Forum Moderators: open
Also, does anyone know how the licence works?
I couldnt find it on their site. What if i want to give it to 3 contributers in the same company, do i need to buy 3 licences?
Also i think im right in saying that this is a package which sits on the users system, not the web server? I am right? In which case, is being a macromedia contribute reseller a good option, and should i seel it seperatly or in with my webdesign price?
thanx
There is also planned to be some kind of "volume discount" - but it looks as if this will be more for large corporate users and educational establishments.
Reaction has been extremely positive from designers who see this as a way of getting clients to make changes to their own sites and as a sales advantage to include in their packages.
Others, who have maintenance contracts or who wonder about giving access to their client list to Macromedia, are more sceptical.
Personally, I can see the advantages in some cases (in fact, I'm probably going to recommend it to a prospective client tomorrow).
However, I am perturbed at the general concept behind this that "content" doesn't really count and the way that this is being marketed to designers as a way of freeing them up from tiresome content changes. As SEOs, copywriters or marketing professionals, we should know better.
Secondly, once Macromedia has got a whole load of new entry-level buyers from designers' client lists, what do they do with them in the future?
Very clever marketing, indeed.
(Edited for spelling.)
[edited by: stever at 4:56 pm (utc) on Nov. 18, 2002]
In fact, there are lots of free solutions, not just MT. With MT however, you have to pay a licensing fee if it is used in a commercial setting or if you don't want to display their "powered by logo"
That's when Contribute starts to look like a contender.
It's a very simplified version of the Dreamweaver GUI, which works on a Template system - with editable areas for the client to update.
What I do like about it is that, as the developer, you can send over a config-like file to your client which tells Contribute which files they can and cannot edit, which I personally thought was a very nice feature.
I'd be interested to hear from anyone who may have/will shortly be rolling this out to a client - as to what the client thought of their Contribute interface.