CoreMedia CMS: Difference between revisions

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The content management system from CoreMedia is used widely throughout Europe, but with particular concentration in German-speaking countries. Some very large portals such as [[T-Online]], [[GMX]] and the website of Germany's most popular tabloid newspaper, ''[[BILD]]'', all use CoreMedia CMS. Furthermore, CoreMedia CMS forms the technical foundation for the standard CMS used in all German federal government bodies, the Government Site Builder. Thus CoreMedia technology finds application in practically every federal government ministry and agency in Germany.
The content management system from CoreMedia is used widely throughout Europe, but with particular concentration in German-speaking countries. Some very large portals such as [[T-Online]], [[GMX]] and the website of Germany's most popular tabloid newspaper, ''[[BILD]]'', all use CoreMedia CMS. Furthermore, CoreMedia CMS forms the technical foundation for the standard CMS used in all German federal government bodies, the Government Site Builder. Thus CoreMedia technology finds application in practically every federal government ministry and agency in Germany.

In September 2006, the software evaluation company, CMS Watch, [http://www.cmswatch.com/Trends/747-Is-German-CoreMedia-still-a-CMS-company? reported] that CoreMedia is more focused on digital rights management (DRM) than on content management.


CoreMedia CMS clients include: [[Bertelsmann]], Continental, [[Deutsche Telekom]], debitel, [[GMX]], O2, EPCOS, NEC, MLP, [[SEAT]], [[T-Mobile]], [[T-Online]], [[Wincor Nixdorf]]
CoreMedia CMS clients include: [[Bertelsmann]], Continental, [[Deutsche Telekom]], debitel, [[GMX]], O2, EPCOS, NEC, MLP, [[SEAT]], [[T-Mobile]], [[T-Online]], [[Wincor Nixdorf]]

Revision as of 18:47, 17 April 2007

CoreMedia CMS is a content management system developed by CoreMedia AG in Hamburg, Germany.

It offers a Java-based and a web-based editor with a preview editing functionality. Content is saved only one time in a format-independent content module. This enables multi-channel delivery and consistency of data. CoreMedia CMS additionally features very broad workflow management capabilities.

CoreMedia CMS was developed in Java and is based on open standards such as XML, UML, Unicode, Java, Java Beans, SOAP, HTTP and WebDAV. All functions of CoreMedia CMS can be managed via open, Java-based interfaces (CoreMedia Unified API).

The content management system from CoreMedia is used widely throughout Europe, but with particular concentration in German-speaking countries. Some very large portals such as T-Online, GMX and the website of Germany's most popular tabloid newspaper, BILD, all use CoreMedia CMS. Furthermore, CoreMedia CMS forms the technical foundation for the standard CMS used in all German federal government bodies, the Government Site Builder. Thus CoreMedia technology finds application in practically every federal government ministry and agency in Germany.

CoreMedia CMS clients include: Bertelsmann, Continental, Deutsche Telekom, debitel, GMX, O2, EPCOS, NEC, MLP, SEAT, T-Mobile, T-Online, Wincor Nixdorf

Components and supported products

Editorial clients browser (MS I.E., Firefox), Java-based client, WebDAV
Operating systems Windows, Linux, zLinux, Solaris, IBM AIX, HP-UX, Macintosh (WebEditor on Firefox only)
Servlet container Tomcat, IBM WebSphere, BEA WebLogic, Resin, Sun Java System Application Server
Databases Oracle, IBM DB2, Microsoft SQL Server
Standards Java/J2EE, XML, XSL, Unicode, UML, WebDAV, LDAP, SNMP, SOAP,

HTML, WML, SMTP, .NET etc.

APIs Java, .NET, (Web Services)
Portal servers IBM WebSphere Portal Server, SAP Enterprise Portal
Other software (project-specific) Lotus Notes, MS Office, ATG, BEA Portal Server etc.
Localization (or content): any language


Editorial clients German, English, French (extra: Spanish, Italian, Russian, Portuguese, Japanese, Thai, Arabic, Farsi, Polish, Mandarin)

Criticisms

  • no integrated newsletter tool (only on demand)
  • no syllabication out of the box
  • not open source
  • aggressive advertising and promotion (e.g. misuse of wikipedia articles)

See also

External links