Jeff Potts
KM Whirled: Collaboration, Portal, Content Management, Search, and a dash of personal info most people won't care about
















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Thursday, September 15, 2005
 

Although steeply-priced at $2495, the annual EMC Documentum Developer Conference offered in-depth looks into the forthcoming 5.3 sp1 release (due out tomorrow) and access to Documentum product managers and engineers. I'd estimate about 300 developers from around the world attended the four day conference in Berkeley.

Release 5.3 sp1 promises to be pretty major, as far as service packs go. Many of the features that didn't make it in to 5.3 due to time constraints are included in the service pack. That's contrary to the normal EMC Documentum practice of limiting service packs to bug fixes with only minor changes or additions to functionality.

From my perspective, one of the most anticipated features is the next generation of the Business Objects Framework, BOF 2.0. The ability to hot-deploy and sandbox BOF Type Based Objects (TBO's) and Service Based Objects (SBO's) is high on my list. There's also a new package of Search interfaces that look interesting.

This release will be the first in which Linux is supported across the stack. Release 5.3 installed without issue on my Red Hat Linux Enterprise 3 VMWare image. Customers already familiar with content server installations on other flavors of Unix should not have a problem.


6:13:10 PM    

Amazon.com Wants Your Spare Change: All Of It. With an estimated $10.5 billion of idle spare change lying around American households, Amazon sees that found money as found money. And it will now accept it for purchases. [eWEEK Technology News]
6:02:19 PM    

Die hard for FatWire Spark. After FatWire acquired the Content Server product line from divine in 2003, most commentators expected the original FatWire "Spark" product to fade away. Although sold almost exclusively in the USA and not easily upgradable to the more robust Content Server package, FatWire has kept Spark alive and today announced that Sun Microsystems will offer an unlimited - use license free to Sun Portal Server customers. This is an interesting move for two vendors struggling to find their niche. FatWire may see Spark as a lead generator, but some Sun licensees might come to find Spark limiting -- although, to be fair, other portal vendors' CMS tools are similarly light. Other customers might be frustrated that Sun, and not FatWire, will handle product support. Internationally, the FatWire sales force could be left in an awkward position, with Sun giving away Spark for free while the FatWire reps try to push the more complicated (and expensive) Content Server product. By Janus Boye. [CMS Watch Trends and Features]
5:53:26 PM    


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