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Sunday, October 23, 2005
In DITA Lets Tech Publishers ‘Eat Their Cake’ (Intelligent Enterprise), Bill Trippe writes: “The Darwin Information Typing Architecture (DITA) is finally pushing aside roadblocks that have stood in the way of adopting XML-based publishing.”
The article addresses (briefly) the often avoided issue of content modeling (some writers think adopting DITA means they don’t have to model their content—a fallacy). It also points out what many consultants have been saying: DITA requires customization (called ‘specialization’ in DITA lingo). There are significant costs associated with specializing DITA that may make it the wrong choice for some organizations. Trippe doesn’t address this issue in the article, but does a good job of pointing out that organizations considering DITA need to carefully analyze their requirements before jumping in head first.
More articles about DITA : Lessons Learned : Technical Writing
Alfresco Is Not A Picnic: The Problem With Metaphors And Content Management Systems
Microsoft, Welcome to the SaaS World (and See You in a Year)
Information Visualization: A Look At U.S. Newspapers And Their Picks For President
Economic Woes Signal Content Industry Job Losses: It Could Happen To You!
Effective Content Reuse: Storing Paragraphs, Not Topics, Is Key to Content Management Success

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