- KIX is a web framework for distributed integration and agile engineering.
- KIX has a multiversion document repository - i.e. the document owners explicitly nominates one document version to be the current one. This is not the necessarily the last version.
- KIX is a little bit like a distributed make system. It can be used to maintain dependencies between documents. However, KIX may do this even if the different documents are maintained by different stakeholders and the documents reside on different KIX servers.
- Significant document events are notified to all dependent KIX documents - the KIX framework supports the configuration of plugins, which may take automatic actions when such events arrive. For example a new version of a dependency document may result in the automatic creation of a new version of the dependent document. Thus changes to one document may ripple through a web of distributed KIX documents much like a spreadsheet, where each document taking part corresponds to a spreadsheet cell.
- KIX also has a plugin point for bespoke document display; any KIX document can be viewed by any number of viewing plugins - one after the other - thus providing multiple specialised views of the same document (see e.g. this wiki view followed by a document review view).
- KIX may also deploy the documents to the outside world; when for example a KIX document version is nominated as the new current version it may simultanously be exported as a file - with or without conversion. This is happening in the above example where the 'Exported page' link has been written as a static HTML file.
- Moreover, KIX provide a document version comparison tool and a generic KIX site map navigational tool.
- In order to support agile engineering KIX implements fast notified feedback from stakeholders in the form of threaded web conferences. A KIX display plugins may split a document in any number of document subject nodes, each available for individual threaded discussions.
Friday, 26 June 2009
Growing interest in KIX
Last week a colleague of mine approached me on the subject of KIX - please describe KIX in 5 minutes. I tried along these lines:
Wednesday, 17 June 2009
New versions of the Document Review plugin and the KixFw framework
Version 1.13 of the KixFw framework has now been released. The main upgrade is to allow 'open browsing' of KIX documents, i.e. web users may view KIX folders, documents and comments without having to login to KIX. The open browsing mode is a configuration option when you install an instance of KIX.
Version 1.6 of the Document Review plugin has also been released. It also supports 'open browsing' when this is configured. Otherwise the plugin has been reimplemented for much better performance.
After these releases it is easy to demonstrate some basic aspects of KIX and the related Document Review plugin:
Version 1.6 of the Document Review plugin has also been released. It also supports 'open browsing' when this is configured. Otherwise the plugin has been reimplemented for much better performance.
After these releases it is easy to demonstrate some basic aspects of KIX and the related Document Review plugin:
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