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Filed under: liferay

Rob Enslin says...

Our IT team are putting together a ‘cookie cutter’ solution for rapid website deployments. During this process they are moving to the latest version of Liferay (Liferay version 5). I was privy to be invited to join a introduction training session on how to add/edit pages and content. For those who are unfamiliar with Liferay, the CMS is powered by Java and basis itself on editable java ‘portlets’ by drop-n-drag methodology. I can’t say I’m a fan of drop-n-drag when it comes to managing the UI, especially for Marketers or anyone who has little knowledge about the importance of UI design and consistentcy. I see this approach as a somewhat irresponsibly provactive unless very tight portlet lock-down is enforced.

I can’t say I’m a fan of drop-n-drag when it comes to managing the UI, especially for Marketers or anyone who has little knowledge about the importance of UI design and consistentcy. I see this approach as a somewhat irresponsibly provactive unless very tight portlet lock-down is enforced.

 

Filed under: liferay

pressehof says...

Düsseldorf/Dortmund - Bücker GmbH und Fraunhofer ISST legen Bewertung der BPM-Toolsuiten mit Portalintegration von IBM - Websphere, IDS Scheer / SAP, sowie Intalio / Liferay vor.

Zurzeit gibt es mehr als 150 Anbieter von Business-Process-Management-Lösungen. Da fällt die Auswahl schwer. Das Fraunhofer ISST hat im Auftrag von Bücker fünf BPM-Anbieter, die zu drei Suiten gebündelt wurden, ausführlich untersucht. Nach eingehender Marktanalyse fiel die Auswahl zum einen auf die IBM WebSphere Toolsuite, zum anderen auf eine kommerzielle Toolsuite aus SAP und IDS Scheer und als drittes auf eine freie Toolsuite aus den Angeboten von Intalio und Liferay. „Der Markt im...

Studie: Welche Toolsuite zum eigenen Business passt bei Pressehof komplett lesen

Filed under: Liferay

kluivers says...

eXo and JBoss combine portal technologies

A strategic partnership between Red Hat and eXo, the French open source developer, aims to create a new open source portal solution within the JBoss community, the JBoss Community Portal. The project will be jointly lead by eXo and Red Hat, with the eXo Portal being moved to JBoss.org for community development and combined with the JBoss Portal. eXo has also contributed eXo JCR, a robust and cluster ready version of a JSR 170 compliant Java Content Repository.

Red Hat's JBoss division will concentrate, within the project, on the supporting infrastructure and container performance, and also work on security and rich application integration. eXo plans to bring their expertise in user interface and administrative functions to the project. The new project will be licensed under the GNU LGPL which will, according to eXo, "encourage broader adoption", while eXo's other products will remain under the Affero GPL (AGPL).

(djwm)

Filed under: liferay