Good Software for Editorial Management? 36
cardoso asks: "I'm editor of a Brazilian news site, with a few permanent writers and a dozen occasional collaborators, and all the assignments are hand-made. I wrote a few queries for productivity stats (thanks heaven for MySQL), but the everyday tasks are not automated. What I really need is software to organize the stories: who's doing what, deadlines, production stats and assignments. It may be standalone or a Drupal module. I tried all the popular project packages, but they're too generic. Are there any solutions specially crafted to the online publishing market?"
Ellington (Score:4, Informative)
Jim http://www.runfatboy.net/ [runfatboy.net] -- Exercise for the rest of us.
Re:Ellington (Score:1)
Is better this Ellington soft than have your own designed online publishing system?
With 10K you can pay a group of developers to do something really good, right?
Ellington-Insourcing /. answers. (Score:2, Funny)
I'm certain Brazilians work cheap.
Re:Ellington (Score:2, Informative)
Vignette (Score:2)
I've never understood why they refuse to do a lower end product...
Re:Nice editing (Score:1)
Looks like Cliff needs to read the replies to this story.
Re:Nice editing (Score:3, Informative)
'"A few permanents writers", nice editing slick. :)'
He's Brazilian. Unless you're willing let him critique your Portuguese, I'd suggest you not be so quick to complain. 8^)
Re:Nice editing (Score:2)
Cliff is the editor of this story. They're supposed to read and corect things like that. Any other site than Slashdot anyway.
Re:Nice editing (Score:2)
The gramatical rule that says that "permanent" should not be plural is the same in the two languages. (I'm Brazilian too.)
Re:Nice editing (Score:2)
Resume Spelling Nazism
Re:Nice editing (Score:1)
pear.php.net (Score:4, Informative)
And if you think it is a little beyond your current skillset, perhaps you can find a developer who has worked w/ the pear libraries before to create it for you (I'm sure they have a mailing-list that would be useful for you, asl well).
Good luck!
Slashcode (Score:1)
You can't fool us (Score:5, Funny)
Re:You can't fool us (Score:2)
-Eric
Bricolage (Score:4, Informative)
Bricolage [bricolage.cc] has a lot of what you're looking for, and it's very well built.
Here is a good intro [perl.com] to what it is and how it works.
Basecamp (Score:3, Informative)
It sounds like what you're really looking for is a project management solution. Assigning tasks (such as 'write a story about x', 'cover the situation in y for the next 2 weeks'), settings deadlines, and co-ordinating groups or individuals - this all has very little to do with 'content management' as most people think about it.
Drupal has you covered with organising your content (taxonomy), tracking history and versioning, and establishing an editorial workflow (actions and workflow). But it doesn't have project management well covered (the 'project module' is too specific to software development), and there are no Drupal modules that I'm aware of, for integrating such management with actual content handling.
I think that Basecamp [basecamphq.com] would do the job best for you. It has all these PM facilities, in a very intuitive and easy interface.
Maybe Wiki... (Score:1)
I've taken this approach for clients looking at managing online publications however I understand it's definately not "one size fits all".
Review Site for Open Source CMS (Score:5, Informative)
One of the volunteers on that site also runs http://ongetc.com/ [ongetc.com], which has summary information on a few more CMS possibilities. The first site is restricted to open source tools that use PHP/MySQL. The second site seems less restrictive. I'm still looking for more general sources.
two other cms (Score:2, Informative)
* http://www.mmbase.org/ [mmbase.org]
* http://typo3.com/ [typo3.com]
Both are open source packages, and both are very feature rich. I also believe both offer some form of work flow management.
I'm not sure because during my evaluation I noticed both packages had too many features for my use. I ended up using Drupal.
... and another one (Score:2)
Must plug friends software (Score:1)
Zope/Plone (Score:2, Informative)
Slashcode (Score:1)
It's the same code Slashdot uses and, from the layout of your website, looks just like what you'd want. However, I'm 99% sure it's in English, and there might not be translations available to where the UI is in your language. Although, it might be in a format where it doesn't matter what language you use, I'm not sure.
Scoop? (Score:2)
Re:Scoop? (Score:2)
Slashcode (Score:1)
Cofax (Score:1)