This is interesting. Apparently, IBM has declared war on Microsoft and is producing software that will run on Linux – and is about to release another version of that software to run on Ubuntu Linux. IBM's Symphony office suite software is – get this – free.
IBM has increased support for Linux with the introduction of versions of its Lotus Notes collaboration suite and Symphony productivity tools built to run on the open source OS — and it's hoping the effort will help unseat Microsoft as the king of desktop software.
The company this week said it plans to ship what it calls its "Open Collaboration Client," made up of Lotus Notes 8 and Symphony, for Canonical's popular Ubuntu Linux distribution.Lotus Notes 8 includes e-mail, calendaring, and contact management modules, while Symphony — available as a free download — features word processing, spreadsheet, and presentation applications build on the open source OpenOffice.org standard.
IBM also said this week that it's working with Red Hat to develop a version of the Open Collaboration Client for small and midsize businesses, which are increasingly a focus for IBM.
Under the plan, Red Hat will offer to its customers a version of the Red Hat Enterprise Linux Advanced Platform packaged with Lotus Notes, Symphony, and IBM's Domino messaging server.
Red Hat also will offer technical services to help resellers implement the package for customers.
IBM last year said it would offer versions of Lotus Notes and Symphony for Novell's SUSE Enterprise Linux distribution.
By porting key software to Linux, IBM is looking to give businesses one less reason to buy products from rival Microsoft — which IBM said offers "a proprietary desktop model."
I've just downloaded a copy of Symphony and am installing it on a backup computer to see what it does. Warning to IBM, though. The registration process is onerous compared to the free – and easily usable – OpenOffice product. You might want to rethink that.




Well, Crabman, what do you think about Symphony? I’ve been wondering if it’s worth it, since, as you noted, OpenOffice (which I’ve already installed) pretty much covers my “NO M$FT!” inclinations.
So far I have gotten only as far as booting it up to see if it installed. The brief look I got of it is that I kind of liked the GUI, but that is based on looking at it, not really playing with it yet. I’ve been busy the past couple of days in the real world.