When Automated Publishing is Not Enough
Reprinted with permission, from issue 17 of the Arbortext XML Publishing Network. Automation saves labor, collapses production time and improves quality
Reprinted with permission, from issue 17 of the Arbortext XML Publishing Network. Automation saves labor, collapses production time and improves quality
Accoording to a post to the [xml-doc] Yahoo group, Extreme Markup Languages
Content Management Professionals, an international community of content management professionals whose purpose is to further best practices based on shared experiences of experts and peers, announced their new Board of Directors, Wednesday, January 12, 2005. The new roster includes: Ann Rockley, President Erik Hartman, Vice President Seth Gottlieb, Treasurer Samantha Starmer, Secretary Frank Gilbane Join CM Pros Visit the CM Pros Election Page
Organizations of all sizes are beginning to realize how content and its reuse across the enterprise can improve productivity
If you think you’ve seen it all, think again. The winner of the eighth annual the Wacky Warning Label Contest, sponsored by Michigan Lawsuit Abuse Watch, may prove you wrong. What really wacky warning did this year’s top honoree unleash on the masses? Well, a popular flushable toilet brush warns users,
In Bob Ducharme’s Transforming XML column, January 5, 2005, he examines issues surround the use of extensions to the XSLT 1.0 language. If you’re interested in XML and Exstensible Stylesheet Language, check out Bob’s column and follow the hypertext links provided in the article. Read the arctile.
By Kay Ethier and Scott Abel. Originally published in the inaugural issue of Free Software Magazine Everywhere you turn these days, someone is talking Extensible Markup Language (XML). Jump into a discussion about publishing – XML is touted as a means of exchanging information. Talk with someone about the new software tool she is creating – she describes setting up some of her actions in XML. Ask a webmaster what he
You can learn a lot about an industry by studying the marketing efforts of those attempting to sell products and services. That’s why I think the “2005 IT Marketing Trends Study” (conducted by BitPipe/Sam Whitmore Media) is an interesting source of information on IT trends. Read the survey Some interesting findings 49% of tech marketing budgets will be allocated for online advertising and online sales lead generation in 2005, an increase of nearly 5% over 2004 spending; online sales lead generation’s share of the budget will rise from 26% to Read the full article…
Are your tech support salaries in line with current industry standards? To help provide you with data to answer this critical question, the Association of Support Professionals (ASP) conducts an annual support salary survey that provides the industry’s most detailed look at support compensation trends. The ASP survey, to be published in February, supplies comparative salary benchmarks by job title (seven categories), company size, product price, and employee skill level. We invite you to help with this project by filling out this brief questionnaire. In return, we’ll send you a Read the full article…
Recent Comments