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Movable Type
Web Design & Development Guide
Movable Type
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Movable Type |
Movable Type logo |
Developer: |
Six Apart |
Latest release: |
3.35 /
April 17, 2007 |
Preview release: |
4.0 /
June 5, 2007 |
Platform: |
Perl |
Genre: |
Blog publishing system |
License: |
proprietary (GPL
version promised)[1] |
Website: |
www.sixapart.com/movabletype |
Movable Type is a
weblog publishing system developed by
California-based Six Apart. It was publicly announced on 3 September 2001,[2]
and version 1.0 was publicly released on 8 October 2001.[3]
Its
TrackBack feature was introduced in version 2.2, and has since been adopted
by a number of other blog systems. Movable Type also supports most popular
weblogging features, including user accounts, comments, categories, and themes,
and is extensible through a large library of third-party plug-ins. Movable Type
is free of charge for personal blogs with unlimited authors and blogs; paid
support and commercial licenses, which allow more authors and weblogs on a
single installation of the software, are also available.[4]
The current version is 3.35.[5]
Movable Type is written in
Perl, and supports storage of the weblog's content and associated data within
MySQL, Berkeley DB, PostgreSQL, and SQLite; dynamic page generation is handled
by Smarty. Movable Type Enterprise also supports the Oracle database and
Microsoft SQL Server. The application supports static page generation (in
which files for each page are updated whenever the content of the site is
changed), dynamic page generation (in which pages are composited from the
underlying data as the browser requests them), or a combination of the two
technologies.
With the release of version 3.0, there were marked changes in Movable Type's
licensing,[6]
most notably placing greater restrictions on its use without paying a licensing
fee.[7]
This sparked criticism from some users of the software. With the release of
Movable Type 3.2, the ability to create an unlimited number of weblogs at all
licensing levels was restored. In Movable Type 3.3, it is completely free for
personal users.
Six Apart released Movable Type 4 beta on June 5, 2007 and re-launched
movabletype.org as a community site for purposes of developing an open-source version (MTOS) to be released under GPL in Q3 2007.[8][9]
Movable Type Enterprise version has become a standard corporate and
enterprise blogging software because of advanced features such as LDAP
management, enterprise database integration such as Oracle, MySQL, user roles,
blog cloning and automated blog provisioning. It is also available as part of
Intel's SuiteTwo professional software offering of Web 2.0 tools.
Six Apart also maintains three other weblog publishing systems,
TypePad,
LiveJournal and Vox. While Movable Type is a system which needs to be installed
on a user's own web server, TypePad is a hosted weblog service. LiveJournal is
an entirely separate blogging system, acquired after Six Apart's buyout of Danga
Interactive in January 2005.
Movable Type was originally named Serge after musician
Serge Gainsbourg.
References
-
^
Dash,
Anil (2007-06-05).
Movable Type 4 Beta: We're On A Mission. Movable Type News.
Six
Apart.
-
^
"Original
announcement", Six Apart,
3 September 2001.
-
^
"Announcement
of first public release", Six Apart, 8 October 2001.
-
^
Movable Type pricing and licenses information
-
^
"Announcing
Movable Type 3.34", Six Apart, 17 January 2007.
-
^
"Mena's
Corner: It's About Time", Six Apart, 13 May 2004.
-
^
"Six Apart's Movable Type arguably puts blogs on the map.",
Mike Heck, InfoWorld, PC World, March 28, 2005
-
^
The Movable Type Open Source Project
-
^
"Six Apart's Movable Type is widely recognized as the powerhouse of
blogging tools", Movable Type 4.0 Beta review, Don Reisinger,
PC World, July 19, 2007
External links
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This guide is licensed under the GNU
Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia.
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