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Document Collaboration: The New Tech Battle Ground

Email has proven to be the first killer app for cloud computing, and today businesses can choose to rent email as a service from IBM, Microsoft, Google, Oracle, Cisco, or numerous smaller vendors. It is the first step in a larger shift in which, over the next decade, much of the computing and data storage that takes place in corporate data centers will migrate to the cloud. Now that our emails are “up there”, our documents are next, and vendors are battling to provide the leading cloud-based solution for documents because, let’s face it, if you manage a company’s email and their documents, you have them locked in.

However, online storage is only part of the value that business users want from the cloud when it comes to their documents. They also want to be able to collaborate with other users, and they don’t want to be forced to use a different office productivity suite. Oh – they also expect their files and those files belonging to their collaborators to render perfectly regardless of the format the file was created in. At eXpresso, we know this because we’ve been engaged with customers that have told us these things for the past 4 years.

With budgets constantly scrutinized, the software giants and not-so-giants who are contending for the title of Collaboration King will need to accommodate a world where their users need to collaborate with something other thanMicrosoft Office. That’s just a fact. They will need to support the complex fabric that is today’s computing landscape. Every collaborative interaction that involves documents will potentially involve a different blend of operating systems, office productivity suites, file formats, and browsers.

eXpresso has been working tirelessly to prove that such a world is possible, and today we have a working prototype ready to show to the world. (See Figure 1)

Figure 1

mac-windows-user-collaboration 

Notice that these two users have completely different computer environments. I should also add that this prototype makes use of IBM LotusLive as the collaboration backbone and that eXpresso will be available to all LotusLive users in the near future. What’s more, it shows the hybrid model that we believe in at eXpresso, where the desktop productivity resources of MS Office or Lotus Symphony are leveraged by our web-based document collaboration framework. The benefit of this is that each user gets to view or edit the file with their suite of choice, and the file’s original format is preserved with full fidelity.

eXpresso’s methodology and framework allows us to plug into almost any collaboration backbone and leverage almost any desktop productivity suite. This allows our users to keep using the software that they choose, while being able to collaborate with others in real-time without the drawbacks of Google Docs or the manual check-in/check-out model that is prevalent throughout the collaboration backbones available today.

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