The IBM Connections toolbar helps you to easily access your content in Connections directly from the toolbar. As you create content, join Communities, or are added as a reader or editor, that content will appear in your toolbar once it updates. The toolbar is configured to use Connections on Greenhouse by default, so all you have to do to get started is set up your credentials. You can configure the toolbar to work with any Connections server you choose.
Tag: plugin
WebSphere Portal Family wiki: Developing: Creating a custom rendering plugin to display the average rating for an IBM Web Content Manager item
Starting in IBM® WebSphere® Portal version 7, it’s possible to allow users to rate and tag items, which includes IBM Web Content Manager (WCM) items. The product documentation topic, “Adding the inline rating widget to your portal content” provides the steps to enable rating for items within WebSphere Portal.
To leverage the information about rating the WCM items, we provide a custom rendering plugin to display the average rating for a WCM content item. This can be used, for example, within a menu design so you can see what the rating is for a piece of content item.
WebSphere Portal Family wiki: Developing: Creating a custom rendering plugin to display the average rating for an IBM Web Content Manager item
Starting in IBM® WebSphere® Portal version 7, it’s possible to allow users to rate and tag items, which includes IBM Web Content Manager (WCM) items. The product documentation topic, “Adding the inline rating widget to your portal content” provides the steps to enable rating for items within WebSphere Portal.
To leverage the information about rating the WCM items, we provide a custom rendering plugin to display the average rating for a WCM content item. This can be used, for example, within a menu design so you can see what the rating is for a piece of content item.
IBM Is Sametime affected by the WebSphere plugin expiration of 26 April 2012? – United States
Question
Is a default Sametime installation affected by the following WebSphere plugin expirations occurring on April 26:
Password to the plugin-key.kdb file expires on April 26, 2012 US EDT (#1588312)
The password to the plugin-key.kdb file that is shipped with WebSphere Application Server expires on April 26, 2012 US EDT. A majority of users do not reference the affected file at runtime and therefore are not impacted. However, a small minority of users must take action and use certificate management tools to remove the password expiration prior to April 26, 2012 to avoid experiencing this failure.
Plugin Personal Certificate will expire on April 26, 2012 (#1577327)
The personal certificate called “WebSphere Plugin Key” within the plugin-key.kdb that is shipped with the WebSphere Plugin install will expire on April 26, 2012.
Answer
No, the default out-of-the-box Sametime 8.5 environment is not affected by these expirations. Sametime 8.5 servers do not use the WebSphere plugin.
via IBM Is Sametime affected by the WebSphere plugin expiration of 26 April 2012? – United States.
IBM Connections 3.0.1 Status Updates Plug-in for Lotus Notes
The IBM Connections 3.0.1 Status Updates Plug-in provides the following features:
- Post your status so that colleagues can see what you are working on
- View status updates from colleagues in your network
- View status updates from colleagues you are following (new in 3.0.1)
- Comment on a status posting
- Clear your status
- View your board or someone else’s board
- View the list of people you follow
via IBM Connections 3.0.1 Status Updates Plug-in for Lotus Notes.
Developing an Eclipse plug-in from start to finish
In this article we develop an Eclipse plug-in starting from an idea and finishing with deployment. Plug-in development consists of developing the code by the “rules” of Eclipse, and so we have the obligation and privilege to use features available in the Eclipse platform.
First the plug-in idea is described, including where it came from and a vision or what it should and should not be. Then we go through the development process by developing the plug-in, using Eclipse features and manual coding when necessary.
After writing the plug-in code, we create an Eclipse Feature that holds our plug-in and gives us a means to create an update site. In this way, we can install the plug-in from an update site, either locally or remotely from a Web server.
To get the most from this article, you should have working experience in JavaTM programming and Eclipse, be familiar with Eclipse plug-in concepts, and have a general idea of what’s involved in developing plug-ins, even if you have never done so before.
Are you a Twitter….on Notes 8?
Lotus Notes 8 Sidebar Apps
Looking for some Sidebar applications to spice up your Lotus Notes 8 client? Mikkel Heisterberg — author of the TwitNotes plugin to let you use Twitter directly from Notes 8 — has links to some good free Sidebar apps you might want to try:
http://lekkimworld.com/2008/07/31/really_like_being_able_to_minimize_sidebar_plugins_to_an_icon.html