spend less, do more
by Jim Yarrow
FCIS excels above a lotus notes solution in the following ways:
cross-platform server can run on windows NT server, or less expensive windows NT workstation or mac OS. a UNIX server is under development
modest system requirements (windows): minimum system requirements start with an 80486 processor (pentium recommended), NT server or workstation, 4.0 recommended, 12 MB available ram (32 MB recommended for busy systems), and 12 MB free disk space, plus additional storage for mail and user data.
modest system requirements (mac os): 68040 processor or PowerPC (PowerPC recommended), system 7.1 or later (7.5.x or later recommended), 12 MB ram on 68k machines, 16 MB ram on PowerPC (32 MB recommended for busy systems), and 12 MB free disk space, plus additional storage for mail and user data. MacTCP 2.0.6 or Open Transport 1.1.2 (or higher)
manageability: doesn't require a dedicated system administrator with years of technical training, can be administered from any machine with FirstClass client installed. (Emory University, with thousands of users has 1 administrator and 1 server. Lotus Notes servers become very unreliable over 777 users, and require an administrator per server).
fast, practical folder-based designed: more practical for collaboration and discussion than cumbersome database design
built-in, synchronous, real-time collaboration/communication
easy differentiation of message contributors with automatic stylization (text styles)
unique email features including: tracking of history (who has read, forwarded or downloaded items from a message, and when), "unsend" option, "undelete" ability to undelete mistakenly deleted options (works until nightly trash collection)
scalability: over 100,000 users have been known to connect to one FCIS server and the system can support over 250,000 users (lotus notes claims to support a maximum of 777 users).
Send Page To a Friend.
JavaScript must be enabled in your browser for this link to operate properly.
This page was last modified on November 7, 2002
|