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Posts Tagged ‘content management system’

6 New Web Technologies of 2009 You Need to Use Now

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009

Every year, we see scores of innovations trickle onto the web — everything from new browser features to cool web apps to entire programming languages. Some of these concepts just make us smile, then we move on. Some completely blow our minds with their utility and ingenuity — and become must-haves.

For this list, we’ve compiled the most truly life-altering nuggets of brilliance to hit center stage in 2008: the ideas, products and enhancements to the web experience so huge that they make us wonder how we got along without them.

Nitpickers will notice that a couple of these technologies arrived two or three years ago. Others aren’t even fully baked yet. But each innovation on our list reached a level of maturity, hit the point of critical mass, or stepped in to fill a burning need during 2008 that resulted in it significantly changing the landscape of the web.

Here’s to the technologies currently making the web a better place than it was 12 months ago.

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Why use a CMS?

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

Many websites, especially small or older websites, are built using static webpages. These webpages are built using HTML, Javascript, and Macromedia Flash computer code. This code is difficult to access on web servers and is virtually impossible to edit without special software and training. Thus, static websites are difficult and expensive to maintain.

To solve this website design and maintenance problem, a new technology called a Content Management System (CMS) was developed. A CMS uses a database to store, retrieve, and edit the content of your website.  Each page of your site is stored as simple text – making it easy to edit, search, and manipulate. When someone visits your website the CMS automatically converts your text into the required HTML and Javascript. Furthermore, the CMS database allows for additional features to be easily integrated into the website: user login and passwords, events and calendars, blogs, news feeds, and much more.

If you would like to see how easy it is to change a website page — you can watch this short two minute video.

Below is an outline of common static website problems, our solutions, and some of the many benefits you will gain once your site has been converted to a CMS.

Common Website Problems

  • No updating – static sites are difficult and/or impossible to update
  • No search function – users cannot search your site to find the content they are looking for
  • Limited features – user login, forums, mailing lists, and calendar features require custom code and are expensive to implement

Our Solution

  • Install an open source content management system (CMS)
  • Move your existing content into it
  • Train you to use the CMS and update your website yourself

The Benefits

  • The ability to update and change your content anytime using a web browser
  • Your site’s content will be displaying using current web standards. This increases accessibility and makes your content more “future proof
  • The CMS has built-in search capability
  • Room to grow – Easily add forums and other community building features, set up RSS feeds for your growing content, have users subscribe to newsletters, and much more
  • You are not trapped with a single web developer – your CMS is an open source software product understood by thousands of users and developers.
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960 Gridder: Easy to use layout design tool

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

Andrée Hansson has created 960 Gridder, a grid layout tool for web developers that you can either use as an integrated component to layout your websites or use it as a bookmarklet. The grid is fully customizable but it defaults to the “960px grid standard”.

960 Gridder will automatically identify if jQuery is present at the website and if it is not, it will include it.

It injects your website of choice and you can then work with this tool to help you out with whichever layout/design task you find it useful for.

By default, it is set to work with 12 columns, 60 pixel wide columns with a 10 pixel spacer left and right of the column, making it a 20 pixel wide gutter (which actually is the ones this gridder renders).

You can see and read about the “960 standard” at http://960.gs.

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