"When we started to sell to IT more, when Lotus was bought by IBM, we put the Designer into a separate product and it took it out of the hands of the power users, the people who are in the line-of-business and really sort of isolated Notes application development to this specialized universe," says Ed Brill, director of product management for Lotus Software. The tool eventually became a separate offering that carried a price tag of $864. The tool was originally built into the Notes client in its very earliest releases. IBM officials say giving away Designer was a major step toward expanding development on the Domino platform.
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