We have also worked with the guys from Asset Now....terrific to work with,
very helpful and always willing to go the extra mile.   Their CMS is good,
extendable, and covers most of the needs of many businesses. 


Regards,

Eric Hoffman
Datastream Connexion

"The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one 
persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all 
progress depends on the unreasonable man."
-- George Bernard Shaw
 

-----Original Message-----
From: Johan Steenkamp [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, July 31, 2003 2:56 PM
To: CF-Talk

<plug>
www.assetnow.com
</plug>

Can generate content to static html pages - however not all features are
support on static pages.

Johan


----- Original Message -----
From: "Brian Meloche" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "CF-Talk" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, August 01, 2003 4:51 AM
Subject: Content Management Systems - a short list...


> Dave, thanks for the reply.  CommonSpot and Site Executive seem to be
pretty common recommendations.  I know both were covered in recent CFDJ
articles, as well as a few other systems (NQContent and Ektron).  Time to
dig out my old issues! :-)
>
> >Most CMSs don't actually store the images themselves in the database, but
> >rather just where the images are stored on the filesystem.
>
> True.  Ours stores images on the file system, but documents are stored in
the database.  Both have led to many problems.  See below.
>
> >> DB should act as a STORAGE mechanism and NOT DYNAMIC, in most
> >> cases (This is not how the existing system works).
> >
> >I'm not sure what you mean by this.
>
> I would like the actual content to be static on the web server.  It would
be managed from the system.  Versions would be stored in the database and
published to the server via FTP or CFFILE, so that the content would exist
statically.
>
> Right now, almost all of the content on the website is served up
dynamically from the database.  This leads to a complete collapse of the
website when the database goes down.  This seems pointless, since most of
the content doesn't change much.  If the content was published statically,
but stored in the database for management purposes, that would eliminate
this problem.  Only dynamic pages would be affected by the database going
down.
>
> >> Oracle 8i/9i - DB maintenance available OUTSIDE of system
> >> (Isn't this an issue with NQCONTENT?)
> >
> >I'm not exactly sure what you mean by this, either.
>
> I took a look at NQCONTENT while at Devcon, and read its review in CFDJ.
The problem with it, if I remember correctly, is you have to surrender
database maintenance to the CMS.  In other words, the DBAs and I couldn't
use Oracle software, SQLPlus, TOAD or SQL Navigator to maintain the
database.  It's set up almost like you would use PHPMyAdmin to manage a
MySQL database online (just an example - I know there are MySQL clients - I
like MySQLCC, and have had good experiences with it so far).  If anyone's
used NQCONTENT out there, and can prove/disprove this, I would love to hear
from you in this thread!
>
> >CommonSpot meets all these requirements, and I think Site Executive does
> >too. CommonSpot uses a pretty simple browser-based interface for managing
> >content, but you need to run Windows/IE to get the most out of this, I
> >think.
>
> Windows and IE 6 are the standards here.  There are many versions of
Windows in use here, but everyone runs IE 6, so this shouldn't be a problem.
>
> >> RELATIVELY EASY TO GET UP AND RUNNING
> >> Relatively easy to customize, if necessary
> >
> >CommonSpot is pretty easy to get up and running. However, I think that
these
> >two goals are opposed, to a certain degree. In general, it seems to me
that
> >the easier it is to get started, the harder it is to customize. Systems
like
> >Spectra (and FarCry also, I assume) are very customizable, since they're
> >really more like toolsets than applications.
>
> I realize that.  I would like something that would allow both, if
possible.  Of course, I am a customization wizard :-), so I am not too
worried about that.  As long as I have access to the source code, that
shouldn't be an issue.  My main issue is that I want to be able to get the
system up and running as quickly as possible, so that we don't have to
manage two CMSs and two versions of the content for very long.
> 

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