DTI wants everyone in
the pool with new content app
MediaPool designed to let users
handle content slated for Web and print through a single database on a single
server.
By Marcelo Duran
Associate
Editor
Newspapers now have another tool to oversee content slated for multiple channels
with the release last month of MediaPool, a content management app that handles
both print and online data on the same server.
Digital Technology
International Chief Executive Officer Don Oldham said MediaPool, introduced at
last month’s IfraExpo, will let newspapers freely earmark content as needed,
from print to Web radio.
“MediaPool is a content
management system that doesn’t have boundaries between print and Web or even
between new channels,” Oldham said. “When we talk about the Web, that’s usually
not one channel. It’s possibly on the Internet or mobile, Web TV or Web radio.”
The Register-Guard in Eugene,
Ore., is the first newspaper to integrate MediaPool CMS into its operation. The
paper expects to roll out the app later this year in conjunction with a major
upgrade of its editorial and advertising software.
Engine for apps
MediaPool is the content
management engine for several DTI apps, including AdSpeed, ClassSpeed, NewsSpeed
and WebSpeed.
The app is based on
InterSystems Corp.’s Cache database software, a high-performance object database
InterSystems claims can retrieve information five times faster than relational
databases.
“This database uses a
multidimensional array and even though it’s a single pool of data, it can be
physically distributed across servers and even across geographic locations,”
said Oldham, explaining the benefits of InterSystems’ approach.
Parent and child approach
MediaPool uses a hierarchical
method to manage data, with a “parent” record and any number of “child” records
linked together in the database.
“You have to have children
because you may need a high-resolution photographs for print, but a
low-resolution version for the Web,” Oldham said.
“Instead of having two
separate photos with separate names that have to be updated in the system, they
exist as one photo with different versions that show up as a thumbnail.”
MediaPool is also capable of
overseeing user-generated content, a benefit to newspapers that solicit
community input on their Web sites.
“Typically, that content isn’t
in the regular workflow and has to be treated and handled separately,” Oldham
said. “But the MediaPool architecture allows all of that user-generated material
to come into the pool of content and be treated” like newsroom-generated
content.
Meantime, DTI released a new
version of WebSpeed, integrating the app with Adobe Systems Inc.’s Dreamweaver
software.
WebSpeed’s suite of
applications includes SpeedWriter, eWriter and Escenic Content Studio.
SpeedWriter and eWriter let users create stories in a format that can be
immediately published to the Web or onto layouts for print publications.
DTI has had a longstanding
relationship with Adobe, integrating InDesign and InCopy within its software
offerings.
“What we did with InDesign is
we made it into a multi-user collaborative system and not just a single-user
page layout program like it comes shrink wrapped,” Oldham said. “What we’ve
added to Dreamweaver are dynamic tags so that a designer can lay out pages but
put in the content tags, which will update directly out of the MediaPool
database.”
The tags will thus allow users
to automatically update their Web site hundreds of times per day without having
to go back and manually edit the sites, Oldham said.
DTI said it also plans to
incorporate Adobe Media Player into its apps at a later date.