8 Feb 2007
-
Browse
or -
Alfresco Developer Guide
-
Twitter
- One week from tonight: #WashingtonDC #Alfresco Meetup Topic: #Activiti #BPM http://t.co/SH6wBru1 2 days ago
- One week from today: #Alfresco meetup in #Granada Spain http://t.co/dh9yFymb 6 days ago
- Quick-and-dirty file management web app built with #Pyramid #cmis #alfresco http://t.co/nwX02WiE 6 days ago
- More updates...
Tag Cloud
Alfresco Alfresco Community Alfresco DevCon Alfresco Developer Guide Alfresco Meetup Alfresco Share Alfresco Share Customization Alfresco Surf Apache Chemistry book Book Review CMIS Community Conference Django Drupal ECM Liferay meetup Metaversant Open Source Optaros Portal Python screencast Surf tutorial WCM webinar Web ScriptsPages
Categories
- Apache Chemistry (3)
- cmislib (3)
- Blogging (6)
- Collaboration (26)
- Content Management (463)
- Acquia (4)
- Alfresco (226)
- Alfresco Book (12)
- Alfresco Community (17)
- Alfresco DevCon (10)
- Alfresco Developer Series (19)
- Alfresco Meetups (4)
- Apache Jackrabbit (4)
- Apache Sling (3)
- CMIS (14)
- Documentum (54)
- Drupal (22)
- NOSQL (3)
- Zope (23)
- Corporate Blogging (57)
- Django (8)
- Enterprise 2.0 (35)
- General (103)
- Knowledge Management (73)
- Linux (20)
- Ubuntu (9)
- Metaversant (3)
- Open Source (37)
- Personal (91)
- Portal (70)
- JBoss Portal (4)
- Liferay (7)
- Search (27)
- Social Software (8)
- Ringside (6)
- Workflow (4)
- XML (66)
- Apache Chemistry (3)

[...] I’ve recently finished the new Alfresco book. The bottom-line on this book is this: End-users evaluating or learning to use Alfresco may find the book helpful. Most chapters are aimed at teaching people how to work with the web client. For this audience, the book does a pretty good job of presenting a logical progression through the product. Although most of the information in the book is readily available through the Alfresco wiki, forums, demos, and documentation, the book pulls it together in a hassle-free, portable format. Technical users, however, will be disappointed. If you want technical depth this book isn’t for you. Before you shell out the $60 you really need to consider what kind of information you are looking for. You may ultimately be better off surfing blogs, forums, and wikis. When I originally saw the announcement for the book, I was excited. Shelf space is one datapoint that can be used to measure technology adoption and maturity. More specifically, I was hoping the book would be a one stop shop for business users as well as technical users–sort of an Alfresco Unleashed. But as the preface clearly states, “This book is not targeted at developers who want to change the core code structure of Alfresco.” I don’t necessarily want to change the “core code structure,” but I do want to implement, customize, and extend Alfresco for my clients. In that respect my expectations for the book turned out to be way too high. For now, at least, from a technical publication standpoint, Alfresco has yet to be “Unleashed” or “Exposed”. Workflow is an example where the book could have gone into much more depth, particularly with the introduction of the JBPM integration in release 1.4. But the chapter on workflow focuses almost exclusively on the simple folder-based workflow functionality. Although there is a section on advanced workflow using JBPM, it only skims the surface by providing the steps one goes through to define an advanced workflow. It does this at such a high level it really provides little value other than to inform the reader that there’s such a thing as advanced workflow. [...]
ecmarchitect.com » Book review: Alfresco Enterprise Content Management
February 21st, 2007 at 9:43 pmpermalink