Archive for February, 2008

We've Been Cloned!

Wednesday, February 6th, 2008

Thanks to Joshua Gans, I have today learnt that MBS has been cloned by Richmonds University in Ontario, Canada. Well, at least according to Richmonds’ website.

They have the same students, the same building, the same tag line, even a Dean who’s lived the same life as ours has…you get the picture. Check out Gans’ post to see what I mean. Or, better yet, compare the two websites:

Oh, and if you have any doubts about who copied who, check out the URL of About Richmonds University section (and of some of the other pages as well) or, for example, the site’s Location page.

Like Gans said, I guess we’re good enough to be imitated :)  Oh, and a special shout out to MBS’ ITS department for creating such an awesome site.

Microsoft & Yahoo!

Monday, February 4th, 2008

By now, everyone’s heard of Microsoft’s $44.6bn bid for Yahoo! and everyone’s talked about it as well, though Yahoo! isn’t saying much for the time being.

Here, in my opinion, are some of the most interesting articles currently published on this topic:

In fact, if you’re only going to read one article on this topic, read Thurrott’s. Though it would be good if you checked out the comparison table in Zheng’s article as well.

Finally, in light of all this merger talk, check out Josh Lowensohn’s article on Dot-com pioneers — where are they now?. It makes and interesting read.

What a CMS Should Be

Sunday, February 3rd, 2008

Eight Black’s Simon Chen wrote a really good article today on what a Content Management System (CMS) should be. He argues that, for a company considering a CMS solution for its website, “buying into a stand alone CMS is just not logical.” Instead, open source CMS’ like WordPress are the way to go.

I agree. In fact, in my last job in Pakistan, I spent a couple of years trying to convince firms working in that country’s development sector (both government and NGOs) of exactly that. I didn’t use WordPress, but I did use, among others, applications like Mambo, Joomla, Drupal, Typo3, phpBB, Alfresco, Moodle, MediaWiki, as well as countless plug-ins, add-ons, components, and modules. Each CMS has its own strengths and weaknesses, of course, and some are designed for specific things (you can’t do much else with the message board system, phpBB, for example) but all of them do their job quite well. [Good article on how to choose an open source CMS]

And, though over the last year I’ve worked mostly with commercial systems like Intranet DASHBOARD (iD) and Microsoft Office SharePoint Server (MOSS), I really do think that open source systems are a great way to go for most small companies and, increasingly, for medium-sized companies as well. It’s only large firms that need much more than just a CMS solution that truly benefit from all the other features that systems like iD and MOSS bring with them. In fact, I’d almost feel silly using something like MOSS in a small company environment. That’s like having a 40-seater bus as the company car for a firm that employs 15 people.

Anyway, my point is that Chen makes a good point, though it is worth it to look at much more than just WordPress.

Amazon Acquires Audible

Friday, February 1st, 2008

Well, whaddya know? Amazon has reached a deal to acquire Audible. Amazon now sells books, e-books, and audio books. Awesome. [CNET, Last100]