In this section:
Web content management systems: find the appropriate solution
Web content management's dirtiest secret is that most organisations not only don't need most CMS bells and whistles, but should actively avoid them.
Interview with a content management heretic
Ovum's Alan Pelz-Sharpe wonders: just how fancy does your Web content management system really need to be?
"We didn't try and complicate it": the unsecret formula of a winning intranet
A Government department pulled hundreds of people together by understanding their needs and helping them get to know each other. What mattered: photos of people's faces. What didn't matter: the technology.
Apache: The feather floats to the top
The Apache Web server has not only resisted the onslaught of a Microsoft alternative, but appears to be gaining ground.
Mambo: stuck in the middle with ... 2731 other CMSs
Mambo manages Web site content with style, but its creators are still battling to turn their brainchild into a strong business.
One way to Web Content Management (as long as you're big)
Russell Nakano's Web Content Management: A Collaborative Approach provides authoritative guidance for Interwoven-style sites, and insights for everyone else.
Fog Creek CityDesk: Content management for the masses
Countless managers of small to medium sites have wondered how to cross the chasm from hand-built pages to a true content management system. Now a product called CityDesk provides the best answer yet.
Required reading: Gause and Weinberg show how to ask for what you want
One book cuts to the heart of the requirements management problem and asks: are your brave enough to do it?
Web project? Buy this book.
One unhailed volume turns Web project management into a serious sub-discipline.
Goto's statements considered helpful
A handsome new book usefully combines Web usability and project management disciplines, while pretending to be about 'redesign'. (And yes, the title is a blatant pun in honor of Edsger W. Dijkstra's classic 1968 essay on program structure.)