Tomorrow morning I’m off for an extended weekend to the cities of cities aka. Paris, France… How sweet is that!

Tomorrow morning I’m off for an extended weekend to the cities of cities aka. Paris, France… How sweet is that!

OnTime Meeting Manager is done! When I joined IntraVision in October Meeting Manager was almost ready, but not completely. Now the product is done and out the door – kudos to the team for putting in the extra hours to get the product done and out the door.
Warning – product plug comming up… 🙂
The product is called OnTime Meeting Manager and is an extension of the Rooms and Resouces feature of Notes/Domino. Meeting Manager extends R&R by handling booking multiple rooms at once, across time zones, booking catering (coffee, tea, lunch etc.) and by giving you fine grained control over calendar invites. MM even lets you invite invitees based on geography which is nice to reduce travel. Below is a small snippet from the release newsletter.
“Managing meetings and facilities can be time consuming. It involves a number of people and processes within your organisation. OnTime Meeting Manager is your one-stop meeting organiser – your personal electronic assistant – dedicated to making the process of organising meetings quick and efficient, leaving you free to concentrate on whats central to your business.
OnTime Meeting Manager focuses on streamlining the process of making invitations, booking meeting rooms, ordering catering and reserving resources. At the same time, Management gains a clear overview of all the meetings within the organisation.”
I’m using Skype for all my conference calling (which has been a lot lately) and noticed a new status message I thought was very nice and that I haven’t noticed before. Skype now tells you if you’re talking but your microphone is muted.

It’s frightening but this link pretty much sums up my day…. A day I’ll never have back! 🙂
Screencast demoing Project “Atlantic”, the future software product integrating SAP into Lotus Notes 8 standard.
While cleaning up today I found an interesting piece of information in the Microsoft Action Pack material. It appears that the 30 day grace period of Windows Vista can be extended to 90 days by rearming the installation (you should also disable auto-activation during the installation). This is great for testing purposes.
To rearm Windows start a command-prompt with admin. privileges and run
cscript %windir%system32slmgr.vbs -rearm
The script can also be used to active Windows using the -ipk switch followed by the 25 digit activation code.
I’m continuing to improve TwitNotes and to make it a killer demo application for Notes 8. Last night I added OSGi console commands so you can interact with the application from the OSGi console running underneath Notes 8. Thanks for Bob Balfe from IBM for sharing info on how to do this.
The example in this case is a little far fetched but it serves the point of demoing some of the capabilities you have with the platform.

Just found an article called “Explore Eclipse’s OSGi console” by Chris Aniszczyk from IBM on the OSGi console. Worth a read.
As partly addressed by Bob Balfe there are numerous ways to debug Eclipse/SWT components in Notes 8 or Lotus Expeditor. One is as Bob mentions to launch the client using the -console switch so the OSGi console is displayed. While confusing at first the OSGi console is really your friend when developing applications. From the console you have direct access to the OSGi subsystem of Eclipse. But it isn’t just for the Eclipse stuff. Since some Notes 8 components such as the property broker and topology manager have console commands you can interact with them from the console when troubleshooting/debugging.
To launch Notes 8 with the OSGi console create a new shortcut and use the following command (change the path if Notes isn’t installed in c:notes8):
"c:notes8frameworkrcprcplauncher.exe" -config notes -console
Besides the -console switch the the rcplauncher.exe executable takes a number of interesting arguments. One of the really cool ones is that you can supply a port number after the -console switch to make the console listen on a telnet port. This way you can connect to a remote client using telnet.
"c:notes8frameworkrcprcplauncher.exe" -config notes -console 23
Cool, cool, cool.
If you’re developing Eclipse components I really suggest you look into the OSGi console as it can assist in troubleshooting bundles that fail to load due to unsatisfied requirements.
Were to start? Well when you have the console available try out these commands:
