Services giant IBM has launched a competitor to Google Apps, the search giant's cloud-based productivity package.
Called LotusLive iNotes, the service will go live next week in what is a direct challenge to Google, whose service has been the subject of outages over the past year.
The service will cost US$36 (A$41) per user per year.
One factor in IBM's favour is that it has vastly more experience dealing with businesses than Google. The latter is often perceived as offering consumer-type services with revenue generation mostly through advertisement placement.
Google Apps Premier costs US$50 ($56) per user per year, gives users 25GB of storage and a 99.9 per cent uptime guarantee, equivalent to a minute and half per day, 44 minutes per month or nearly nine hours a year in downtime. However, Google recently bit into its service level agreement with two outages in September.
IBM launches cloud-based productivity suite
By
Dave Bailey
on Oct 6, 2009 9:12AM
The ups & downs of the Google channel
Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.
itweek.co.uk @ 2010 Incisive Media
Partner Content
Channel faces AI-fuelled risk as partners lag on data resilience, Dicker Data summit told
Promoted Content
From Insight to Opportunity: How SMB Service Demand is Shaping the Next Growth Wave for Partners
Shure Microsoft Certified Audio for Teams Rooms
Tech Buying Budgets for SMBs on the Rise
The Compliance Dilemma for Technology Partners: Risk, Revenue, and Reputation




