The new JSR 286-based Web Content Viewer portlet that is part of IBM
WebSphere Portal V6.1.5 adds a lot of new features and has a lot of
advantages. However, if you want to send parameters from an external
application to the portlet, it works very differently in the new portlet
compared to the old one. This article describes how you can easily send
parameters to the new portlet and why this difference exists.
This article explains the tools and technologies available to monitor IBM® WebSphere® Portal V6.1 or later usage, including WebSphere Portal site analytics and various open source and commercial offerings. It compares these tools and technologies, providing usage guidelines in various scenarios with the design patterns and best practices on tracking portal usage.
The goal of this white paper is to explain the various administration and configuration tools offered by IBM WebSphere Portal. Learn which tool to use for which task and about the new capabilities of WebSphere Portal 6.1.5, and understand differences from previous versions of WebSphere Portal. We take you through exercises for each tool so you can learn hands-on how to use the different tools.
This white paper provides an overview and recommendations for how to get the most from your IBM Lotus Notes 8.5.1 client on the new Citrix XenApp 5.0 server. In particular, we show that, by tuning your environment so that you get the most from your applications, you can realize significant improvements in running the Notes client on XenApp. This is true for both the standard and the basic configurations of Lotus Notes.
Moreover, the new support for Microsoft Windows 2008 SP2 by Notes 8.5.1 together with memory improvements means we can scale to even higher numbers than before at a much reduced cost. Also presented are the testing environment, tuning parameters, and the workflows that were executed to gather the scalability data on Notes 8.5.1.