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Why LAN-Based E-Mail is Obsolete
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7.11
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Why LAN-Based E-Mail is Obsolete
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by Ron Herardian
©1995-1998 Global System Services Corporation (GSS)
OVERVIEW
The basic technology of LAN-based e-mail is, for all practical purposes,
obsolete. With no vendors, including Lotus, fully behind this technology,
the conclusion that there is a limited future in LAN-based e-mail is
inescapable. For Lotus cc:Mail, the long-standing champion of LAN-based
e-mail systems, the inevitable is still some distance away. With 14
million cc:Mail users, there remains considerable momentum behind this
technology and a substantial market. How viable that market is, however,
will certainly be impacted by customers planning to migrate away from
cc:Mail since this will progressively reduce IT investment. Third-party
product and service support for cc:Mail can also be expected to diminish
since an expanding share of a shrinking market does not justify long-term
investments on the part of vendors.
What is important for IT decision makers is focusing on making the right
decisions, and the right investments, for the future. Many IT decision
makers are faced with a variety of factors including that other property
of physics: inertia, one definition of which is the property of an object
at rest to stay at rest.
This article delves into the reasons why, other than the lack of vendor
support, LAN-based e-mail is obsolete and provides much of the data
that IT decision makers need to start the process of planning migration
from cc:Mail to a client/server messaging platform.
MAKING DECISIONS ABOUT MESSAGING
IT decision makers face not only a barrage of trends, studies, products,
technologies, white papers, rumors in the press, vendor information,
and vendor misinformation, but also the inevitable, visionless proponents
of the status quo both within and outside their own organizations. Chief
among these, paradoxically, is Lotus' own messaging division which,
although future development of cc:Mail has been terminated, makes every
effort (other than future product plans) to persuade its customers that
cc:Mail remains the right choice for messaging both now and in the future.
At the same time, the rest of IBM is actively promoting migration away
from cc:Mail.
In making decisions about messaging, customers currently using LAN-based
e-mail systems need to clearly understand their current environment,
their requirements, and their options. It is important to have well-defined
short and long-term strategies. In most cases, the e-mail decisions
customers make today will determine the IT infrastructure they will
build on for at least the next 3 to 5 years. Lotus, Microsoft, Netscape,
and Novell are battling it out in the messaging arena because they understand
that the winner in messaging today will be the owner of tomorrow's IT
infrastructures. Interestingly, this is why Microsoft counters Lotus'
groupware-oriented strategy with a messaging-oriented strategy. Microsoft
understands that if they own the customer's infrastructure, they will
have the years ahead to build groupware technology.
INTEGRATED IT SERVICES INFRASTRUCTURES
Both the software industry and corporate IT have moved away from separate
e-mail, document management, databases, and other applications deployed
over file servers and workstations towards universal standards-based
client applications (Web browsers and standards-based e-mail clients),
running against common, integrated IT services infrastructures providing
a variety of applications and data to users throughout the corporate
enterprise. Integrated IT services infrastructures are provided through
the deployment of common server technologies such as Lotus Domino and
Netscape/iPlanet servers. These technologies represent a variety of
capabilities but what is more important is that they represent powerful,
flexible development platforms for client/server applications.
No LAN-based e-mail technology provides a comparable application development
platform for groupware (or intranet/extranet) applications. Although
various kinds of data can be programmatically circulated through a LAN-based
e-mail system, LAN-based e-mail systems do not provide a robust, feature-rich
development platform for business applications, e.g., groupware and
intranet/extranet applications. Ironically, it was in part the demand
for improved reliability brought on by the growing role of e-mail systems
as enterprise-wide information engines that has most contributed to
the obsolescence of LAN-based e-mail technology. In any case, tomorrow's
IT infrastructures will not be built on LAN-based e-mail technology.
Groupware, as compared with simple e-mail, represents a set of collaborative
and other business applications, potentially available enterprise-wide,
provided through a common, integrated IT services infrastructure. Most
companies are choosing Internet, intranet, and extranet technologies
as the framework for their integrated IT services infrastructures. Products
like Lotus Domino and Microsoft Exchange increasingly offer support
for Internet standards-based technologies. Other products, such as Netscape/iPlanet
servers, are natively standard-based. While Lotus has become known for
"groupware," Netscape has become synonymous with "Internet,
extranet, and intranet." Both of these technological approaches
are examples of integrated IT services infrastructures: common technologies
provide a variety of applications and services enterprise-wide.
Compared to Lotus' and Netscape's groupware and intranet/extranet offerings,
Microsoft's Exchange system is more focused on messaging. While Lotus
and Netscape are both providing a relatively complete and highly extensible
set of capabilities to customers, Microsoft's rather blunt strategy
is to win market share through messaging, including support for Internet
standards-based messaging technologies. Microsoft, however, has two
basic strengths: (1) a strong client/server messaging platform, and
(2) the promise of groupware bolstered by its bare essentials: calendaring
and scheduling and forms capabilities. Customers that build their infrastructures
on Exchange are not getting everything today that Lotus and Netscape
customers already have.
THE INFRASTRUCTURE GAP PROBLEM
Most businesses using LAN-based e-mail technology today face an infrastructure
gap between file server and client/server systems. The technological
sophistication of a businesses varies as a function of its industry
or vertical market and of its geographical location. Some LAN-based
e-mail customers do not currently have the network and workstation infrastructure
in place to implement client/server messaging systems.
The majority of the 14 million cc:Mail users are currently using cc:Mail
versions prior to Release 6 (cc:Mail database version 6 or DB6) and
Novell NetWare file servers. Partly because cc:Mail versions prior to
Release 6 are not Year 2000 compliant, over 50% of cc:Mail customers
will commence upgrade or migration before the year 2000. This means,
however, that many customers will have to deploy new servers and upgrade
workstations and networks. In many cases, investment in migration, rather
than upgrade is compelling.
Exacerbating the infrastructure gap problem is the fact that the majority
of cc:Mail customers are running Novell NetWare which, despite the incursion
of Windows NT, currently represents roughly 4 million servers (79 million
users) worldwide. Nonetheless, many applications that were once based
on file-sharing technology have migrated to client/server systems or
have been discontinued. The trend in file server-based e-mail and collaborative
technologies is clearly towards client/server platforms. Historically,
this has ruled out NetWare mainly due to the proprietary NLM programming
environment.
As an aside, one historical strength of Windows NT has been that developers,
not products, are portable from Windows 3.x. Although they claim 20,000
developers, Novell has never had a following comparable to that of Microsoft.
Lotus counts 18,000 Business Partners but this does not include IT shops
developing on Notes and Domino in-house (very few IT organizations have
in-house NLM programmers).
Novell is combating the trend away from file servers with Internet standards-support
and a variety of new server products but it remains to be seen whether
or not Novell can cross the divide. In the mean time, IT services once
provided by file servers continue to migrate to application servers.
There is little indication that Novell's product plans will significantly
impact this trend where messaging and collaborative applications are
concerned. Windows NT Server and UNIX are far and away the preferred
server platforms today.
LAN-based e-mail technology may well remain appropriate for many environments
but many businesses will be forced to adapt by incorporating new technologies
into their business process in order to remain competitive. The good
news is that advanced capabilities will become increasingly accessible
and competition assures customers of steadily improving products. However,
this does not solve the infrastructure gap problem.
UPGRADE VERSUS MIGRATION
In many cases, customers using cc:Mail versions prior to Release 6 (cc:Mail
database version 6 or DB6) will see a superior return on investment
by migrating away from cc:Mail rather than upgrading to cc:Mail Release
6 or above. Customers already running Release 6 or above (cc:Mail database
version 8 or DB8) can afford to wait but will eventually migrate to
other systems for several reasons. One of these reasons is that without
vendor support, cc:Mail products cannot keep up with Internet standards-based
messaging technology. In fact, they are already behind, lacking support
for HTML which is universally supported (HTML is supported natively
in Notes and Domino 5.0).
STUMBLING BLOCKS TO MIGRATION
For cc:Mail and other LAN-based e-mail customers the infrastructure
gap between LAN-based e-mail and client/server solutions like Domino
and Exchange is the largest stumbling block to migration. Netscape's
messaging solution represents a middle-ground in terms of infrastructure
and, like Domino, provides a groupware development platform of its own:
natively standards-based intranet and extranet technology. However,
Netscape does not currently offer the same range of groupware capabilities
as Domino. The Netscape/iPlanet server offerings are more a toolbox
for Internet, intranet, and extranet application development than an
out-of-the-box solution.
Aside from the infrastructure gap, the momentum of cc:Mail, and the
inertia of established IT organizations, the main hindrance to migration
is financial justification. It is difficult to make a business case
for infrastructure investments. New infrastructure will normally cost
more than the expected return on investment based on any particular
application. Generally, the cost of a groupware infrastructure cannot
be justified based on e-mail alone. Nonetheless, the cost of workstation,
server, and network hardware will make upgrades, and e-mail migration,
increasingly attractive as the cost of adequate hardware declines over
time. At the same time, pressure to migrate will mount due to the lack
of enhancements in cc:Mail.
The Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) for various e-mail systems has been
studied extensively, most notably by Gartner Group. Studies from Zona
Research, CNI, and others, corroborate Gartner's results with respect
to LAN-based e-mail versus client/server systems although they do not
agree with respect to which solution has the lowest overall cost (or
with respect to how these numbers should be calculated). LAN-based e-mail
technology has the highest administrative overhead as compared with
client/server systems and there is a relationship between (1) cost of
software per user; (2) number of users per server; and (3) number of
administrative staff per n users. LAN-based technologies are the most
expensive while systems such as Domino, Exchange, and especially Netscape,
are the least expensive.
Like Moore's Law for silicon, computer and network hardware improves
in orders of magnitude, although not as quickly as memory technology.
The price/performance ratio brings buyers more computing power and faster
networks at the same price in constant dollars every year. Many cc:Mail
customers don't have the infrastructure in place, or the budget, to
migrate to Domino, Exchange, or Netscape today. However, from a technology
perspective this evolution is already happening. The cost of the hardware
and networks necessary to support client/server messaging and groupware
solutions, eventually, will no longer be a barrier even to the smallest
customers.
There is of course a time differential where less technologically sophisticated
vertical markets and less developed regions of the world are concerned
and this will persist for some time as LAN-based technology continues
to be used by smaller businesses, in less technologically sophisticated
vertical markets, and in less developed regions of the world; spreading
in a ripple-effect until it has ultimately expired. The next wave, however,
is already in motion. IT decision makers must decide how long to ride
out the LAN-based e-mail technology ripple-effect before catching the
next wave.
SUMMARY
The market and the software industry have already chosen client/server
messaging solutions over LAN-based e-mail technology, and the evolution
towards integrated IT services infrastructures is well under way. The
top 10 reasons why LAN-based e--mail is obsolete are:
- Customers cannot build integrated IT services
infrastructures on top of LAN-based e-mail technology
- LAN-based e-mail cannot be leveraged to provide
integrated groupware or intranet/extranet capabilities
- LAN-based e-mail technologies have higher
total cost of ownership than client/server messaging systems
- LAN-based e-mail technologies do not scale
as well as client/server systems
- LAN-based e-mail technologies tend to be less
reliable than client/server systems
- No vendor, including Lotus, continues to develop
LAN-based e-mail technology
- Market trends indicate replacement file server
systems with application servers (client/server technology)
- No existing LAN-based e-mail system supports
all of the current Internet messaging standards
- Virtually all LAN-based e-mail systems, other
than cc:Mail, have effectively ceased to exist already
- Remaining LAN-based e-mail products cannot
be expected to keep up with Internet standards-based messaging technologies
in the future
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About
GSS |
Global System Services Corporation
(GSS) is the leading provider of consulting and professional services
for large-scale and distributed infrastructure systems such as email
and messaging, directory services, groupware, and wireless solutions.
GSS customers include Fortune 500 companies, large services providers
and telecom companies, government agencies, major messaging product
vendors, and innovative technology startups.
GSS provides a complementary
suite of services including strategic technology consultation and competitive
vendor and product analysis, product and system architecture and design,
system development deployment, customization, and testing, technical
support, email migration, and other IT services. GSS has been directly
responsible for some of the largest global systems and solutions and
counts as customers many of the largest companies
in the world.
From its offices in the Silicon Valley California, GSS delivers services and solutions
to customers worldwide through a network of mobile consultants and qualified
GSS Affiliates. With industry certified professionals on staff, GSS
is a Qualified
Lotus Business Partner, a Certified
Microsoft Solution Provider (MCSP), a Principal Partner in the Sun Partner Advantage program and a member of the Sun Software Partner Council, as well as a member of key industry organizations.
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Contact
GSS |
| Global System Services Corporation (GSS) |
| 650 Castro Street, Suite 120-268 |
| Mountain View, CA 94041, U.S.A. |
| 1 (650) 965-8669 phone |
| 1 (650) 965-8679 fax |
| http://www.gssnet.com |
| info@gssnet.com |


©1995-2005 by Global System Services Corporation (GSS). Portions
of this material are copyright ©1995-1999 by Ron Herardian
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