Selasa, 13 November 2007

Affordable Hosting Realtor Site Web-Finding Cheap Hosting Today Isn't Hard

So how can you find affordable hosting the realtor website? Many people today are trying to find low cost hosting. Keep in mind, today it is not really that difficult to find affordable hosting for your web site, as there are literally hundreds if not thousands of hosting companies today.

The difficult task is this: finding a company that offers affordable hosting and good customer service. You should never sacrifice customer service just because the company is affordable; make sure that they are affordable and offer good quality hosting service.

Here's are important tips and information to help you find the best and most affordable web hosting companies quickly as possible. In days past, finding a good affordable web hosting company was quite simple: all that was needed was to simply read the website of Web hosting providers come and find out which one was the best.

Nowadays however, with all the competition and self proclamation, it is the more difficult to find out which Web hosting companies are the best without trying them all out beforehand. Keep in mind, there are two different factors you must decide beforehand for your personal situation before you make the right decision for your Web hosting company.

First of all, you need to determine how much traffic you will be getting to your website. Believe it or not, there actually some hosting companies that will put a restriction on the amount of traffic to your website can receive in order for your site to be hosted on their server. However, good affordable web hosting companies will not do this. Make sure the company you are considering has no such restrictions.

Good affordable hosting companies will provide you with enough space it you can get as much traffic as you want your website. Also, good hosting companies will enable you to be able to put pictures or images and even videos on your website, something that many affordable web hosting cubbies will not do.

Also, make actually sure you know what type customer service the company has before you get involved with them. For this, simply read reviews by current customers who have had experience with that company, and find out what kind of customer service they provide.

Absolutely make sure that they offer 24/7 customer service in case something goes wrong with your server. Hopefully these tips will help you to find the right affordable hosting company for your realtor web site.

Tips for Hosting Office Parties

  1. Be honest with employees. Make sure your employees know your workplace substance abuse policy and that the policy addresses the use of alcoholic beverages in any work-related situation and office social function.
  2. Post the policy. Use every communication vehicle to make sure your employees know the policy. Prior to an office party, use break room bulletin boards, office e-mail and paycheck envelopes to communicate your policy and concerns.
  3. Reinvent the office party concept. Why have the typical office party? Try something new like an indoor carnival, group outing to an amusement park or volunteer activity with a local charity.
  4. Make sure employees know when to say when. If you do serve alcohol at an office event, make sure all employees know that they are welcome to attend and have a good time, but that they are expected to act responsibly.
  5. Make it the office party of choice. Make sure there are plenty of non-alcoholic beverages available.
  6. Eat...and be merry! Avoid serving lots of salty, greasy or sweet foods which tend to make people thirsty. Serve foods rich in starch and protein which stay in the stomach longer and slow the absorption of alcohol in the bloodstream.
  7. Designate party managers. Remind managers that even at the office party, they may need to implement the company's alcohol and substance abuse policy.
  8. Arrange alternative transportation. Anticipate the need for alternative transportation for all party goers and make special transportation arrangements in advance of the party. Encourage all employees to make use of the alternative transportation if they consume any alcohol.
  9. Serve none for the road. Stop serving alcohol before the party officially ends.

If alcoholic beverages are provided at office social functions, state laws regarding their use and resulting legal responsibilities should be consulted and addressed. This information is not intended to be a substitute for legal advice and should not be relied upon to determine what steps employers can or should take to address potential legal liability.

These tips for hosting office parties are provided by the U.S. Department of Labor.

Rabu, 07 November 2007

Joomladesigns Joomla 1.5 Templates

Joomladesigns have now redeveloped all the templates to support Joomla 1.5 natively. Each zip package now includes both 1.0.x and 1.5 versions of the Joomla templates.

You can also view the new releases for October 2007 called systemforce, forcast, financial and centreview which also support 1.0.x and 1.5 natively. To view the lastest Joomla templates visit the Joomladesigns web site.

Joomla! 1.5 RC3 Takriban

The development team have announced the release of Joomla! 1.5 RC3 codenamed Takriban which is now available for download from the Joomla web site. The release of 1.5 RC3 means that the core team are getting close to releasing a stable version of Joomla 1.5 which includes all the improvements taken from the RC1 and RC2 releases.

Joomla New York Conference

Joomla! will be presented for the first time in Joomla!Day format New York, next month.
The Joomla event will take place in the heart of New York City, at Google’s East Coast headquarters on Saturday, October 13, 2007 — 9.30am-5pm ET. The event will cover a number of topics plus presenations from a number of developers including Joomla! lead developer Louis Landry, Software Freedom Law Center lawyer James Vasile and Open Source Matters board member Ryan Ozimek.

Joomla! 1.5 RC2 Endeleo Now available

The development team have announced the release of Joomla! 1.5 RC2 called Endeleo which is is now available for download from the Joomla web site.
A number of improvements have been introduced to the the 1.5 codebase since the RC1 release which include the following.

  • Router refactoring solving a range of bugs

  • Media Manager refactoring, moving this to MVC standards

  • Updated scripts (version); mootools, tinyMCE, Xstandard

  • Core template improvements

  • Template language installer support

Joomladesigns Joomla Templates For September 2007

Joomladesigns has released five new eye catching Joomla templates for September 2007. The new website designs come with the Photoshop PSD files plus support a number of module positions. The designs are called SME business, Focal point, wild thing, MXDEV and JRX. To view the latest released visit www.joomladesigns.co.uk

Idea about the unspec/spec timers..

My allegiance is pretty small, but when someone wants to reroll and level up a new template, we help them out. That's what patrons, monarchs, and allegiance friends are there for. We help one another.

Now, factor in how much easier it is to level these days, and it really doesn't take that long to reach a level where you're having fun with your template.

If you're having a hard time finding out what template suits your playstyle the most, you may want to ask around, and see what others say about the same template you're looking to make.

I'm guessing people here want their cake and eat it too, meaning they don't want to reroll and have to redo a multitude of quests like:

- GW Recall
- Aerlinthe Recall
- Sanctuary Recall
- Caul Recall
- LS Sending
- Mt Lethe Recall
- Ulgrim's Recall
- Skill Credit #1
- Skill Credit #2
- Encrusted Bloodstone Jewel
- Healer's Heart
- Augmentation Gems
- etc.
- etc.

I really understand this side of things. I have a lot of playable characters who I've done these with across a very broad range of levels. It'd be nice if I did, say, Aerlinthe Recall on one of my guys, and when any other of my characters reaches that level they automatically get Aerlinthe Recall...

But, there are many character slots, and I think Turbine has always wanted folks to reroll. Mainly, I think, it's so new players can meet up with more experienced players, and make relationships/allegiances, and things like that.

So, to be pretty much any template at any given time, with a downtime of pressing the green triangles, pack space, and a not promoting people to reroll and meet up with new people... eh, just doesn't seem like a good thing, even when considering people just want to play, and not be 'hassled' with repeated hunting/questing that doesn't interest them.

I didn't check the first few pages of this thread, but there was one thread with a similar topic where I talked about reducing the timers for people if they haven't visited the temples in a certain amount of time. The reason I proposed that option was because the game changes, but our timers don't. Alchemy got updated, and people may want to sell stuff back to get it. People made a template choice based on current game tech/info, but devs changed what's available for the better, but we're still penalized. This situation here would also give good reason to have a gradual reduction of the timers if you aren't hitting up the temples often.

See, people have used the timers for all kinds of minor exploitations that have added up over time. Carving stuff with LP, turning in tradeskill/tinker skill trophies, harbinger / skill sellback exploitation, sellback/train/spec'z skills to pick up something that's exploitable (Virindi Wands, TW ammo damage).

Many people would pick up these gems, and keep them on their guy, and as the time arrose, they would use their gems, and get the use of skills for free. For my template, and several others, I could carry several gems, and whenever I ran into something new that was more exploitable by one template over another, I could add that skill.

So, say something is tankable by a melee/sword, but not a mage. My template, and others, allow me to pick up sword with a couple temple gems.

As another pointed out, this puts in a situation where skills don't have much meaning anymore, because you can select the best ones for you whenever you feel like it. It'd be like having a melee skill, archer skill, and magic skill.

No Timers on temple gems would really hurt the game. A gradual reduction in timers would accomodate more people who aren't looking to exploit the system.

Selasa, 06 November 2007

CMS Software

CMS Software is a leading provider of ERP software, Manufacturing software and Supply Chain Management software solutions to manufacturers and distributors operating in supply-chain-intensive environments.



CMS Software - ERP Software solutions for manufacturers and distributors With increasingly stringent quality, performance and accuracy standards set by customers, optimizing internal processes has never been more critical, and controlling costs has never been more challenging. A company's enterprise software is key to surviving in such an environment.

With our products, CMS Software provides ERP software with comprehensive and fully integrated manufacturing functionality that is fully internet-enabled. Businesses utilizing CMS Software's ERP software maximize management control throughout the enterprise by enhancing resource visibility and information accessibility from the front-office to the shop floor.


CMS Software
is a one-stop, turnkey ERP software solution provider, with an in-house staff of implementation, education, training, support and hardware professionals ready to work directly with your staff to fully exploit our solutions' strengths; harnessing our functionality to meet your unique business challenges.

VLAN Trunking Protocol (VTP)

VLAN Trunking Protocol (VTP) is a Cisco proprietary Layer 2 messaging protocol that manages the addition, deletion, and renaming of VLANs on a network-wide basis. Virtual Local Area Network (VLAN) Trunk Protocol (VTP) reduces administration in a switched network. When you configure a new VLAN on one VTP server, the VLAN is distributed through all switches in the domain. This reduces the need to configure the same VLAN everywhere. To do this VTP carries VLAN information to all the switches in a VTP domain. VTP advertisements can be sent over ISL, 802.1q, IEEE 802.10 and LANE trunks. VTP traffic is sent over the management VLAN (VLAN1), so all VLAN trunks must be configured to pass VLAN1. VTP is available on most of the Cisco Catalyst Family products.

WordPress Super Cache 0.2

It is an extensive modification of the famous WP-Cache 2 plugin by Ricardo Galli Granada. This plugin creates static html files that are served directly by the webserver as well as the usual WP-Cache data files. It also goes one step further fixing a couple of bugs, adding some hooks and new features and making WP-Cache more flexible.
From the plugin page, here are some of the major changes and updates:
  • A plugin and hooks system. A common complaint with WP Cache was that hacking was required to make it work nicely with other plugins. Now you can take advantage of the simple plugin system built in to change how or when pages are cached. Use do_cacheaction() and add_cacheaction() like you would with WordPress hooks. Plugins can add their own options to the admin page too.
  • Works well with WordPress MU in VHOST or non-VHOST configuration. Each blog’s cache files are identified to improve performance.
  • Normal WP-Cache files are now split in two. Meta files go in their own directory making it much faster to scan and update the cache.
  • Includes this WP-Cache and protected posts fix.
  • Automatically disable gzip compression in WordPress instead of dying.
  • As Akismet and other spam fighting tools have improved, the cache will only be invalidated if a comment is definitely not spam.

If your server is struggling to cope with the traffic your site gets this plugin could be just right for you. If your site regularly gets hit by spikes of traffic like a digging or slashdotting it’s definitely the right choice, and even for everyday use, you may very well notice your webserver is a little bit more responsive.

Google SEO Algorithm Problems

Have you noticed anything different with Google lately? We webmasters certainly have, and if recent talk on SEO forums is an indicator, we're very frustrated! Over the last two years, Google has introduced a series of algorithm and filter changes that have led to unpredictable search engine results, dropping the rankings of many clean (non-spamming) web sites.

Google's algorithm changes started in November 2003 with the Florida update, now remembered as a legendary event among the webmaster community. This was followed by the Austin, Brandy, Bourbon, and Jagger updates. Google updates used to occur monthly; they're now carried out quarterly. But with so many servers, there seem to be several different results rolling through the servers at any time during a quarter.

BigDaddy, Google's most recent update, is partly to blame. Believed to be using a 64-bit architecture, BigDaddy is an update of Google's infrastructure as much as it is an update of its search algorithm. Pages lose their first page rankings and drop to the 100th page, or worse still, the Supplemental index!

BigDaddy's algorithm problems fall into four categories: canonical issues, duplicate content issues, the Sandbox, and supplemental page issues.


  1. Canonical Issues. These occur when a search engine treats www.yourdomain.com, yourdomain.com, and yourdomain.com/index.html as different web sites. When Google does this, it flags the different copies as duplicate content, and penalizes them. If yourdomain.com is not penalized and all other sites link to your web site using www.yourdomain.com, then the version left in the index will have no ranking. These are basic issues that other major search engines, such as Yahoo and MSN, have no problem dealing with. Google's reputation as the world's greatest search engine (self-ranked as a ten on a scale of one to ten) is hindered by its inability to resolve basic indexing issues.

  1. The Sandbox. It's believed that Google has implemented a time penalty for new links and sites before fully marking the index, based on the presumption that 100,000-page websites can't be created overnight. Certain web sites, or links to them, are "sandboxed" for a period of time before they are given full rank in the index. Speculation is that only a set of competitive keywords (the ones that are manipulated the most) are sandboxed. A drifting legend in the search engine world, the existence of the Sandbox has been debated, and is yet to be confirmed by Google.

  1. Duplicate Content Issues. Since web pages drive search engine rankings, Black Hat SEOs began duplicating the content of entire web sites under their own domain name, instantly producing a ton of web pages (kind of like downloading an encyclopedia onto your web site). Due to this abuse, Google aggressively attacked duplicate content abusers with their algorithm updates, knocking out many legitimate websites as collateral damage in the process. For example, when someone scrapes your site, Google will look at both renditions of the site, and in some cases it may determine the legitimate one to be the duplicate. The only way to prevent this is to track down sites as they are scraped and then submit spam reports to Google. Issues with duplicate content also arise because there are a lot of legitimate uses for them. News feeds are the most obvious example: a news story is covered by many websites because it's the content that viewerss want to see. Any filter will inevitably catch some legitimate uses.

  2. Supplemental Page Issues. "Supplemental Hell" to webmasters, the issue has been lurking in places like Webmasterworld for over a year, but it was the major shake-up in late February (coinciding with the ongoing BigDaddy rollout) that finally led to all hell breaking loose in the webmaster community. You may be aware that Google has two indexes: the main index, which is the one you see when you search; and the Supplemental index, a graveyard where old, erroneous and obsolete pages are laid to rest (among others). Nobody's disputing the need for a Supplemental index, it does indeed provide a worthy cause. But when you're buried alive, it's another story! Which is exactly what's been happening: active, recent, and clean pages have been showing up in the Supplemental index. The true nature of the issue is unclear, nor has a common causing leading to it been determined.

Google's monthly updates, once fairly predictable, were anticipated by webmasters with both joy and angst. Google followed a well published algorithm that gave each web page a Page Rank (a numerical ranking based on the number and rank of the web pages that link to it). When you searched for a term, Google ordered all the web pages that were deemed relevant to your search by their Page Rank. A number of factors were used to determine the relevancy of pages, including keyword density, page titles, meta tags, and header tags.

This original algorithm favored incoming links that used selected keywords as anchor text. The more sites that linked to yours using that keyword-rich anchor text, the better your search rank for those keywords. As Google became the dominant search force in the early part of the decade, site owners fought for high rankings in its SERPs. The release of Google's Adsense program made it very lucrative for those site owners who won: if a web site ranked highly for a popular keyword, they could run Google ads under Adsense, and split the revenue with Google! This led to an SEO epidemic that had never before been seen by the webmaster world.

The nature of links between web sites changed. Webmasters found that referring links on their websites could not only reduce their own search engine rankings, but boost those of their competitors as well. Google's algorithm works in a manner whereby links coming into your web site boost its Page Rank (PR), while outgoing links from your web pages to other web sites reduce your PR. Attempts to boost the page rankings for websites led to people creating link farms, participating in reciprocal link partnerships, and buying and selling links. Instead of using links to provide quality content for their visitors, webmasters now included links to support PRs and for monetary gain.

This led to the wholesale scraping of web sites, as I mentioned earlier. Black Hat SEOs could combine the content of an entire web site with Google's ad, and a few high-powered incoming links, to produce high page rankings and generate revenue from Google's Adsense program -- all without providing any unique web site content themselves! Aware of the manipulation that was taking place, Google aggressively altered their algorithms to prevent it. Thus began the cat-and-mouse game that has become the Google algorithm: in order to blacklist the duplicate sites so they could provide their users with the most relevant search results, sometimes the algorithm attacked the original site instead of the scraped one.

This led to a period of unstable updates that caused many top ranking, authentic web sites to drop from their ranks. Most end-users may not perceive this to be a problem. As far as they're concerned, Google's job is to provide the most relevant listings for their search, which it still does. For this reason, the problem hasn't made an immediate major impact on Google. However, if Google continues to produce unintended results as it evolves, slowly but surely, problems will surface. As these problems escalate, the webmaster community will lose faith in Google, making it vulnerable to the growing competition.

Webmasters are the word-of-mouth experts; and run the web sites that use Google's Adsense program. Fluctuations in ranking are part of the internet business, and most webmasters realize this – we're simply calling on Google to fix the bugs that unfairly snatch the correct rankings of our websites.

Of course, we understand that the reason that the bugs surfaced to begin with is because not all webmasters are innocent. Some have violated the guidelines laid out by Google, and continue to do so. We support Google's needs to fight spam and Black Hat SEO manipulation, and accept that there's probably no easy fix.

We don't expect Google to reveal their algorithm, or the changes that have been made to it. But given the impact Google's rankings have on companies, we webmasters would like to see more communication around the known issues, and be able to assist with identifying future algorithm issues, rather than speculating.

The most recent of these speculations suggest that Google is currently looking at attributes such as the age of a domain name, the number web sites on the same IP, and frequency of fresh content to churn their search results. As webmasters, we'd appreciate the ability to report potential bugs to Google, and receive a responses to our feedback.

After all, it's not just in Google's best interests to have a bug-free algorithm. Ultimately, this will provide the best search results for everyone.


Is Joomla! 1.5 RC3 really a release candidate?

I was really surprised not only find out that Joomla! 1.5 is going through a third release candidate, but will likely be followed with more release candidates. In most projects, the release canddate is a nearly-done final product where the only thing left is to make sure all the i's are dotted and all the t's are crossed. Not so with Joomla! 1.5.

Johan Janssens's writes in his post, Is Joomla! 1.5 RC3 really a release candidate?:

In the last two weeks after the release of RC3 I have seen this question popping up on forums and mailing lists. I have seen complaints about RC3 being more of a break in development then a real release candidate. Some people seem to feel that we are still adding features and making functionality changes.

In this post I will try to give, in all honesty and openness, a status update on development and provide an answer to this question.

You can read the rest of the post yourself. One quick summary for Johan's post would be, "Joomla is experiencing growing pains". Sometimes it's difficult for us to remember that while the original codebase for Joomla! has been around for awhile, the project itself is quite young.

Though, you have to admit, the number of Joomla! 1.5 release candidates does make it appear that the software is actually at beta level and not RC. Perhaps we'll be seeing a Joomla! 1.5 Final1 and Joomla! 1.5 Final2 then finally a Joomla! 1.5 Gold? That's likely not to happen, but I know it becomes a user's fear when they're not sure whether the software they're using is really stable or not. I wonder what all the Joomla! documentation writers are thinking right now?

Core features of CMS products

Another section titled What's important in a CMS, covers segment defining features and how to decide which products match your needs. This thankfully brief section is about the general features that define in a basic way, what it means to be a Web Content Management System. And the core features are ...

Production of web pages
By definition, a web content management system is about editing, producing and deploying web pages.

Systematisation of web pages
Turning website management and production into a systematic activity that delivers efficiency.

Simplification of website production activities
One of the critical ideas is that a CMS should internalise at least some of the technical, design or communication complexity of producing a website. Some still expect technical or design skill, the better ones make all aspects simpler.

User management
A CMS should manage who does what. Who can see the site, who can edit it, who can publish it and who can administer it.

Web based editing
The editor of some CMS are not web based. This is somewhat of an anathema, really you should be able to use a web browser to edit your site. The best systems do not depend on specific browsers or platforms for you to be able to edit your site(s).

Database storage
The content and delivery of your web pages does not need to be from a database, in fact static (non-database delivered) pages have some inherent advantages (such as speed). However at some level your content should reside in a database to enable it to be managed, retrieved, manipulated, archived and integrated.

Consistency and compatibility
Especially for systems deploying public pages, the results should appear consistently across different platforms and browsers. This compatibility and standards compliance is a benefit that should come from systematisation.

Split editing environment
Most contemporary content management systems keep the 'live' content separated from the 'draft' or 'editable' content. This ensures site visitors are uninterrupted and provides the flexibility for dividing editing from publishing rights, improving data integrity and delivering 'undo' capabilities.

Intuitive and simple to learn interfaces
Few people want to spend much time learning a piece of software. Most of the benefit of a CMS is lost if it is as difficult to use as learning how to build a website using code or design tools. Look for something that works the way you would want it to.

Scalability and extensibility
Can the tool grow as you do, both in size and in capabilities.

Support and information
Can you get the information and assistance that you need from the vendor(s) of the content management system.

Speed and efficiency
Does the content management system make the site editing and deployment faster and more efficient than other alternatives.

CMS product groups and variants

In order to simplify consideration of Content Management Systems, we use a six-step classification system.

Step One - Function based classification
In the Content Management System Definition page, we hinted at the broader range of software products that have some form of Content Management System (CMS) heritage. These include Document Management Systems (DMS), Digital Asset Management (DAM) Systems, Learning Management Systems (LAM or eLearning Solutions), Brand Management Systems, Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and a wide range of other web related information systems. The most appropriate classification for Komodo CMS and similar product offerings is that of Web Content Management Systems (WCM), although we believe we have superior credentials in both eLearning and Brand Management as well.

Step Two - Scale based classification
In addition to the functional niche, the scale of the system is also identified. For example, Enterprise Content Management (ECM) and Global Content Management (GCM) are more about the customer size to which the solution is targetted (and of course the attached price tag). It is true that ECM solutions contain advanced workflow management and archival systems, and the GCM solutions usually have translation and Unicode management built in, however so do some of the smaller players. In this classification, Komodo CMS would be considered mid-market. This uninformative designation covers small businesses with serious web management requirements through to large corporates and governments who whilst having large audiences may have modest numbers of web editors and contributors. In many ways it is easier to scale-up than live with application complexity that comes about because of unused features (in our humble opinion of course).

Step Three - License model classification
Further market segmentation comes about on the basis of the engagement model. Proprietary systems come at a cost in the more conventional sense and are subject to stringent licensing terms, ASP solutions are purchased under a rental agreement and Open Source solutions are at least notionally free and subject to open agreements in the form of GPL or GNU licences (discussed later). Komodo CMS would be considered a proprietary system and is subject to an End User License Agreement (EULA), some important issues related to licensing are discussed in the section on Open Source solutions.

Step Four - Platform based classification
Some CMS solutions will only work on a certain platform (for example, Microsoft Windows®, UNIX®, or Linux) or are built on top of other solutions (Lotus Domino, Microsoft Exchange) or require the use of particular plug-ins, system set-ups, or internet browsers. Where cross-browser compatibility is advertised, this may not cover editing for which a specific browser may be required. Platform agnostic content management systems do not exist in the real world (outside of marketing spin doctoring), because at the very least, every vendor has a platform preference and every vendor can only test so many different combinations and permutations of platforms and browsers.

Step Five – Classification of underlying development environment
As with all software products, CMS solutions are built by programmers using varying programming environments. With the increasing compatibility of solutions that has come about bu the adoption of Open Standards (ODBC, RSS, XML, LDAP, and so on), organisations can deploy varied software applications and make them work together. The reality of course is that this is easier to do when they are relative close in origin and development methodologies and where your deployment, IT and other resources can be utilised across multiple environments. If everything you already operate runs on Windows, then you will need to think twice before buying software you wish to integrate that runs on another platform or uses another code base. Beware however that this is not your only selection criteria otherwise saving some integration problems may lead you to bigger core functionality problems if your existing vendor of other IT solutions has a sub-standard offering in web CMS applications space.

Step Six - CMS methodology classification
Content Management Solutions are youthful, even in the field of internet applications. As a result, there is no real industry standard and the methodologies used to manage internet content vary considerably. No solution is exactly the same as another, however some classifications exist. Some editors use a file and folder structure (these are generally systems that have migrated to the internet from document management or other pre-web CMS disciplines), most however are WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get), trying to maintain the ‘look’ of the site whilst in an editing environment. The user methodology continues into areas such as user access, rights and privileges, methods of file handling, site updating processes and a raft of other ‘stylistic’ decision areas.

Classification results – The six sided matrix
As you can see from Google’s DMOZ Project, there are a large number of vendors in the Internet Content Management space. Broken down across the six classifications detailed above (function, scale, license, platform, build environment and user methodology), the number of vendor solutions in each matrix segment is a much smaller number.

In the section on Making a Decision, we suggest that you determine your requirements and the ‘matrix section’ in which your ideal product resides before making a choice.

For the record, Komodo CMS can be classified as follows under this model …
Functional classification: Web Content Management System (WCM)
Scale based classification: Mid-market solution
License classification: Proprietary license with exceptions
Platform classification: Cross-platform with Linux deployment preference
Underlying code classification: Developed using PHP and MySQL
User methodology: Cross-browser editor, through-the-web, WYSIWYG

Other classifications and comparisons abound …

For enterprise solutions, Gartner publishes a magic quadrant®, if you are willing to buy the research. In other segments the research and comparisons are more fractured, however examine our CMS Experts and Product Vendors sections to gather more information.

What's important in a CMS product?

The whole concept that Content Management as some homogeneous technology segment is fundamentally flawed. Not only do definitions of Content Management vary wildly, the broad discipline includes Document Management (DM), Knowledge Management (KM), Record Identification Management (RIM), Digital Asset Management (DAM), the glorious sounding; Enterprise Content Management (ECM) and just about every other digital information storage area. Of course the very fact that you are at this site means, like us, you are probably in the subset of Web Content Management (WCM) which is the most commonly accepted form of CMS.

The most important features of a web content management system are the ones that your organisation needs to achieve its objectives. Of course, there are some core features that are required for software to be a web content management system, and these are discussed in the section on Features of CMS Products. The important thing is that you do not get caught up in these generic features and you discover what specific needs your organisation has. Once you know these features you will probably find a subset of vendors that also believe that your needs are the important features of a CMS. That is because they are working in a segment like yours and for that reason their CMS will probably be well suited to your organisation and your particular business needs.

Lets dive right in. If you also believe that the following are important features then your organisation and our product match … Bingo! If not, it is not that your feature list is flawed, but rather that you are better suited by a different product sub-group.

IMPORTANT FEATURES

Core Web Content Management Features
First see the 12 core features discussed under Features of a CMS Product and determine the level of performance that you need within these areas.

Brand and Corporate Identity
As a publishing solution, protection and assistance with the maintenance of visual communication elements may be important to you.

Flexible Editing
If you wish to distribute the contribution of content to members, staff, clients or other participants, you will probably want flexibility in terms of what browsers and platforms they use. You will also want a simple interface to reduce training and support.

Statistics and Traffic Reporting
You will probably want to know how well used your site is, who is using it and what sections and pages they are most drawn to. You will probably also want to know where users of the site are coming from and what marketing and links are working for you.

Rapid Development Tools (Templates, Copy and Paste, Shared Content)
Why create each piece of content when you can use the systemisation benefits of a CMS to speed things up. Using templates, copy and paste and repeatable content, you can reduce site adjustment and deployment times.

Accessibility and Useability
Focus on accessibility and useability does more than enabling disadvantages audiences to use you site, it also generally improves effectiveness of communication and power of your message.

Built in Features (Site Map, Search, Breadcrumbs, Navigation)
Since you site content is in a database, shouldn’t the site map be created dynamically? You should also be able to search all content and build navigation structures automatically.