsoft Powerpoint. It can be downloaded free of charge at http://symphony.lotus.com/software/lotus/symphony/home.nsf/home 

    


Contact(s) information

Mike Azzi
IBM Media Relations
914-766-1561
azzi@us.ibm.com

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