It seems to me that the major flaw of the software is that it isn't cross-platform, which comes as no surprise. But I feel Microsoft didn't do their market research. While the financial and business sectors are heavily reliant on Microsoft servers, American universities, and by extension, research libraries, are not. If they really wanted to make a "commitment to support the academic community" as they say on the Zentity website, they would have developed it for a platform that the academic community actually uses.
Ethan On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 10:11 AM, David Kane <[email protected]> wrote: > Andy, > > It is a highly extensible platform, based on .NET and windows. It is also > open source! We did install it and have a play around with it. But not as > much as we would have liked, primarily because of skillset and resource > issues here. > > Microsoft have come late into the repository space, and have had a really > good look at the kinds of mistakes others have made. > > Let us know how you get on. > > David. > > > > > > On 28 April 2010 14:54, Andrew Ashton <[email protected]> wrote: > > > I¹m looking for some background information on Microsoft¹s Zentity (their > > digital repository software). If anyone has first-hand experience > working > > with it, or if you know of institutions that have implemented it, please > > contact me. > > > > Thanks, > > > > Andy Ashton > > Senior Research Programmer > > Center for Digital Scholarship, Brown University Library > > [email protected] > > > > > > -- > David Kane > Systems Librarian > Waterford Institute of Technology > Ireland > http://library.wit.ie/ > [email protected] > T: ++353.51302838 > M: ++353.876693212 >
