Facebook goes Alfresco
By Stuart Turton,
Open-source content management specialist Alfresco has integrated its enterprise software into the http://www.facebook.com platform, the first such merger of technologies according to the company.
Facebook has been been greeted with varying degrees of enthusiasm by organisations, with some seeing it as a security threat and unwelcome distraction for its employees while others have been working to leverage its popularity as part of their own communications.
Alfresco is clearly banking on the latter path, and using the APIs and custom markup language published by Facebook in May has integrated its CMS with the popular social networking site.
According to Alfresco, this integration makes publishing enterprise content to Facebook as controlled, secure and auditable as publishing to a corporate website.
"While social networking websites have typically been perceived as attractive to a predominately younger consumer market, if leveraged properly, these services may provide the enterprise market with a potentially powerful and cost-effective solution to its collaboration and content management needs," said Nicole Engelbert, lead analyst, Vertical Markets Technology, Datamonitor.
"With Facebook, companies can engage with their customers, partners and employees to share social connections as well as content, and track what is going on in the enterprise," added John Newton, chief technology officer of Alfresco Software.
"For example, our new ECM-enabled access to Facebook lets an organisation take the latest news or catalog information from inside the corporation and easily publish it both internally and externally to keep stakeholders informed."
You may also like...
Sponsored Links
advertisement
You may also like...
Latest Networking Analysis & Insight
Bring you own device: the $600 question
Inside the enterprise: A recent Cisco report claims bring your own device is gaining support from IT departments. But how much are staff willing to invest in personal technology?
- Interop 2012: Q&A, Saar Gillai, CTO, HP Networking
- Is BT the key to broadband Britain?
- Tencent: the biggest web company you’ve never heard of
- The truth about spam
- Have ISPs finally lost the DEA fight?
- Are you ready to launch IPv6 securely?
- Broadband, pricing and small businesses
- Welcome to the stay-at-home Olympics
- Q&A: Cisco on servers, storage and strategy
Latest Networking Reviews
HP t410 All-in-One Thin Client review: First look
- Swyx SwyxExpress X20 review
- Ipswitch WhatsUp Gold Premium 15
- ForeScout Technologies CounterACT 6.3.4
- ThinPrint Printer Dashboard review: First Look
- TITUS Aware for Microsoft Outlook review
- Windows Phone 7 Mango review: First Look
- Dartware InterMapper review
- Kemp Technologies LoadMaster 3600 review
- Sangfor WANACC M5500 review
advertisement
Most popular
- Apple iPad 3 vs iPad 2 head-to-head review
- Hutchison denies it will pull plug on Three UK
- EMC World 2012: Tucci declares Documentum is here to stay
- ICO: Fines for cookie law breakers
- EMC World 2012: EMC talks up cloud, security and big data
- Dell PowerEdge R820 review
- Sony Vaio T13 Ultrabook review: First look
- BlackBerry 7 OS certified to carry 'Restricted' UK government information
- Facebook floatation marred by Nasdaq glitch
- CIO: Career is over?
Register for IT PRO
You'll get exclusive member benefits including free whitepapers, downloads, Webinars and weekly newsletters full of the latest IT PRO news, reviews, insight and expertise.





