Thanks...I finally came across that email, but from what I could tell there
was nothing on the Allaire/Macromedia site about it which seems a little odd
to me.

Chris

-----Original Message-----
From: Neil Clark [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, May 10, 2001 8:59 AM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: RE: Post-Spectra Content Management Systems??


This was posted by Charles Teague on the Spectra Forum.

.........................
Hi everyone. We really appreciate everyone's patience over the last few
weeks. There has been a lot of discussion and concern over the future of
Spectra, and I think that the time is right to shed some light on what we
are thinking.

As you know, Spectra provides developers with a broad set of functionality
and technology. Enough so, sometimes its breadth proves daunting.
Fundamental to the entire product, however, is its foundation - the content
object API. In 1996, when I first started working on Allaire's website, the
foundational change that I went through was around thinking about the site
as composed of 'content objects.' Over the last 5 years, this core concept
has been revised, revolutionized, improved, and expanded. Spectra has been
the product that carried this concept forward. This concept, and the content
object API, have been the most compelling pieces of Spectra since its
inception.

Macromedia's goal is to make dynamic content technology like the content
object API pervasive, approachable, and cost effective for our developers.
To help us better achieve this, we plan to incorporate key components of
Spectra technology - a Java-based version of the COAPI architecture and
other services directly related to dynamic content - into the application
server, as well as delivering next generation dynamic content technologies
such as end-user content contribution and team production through a series
of new product initiatives. This means that version 1.5 will be Spectra's
last feature additive release - we'll invest our resources in making the
core technology that we move into our application server and visual tools
faster, easier, and better.

Macromedia will continue to support Spectra via a community source model,
on-going technical support, training, and consulting, as well as having a
team of engineers working on bug fixes and quality assurance for community
source submissions. Spectra will continue to be offered for sale, using our
partners as the primary sales channel. We also will do our best to give you
early access to technology previews, alphas, and betas of the new
technologies already under development.

In the world we live and work in, technology changes constantly, we've all
thrived because of our ability to adapt to change. This is no different - a
change for the Spectra Product Group, and for every developer, customer and
partner out there who has invested their valuable time and mind share into
Spectra. While I understand the challenge that a change like this can pose,
I am extremely optimistic. The core vision of the Spectra technology is
compelling - the opportunity to make this technology available to more
developers, cheaper, and better, is a chance that I relish. I hope you share
my optimism through this time of change

<!-----------------------------
Neil Clark
Senior Web Applications Engineer
Spectra / ColdFusion / XML / Cerebro
MCB Digital
Macromedia Alliance Member
Tel: 020 8941 3232
Fax: 020 8941 4333
Mobile : 077719 448 227
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
---------------------------->
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