Chapter 7: Microsoft Content Management Server

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Overview

Content management is the process of ensuring that a Web site contains relevant up-to-date material. The content needs to be created and submitted securely, with appropriate business approval, to ensure that it is suitable for use on a company's site. As well as attracting bad publicity, inaccurate content can lead to legal problems.

The need for content management came about soon after organizations built their own Web sites and realized that they needed an army of HTML authors just to keep the site up-to-date. As the number of Web site pages increased, so did the number of HTML authors since the process of designing and managing Web pages is fairly labor intensive. Clearly, this was impractical, and the costs of such an operation were becoming too much for many organizations to bear (see Figure 7.1).

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Figure 7.1: Before content management tools were developed, Web site authors would become an expensive bottleneck.

A number of organizations built home grown-solutions, some using products such as Microsoft Access and SQL Server. The site content would be typed into the database and then linked from the database to the site. This worked well and continues to provide a level of content management to some companies today. As you would expect, the dot-com boom led to a huge demand for 'proper' content management solutions, and a number of companies started up providing just such a service (see Figure 7.2).

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Figure 7.2: With content management products, templates are built and then any end user with appropriate rights can submit content.

Although feature-rich, these solutions were very expensive, often costing hundreds of thousands of dollars for a basic implementation. In parallel with this, Microsoft realized that content management was missing from its portfolio, so it struck up relationships with some content management companies (notably NCompass and Interwoven) to provide content management as part of the Microsoft Commerce Server Business Desk application (see Chapter 5). These third parties were given the appropriate hooks and were able, with differing levels of success, to provide basic content management features for Microsoft-based Web sites.

Microsoft subsequently purchased NCompass and renamed the product Microsoft Content Management Server, launching it as part of the .NET Enterprise Server range.



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Microsoft  .NET. Jumpstart for Systems Administrators and Developers
Microsoft .NET: Jumpstart for Systems Administrators and Developers (Communications (Digital Press))
ISBN: 1555582850
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2003
Pages: 136
Authors: Nigel Stanley

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