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Tune
A live stream of the OGS is available, check out our full live blogging schedule for Lotusphere here.
In
Don’t get me wrong Installing Traveler on your Android phone is a rather simple process, you log on to your company’s Traveler server from your device, select the option to configure your Android Device, which downloads the Lotus Installer, which installs the components of Traveler. The Installer also provides a mechanism to provide updates to the Traveler client as they become available. So what is wrong with this? (should this sound at all complicated to anyone, I assure you it is not, and it is very consistent with the process to install many Android applications from the Android Market)
First in order to install an application from a source other then the Android Market, the “Unknown sources†option must be manually checked on the device:
Second, if you read the announcements carefully there is this little nugget
“AT&T: Lotus Notes Traveler for Android installs and run well on all Android devices, with the exception of Android devices from AT&T, due to an AT&T policy decision that supports the installation of applications only from the Android Marketplace. AT&T is planning to resolve this issue in early 2011.â€
Yep that’s right AT&T currently does not offer the option to allow “Unknown sources†so Traveler can not be used by anyone who has an Android phone from AT&T.
Both of these issues could be easily solved by distributing the Traveler client via the Android Market, I can not understand why this is not being done. While you need to be licensed to use Traveler, with out a server I am not sure what one would actually do with the client, so I don’t see the downside of having it available free in the Market. In the iOS world IBM Lotus Notes Traveler Companion which adds support for encrypted mail in iPhone and iPad is freely available in the App Store. Why would you treat Android differently. Also a Lotus Software presence in the Android Market would be a good thing, since they have virtually none today
Yes there are a few Lotus related applications, but nothing from IBM.
So why not put the Traveler client in the Android market, I can not see the downside, but I do see ease of use, and a real presence for Lotus in the Android Market as a huge upside.
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