http://www.editmysiteonline.com/e/

is a "remote CMS" or more appropriately an ASP.

You edit all files via their web interface and just drop a small jscript function into 
your static template pages.  Content is served from your hosting provider via ESMO's 
servers.

www.babeltext.com is a free CMS that I am currently developing that runs under IIS 
that will work on any IIS based shared hosting provider, as long as at least one 
directory is writeable by the WEBUSERS group, which is the default user group that IS 
web pages are served from.  It has a web based upload, and no 3rd party components are 
required.

Release will be in a month or so.

Be Blessed, 
Nik Martin
www.babeltext.com



----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Andre Milton" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: 06 January, 2003 4:55 PM
Subject: RE: [cms-list] Client Side CMS??


> Hi Elizabeth,
> 
> Many CMSs can still run under shared environments.  Granted, some
> functionality such as inline (web-based) file uploads may not be permitted
> by the host but you should be able to find something.  www.doitlive.com
> comes to mind for ASP based solutions and there are too many to count for
> Linux based machines.    I'm sure you can find one that fits.  Anyone have
> suggestions?
> 
> Otherwise, Macromedia Contribute is like a stripped down layman version of
> Dreamweaver.  I'd never call anything client side a CMS but it may fit your
> need as well.  Make sure the client understands the implications of non
> centralized content management.
> 
> a.
> 
> Andre Milton
> www.mlore.com
> 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> Behalf Of Elizabeth Veserat
> 
> 
> We have a customer whose site is hosted in a shared environment and
> cannot install a CMS on that server. We started to look at client side
> packages but have not been able to find much in that area.
> 
> --
> http://cms-list.org/
> more signal, less noise.
> m¶Ÿÿrk%ŠËh®梷¬Š    Ú–W¬²z"±


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