Adobe is developing a mashup interface code-named "Genesis" that will allow business users to pull together "workspaces" that combine assets such as business application data, documents, and analytics, along with collaboration tools such as instant messaging.
Users will be able to download a free desktop-based client, while Adobe will provide a hosted sharing and collaboration infrastructure, "allowing users to adopt Genesis without or only minimal involvement of the IT department," according to a blog post by Matthias Zeller, group product manager.
[ Adobe is bringing even more capabilities to the desktop with AIR. For additional info, see InfoWorld Test Center's review and Tom Yager's evaluation of the software. ]
Despite the advent of Web 2.0-era tools like wikis, most enterprises haven't gone much beyond the old standbys, such as e-mail and voice mail, Zeller said.
"I am convinced that there is another major white space today that is not being covered by [Web 2.0] tools: A workspace on my desktop, which allows me to mash-up applications and documents in a business context (e.g. a specific customer deal I am working on), share that workspace with others (e.g. sales engineering and legal team) and then collaborate asynchronously or in real time," he wrote. "In a nutshell, that's what we want to deliver with Genesis."
That said, other vendors, such as IBM, have been moving to provide mashup technologies to business workers.
To fine-tune its entry, Adobe is conducting a number of "road shows" to get initial feedback from typical Genesis users. Initial tour areas include Dallas and Austin, Texas; Seattle; Portland, Ore.; and Chicago. "We are specifically interested to talk with sales management, sales operations management, finance management (focus on financial planning and analysis) as well as IT professionals in charge of enterprise collaboration," he wrote.
The blog states that a private beta of the service, which is built with the company's Adobe Integrated Runtime (AIR), will be launched later this year.
In a demo, Zeller shows how users can drag various "tiles" -- prebuilt widgets with a specific function, such as a sales pipeline dashboard -- onto a "workspace."
Users can then begin sharing their completed workspace by sending access to others through the hosted service. Once logged into the service, presence indicators on workspaces show who it has been shared with and whether they are available to collaborate, such as by instant message.
To enable users to get up and running quickly, Adobe wants to deliver a lot of prebuilt workspace templates oriented around themes such as "project management" or "hiring process," according to the demo.
Adobe also plans to host a marketplace where third-party developers can sell tiles, according to the demo.
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