Lotus Notes Email, Calendaring and
Instant Messaging
The University's centrally supported and
delivered communications tools are about to change.
A number of factors are driving this new approach:
- York's Information Technology strategy, a key element
of which is to leverage technology to enhance the
communication and collaboration capabilities of students,
faculty and staff
- A growing demand for an integrated email and calendaring
tool which also contains general "productivity"
tools (such as to do lists)
- The increasing need to accommodate PDA (Palm, Blackberry,
etc.) integration with email and calendaring functions
- The potential of instant messaging as a university-wide
tool and the need to establish a standard.
Thus, in 2003 York issued an RFI to gain
information on current options and emerging trends in
the marketplace. Based in part on this information,
but also in large part to leverage existing University
investment and expertise, the decision has been made
to provide central licensing and support for Lotus Notes
calendaring and messaging.
Why Lotus Notes?
Lotus Notes is one of two dominant applications
already in use at the University. There are several
thousand existing Notes users at York (in Osgoode, Schulich,
Glendon and Atkinson), and the university can leverage
considerable internal technical expertise for this product.
Notes offers flexible client support and good platform
coverage, and the product direction aligns well with
York's technology direction. Lotus Notes can deliver
significantly improved functionality in calendaring
and associated productivity tools, greater standardization
with lower support costs and, as the project proceeds,
a common base of knowledge for users.
This initiative will replace Synchronize
calendaring which has been in use at York for many years.
This means that faculty members who are currently using
Synchronize to meet their calendaring requirements will
need to transition to the Lotus Notes calendaring product
as Sychronize is phased out (see implementation, below).
Supported services
Lotus Notes will become the only supported
tool for calendaring, integrated email/calendaring and
instant messaging for faculty and staff, and license
costs for the service will be supported centrally.
Even so, while many faculty will undoubtedly
choose to take advantage of the email and instant messaging
capabilities which will be part of Lotus Notes, standards-based
IMAP email (such as Netscape) will remain as a supported
service, primarily for students but also for staff and
faculty who need or wish to use only email.
Notes Implementation
Lotus Notes email, calendaring and instant
messaging will be implemented in phases, with the first
phase being startup and testing, planning and design,
followed by implementation (this phase will include
training and any necessary data conversion). The roll
out of Lotus Notes will proceed in phases through 2004
and into 2005, in concert with CNS and local IT support
teams.
The instant messaging capabilities of
Lotus Notes will eventually be made available for all
students.
A quick preview
York's Lotus Notes application has a series
of pages accessible by tabs along the top of the window:
a Welcome page, Inbox page, Calendar page and To Do
page. The Welcome screen shows your recent messages,
today's appointments and items to do.
Welcome screen
Instant Messaging
Lotus Notes will also have an instant messaging
feature which allows you to view and manage your online
status (available, away, do not disturb, etc.), initiate
chat sessions, and maintain an Instant Messaging Contact
List.
Lotus Domino Web Access
For web based access to your email, you will be
able to use Lotus Domino Web Access, which provides
similar functionality as the Lotus Notes Client.
Questions?
Questions about the Lotus Notes project
may be directed to notes@yorku.ca.
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