With a new lite version of its CMS product, Microsoft is targeting the lower end of the marketplace -- where many observers thought the company belonged in the first place (see our earlier take).
OSCOM (Open Source CMS association) is organizing another hackathon to encourage development and -- dare we hope! -- inter-project cooperation on open-source client tools.
There are many good reasons to invest in strong Records Management systems, but it increasingly appears the Sarbanes-Oxley compliance may not be a good one.
The German government has launched the first site managed by a new Web content management system, Government Site Builder, which was built by a local integrator, Materna, on top of a product from German CMS vendor CoreMedia.
The desire to publish your website in multiple languages -- or more appropriately, to localize it for different international audiences -- is well-taken and seems increasingly important.
The University of California-Berkeley has updated its landmark report on digital content and found that the volume of information online has tripled during the past three years (though voice and e-mail still dwarf the Web in terms of overall throughput).
Wikis -- collaboration environments where visitors can edit pages -- are becoming more popular and could provide some interesting models for content management projects at a time when many organizations are looking for more ad-hoc collaboration on content than a linear workflow engine can typically provide.