Sources
The posts in this section have been sourced mainly from the Webwiser founder's personal blog - www.2020visions.wordpress.com - which has been running for a number of years as a platform for debate about content technologies amongst leading commentators in the industry and as a test ground for new ideas.
Perfect Union site in development
A site for Perfect Union is being developed. In the meantime here is a earlier project site featuring previous work.
#futureWCM - some thoughts from China - part 3

Microsoft and Google featured strongly in my last post because in thinking about how web content management may develop over the next decade, the big battle for hearts and minds these organisations are engaged in will continue to shape WCM because they touch so many aspects of the content process. A personal view I’ve held for a number of years now is that Microsoft’s understandable efforts to protect the desktop worldview that it earns the bulk of its revenue from has been doing WCM a disservice and products such as SharePoint continue to distract us from smarter ways of doing things. Conversely, Google appears to be accelerating its pace of development in exciting and innovative ways. Its services are superb for small to medium businesses and I welcome its ongoing efforts to usurp Microsoft’s desktop dominance in larger organisations.
Many WCM and ECM developments of the last 15 years have been skewed towards Microsoft’s desktop PC view of the world and, for the sake of ubiquity, we have complied with this worldview and happily made WCM products that look like Microsoft’s desktop apps (because that’s what most people are familiar with using), connected to them or integrated them while being at its mercy with sometimes flaky support for broader standards such as WebDAV or having to get to grips with it’s particular way of doing things such as extensive use of CAML in SharePoint.
Google has been making steady progress in pushing the humble web browser forward to accomplish ever more sophisticated computing application tasks. Recent developments have highlighted progress in these areas. Google Wave and a new range of Google Apps site templates illustrate the company’s play for Microsoft’s stronghold of business collaboration. Reading Don Dodge’s recent blog post following his departure from Microsoft to Google and looking beyond the slightly acrimonious tone of some of it, the words he chose to describe the development of Google docs hit at the heart of Microsoft’s perceived weaknesses and Google’s strengths.
Personally I welcome these developments and have felt frustrated at the time it’s taking to shift from an information management approach that has clearly had it’s day and to a web first one that makes so much sense in an always on, always connected world.
For a number of years now I’ve been emphasising the importance of context in the content management process and while in a Product Management and Strategy role a few years ago, was focused for a time on visualising just the kind of connected and collaborative process now being illustrated by Google Wave. At the time we were looking at how web based application developers such as Zoho were innovating word processing in a browser based environment, recognising that new thinking should be applied rather than replicating old thinking on a new delivery platform.
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