About InfoWorld : Advertise : Subscribe : Contact Us : Awards : Events : Store
InfoWorld HomeNewsTest CenterOpinionsProduct GuideTechIndex
PRODUCT REVIEWS GUIDE    REVIEWS    ANALYSES    SPECIAL REPORTS 
 

TEST CENTER

 
Getting Traction

By Jon Udell
July 12, 2002


THERE IS STILL NO sure-fire recipe for KM (knowledge management) success, but the ingredients must include the staples of the knowledge worker: e-mail, the Web, and Microsoft Office. With Traction Software's KM solution, content flowing through all these channels is easily captured by the Java-based Traction Server, which can be best described as an enterprise Weblog system. Documents posted to the server are stored as XML, tagged (in a Web interface) with system-and user-defined terms, made available for full-text and structured search, and served back out as team workspaces, enterprise information portals, or both.

   ADVERTISEMENT
  

Free IT resource

Virtualization Insights from Top Experts - Learn how virtualization gets real!

Sponsored by Dell

Free IT resource

TechNet: More ways to know it, share it, and keep it running.

Sponsored by Microsoft

RELATED LINKS
»  AT&T buys high-speed wireless spectrum for $2.5 billion
»  Update: Sprint chief Forsee resigns
»  IT trainer offers master's degree for hackers
»  Wireless RSS feed 

IDG ENTERPRISE NETWORK
More Network LAN/WAN News...  (ComputerWorld)
Wireless EV-DO on board  (ComputerWorld)

TOP NEWS 


IT SOLUTION SEARCH

Traction says you'll be up and running in 15 minutes, and that was true of our Windows XP installation. We spent another 15 minutes configuring the server for SSL (Secure Sockets Layer). To do that, we downloaded Sun's JCE (Java Cryptography Engine) and JSSE (Java Secure Socket Extension) JAR (Java Archive) files, dropped them into the server's directory, and ran the canned keytool command provided by Traction to create a self-signed certificate.

New to Version 2.8 is the automatic enabling of a visitor (anonymous) account. We exploited it by creating two Weblogs, or "projects": a public one for visitors and a private one called watercooler, where a team could assemble, discuss, and refine content to be made public. We used Traction's Web-based administration to define users and permissions. There's also an LDAP provider interface for synching enterprise directories, which we did not test.

Logged-in users add, edit, classify, and erase articles using a Web form that accepts HTML from any source, including e-mail attachments. The system provides a set of default labels -- including headline, news, notice, to-do, done, bulletin, contact -- and invites authors to apply these to posted articles. Labels define rules for displaying articles. For example, headlines come first on the portal's news page, followed by news items, then notices. All of these obey the current time slice, and therefore are visible by day, week, month, or quarter. Bulletins, however, are time-independent and always appear on the news page.

After they are posted, articles or paragraphs within them can be assigned more labels. For example, a paragraph of contact information can be tagged with the contact label. A search for the label returns all documents containing paragraphs so tagged, and highlights the paragraphs. Users can easily extend the set of system-defined labels. While testing, we created a "howto" label for Traction lore as we acquired it, and a "wssecurity" label for Web pages and e-mails related to a research project on Web services security. Even without such labels, these documents can be found using Traction's built-in, full-text search engine. But the system is designed to encourage and reward metadata tagging.

Search is menu-driven for novices. But for experts there's a powerful and terse syntax. For example, /:howto finds all how-to articles in the current time slice, and /::news (saml and ws-security) w finds all news items for the current week matching SAML ( Security Assertion Markup Language) and WS-Security. A related syntax makes it easy to link to these dynamic result sets. To give users easy access to our series of how-to items, for example, we posted a bulletin containing the text [[link :howto 'howto' items]] that Traction rewrote as a link, labeled "howto items," that invokes the query and returns the set of items within the current time slice.

Mastery of such syntax is, admittedly, a power-user's game. Novices (and rusty experts) require WYSIWYG support, which Traction's Web interface delivers for search but not for content authoring. A companion Windows tool, the Traction Instant Publisher, embeds the Microsoft DHTML edit control that it uses to offer basic WYSIWYG editing of new entries it posts to the server by way of a remote API. It's an HTML editor that supports simple styles and hyperlinking (but not tables), has access to the same labels available in the Web interface, and can search the server as well as post to it.

But the Instant Publisher can't retrieve, edit, or reclassify items that have been posted, and it doesn't simplify use of Traction's link or search syntax. A friendlier interface for novices, who will otherwise struggle to master the deep and powerful Traction engine, should be a top priority in future versions.

The Instant Publisher is, nevertheless, very effective in its primary mission, which is to push raw material onto the server. Running from the Windows tray, it senses the URL in your browser, the e-mail message selected in Outlook, or the document open in Word, and allows you to post any of these with one click. It also includes a handy screen-capture tool.

E-mail is another vital source of raw material. We set up a POP account and told Traction to poll it and move messages into our private project, labeling them as news items. Conversely, we told Traction to send e-mail digests summarizing project activity to team members. This two-way e-mail flow is crucial for adoption in companies that rely heavily on e-mail and on the RIM BlackBerry in particular.

There's much more to Traction than we can say here. The company has deep roots in hypertext, and its engine weaves a dense fabric. Every action is recorded and cross-referenced. Every document's inbound and outbound links can be displayed. Items can be collected and reclassified in batches. The interface is highly skinnable in ways that affect not just appearance, but the level of exposed detail. There's no lock-in to the Traction repository; all data can be easily exported as XML. To create an ad-hoc RSS (Rich Site Summary) feed, you add &skin=rss10 to any view-generating URL; to retrieve search results as XML, you add &theme=xml to any search URL.

Traction can be regarded as an ultrasophisticated PIM (personal information manager). That's just the quality you need in a KM product to get people to actually use it.




  BOTTOM LINE
Traction Server 2.8
BUSINESS CASE
This powerful and easy-to-deploy Java-based KM server converts e-mail, Web content, and Office documents into an XML database that can be reorganized and searched.

TECHNOLOGY CASE
Traction Instant Publisher easily captures e-mail, Web pages, and other documents. Traction Server delivers powerful search, classification, and news publishing.

PROS
+ Manages a robust hypertext database
+ Strong inbound/outbound e-mail support
+ XML APIs provide easy integration hooks

CONS
- WYSIWYG editor available only in Instant Publisher

COST
15 users, five projects: $4,995 ($2,499 through summer of 2002)

PLATFORMS
Server: Any J2SE 1.3-capable platform. Client: Windows

COMPANY
Traction Software, http://www.tractionsoftware.com

Deploy
Ease of use
Implementation
Innovation
Interoperability
Scalability
Security
Suitability
Support
Training
Value
Deploy



SPONSORED WHITE PAPERS
EMC - Lower costs and improve reliability-Get the EMC CLARiiON white paper!
Ciphertrust - Are you ready for Sobig.G? Learn how to protect your email systems.
CDW - Personal attention. CDW. The Right Technology. Right Away.
EMC - Explore key performance features and capabilities of EMC ControlCenter 5.1.1.
Intel - Free Intel white paper shows you how to deploy a secure wireless LAN
Cisco - FREE WHITE PAPER: BLUEPRINT to design and implement secure VPNs
Verity, Inc. - "Mass Consolidation Hits the Web-Search Market"
McDATA - Download a FREE storage consolidation white paper from McDATA(R).
Lucent Technologies - Overcoming Common Firewall Limitations
Lucent Technologies - Leverage Your Mobile High Speed Data Access. Download Free White Paper!
Nokia - Get the scoop! Mobilizing business white papers & case studies.
BMC Software - Maximize the Potential of Enterprise Data: Free white paper!
Network Associates - Free white paper - Strategies for Optimizing Network Costs and Benefits
Entrust - Manage identities across applications. Improve productivity.
Stalker Software - CommuniGate Pro - Transform your Email and Calendaring
Remedy - A NEW Gartner Research Note:Producing Quality IT Services

Search the IDG White Paper Library:


SPONSORED LINKS

INFOWORLD MARKETPLACE


» Hot Stock Alert (TMDI)
Telemedicus - Medical Communication Top Telemedicine Technology
» Apply BPM and ITIL at your IT Help Desk
ServiceWise brings BPM to complete IT service while eliminating integration cost. Learn more here.
» EMC delivers high-speed image capture, storage
Learn how you can quickly capture, organize, and deliver information with EMC ApplicationXtender.
» Register for your free VMWare Virtualization kit!
VMware virtualization takes the cost and complexity out of IT  Download this free kit to learn how.
» FREE Sophos Threat Detection Test
Is your AV catching everything it should? Free virus, spyware and adware scan.




 HOME  NEWS  TEST CENTER  OPINIONS  PRODUCT GUIDE  TECHINDEX   About : Advertise : Subscribe : Contact Us : Awards : Events 

Copyright © 2008, Reprints, Permissions, Licensing, IDG Network, Privacy Policy

All Rights reserved. InfoWorld is a leading publisher of technology information and product reviews on topics including viruses, phishing, worms, firewalls, security, servers, storage, networking, wireless, databases, and web services.

Computerworld :: Network World :: CIO :: PC World :: Darwin :: CMO :: CSO
IT Careers :: JavaWorld :: Macworld :: Mac Central :: Playlist :: GamePro :: GameStar :: Gamerhelp
ITWorld Canada :: Computerwoche :: Techworld UK :: tecChannel :: IDG.se :: IDG.no