It's more challenging than ever to handle all aspects of content management internally. In this podcast, Firebrand Technologies founder and president Fran Toolan addresses a myriad of content management issues.
Stitches is a Grails 1.1 plugin that implements a content repository with many value added features.
* Define content and attributes
* Store and version content
* Search and filter by keyword, folder, tag.
* Geocode your content and perform "nearby longitude/latitude searches"
* Synchronize your content to amazon s3.
* Automatic Image scaling upon request.
* Text is automatically extracted for keyword search from different document formats (e.g. PDF, Word, Excel, etc)
Apache Sling (currently in incubation) is a web framework that uses a Java Content Repository, such as Apache Jackrabbit, to store and manage content.
Sling applications use either scripts or Java servlets, selected based on simple name conventions, to process HTTP requests in a RESTful way.
The embedded Apache Felix OSGi framework and console provide a dynamic runtime environment, where code and content bundles can be loaded, unloaded and reconfigured at runtime.
As the first web framework dedicated to JSR-170 Java Content Repositories, Sling makes it very simple to implement simple applications, while providing an enterprise-level framework for more complex applications.
Discussions about Sling happen on our mailing lists, see the Project Information page for more info.
Y. Chan, and D. Roth. Proceedings of the 49th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Human Language Technologies - Volume 1, page 551--560. Stroudsburg, PA, USA, Association for Computational Linguistics, (2011)
R. Farrell, S. Liburd, and J. Thomas. Proceedings of the 13th international World Wide Web conference on
Alternate track papers & posters, page 162--169. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2004)
H. Lang, G. Wohlgenannt, and A. Weichselbraun. International Conference on Information Resources Management (Conf-IRM), Vienna, Austria, AIS, (2012)Forthcoming (accepted 6 February 2012).