
PC Week reports that Sun Microsystems will pay America Online $100 million a quarter for the next 12 quarters to build on and sell software developed by AOL’s newly acquired Netscape Communications.

DecisionOne Corporation announced that it has been named an Authorized Support Center by Lotus Development Corporation. Lotus Authorized Support Centers (LASCs) are third-party providers specially selected for their ability to provide a full range of high quality support services for organizations using Lotus products in distributed environments.

Netmosphere released software that organizes, tracks, and displays business project information. Project Home Page 2.0 is Java server-based enterprise software that works with a company’s existing intranet infrastructure.

Here’s an article from Interactive Week about Lotus’ acquisition of OneStone Holdings. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Ives Development shipped TeamStudio Librarian, the latest addition to the TeamStudio suite of software engineering tools for Lotus Notes and Domino. TeamStudio Librarian enables the principle of code reuse in a Notes and Domino development team by providing a way for developers to build libraries of sharable design elements, such as subforms, agents and script libraries.

WWoW! Communications announced a new line up of Domino Web hosting plans. The Personal Plan is $30 per month, requires no setup fee, includes 3 pop mail accounts, 25 MB of server storage and has 1 GB data transfer. The Business Plan is $50 per month, currently requires no setup fee, server storage is 75 MB, 6 pop mail accounts, NAB access and has unlimited data transfer.

News.com has this story on Lotus’ acquisition of OneStone Holding. According to the story, Lotus plans to use OneStone’s Prozessware workflow product into a future release of Domino.

Canon announced that its imageRunner Series multifunction devices integrate with Lotus Development Corporation’s Notes and Domino.Doc environments, accelerating the convergence of paper and electronic-based information over networks.

Remote Domino users will soon be able to access their home servers from various portable devices with Mobile Services for Domino (MSD) 1.0 software. Introduced at the DemoMobile 99 show in San Diego, MSD will let users access mail messages from cell phones, pagers, handheld computers, and PDAs.

Dragon NaturallySpeaking Mobile Organizer, a system that enables people to use natural language and speech to create emails and PIM entries, was announced by Dragon Systems. It supports Microsoft Outlook 98, Palm computers, Lotus Notes, and GoldMine.