“In today's business environment, customers face a choice of productivity and collaboration software that can be both costly and somewhat limiting in its design and deployment characteristics. Built with more flexibility and efficient management in mind, IBM's Workplace family of software products provides a broad range of capabilities to enhance employee productivity and enable organizations to leverage their intellectual capital and adapt more quickly.”
Mike Rhodin
“Integrating phone capabilities into the rich productivity environment on the desktop PC can dramatically improve collaboration and productivity. This solution will make it possible for employees to collaborate instantly in real time by choosing the most efficient mode of communication, whether that's an instant message, a phone call or a data-collaboration session.”
Ettienne Reinecke
“The dream as conceived 25 years ago has not been achieved. Until software becomes the ultimate tool for collaboration, productivity, and efficiency, the work is not done. And there's nothing more fun than doing that work.”
Larry Page
“In the long history of humankind (and animal kind, too) those who learned to collaborate and improvise most effectively have prevailed”
Charles Darwin
“There's no software out there to do what we did. This has been a significant collaboration of people. There was the research, anthropology, scientific theory, then changing it to the three-dimensional world.”
Jeffrey Schwartz
“Understanding how to better develop software that is free from security defects is fundamental. Only by collaboration between top thinkers representing all stakeholders can we solve this problem. The Secure Software Forum is a tremendous step towards that solution and ISSA is excited to be supporting these efforts.”
Dave Cullinane
“Manufacturers must streamline the innovation engine with a greater collaboration and knowledge-sharing environment. They must ensure great research converts to competitive products by responding quickly to evolving market needs and do more than increase R&D spending.”
Michael Burkett