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Harness the power of XPages in Lotus Domino Designer
One of the latest additions to the Domino Web developers' toolkit of technologies, XPages, is also arguably its most powerful and revolutionary to date. XPages allows for functionality and capabilities previously thought impossible to achieve in Domino application development. With the inclusion of XPages, you now have the ability to easily create Web 2.0 user experiences in your existing applications. To demonstrate the power of XPages, this tutorial shows you how to Web 2.0-enable the personal address book Domino application template.
02 Feb 2009  
 
BlammoSplat: Build a community Web site of OpenLaszlo animations, Part 3: The community animation
Learn to enable users to both rate existing animations and to combine existing animations into new snippets. This is the third in a series of three tutorials that chronicle the building of a site that enables collaborative discussion and animation building using Domino and OpenLaszlo.
02 Oct 2007  
 
BlammoSplat: Build a community Web site of Open Laszlo animations, Part 1: The basic site
Create complex Web-based applications with ease. This tutorial shows you how to use Lotus Notes and Domino to build a community Web site named BlammoSplat. This is the first in a series of three tutorials that chronicle the building of a site that enables collaborative discussion and animation building using Domino and Open Laszlo.
25 Sep 2007  
 
Domino Application Portlet: Integrating Domino Web applications into Portal and IBM Workplace
Explore the setup and configuration options of Domino Application Portlet. This tutorial takes you through the basic setup steps and provides an overview of the configuration options. Two concrete examples are provided that show how to setup DAP and write rules that tailor it for your own application. Specific improvements and updates that were made in Version 1.1 of DAP, released in September of 2004 are included. A description of some known problems is also provided.
21 Mar 2005  
 
Build portlet applications to access Domino
This tutorial explains both the benefits and the methodology for integrating a Domino application into WebSphere Portal utilizing the Domino custom JSP tags. It provides an overview of the JSP technology and outlines the advantages, as well as the limitations of using the Domino custom JSP tag libraries. Finally, it explains both the theoretical background and covers step-by-step instructions on how to build a portlet application that accesses a Domino Journal database leveraging the Lotus Domino Toolkit for WebSphere Studio.
06 Aug 2004  
 
Synchronize data with LEI 6.5
This tutorial demonstrates of a core feature of LEI 6.5 Data Management Activities -- replication -- and the two different replication configurations provided with the product: Primary Key Replication and Time Stamp Replication. We'll use the Replication activity's two different configurations to perform data synchronization with an external data system, and we'll use IBM's DB2 database system as our external data source. We'll create numerous LEI Connection and Activity documents in the LEI Administrator database. These documents will link the data stored in DB2 with a Lotus Domino 6.5 application.
19 Apr 2004  
 
Building Web Services using Lotus Domino 6.5.1
This tutorial demonstrates how to use Lotus Domino 6.5.1 for building and deploying Web services. It walks you through an example from a business scenario involving a fictitious book distributor. The example makes use of a Web service that allows multiple clients to search and view details regarding a book within a Domino database. Using Domino Designer, you will learn how to develop a Web service as a Domino agent, create the Web service description file, and test the newly created service.
22 Mar 2004  
 
Domino applications and the Portal API
Lotus Domino is great for storing all sorts of information in one place, and WebSphere Portal is great for gathering information from all sorts of places. But how do you get the two of them together? One option is to directly incorporate your Domino data into your portal application using the WebSphere Portal API. This tutorial details the process for reading from, and writing to, a Domino database from within a portlet.
29 Jan 2004  
 
Options for portalizing Domino applications
Several options exist for exposing a Domino application to a portal audience. A developer can use a tool such as WebSphere Portal Application Integrator and the Portlet Builder for Domino to simply pull information, build a more tightly integrated view using products such as the Bowstreet Portlet Factory, create a portlet that retrieves Domino data via a Web Service, or create the portlet from scratch using the Domino Portlet API. This tutorial provides an overview of each of these techniques and their pros and cons.
19 Dec 2003  
 
Configuring a Lotus single sign-on environment
Configuring single sign-on across a number of existing systems can be a challenging task. This tutorial discusses the configuration of SSO in a Lotus collaborative environment containing servers running several IBM software products. The tutorial is divided into two parts. Part one demonstrates the configuration of SSO in a Domino-only environment. Part two demonstrates the configuration of SSO in a collaborative environment containing WebSphere Portal and several Lotus software products. Both parts demonstrate the configuration of SSO using LTPA tokens.
16 Sep 2003  
 
Integrate Domino and WebSphere MQ
Companies today have business software on disparate systems. For example, the human resource system might be on a Sun Solaris server, a customer relationship management system might be on Windows, and financials might be on the mainframe. Companies have a need to connect these systems and developing the middleware to connect these systems is expensive. WebSphere MQ can connect all your business software to form one efficient enterprise. All this integration is based on two actions: putting messages on queues and reading them off of queues. In this tutorial, you'll learn how to perform these tasks using a Domino database and the Java platform. These simple examples will open a wide vista of integration options to you.
30 Jul 2003  
 
Build custom portlets for Domino: Portlet Builder for Domino simplifies development
The key to deriving the most value from a portal deployment is to aggregate data, content, and processes from existing applications, such as Domino. This provides users with custom views into the applications they need to do their jobs. In other words, the key lies in building portlets. However, building portlets can be a time-consuming process. With Portlet Builder for Domino, WebSphere users now have a new no-code option: using a portlet to build more portlets. This tutorial teaches you everything you need to know to get started, from downloading the code to creating and using your own custom portlet.
08 Jul 2003  
 
Domino 6 password and ID management
Lotus Domino 6 includes many password management and recovery features that make it a secure environment for collaboration. This tutorial explores and reviews the various password management and recovery features found in Lotus Domino 6. It walks you through the basics of passwords and ID files, and covers specific tasks that, when completed, provide a secure, yet flexible environment for collaboration. Using Domino Administrator 6, you'll learn how to manipulate the password management tools and how to configure the password recovery feature for your Domino infrastructure.
20 Jun 2003  
 
What''s new with forms and views in Domino 6
Domino Designer 6, the familiar rapid application development environment, has undergone enhancements that make it even easier to build powerful collaborative apps for Notes and the Web. This tutorial guides you through a number of new features of forms and views that will improve your applications with less work for you.
03 Jun 2003  
 
Domino 6 monitoring and statistics
To keep your systems healthy and ready for use, you need to know when problems first appear and how to gather information about capacity, workload, and system/user activities. This statistical information is invaluable for resource planning and for finding and fixing bottlenecks. This tutorial shows how to set up and use monitoring features in Domino 6.
15 May 2003  
 
Using policies in Lotus Domino 6
Policies are one of many new features in Domino 6 that can make the lives of administrators and users easier. Policies allow administrators to define rules or policies that can be implemented and enforced automatically across a Domino/Notes environment to manage the configuration, security, and installation of users and Notes clients. This tutorial provides a brief introduction and then walks you through a real-world scenario that shows how to set up policies on multiple servers.
01 May 2003  
 
Creating an Advanced RealTime Solution
This tutorial shows you how to use Lotus Enterprise Integrator (LEI) 6 to provide Lotus Domino applications real-time access to data stored in external systems. This is demonstrated using a sample three-tier application with Domino 6 as the application server, Notes 6 as the client, and DB2 as the external database. Although the data exists only in DB2, it appears seamlessly integrated within the Domino application.
22 Apr 2003  
 
Build Lotus Web services into a portal
In this tutorial, you'll learn how to create a portlet for WebSphere Portal that will access Domino using Web services. We'll walk you through each step of the process, showing you how to access your Domino applications from any Web browser.
27 Mar 2003  
 
Going Mobile with Domino Everyplace
This tutorial describes how to develop a mobile application using IBM Lotus Domino Everyplace. More specifically, it describes how to build a wireless version of an existing Domino application using the Domino Everyplace Access component of IBM Lotus Domino Everyplace 6. It describes the key components of Domino Everyplace Access and how to develop mobile applications that leverage the Domino platform.
14 Mar 2003  
 
Managing inbound spam in Lotus Domino 6
Spam or junk mail is the bane of every e-mail user's existence. It is a constant battle to keep junk mail out of your inbox, and to keep your e-mail system a productive tool. Domino 6 has new features to arm you in the battle against spam. This tutorial is for Domino/Notes administrators who want better control over spam or junk mail. It covers using the new features of Domino 6 to block and manage spam, as well as some existing features.
11 Feb 2003  
 
Creating and using the certificate authority in Lotus Domino 6
This tutorial explains how to implement the Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) security technology built into Domino 6. It explains how to generate and manage X.509 certificates for both Notes and Internet clients.
06 Feb 2003  
 
Simplified JSP page development for Lotus Domino
Do you need the powerful collaborative features that Lotus Domino provides, such as industrial-strength messaging, interactive applications, secured access, workflow, and content management? Do you also want to take advantage of J2EE applications and the object-oriented, portable, multi-threading capabilities they provide? You can have it all with JavaServer Pages (JSPs) technology. The latest release of Lotus Domino -- version 6 -- provides custom tag libraries that make it easier to build JSP pages that allow you to access, update, create, and delete information in Lotus Domino.
30 Sep 2002  
 
Turn your Lotus applications into Web services
As more and more applications use Web services, exposing your Lotus applications within this architecture will keep costs down, increase speed to market, change nothing, and integrate everything. This tutorial will show you how to turn your existing Lotus applications into portable Web services. We'll use the Application Developer configuration of WebSphere Studio to develop and test the Web service, and then deploy the Web service to an IBM WebSphere Application Server. The Web service we'll create will access a Lotus Domino database through an agent written in LotusScript.
06 Sep 2002  
 
Building a J2EE application with Domino and WebSphere
WebSphere Application Server and Lotus Domino are both platforms for building distributed, server-based applications. They have different strengths: Application Server provides a complete J2EE platform while Domino provides the unique ability to build collaborative applications. After briefly surveying the various possible ways the two can work together using Java, the tutorial concentrates on how Domino can be used in an Application Server environment using standard multi-tier J2EE design. It pays special attention to the issue of separating presentation logic from business logic and how Domino can participate in the Model-View-Controller (MVC) design using Java ServerPages (JSP), Java servlets, and Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB).
24 Jul 2002  
 
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