jLibrary

Open Source Document Management System from your Desktop

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Description and features

jLibrary is a CMS engine oriented both for personal and enterprise use. The variety of functions and possibilities available make jLibrary a very flexible system that can almost be used for any information management purpose. In the following listing you can find some of its most notable features:

  • Support for local and remote repositories : With jLibrary you can use the embedded repository server and create your local repositories for personal use, or use the bundled server that allows remote connections from other hosts throug web service endpoints. Commonly a normal user will use the first option and an enterprise user will use the second option.

  • Interoperability: jLibrary standalone servers are web services based, so you can access to the core services from any language and from any platform, and so it is a solution that could fit easily within your enterprise development projects. Currently, the only jLibrary client available has been developed with Java programming language, but there is no restriction for developing other clients in other programming languages and platforms like could be a .NET one.

  • Standards compatible: jLibrary uses a JSR-170 compatible backend so you can access jLibrary repository contents with other JSR-170 compatible tools.

  • WebDAV support: jLibrary content can be accessed from any WebDAV client like could be Windows XP one. This makes very useful to handle jLibrary content from the tools that your users use daily like could be for example Microsoft Word.

  • Categorization: jLibrary supports categories and subcategories, so you can catalogue more easily your information or the information of your enterprise.

  • Relationships: jLibrary is oriented to be an intelligent document management system. So you can establish relationships between the documents. This relationships pondered with the importance of the documents can be a quality metric for the information presented to the users. jLibrary even has a visual relationships browser from which you can navigate between the different related media.

  • Favorites: Every jLibrary user can define their favorites in each repository categories. Favorites can be very important when generating content from a repository.

  • Document metadata: You can define several metadata items over the different media. Examples are description, author, importance, etc.

  • Annotations: Are you tired of not remembering where was that book that had that interesting passage ? Well, jLibrary proposes you a solution. Create a virtual document and add notes to it. Later you can search for term and jLibrary automatically search in media object annotations.

  • Multiple editors: jLibrary includes several editors to handle almost all the most common document types: Adobe Acrobad, Microsoft Word, Microsoft Excel, Microsoft Powerpoint, HTML, XML, Image files, etc.

  • Resources management: In jLibrary a media object can have associated different resources. For example, an HTML document could have attached images, audio, cascade sheets or scripts as resources. jLibrary repositories store all this information.

  • Repository import/export: With jLibrary you can save your repository content and restore it later. XML allows processing of the repository content without using jLibrary API. Import/export allow easy sharing of repositories between users and organizations.

  • Search: In jLibrary you can search over one or multiple repositories by keywords or by content. jLibrary automatically performs the search over all the media objects, resources and annotations.

  • Web browsing: With jLibrary you have your system browser integrated within the application so you can browse over your favorite web content. jLibrary also has support for bookmarks and browsing history.

  • Web spidering: But web browsing won't be very useful for if only. With jLibrary you can grab all the content of your favorite pages and add it to your repository in an automatic way. Do you imagine extract all the content of a tutorials page and have it stored and indexed in a few moments ? With jLibrary you can do it !

 

Copyright © 2004-2006 Martín Pérez Mariñán & others. Created with jLibrary. Design by Andreas Viklund.

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