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1. #18330 Add Functionality to Quick, Easy Site Deployment More than a Web content management system, Octigon President James Smith calls Octane8 a deployment platform. What exactly can you deploy with Octane8? To name a few: public Internet sites, private intranet and extranet sites; sites for the group you'll be collaborating with for the next two weeks; sites with pages that sell; and sites with pages that inform. Pastore, Michael. Intranet Journal (2003). Design>Content Management>Web Design 2. #27044 If a modern day Rip van Winkle woke up after just a year's sleep, he would be stunned by the buzz around Ajax today. Technology is moving very quickly in this space and whether you are a web author, a CMS developer, or a regular web user, Ajax will make some exciting changes to your world. Downes, Jonathan and Joe Walker. CMSwatch (2006). Articles>Content Management>Web Design>Ajax 3. #30604 ATAG (Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines) Assessment of WordPress This document assesses WordPress 2.01 against the Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines 1.0. Clark, Joe. JoeClark.org (2006). Articles>Web Design>Accessibility>Content Management 4. #18805 Avoiding the Content Silo Trap™, Enterprise Content Management Organizations frequently fall into the content silo trap, multiple authors creating similar information, in many areas of the organization. Authors rarely share their information (they work in silos) or are even aware that this information already exists elsewhere in the organization. Technical communicators have been single sourcing for years, this session looks at how to move beyond technical publications to assist your organization with enterprise content management. This session includes a case study from Eli Lilly. Rockley, Ann and Jodee Clore. STC Proceedings (2002). Design>Content Management>Information Design 5. #19155 A Better Approach: Requirements-Focused CMS Selection Your organisation is unique, and as such, has a unique set of content management system (CMS) requirements. There is also no single 'perfect for everyone' content management system. Each product has its own set of strengths and weaknesses, and distinctive design principles. Unfortunately, the selection process followed by many organisations doesn't recognise this, leading to the purchase of a CMS which does not match business needs. Selecting a CMS does not have to be a lottery. By following a requirements-focused methodology, instead of a features-driven approach, the right CMS can be identified, and the business risks minimised. Robertson, James. Step Two (2003). Design>Content Management>Software 6. #28933 Better Content Management through Information Architecture Content Management Systems promise so much: content is easier to publish, easier to update, and easier to find and use. Lots of promises, but do CMSs really deliver? Masood Nasser examines why Content Management Systems often fail and shows how Information Architecture can come to the rescue. Nasser, Masood. Boxes and Arrows (2007). Articles>Content Management>Information Design 7. #13552 Beyond the Buzzword: Single Sourcing Single sourcing, which has been a buzzword in technical communication for several years, is now emerging as a practical, efficient, and cost-effective method for creating multiple deliverables. You might want to consider single sourcing if you have some documentation projects that repeat, if not every one of your projects is a one-off, if you reuse some of your content, and if your budget planning includes more than just the very next project. Brierley, Sean. Intercom (2002). Design>Content Management>Single Sourcing 8. #29742 Blog 101: An Overview of Weblog Technologies A weblog or 'blog' is a Web site with content consisting of a series of discrete postings added sequentially and presented in reverse chronological order. Historically used for personal Web sites, blogs in fact represent a form of lightweight content management that can be adapted to virtually any topic, including technical communication. The recent explosion of blogs is in part a result of the availability of publishing tools that simplify their creation. These tools vary significantly in capability, setup, and ease of use, and each offers advantages and disadvantages. Berry, Robert R. STC Proceedings (2004). Articles>Content Management>Information Design>Blogging 9. #23056 Calculating the Cost of a Large-Scale Web Site A well-designed information architecture with intuitive organization, labeling, navigation, and indexing systems can significantly reduce the amount of time that users spend blundering through the hierarchies of Web sites and intranets. How much is this time-savings worth? The case is clearest for intranets where the users are your employees. Morville, Peter. Semantic Studios (1997). Design>Web Design>Content Management>Usability 10. #15097 Capturing Feedback: Building a Tighter Net Describes how to use Microsoft FrontPage and Access to build a system for organizing and retrieving feedback from reviewers. The article is intended for those with some experience with Web and database design. Shoesmith, Kevin. Intercom (2001). Design>Content Management>Web Design>Microsoft Access 11. #25064 Characteristics of Web Site Content Web site content must be recrudescent, repositorial, refluent, and rectilinear. What? Here's an innovative treatment of the essential attributes of online text. Find out why great web site content generally has these 14 characteristics that start with a "R". Streight, Steven. Blogger.com (2005). Articles>Web Design>Content Management>Usability 12. #14225 Choices and Challenges: Considerations for Designing Electronic Performance Support Systems Introduces the breadth of decision-making required in EPSS design. Explores choices and challenges facing designers in the design process, performance cycle, technology constraints, use of storytelling techniques, evaluation, and success factors. Carliner, Saul. Technical Communication Online (2002). Articles>Content Management>Web Design>EPSS 13. #22443 CMS Wiki is a knowledge base for Content Management. CMS Wiki. Resources>Content Management>Information Design>Wikis 14. #19150 A Consumer Survey of CMS Vendor Websites In March 2003, an online survey was conducted of consumer opinion about CMS vendor websites. This was extensively promoted through the CMS mailing lists, and on key CMS websites such as CMS Watch, the Intranet Focus and Step Two Designs sites. In total, 168 responses were made to this survey, representing consumers from across the globe, and in every type of organisation. This briefing provides a high-level summary of the results of the survey. Robertson, James. Step Two (2003). Design>Content Management>Web Design 15. #22441 Content Management and Information Architecture Content management is information architecture writ large. Boiko, Bob. ASIST (2001). Presentations>Content Management>Information Design 16. #19153 A Content Management Project Presents Unique Challenges At a basic level, implementing a content management system (CMS) is like deploying any other large software package. Fundamental project management principles must be followed, along with best practice technical guidelines. Beyond this, however, a CMS project presents a number of unique challenges. These must be recognised and addressed for the project to be successful. Robertson, James. Step Two (2003). Design>Content Management>Information Design 17. #25755 Content management systems are key to running an efficient website. Keep the development group out of the loop on updating content, and you will move ever so much faster. 'Content' doesn’t need the same kind of source control that scripts and templates need. Specific design suggestions follow. Boynton, J.R. Diamond Lane, The (2002). Design>Content Management>Web Design 18. #22648 In this White Paper, we examine the benefits of automated content management, and demonstrate where efficiencies can be gained within your organization. Web sites with more than a few information pages may benefit from content management systems (CMS). Content management systems are automated tools that allow for web site content to be created and administered on a recurring basis. The result puts the responsibility for content development into the hands of the authors (where it belongs) and out of the hands of the programmers. Sloan, Brian and Scott Duffy. XGuru (2002). Articles>Content Management>Web Design 19. #13359 Content Management Systems and the Single Web Designer Content Management is the next step in separating structure from design. What began with Cascading Style Sheets and was furthered by XML, is exploding with the CM environment, where billions were spent last year and more billions are expected to be spent in the years ahead. CM Systems come in many shapes: They can be huge or small, simple or very complex. They range from the very expensive (almost $300,000 for enterprise–wide systems like Vignette or Interwoven and $43,000 per server processor for Microsoft’s CMS to almost free (less than $1,000 for Manila and nothing for Zope). But they are all based on the same idea: CM allows designers to focus on design by building templates. Subject experts build content in a separate environment. The server takes the content, inserts it into the correct template and sends it all, neatly wrapped up, to end users. Ellis, James. List Apart, A (2002). Design>Content Management>Web Design 20. #23992 Content Management Systems: Don't Automate the Misery Few organizations have seen much good come of content-management BPR initiatives so far. Of the many reasons for these failures, one stands out: these BPR initiatives—and the systems they spawn—are focused on realizing organizational objectives without sufficient regard for the context, habits, and goals of the people who will actually use the system. Fore, David. Cooper Interaction Design (2001). Articles>Content Management>User Centered Design 21. #14082 Content Repurposing with FrameMaker+SGML and XML We see content repurposing as taking marked-up content and automatically transforming it for presentation in multiple applications. For example, one of our clients asked us to help them convert existing Word documentation into structured FrameMaker+SGML files, and then export it to a well-formed and valid XML instance. The structured FrameMaker+SGML documents would be used to create user manuals (both print and PDF), and the XML instance would be used for online documentation on PDAs or cell phones. Portions of the content would be applicable for only the printed documents, while other potions of the content would be used only for online display. Idea Store, The (2001). Design>Content Management>Software>Adobe FrameMaker 22. #14219 CoRR: A Computing Research Repository This paper describes the decisions by which the Association for Computing Machinery integrated good features from the Los Alamos e-print (physics) archive and from Cornell University's Networked Computer Science Technical Reference Library to form their own open, permanent, online “computing research repository” (CoRR). Submitted papers are not refereed and anyone can browse and extract CoRR material for free, so CoRR's eventual success could revolutionize computer science publishing. But several serious challenges remain: some journals forbid online preprints, the CoRR user interface is cumbersome, submissions are only self-indexed, (no professional library staff manages the archive) and long-term funding is uncertain. Halpern, Joseph Y. Journal of Computer Documentation (2000). Articles>Content Management>Web Design 23. #19788 Creating a Corporate Electronic Information Delivery Solution Tandem Computers Incorporated developed a new electronic information delivery system and changed internal publishing processes to achieve greater eficiency and customer satisfaction. We were able to move over 1,000 manuals and 11,000 pieces of support documentation along with education material from two different CD-ROM delivery products to one corporate viewer that supports publishing on both CD-ROM and the World Wide Web. The project included creating a new viewer using industry-standard components, creating new publishing tools, and establishing new corporate relationships and processes. Fingold, Sharon. STC Proceedings (1997). Design>Content Management>Single Sourcing 24. #13591 An Information Model provides the framework for organizing your content so that it can be delivered and reused in a variety of innovative ways. Once you have created an Information Model for your content repository, you will be able to label information in ways that will enhance search and retrieval, making it possible for authors and users to find the information resources they need quickly and easily. Hackos, JoAnn T. WebRef (2002). Design>Content Management>Single Sourcing>Web Design 25. #20488 Database-Driven Navigation Bars Using Text and Images Okay, we've all fiddled with NavBars. In fact, MM's built-in Navigation Bar Builder is pretty sweet for creating NavBars with onMouseOver and onMouseOut behaviors giving your site that professional look. But what if your site changes frequently? One option is to bag the images and stick with a database-driven NavBar that uses a repeat region. We'll look at that approach first. Then we will see how we can replace UltraDev's hardcoded NavBar image behaviors with database-driven links and images. Princeton University. Design>Content Management>Web Design>Dreamweaver
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