DCMS: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 11: | Line 11: | ||
<html> | <html> | ||
<div style="background-color: black; width: 1100px";> | <div style="background-color: black; width: 1100px";> | ||
<div style="position: relative; top: 10px; left:10px; background-image: url(/images/liberty_leading_the_people.jpg); background-repeat: no-repeat; background-position: top left; width:1000px; height: | <div style="position: relative; top: 10px; left:10px; background-image: url(/images/liberty_leading_the_people.jpg); background-repeat: no-repeat; background-position: top left; width:1000px; height: 400px;"></html> | ||
DCMS - Domain Content Management System. | DCMS - Domain Content Management System. | ||
<br/> | <br/> | ||
<blockquote> | <blockquote> | ||
Is a design concept of <b>ai-integration.biz</b> <font color=navy> generalizing anything that could ''reasonably'' be construed to be a CMS: | Is a design concept of <b>ai-integration.biz</b> <font color="navy"> generalizing anything that could ''reasonably'' be construed to be a CMS: | ||
<br/> | <br/> | ||
<ul> | <ul> |
Revision as of 07:35, 2 December 2012
Précis
DCMS is, as indicated in the older material below, a generalization of CMS. In this I have in mind a certain aesthetic which is hard to convey but one can refer to examples in historical systems. First is the AS/400 architecture in which the entire user filespace could be accessed as a relational store. The generic quality of apps in the MCP systems is a less clear but similar example. DCMS provides the reasoning support for finer level names than the domain name and is an umbrella term for all the support I provide for that.
Is a design concept of ai-integration.biz generalizing anything that could reasonably be construed to be a CMS:
- A framework in which arbitrary NixOS packages can form an integral aii.biz domain application.
- A designation or namestyle by which the derivations used in WFL/DCP are distinguised from their original distributions. In this, the form DCMS-<contentSpecifier> is used where the convention is that <contentSpecifier> will be one or two latin characters if a generic category of actual CMSes is being modeled, or a name if a specific one is.
- Example: DCMS-W would be the category of wiki CMSes but DCMS-wiki would be the mediawiki derivation ("EG") which you are working with now.
- DCMS-X is the special abstraction of DCMS realized in WFL/DCP as a dominion level subject, a concrete implementation of the LAMP abstraction based on our NixOS packages.
Historical
DCMS was originally intended to be implemented as the set of packages integrated by DCMS-X over DMS III, but the later is more approriate to another of my projects.