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Here begins the article, I have never used the IBM Workplace so feel free to correct and change it as you like! Zeth
I updated the information regarding IBM Workplace. I work on the IBM Workplace team. (Pouliopoulos)
With all respect to Pouliopoulos, I think the article is going to get hammered for being a little too much like reading a press release. It's a good start, but it's somewhat vague and light on detail. How is the content going to be delivered to the clients? Via a browser? Standalone application? Will all browsers be supported or just some, if that's the delivery mechanism? At what stage in the development process is it -- are we talking about vaporware here, or is there a working prototype system actually in existence? These are the sorts of questions readers want answers to, and which they can't get by just skimming IBM's site themselves. -- Kadin2048 22:20, 8 December 2005 (UTC)
"IBM Workplace is a family of products and technologies from IBM for creating adaptive, unified, secure work environments that can be customized based on users' unique roles and/or skill levels in the organization." Yes, but what is it?
Operating systems?
editYou've got a good working outline for an important article. But it would be good to work in what operating system or systems are supported by which components. That is actually the information I am trying to track down. Marbux 04:07, 2 August 2006 (UTC)
Dont try to sell lads!
editI really don't like this article. It seems to and sell the product rather than document it. This is blatantly obvious at the end of the article. It finishes off on a finale describing how it can reduce costs for IT etc. I worked in IBM before as a developer for workplace and I know how desperate you guys are to sell it (I say you guys because I'm sure the people who wrote this work for or have a vested interest in IBM). Dumb it down, forget the benefits and document its features objectively.