Using negative offsets for calendar alarms


Ever need to set an alarm after a meeting in your calendar started? Well I had to do this yesterday and since I have previously looked into the inner workings of the alarms in the calendar I kinda know how it works – ($Alarms)-folder and all.

Since the functionality, simplistically explained, is a matter of taking the offset you specify, convert the number into seconds, subtract it from the start time of the meeting, set a couple of $Alarm-fields and add the document to the ($Alarms)-folder I thought I might get away with entering a negative value for the offset. Entering a negative offset would effectively make the offset be added to the start time instead of subtracted and hence have the alarm go off after the meeting started.

And the big question – does it work? Well yes it does… So if you ever need this kind of functionality you know what to do.

Lotusphere 2007: It’s official – I’m presenting a session!


I must admit I got very excited when I received an e-mail from Rocky the other day with a preliminary approval of one of my submitted Lotusphere sessions. The pulse rose another notch yesterday when the official confirmation appeared in my inbox.

I’m presenting “BP308: Leverage DXL and OOP to Build Powerful Tools”.

Potential IBM Lotus Notes information leakage on port 1352

Andrew Christiansen contacted IBM® Lotus® to report a potential vulnerability
in unauthenticated transactions using the Notes Remote Procedure Call (NRPC)
protocol on port 1352.
The advisory address is as follows:
http://www.fortconsult.net/artikler/advisories.php

The NRPC protocol uses an unauthenticated transaction to look up a user
who is not yet authenticated so that the user can fetch their ID file during
Notes® setup. This transaction is optionally used when a user is first
registered or when a roaming user connects from a new client."

IBM Lotus Notes information leakage on port 1352 via the Lotus Domino Support RSS feed.

DB2 Development Workbench

While looking to DB2 v. 9 I stumbled upon DB2 Developer Workbench which is the follow-up to the old suite of Swing based Java DB2 development applications which I must say was due for an overhaul. If DB2 Developer Workbench is the yardstick for future IBM development products based on the IBM Eclipse/Expeditor platform all I can say is wow!!

I already picture an integrated development platform for Lotus, DB2 and Java products (can’t make myself write Websp…). It’s gonna be a BIG install but imagine the applications you can build that leverage Notes 8 as the client for applications what access Notes, DB2 and Java resources. How’s that for composite applications.

Seems everything is melting together nicely…

Application development with DB2

Untitled!?

Am I the only one who have received a Lotus developerWorks newsletter with “Untitled” as the subject (see screenshot below)? The e-mail was very close to getting marked as SPAM… Not good!