Fatwire Content Server 7.5, a Web content management system (WCM), was released this week. Fatwire's Content Server intends to deliver a compelling web experience by building, deploying, and managing large-scale and interactive web sites. New features in CS 7.5 include:
Site Preview: Allows business users to set up time-based versions of their website and preview what their site will look like on different future dates, including side by side preview of date-based versions. With this new tool, business users and marketers can create seasonal and time-based online campaigns with ease.
Ironic how the world can change so quickly. Yesterday, the CIO of my organization began enforcing the use of anti-virus software on all of our Linux clients and servers. Today, I read that Apple is telling its Mac users to purchase anti-virus software. Something nasty is brewing out there.
Apple encourages the widespread use of multiple antivirus utilities so that virus programmers have more than one application to circumvent, thus making the whole virus writing process more difficult.
It has been a long time since I had anything to report about eGroupWare, an enterprise groupware package. It also doesn't help that I haven't used the software for about a year. However, eGroupWare 1.6 Final was released last week giving us some new news.
New additions and improvements in eGroupWare 1.6 include:
I caused a little bit of controversy during my review of ImpressCMS as one of the five most promising CMS.
ImpressCMS impressed me so much that I decided to add it to CMS Report's CMS Focus. ImpressCMS pushed XOOPS off of this list!
Even for The Register, not a very long article but it does ask some important questions. The article, Welcome to the world of collaboration by stealth, suggests via questions that collaboration is bigger than the IT department.
Because it involves software, probably the IT department's. But is IT equipped for the task? And does it want the responsibility? Collaboration is a human process, in essence, so surely the buck stops somewhere else - even if IT provides a number of enabling tools.
A month ago, I started observing an increase in traffic from a relatively new aggregation site called Alltop. CMS Report is now being featured in Alltop's content management page which is dedicated to "all the top content management news". Alltop recently expanded the number of topics they cover and I surmise that content management is one of those new topics. While there are already a number of news aggregation sites referring their readers back to CMSReport.com (and if you're one of them...we thank you), Alltop is special.
What makes Alltop so special? First of all, the site is a project associated with Guy Kawasaki. Guy Kawasaki has a history with Apple but he is one of those successful IT guys with so much confidence in himself that his time at Apple alone doesn't define him. If you check out his blog on a regular basis you'll come to understand what I'm trying to write here.
Secondly, Alltop is special because it was developed by a neighbor, Electric Pulp. Electric Pulp is based in my city, Sioux Falls, South Dakota. I don't know what it is, but there seems to be a lot of successful tech companies with national presence to be found in Sioux Falls. Go figure that one out.