Thanks to everyone who attended the AIIM luncheon today at the University of Dallas. It was great to meet you and I appreciated the questions and interest. I’ve posted my slides on SlideShare. As I mentioned, all of the open source resources and other web sites mentioned during the talk are bookmarked on Delicious and tagged under “opensource_ecm_talk”.
Category: Content Management
Enterprise Content Management (ECM), Web Content Management (WCM), Document Management (DM). Whatever you call it this category covers market happenings and lessons learned.
Open Source ECM: My topic for tomorrow’s AIIM DFW Meeting
I’ll be speaking at the AIIM DFW meeting tomorrow at the University of Dallas. My topic is ECM and Open Source Software: A New Force in ECM Solutions. Here’s the abstract:
Open source software is finally getting the recognition it deserves from analysts like Forrester and Gartner as a disruptive force in IT. Over the years, open source has “climbed up the stack” from operating systems to databases and now to business applications where it has established a firm foothold in the content management space.What should enterprises know about open source content management? Is it really just for Web Content Management (WCM) or does it meet the needs of broader Enterprise Content Management (ECM) deployments? Arelarge enterprises doing big, meaningful content management projects with open source or is its appeal limited to subsets of the market? What about Enterprise 2.0 initiatives? Can you assemble an Enterprise 2.0 solution from open source components? How does it compare with something like Sharepoint?
If you are in the Dallas area and are interested in the topic you should swing by. And, as always, please say hello and mention the blog. I look forward to meeting you.
When:
Wednesday, October 15, 2008
11:30a – 1:30p, Registration at 11:20a
Where:
University of Dallas
Haggar University Center – Haggar Dining Room
1845 East Northgate Drive
Irving, Texas 75062-4736
972.721.5123
Parking – Lot A and B
Campus Map Link – Bldg 4
Cost:
AIIM DFW luncheons are $30 at the door if you have not pre-registered. The pre-registration deadline for this event is now closed.
Surfing in D.C. with Alfresco’s new web application framework
If you are in Washington, D.C. today for Alfresco’s North American Community Conference please be sure to stop me and say hello. I’ll be in the sessions, in the Optaros booth, and presenting during the technical track. For my European friends, I’m sad to say that I will not be in Munich for the European version of the conference next week, but I will be in Europe at the end of this year or the first part of January so we can meet up then.
During the technical track (in both D.C and Munich) we will be showing some Surf 3.0 components we’ve built. One is called “Status”. It is kind of like a Facebook status or a Basecamp Journal entry. It allows you to say what you’re working on right now and what your mood is. A dashlet aggregates the status entries for all of your teammates across the site and another one shows status across all sites to which you are a member. When you mark it “Done” that status is archived. When status changes are made the new Activity Service is called so that if people are following site activity by subscribing to the activity feed, the status changes are included.
We’ve also got a simple “bookmark” component that lets you share URLs with other team members. As it exists right this second it allows a team to manage a set of shared bookmarks. Before it is GA we plan to make sure bookmarks are taggable and rateable and marked as shared or private.
I’ll follow up soon with a deconstruction of these components so you can learn more about how they work (and even contribute code to them if you want to make improvements).
Finally, we plan to leverage the Rating Service that was used as an example in the forthcoming Alfresco Developer Guide as the back-end for a five star rating component that would allow any Share or Surf site to enable users to rate any node.
These components will be available for you to add to your Share sites or any site built with Alfresco Surf. Our goal is to have them generally available by the time 3.0 Enterprise ships.
We’ll also be hosting code camps in North America and Europe so that you can learn to build your own Surf components. I’ll provide more details on those as they are available.
Acquia Drupal officially launches
Do you love Drupal but wish you could get a “certified” version and commercial support? Now you can. Acquia, the commercial company recently formed by Drupal founder Dries Buytaert and Jay Batson, officially launched Acquia Drupal this week (press release). Acquia Drupal is a commercially-supported distribution of Drupal. It includes Drupal Core plus a handful of essential modules. In addition to the distribution, customers can take advantage of the Acquia Network for things like monitoring, spam blocking, and update notification.
Acquia Drupal and Acquia Network subscriptions are freely-available, even if you don’t pay for support. If you want to try it out, check out the download instructions.
Optaros is very excited about the launch and we look forward to working with the Acquia team. We’ve had success implementing Drupal as a community platform for a number of clients. Having a commercial company behind Drupal is a big step toward broader acceptance among enterprises who can’t or are unwilling to self-support.
Alfresco plus Drupal thoughts
I’ve had several discussions with Optaros clients and internal team members lately around Drupal and Alfresco integration. Particularly around this topic, I usually try to listen more than I talk. I want to make sure I understand where the value is for this kind of integration rather than simply geeking out on yet another “stupid CMS trick”. I thought maybe I’d bounce a summary of these thoughts off of you.
The key is to leverage the strengths of each. If you don’t have a problem that requires this particular combination of strengths, assembling a solution from these two components isn’t going to be of any value at all. What are some of the key strengths relevant to this discussion?
Drupal has:
- A front-end presentation framework. (I would add that it is written in PHP–a relatively widespread language that’s easy to pick up).
- A very large library of modules, most of them focused on building community-centric web sites.
- A lightweight footprint, requiring only a web server, MySQL, and PHP. (Yes, I know it is possible to run Drupal on other databases but not every module will).
Alfresco has:
- Robust workflow via the embedded JBoss jBPM engine.
- Smart management of file-based objects (files go on the file system, metadata goes in the database, and an API that abstracts the separation).
- A plethora of file-based protocols and API’s for getting content into and out of the repository, including a framework to easily expose content and business logic via REST.
Silo’d community solutions are best implemented in Drupal alone. Why complicate your life with a separate repository? It adds no value in that situation. Similarly, straight document management (and even team-based collaboration) really can be addressed with the Alfresco repository and the standard Alfresco web client (or, soon, with Alfresco’s new Share client).
I think where Drupal-Alfresco makes the most sense is in cases where there is a significant amount of file-based content that requires “basic content services” such as workflow, versioning, security, check-in/check-out, but needs to be shared in the context of a community.
Alfresco becomes even more useful when there are multiple communities that need this content because you can start to leverage the “content-as-a-service” idea to make the content available to any number of front-end sites (where those sites might or might not be Drupal-based).
Suppose rather than one community, you have ten. Each community will have community-specific content but there may also be a set of content that needs to be leveraged across many communities. A subset of things you might be concerned about include:
- Some content might need editorial review and approval before it goes live, but not everything.
- Not all content comes from internal sources (pushed out from the repository). Some might originate from one of the communities as user-generated content. That content might need editorial review before it is made available on other community sites.
- Communities need flexibility in how/if they expose cross-community content.
- Tags and other metadata value need to be consistent between an end point and the repository (and therefore, across all end points).
- Search needs to be properly scoped (does it include community content only, community plus shared content in the repo, multiple selected communities, or all communities)
- Some clients may not be able to control the technology used on these community endpoints.
In these scenarios, Alfresco acts as your core repository and Drupal provides the front-end presentation layer. When you look at it this way, Drupal really becomes equivalent (in terms of where it sits in the architecture and the role it plays) to traditional portals like Liferay or JBoss Portal.
Content sitting in Drupal is harder for other systems to get to than when it sits in Alfresco. There are Drupal modules that make it easier to syndicate out but Alfresco’s purpose-built to expose content in this way. Once it is in Alfresco, content can be routed through Alfresco workflows, and then approved to be made available to one or more front-end Drupal sites. Content could come from a Drupal site, get persisted to Alfresco, routed around for editorial review, and then be made available. It really opens up a lot of possibilities.
Not all Drupal modules need to persist their data back to Alfresco. Things like comments and ratings will likely never need to be treated as real content. Instead of trying to persist everything you would either modify select modules to integrate with Alfresco or create new ones that work with Alfresco. For example, you might want to have Drupal stick file uploads in Alfresco instead of the local file system. Or, it might make sense to have a “send to alfresco” button visible to certain roles that would send the current node to Alfresco.
It doesn’t all have to be Drupal getting and posting to Alfresco. There might be cases where you need some Drupal data from within Alfresco. Maybe you are in Alfresco and you want to tag objects using the same set of tags Drupal knows about, for example. Or maybe you want to do a mass import of Drupal objects into the Alfresco repository.
I’ve got a little test module that uses Alfresco’s REST API (including the new CMIS URLs) to retrieve content from Alfresco and show it in a Drupal block. I can talk about it in a separate post.
Dogs and Cats: EMC, Microsoft, IBM, & Alfresco release CMIS
EMC, Microsoft, IBM, and Alfresco are announcing today a new specification for interoperability between content management systems (EMC press release, Alfresco press release). The specification is called CMIS which stands for Content Management Interoperability Services (full specification). Other major players involved with the spec include OpenText, Oracle, and SAP.
What the spec outlines is essentially an abstraction layer between content-centric applications and back-end repositories. The abstraction layer is implemented as a set of services (SOAP-based and REST-based). The services are primarily focused on CRUD functions but they also include a SQL-like query language. In his blog post on CMIS, John Newton says that CMIS will become “the SQL of content management”.
This means that, theoretically, a content-centric application can be written that will work with any back-end CMS that implements CMIS. If it sounds like JCR that’s because the two share the same goal, but CMIS is broader because it is language-independent. (Not to be a buzz kill but think about how many applications you’ve seen where the underlying JCR repository could truly be swapped out at no “cost”. It is too early to tell whether that will get any better with CMIS).
In what is really a “dogs and cats living together” moment, think about
this: The new Alfresco Share client (or any Surf-based web application
for that matter) can now be used as the front-end for any
CMIS-compliant repository like Sharepoint or Documentum. (Maybe that’d be a nice “bridge” to have in place while you’re migrating off of those legacy repositories!)
In my post back in June (Slinging some ideas around RESTful content) I mentioned Apache Jackrabbit, Apache Sling, and how there ought to be a standard, REST-based API for working with content repositories. I wondered if Alfresco’s inclusuion of Abdera, Apache’s implementation of the ATOM Publishing Protocol, into the Labs code line signaled Alfresco’s move in that direction. Well, CMIS is that standard. And if you look at Alfresco’s Draft CMIS Implementation, you’ll see that Abdera is, in fact, in the mix.
Back during my Documentum days, a spec was mentioned called iECM that I thought Documentum and maybe AIIM were working on together. But then it seemed like it kind of died. The goals (and some of the details) sound eerily familiar to CMIS. Could the popularity of more modern content management API’s like Alfresco’s web scripts and Apache Sling have spurred the legacy vendors into actually doing something about interoperability for real? (I just saw in John Newton’s blog post that iECM did spawn CMIS but it doesn’t speak to the motivation of the other vendors).
You can try out Alfresco’s CMIS implementation by downloading the latest Labs 3.0 B build.
Here, here! Asay says most analysts are laggards
I really liked Matt Asay’s post on industry analysts. His primary point is that firms like Gartner and Forrester really aren’t that forward-looking. Matt says,
“…They tell an enterprise buyer from whom she should have purchased
software and hardware a few years ago, not where she should invest IT
dollars tomorrow. As an example, despite the massive influx of
open-source vendors in the enterprise, Gartner persists in believing that open source is years away from making a dent in the enterprise, and you’ll rarely find an open-source vendor in a Gartner Magic Quadrant.”
Gartner’s portals and collaboration summit I went to in Vegas last year (Day 1, Day 2, Day 3) really frustrated me because when open source was mentioned, it was spun primarily as a risky investment not worthy of the enterprise. My initial reaction was that firms like Gartner are threatened by open source because most open source projects will never pay the kind of money Gartner demands to have their software “reviewed” and included in the mystical quadrant. Matt’s post goes to a more fundamental issue which is that they just don’t get it.
Pre-order the Alfresco Developer Guide today
Packt Publishing has officially announced the availability of my forthcoming book, Alfresco Developer Guide. It is now available for pre-order and it should be shipping in November.
Alfresco dynamic list constraints example
Jean Barmash has published an example showing how to do dynamic list constraints for Alfresco properties. His example accepts a Lucene query to populate the list but it can easily be extended to query anything you want.UPDATE (12/1/2009):The link to Jean’s example in my original post wasn’t a permalink. I’ve corrected that. To clarify:
- Jean’s post on dynamically updating dependent dropdowns is here.
- His original post on data-driven dropdowns is here.
Obviously, these two techniques can be combined.
Progress on the Alfresco book
Several readers have asked how the book I’m writing on Alfresco development is coming along. First of all, thanks for asking. It has been quite a project. The first draft of the entire book is now complete. What’s happening now is that a group of technical reviewers from Alfresco, Optaros, and Packt, the book’s publisher, are going through the chapters and providing comments. So far, I’ve been able to turn those around quickly but I anticipate an increasing volume of feedback as we move into the later, more technical, chapters.
I’m pretty excited about how it is coming together. If you like the tone and scope of the Alfresco Developer Series of tutorials you’re going to like the book. The book is full of hands-on examples so it should be really good for people that are new to the Alfresco platform.
It would be great if we could publish by the time the North American Community Conference happens in Washington D.C. on October 9th, but to be honest, I’m not exactly sure what the schedule looks like from here on out. I’ll give another update as we get closer to publication.