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Return On Investment (ROI) with Cloud CMSROI and Content Management Systems (CMS) are rarely used in the same sentence due to the uncomfortable pricing models from all legacy CMS vendors - as well as the spiraling costs of implementing them. Often so much investment has been made in the CMS that changing is not a realistic consideration. This negativity only increases when you start using the term Enterprise Content Management (ECM), where suddenly vendors start seeing dollar signs, but offer no additional functionality e.g., Alfresco,
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Cloud CMS and Your Mobile StrategyLast week, a really interesting post was authored by Andrew Chen on why mobile application startups are bombing out like it was 1999. Andrew’s main point is that mobile startups approach the application market using a “hail mary” kind of development approach which is similar to how web sites were delivered in the late 90’s. He also compares the investor mentality today with that of the late 90’s. I really enjoyed Andrew’s article and also enjoyed the comments. In particular, I was inspired by so
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Gitana 4.0 / Content Engine / FindDiscover content effortlessly with Cloud CMS Find Service using Query, Search, and Traversal for powerful, unified results.
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Gitana 4.0 / User Interface / Projects / Create a ProjectCreate collaborative projects easily with Cloud CMS. Customize, invite teams, approve content, and leverage templates for efficient project management.
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Does Cloud CMS support Single Sign On (SSO)?Yes, Cloud CMS supports SSO (Single Sign On) with a variety of authentication providers. Many of these providers are offered out-of-the-box -- including providers for Keycloak, Google, CAS and more. In addition, we allow you to implement your own SSO providers and customize the authentication handshake. To learn more about how Cloud CMS authentication providers work, check out the following documentation: https://www.cloudcms.com/documentation/appserver/services/auth.html Custom Authenticators a
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Gitana 3.2 / Guide / Guide / Content ModelingDiscover Cloud CMS content modeling with powerful JSON Schema definitions for types, properties, and graph associations, ensuring data integrity.
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Gitana 4.0 / Content Engine / Content ModelsExplore Cloud CMS content modeling with JSON Schema for creating, updating, and managing your project's dynamic data efficiently.
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Gitana 3.2 / Guide / Guide / FindDiscover and retrieve content efficiently with Cloud CMS Find Service, utilizing Query, Search, and Traversal mechanisms for optimized results.
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Gitana 3.2 / Guide / Guide / Getting Started / Instant PreviewInstant Preview lets you view content changes instantly, enhancing efficiency in Development, Staging, and QA without extra servers or complex deployments.
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Gitana 4.0 / Getting Started / Navigating the User Interface / Instant PreviewInstant Preview lets you view content changes instantly, enhancing efficiency in Development, Staging, and QA without extra servers or complex deployments.
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Cloud CMS and Two-way ReplicationWhen we designed Cloud CMS, we wanted to give our customers the choice of running the platform both in the cloud and on-premise. The cloud makes sense for a lot of infrastructure needs but we recognize that some of our customers will want to have their own hosted installation of the platform. We also wanted to give our customers the ability to push and pull data between their on-premise installations and the cloud platform (whether our public installation or a private cloud the customer runs). T
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Introduction to Changeset VersioningCloud CMS provides you with content repositories that are powered by a “changeset” versioning model. This a powerful versioning model that you won’t find in most conventional CMS products. It’s one of the reasons why Cloud CMS is such a great platform for collaboration! Document-level Versioning A lot of legacy CMS products feature document-level versioning. With document-level versioning, when you make a change to a document, the system simply increments a version counter. You end up with multi
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Gitana 3.2 / Guide / Guide / Content Modeling / Content Model Builder / Create A New Content TypeCreate and customize content types effortlessly with Cloud CMS's Content Model Builder, featuring UI and JSON options for seamless integration.
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Gitana 4.0 / Content Engine / Content Models / Content Model Builder / Create A New Content TypeEasily create and manage new content types in the Cloud CMS Content Model Builder using UI or JSON options. Preview changes before saving.
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Experimenting with blogsToday we’re switching over to Tumblr for our blogging capabilities. You might ask a couple of questions - one of which is “why tumblr?” and the other is “why would you use an external CMS for your blog?” These are both excellent questions. They’re both pretty easy to answer as well. With respect to blog software, our feeling is that it’s very much a commodity at this point. When this stuff came out early last decade, it was novel and a wide diversity of features were to be found from one product
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Gitana 3.2 / Guide / Guide / Application Server / Web Content ManagementStreamline content management with Cloud CMS. Easily edit, preview, and publish web pages for seamless collaboration and optimized performance.
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Gitana 4.0 / Developers / Application Server / Web Content ManagementStreamline content management with Cloud CMS. Easily edit, preview, and publish web pages for seamless collaboration and optimized performance.
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Gitana 3.2 / Guide / Guide / AuthenticationSecurely connect to Cloud CMS using OAuth 2.0; ensure seamless API interactions with Access and Refresh Tokens, safeguarding client and user credentials.
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Gitana 4.0 / Developers / AuthenticationSecurely authenticate Cloud CMS using OAuth 2.0, support Authorization and Resource Servers, and ensure safe API interactions with encrypted Access and Refresh Tokens.
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Recommended environmentThis is a big subject and, as you know, there are many ways to set things up to be robust. That said, some practices are better than others. I can relate at least what we do and what we've seen customers do. First, I'd recommend thinking of Cloud CMS as black box application that runs on top of MongoDB, Elastic Search (both of which can be thought of as databases) and a binary storage provider. Cloud CMS is a stateless application whose setup is actually quite simple. It doesn't maintain any sta
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Gitana 3.2 / Guide / Guide / Publishing / WorkflowCustomize Cloud CMS workflows for seamless publish and unpublish activities with simple and adaptable workflow models.
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Gitana 4.0 / Content Engine / Publishing / WorkflowCustomize your publishing workflow with Cloud CMS. Define, add, and manage simple publish and unpublish activities seamlessly.
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Role-based security accessYou can configure a Cloud CMS project to provide precise, role-based access to content types and content instances. Let's take a look at example of how this is done! Suppose that you have three users - Jim, Dwight and Michael - and two content types (my:article and my:news). We would like things to work like this: Michael is the boss. He is allowed to view, create, edit and delete content content of all types. Dwight is a worker. He is allowed to view, create, edit and delete content of type "my
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Content Management as a MicroserviceOne of the big ideas we pursued when we set out to build Cloud CMS was to design the product so that it was entirely decoupled. Our vision was to have a number of discrete tiers that would consist of either single servers or clusters of servers dedicated to a single class of problems. For example, the Content API tier is dedicated to powering our JSON API. It does nothing else but receive requests, execute them and hand back JSON data responses. It had nothing to do with presentation or renderin
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Users, Identities and SSO with Cloud CMSOne of the really interesting use cases for Cloud CMS is that of maintaining users across multiple domains while having those users share a common identity context. A common identity context allows an authentication session to transition seamlessly (via an authentication swap) from one user to the next. It also allows for properties (such as username, email, password or other custom user properties) to automatically synchronize across all of the user identities that are part of the context. Here
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