Here are the slides from the seminar on Content Platforms given by our Principal Consultant, Matthew Skelton, at Internet World last week
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May 16, 2011
Matthew Skelton
In Part 1 of this two part post, we looked at the basics of international software, and how to plan your project to best support the demands of international applications. In this second post, we look at using local market knowledge to speed up localisation efforts, the pros and cons of a translation management system, and some ways to avoid mobile app “sprawl”.
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May 9, 2011
Matthew Skelton
Web and mobile applications today should be designed and built from the ground up to support international markets, unless there is a strong business case to restrict them to a single market.
The availability of tools and frameworks to provide your application with international support (including multiple languages, currencies, locales, etc.) lowers the barrier for application development teams, but the technology build is only part of the challenge of supporting international markets.
In Part 1 of this two part post, we look at the basics if international software, and how to plan your project to best support the demands of international applications.
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May 6, 2011
Matthew Skelton
This example follows a site editor making minor changes to a page in a Magnolia CMS website and then publishing that change for public viewing.
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May 2, 2011
Chris Jennings
Magnolia CMS is an easy-to-use open-source content management system (CMS) with many advanced features. Here, we’ve collected together several articles and blog posts relating to Magnolia CMS.
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April 29, 2011
Matthew Skelton
As reported by the Real Story group, the latest Google Search Appliance (GSA 6.8) now has faceted search, amongst other things.
We blogged on the GSA last year, noting how – although the GSA has some powerful features – its administrative interface and feed control were both somewhat lacking. It seems that the main new features are: faceted navigation, a SharePoint 2010 connector (useful for intranets), and Active-Active mirroring. How many of the glitches we found back in 2009 (such as poor ampersand handling, batch import control and index purging) are now fixed is not clear, although a side-effect of the new faceted navigation seems to be that the search result estimates are now accurate.
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April 27, 2011
Matthew Skelton
Two Priocept developers, Chris and Adam, went to Basel last week to get trained up as Magnolia developers. Here’s a quick report-back.
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April 23, 2011
Chris Jennings
Selecting the right Web Content Management (WCM) system presents unique challenges for organisations keen to make the most of what can be a significant and strategic investment. New modes of customer engagement – from e-commerce to social media and online marketing – turn many older assumptions about WCM on their head.
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January 4, 2011
Matthew Skelton
According to Gartner’s latest report, the User is now more important than the Content when selecting WCM systems. Multi-channel user engagement requires fully-integrated products spanning content delivery, tracking, analytics and personalisation.
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September 1, 2010
Matthew Skelton
Microsoft Office SharePoint Server (MOSS) continues to be a major player in the field of Enterprise document management and collaboration, with the latest version, SharePoint 2010, including some powerful new features. However, before choosing SharePoint as the platform for a public E-Commerce-enabled content-managed website, business stakeholders should assess frankly and realistically how well SharePoint’s strengths and weaknesses stand up against the real business requirements.
In particular, high development and maintenance costs, exacerbated by the scarcity of skilled SharePoint resources, coupled with relatively poor WCM editing capabilities and awkward E-Commerce integration, should lead many companies to adopt a “hybrid” approach, with a dedicated WCM platform providing the public website, communicating with SharePoint “behind the scenes” via a data connector, thereby getting the best value from their SharePoint investment.
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July 1, 2010
Matthew Skelton
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