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Macromedia unveils Web Publishing System

Macromedia unveils Web Publishing System By:  Juan Carlos Perez On: 18 Jul 2004 For: IDG News Service Creator

Macromedia Inc. has put together a software suite for designing, building, managing and editing Web sites that is aimed at users that want a Web content management and publishing system that is simpler to use and less expensive than existing options, the company is announcing Monday.



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Macromedia Inc. has put together a software suite for designing, building, managing and editing Web sites that is aimed at users that want a Web content management and publishing system that is simpler to use and less expensive than existing options, the company is announcing Monday.

The suite, called Macromedia Web Publishing System, includes tools for non-technical business users, for Web developers and designers and for IT staffers. Pricing is based on the number of business users that will get access to the suite. A pack with seats for one developer and 10 business users goes for US$2,499, while a pack for 10 developers and 100 business users costs US$24,990. Volume discounts and special pricing for government and education customers are available.

For business users, the suite comes with Contribute 3, designed to make it simple for non-technical users to publish Web content. Meanwhile, for Web developers and designers, the suite has Macromedia Studio MX 2004, which includes the Dreamweaver, Flash, Fireworks and FreeHand Web development products. Finally, Web Publishing System features Contribute Publishing Services, a server-based tracking and administration tool for IT staffers to do things like establish what Web documents different users can modify and what they're allowed to do. The Contribute 3 component includes FlashPaper 2 for converting documents to Flash or PDF formats that make the documents viewable online.

The Macromedia suite has been priced aggressively and designed to be easy to use in order to offer an alternative to content management and publishing systems that tend to be much more expensive and complicated, said Erik Larson, director of product management at San Francisco-based Macromedia.

The Web Publishing System will appeal to organizations such as schools and universities, small government agencies, non-profit groups and small- and medium-sized businesses that need this functionality but lack the money and technical resources to adopt the more sophisticated options in the market from players such as Vignette Corp. and Interwoven Inc., said Eric Peterson, a Jupiter Research analyst.

"This offering is significant because Macromedia, which has long been known for providing very high-quality software to small- to medium-size businesses with applications like Flash and Dreamweaver, is really stepping up into the content management (and publishing) space," he said. "They're making a fairly robust content management (and publishing) system available to any small organization...looking for a system that won't break the bank."

Normally, organizations are expected to shell out a minimum of between US$6,000 and US$10,000 for a Web content management/publishing software suite, but Macromedia is lowering that bar, letting customers spend less on a system that nonetheless can scale up if need be, Peterson said. "It will grow with you. You don't have to make a US$10,000, US$50,000 or US$100,000 investment to get going," he said.


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Juan Carlos Perez Juan Carlos Perez is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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