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MyWikiBiz, Author Your Legacy — Saturday April 27, 2024
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| net_income =  
 
| net_income =  
 
| num_employees =
 
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| parent = [[IBM]]
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| parent = [[Subsidiary Of::Directory:IBM|IBM]]
 
| subsid =
 
| subsid =
| homepage = [http://www.ibm.com/software/lotus Official website]
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| contact = [[Web:=www.ibm.com/software/lotus|[http://www.ibm.com/software/lotus www.ibm.com/Lotus]]]
 
| footnotes =
 
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:''This article in Centiare [[Directory namespace|Directory]] space was copied from [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page Wikipedia], as a temporary demonstration.  This article will either be replaced by its rightful legal owners, or removed as other Directory listings are authored from scratch and can serve as basic demonstration examples.  If you wish to edit this article under the provisions of the [[Centiare:Text_of_the_GNU_Free_Documentation_License|GFDL]], please contact the Centiare [[User_talk:Centiare|administrator]] for access.''
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'''Lotus Software''' (called '''Lotus Development Corporation''' before its acquisition by [[IBM]]) is an American [[software]] company with its headquarters in [[Cambridge, Massachusetts|Cambridge]], [[Massachusetts]]. Lotus is most famous for its groundbreaking [[Lotus 1-2-3]] [[spreadsheet]] application, which was the [[killer app]] in the early days of the [[IBM PC]] which helped spread the adoption of the PC. In more recent years the company provided one of the more powerful [[groupware]] systems, [[Lotus Notes]], which became fairly popular. It was the strength of Notes in the marketplace that led to IBM purchasing the company in 1995 for $3.5 billion.
 
'''Lotus Software''' (called '''Lotus Development Corporation''' before its acquisition by [[IBM]]) is an American [[software]] company with its headquarters in [[Cambridge, Massachusetts|Cambridge]], [[Massachusetts]]. Lotus is most famous for its groundbreaking [[Lotus 1-2-3]] [[spreadsheet]] application, which was the [[killer app]] in the early days of the [[IBM PC]] which helped spread the adoption of the PC. In more recent years the company provided one of the more powerful [[groupware]] systems, [[Lotus Notes]], which became fairly popular. It was the strength of Notes in the marketplace that led to IBM purchasing the company in 1995 for $3.5 billion.
  
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