You have seen the CNET. Inc's World Wide Web sites and
watched it's television shows. Pretty soon, you will be able to use the
software.
Vignette Corp., an Austin Texas startup, bought the server
software used by CNET to support 1.3 million hits per day on it's sites
for delivering online news, searching the Web and finding shareware. The
CNET sites comprise the equivalent of tens of thousands of pages. Much
of the information is stored as structured data in Sybase, Inc. databases
and converted to Web pages as users request it.
Laying the foundation
Vignette plans to use the Presentation of Real-Time Interactive
Service Material (PRISM) software as the basis for a new commercial Web
server product aimed at large Web sites. The product also bill include
software fro Andromedia, Inc. that was designed to track traffic patterns
on a Web site.
The Andromedia software--scheduled to be available late
next month--reports how many hits a site receives, which pages are requested
in what order and other traffic patterns.
Vignette's new server product is due to go into beta-testing
in October and will become generally available by year's end.
It will support databases from Oracle, Corp. and Sybase
and will run on Windows NT and common Unix variants. Pricing hasn't been
set.
Sam Gassel, a technical manager at Turner Broadcasting
System, Inc. in Atlanta, said commercial software that runs large Web sites
could be very attractive. Gassel helps manager the CNN Interactive Web
site (www.cnn.com).
"Almost anyone would want to buy the software rather
than build it," Gassel said. "The content is the most interesting
thing."
But the software would have to match a company's way
of doing business before it will be accepted.
For instance, some companies require that Web content
be approved by several managers before it is posted.
"If it's customizable, there's going to be a learning
curve, and if it's not customizable there's a question of whether it does
what you want." Gassel said.
Vignette stands to gain something very rare on the Internet:
software with a proven track record.
Other server systems for managing very large Web sites
have just been introduced by Oracle; Next Software, Inc.; Broadvision,
Inc.; Applix, Inc; and others.
Didn't want to do software
Apart from an equity investment in Vignette and a seat
on Vignette's board, CNET gets to leave a business it never wanted to be
in: software development.
"When we first started out, we had no intention
of building this." said Halsey Minor, CEO of the San Francisco company.
"But we couldn't find anything like it."
PRISM was designed to allow nontechnical people to create
content using their favorite graphics or word-processing tools. that content
is stored in a relational database.
Separately, production staff builds Hypertext Markup
Language (HTML) templates that will control how pages look online. When
a page gets called up, the templates and content are merged. Frequently
used pages get stored as HTML documents, ready to view, while less-popular
pages are broken down and stored as components.