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> So I'm trying to convince some friends in a startup that open software and > Linux will save them much (time/money/heartache) as they get up and running. > The question of content management has come up. They naturally lean toward > something like Interwoven, which can easily cost a few hundred thousand > dollars (depending on licensing). Meanwhile I go to freshmeat, and "content > management" search shows 50 hits. I don't really have time to adequately > evaluate all 50 of those, does anybody have any recommendations that I could > float to the top of the list? The primary features that they need are version > control, some form of workflow, and an XML friendly environment. They'd also > like the ability to use templates to put together several hunks of content at > once, but that would be the last on the list. > I am currently starting to evaluate ZOPE http://www.zope.org >From the information that I've gathered, it implements WebDAV, which is a protocol to do exactly what you want (content management & version control). I believe that the MS Winblows webfolders use the WebDAV protocol somehow. ZOPE is more than just WebDAV, but exactly what it is is what I hope to discover in my evaluation. Anyway, you can also search on WebRFM which is a perl CGI script which implements a class-1 WebDAV server/protocol. - Subcription/unsubscription/info requests: send e-mail with "subscribe", "unsubscribe", or "info" on the first line of the message body to discuss-request at blu.org (Subject line is ignored).
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