Hi All:
I am working with a law firm that would like to offer to it's clients the ability to access their documents through a web interface. This would require a nice gui to offer the clients with a simple process for the clients to download from. It would also need to be secure (authentication & SSL), and mandatory disclaimer acceptance before logging into their account. Anyone with experience or thoughts on this matter?
Thanks,
Ed
On Thu, 29 Jan 2009 08:45:25 -0800 Ed Morrison wrote:
I am working with a law firm that would like to offer to it's clients the ability to access their documents through a web interface. This would require a nice gui to offer the clients with a simple process for the clients to download from. It would also need to be secure (authentication & SSL), and mandatory disclaimer acceptance before logging into their account. Anyone with experience or thoughts on this matter?
If you find something really clever to do this, I would be very interested in what it is. I was just asked (yesterday afternoon) about setting up something similar to that for a government office.
on 1-29-2009 8:45 AM Ed Morrison spake the following:
Hi All:
I am working with a law firm that would like to offer to it's clients the ability to access their documents through a web interface. This would require a nice gui to offer the clients with a simple process for the clients to download from. It would also need to be secure (authentication & SSL), and mandatory disclaimer acceptance before logging into their account. Anyone with experience or thoughts on this matter?
Thanks,
Ed
I saw an article recently about the Swiss Federal courts using Alfresco for something like this.
On 29-Jan-09, at 10:09 AM, Scott Silva wrote:
on 1-29-2009 8:45 AM Ed Morrison spake the following:
Hi All:
I am working with a law firm that would like to offer to it's clients the ability to access their documents through a web interface. This would require a nice gui to offer the clients with a simple process for the clients to download from. It would also need to be secure (authentication & SSL), and mandatory disclaimer acceptance before logging into their account. Anyone with experience or thoughts on this matter?
Thanks,
Ed
I saw an article recently about the Swiss Federal courts using Alfresco for something like this.
Knowledge Tree was the other i was looking at.
d
dnk wrote:
On 29-Jan-09, at 10:09 AM, Scott Silva wrote:
on 1-29-2009 8:45 AM Ed Morrison spake the following:
Hi All:
I am working with a law firm that would like to offer to it's clients the ability to access their documents through a web interface. This would require a nice gui to offer the clients with a simple process for the clients to download from. It would also need to be secure (authentication & SSL), and mandatory disclaimer acceptance before logging into their account. Anyone with experience or thoughts on this matter?
Thanks,
Ed
I saw an article recently about the Swiss Federal courts using Alfresco for something like this.
Knowledge Tree was the other i was looking at.
d
CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Thanks, I will look into it.
Ed
Scott Silva wrote:
on 1-29-2009 8:45 AM Ed Morrison spake the following:
Hi All:
I am working with a law firm that would like to offer to it's clients the ability to access their documents through a web interface. This would require a nice gui to offer the clients with a simple process for the clients to download from. It would also need to be secure (authentication & SSL), and mandatory disclaimer acceptance before logging into their account. Anyone with experience or thoughts on this matter?
Thanks,
Ed
I saw an article recently about the Swiss Federal courts using Alfresco for something like this.
CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Thanks, I will look into it.
Ed
Ed Morrison wrote:
Hi All:
I am working with a law firm that would like to offer to it's clients the ability to access their documents through a web interface. This would require a nice gui to offer the clients with a simple process for the clients to download from. It would also need to be secure (authentication & SSL), and mandatory disclaimer acceptance before logging into their account. Anyone with experience or thoughts on this matter?
I was also looking for something like this. You can find a whole load of choices here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Document_management_system
A lot of the open source ones are built on Java like the two mentioned in this thread Afresco and KnowledgeTree.
One that is not listed but is possibly less of a hassle to setup and maybe fit the law firm's needs is Epiware:
http://www.epiware.com http://www.linux.com/feature/146307 http://sourceforge.net/projects/epiware/
No java involved and you get an online demo to look at first too.
Christopher Chan wrote:
Ed Morrison wrote:
Hi All:
I am working with a law firm that would like to offer to it's clients the ability to access their documents through a web interface. This would require a nice gui to offer the clients with a simple process for the clients to download from. It would also need to be secure (authentication & SSL), and mandatory disclaimer acceptance before logging into their account. Anyone with experience or thoughts on this matter?
I was also looking for something like this. You can find a whole load of choices here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Document_management_system
A lot of the open source ones are built on Java like the two mentioned in this thread Afresco and KnowledgeTree.
One that is not listed but is possibly less of a hassle to setup and maybe fit the law firm's needs is Epiware:
http://www.epiware.com http://www.linux.com/feature/146307 http://sourceforge.net/projects/epiware/
No java involved and you get an online demo to look at first too. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Thanks, I will look at it.
Ed
Christopher Chan wrote:
Ed Morrison wrote:
Hi All:
I am working with a law firm that would like to offer to it's clients the ability to access their documents through a web interface. This would require a nice gui to offer the clients with a simple process for the clients to download from. It would also need to be secure (authentication & SSL), and mandatory disclaimer acceptance before logging into their account. Anyone with experience or thoughts on this matter?
I was also looking for something like this. You can find a whole load of choices here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Document_management_system
A lot of the open source ones are built on Java like the two mentioned in this thread Afresco and KnowledgeTree.
One that is not listed but is possibly less of a hassle to setup and maybe fit the law firm's needs is Epiware:
http://www.epiware.com http://www.linux.com/feature/146307 http://sourceforge.net/projects/epiware/
No java involved and you get an online demo to look at first too.
Hi Chris,
Bless you for the links to Epiware... I don't know that I would have every found this one otherwise. I have a client that has been asking for something like this and I was about to start writing the thing from scratch. You just saved me two months worth of coding! Bless you!!!
Epiware has turned out to be the cat's meow.
By the way... In case anyone has looked at this and wasn't able to figure out how to keep user folders hidden except for the user they're created for it can be done with epiware out of the box. I've got the step-by-step. Email me off-list and I'll send'em to ya.
Mark
On 6-Feb-09, at 7:57 AM, Mark Weaver wrote:
A lot of the open source ones are built on Java like the two mentioned in this thread Afresco and KnowledgeTree.
Actually KT is PHP based. Basic LAMP stack. Apparently pretty easy to setup. d
dnk wrote:
On 6-Feb-09, at 7:57 AM, Mark Weaver wrote:
A lot of the open source ones are built on Java like the two mentioned in this thread Afresco and KnowledgeTree.
Actually KT is PHP based. Basic LAMP stack. Apparently pretty easy to setup. d
I only took a quick look at that one, but didn't feel like signing up for a demo account. Not having to do this with Epiware and could just download it, install and play with it was a benefit. After poking around at it for two hours I was very happy with the results.
Mark
On 6-Feb-09, at 8:13 AM, Mark Weaver wrote:
I only took a quick look at that one, but didn't feel like signing up for a demo account. Not having to do this with Epiware and could just download it, install and play with it was a benefit. After poking around at it for two hours I was very happy with the results.
I was more so just posting a "FYI" type reply for the archives, etc. =-)
d
dnk wrote:
On 6-Feb-09, at 7:57 AM, Mark Weaver wrote:
A lot of the open source ones are built on Java like the two mentioned in this thread Afresco and KnowledgeTree.
Actually KT is PHP based. Basic LAMP stack. Apparently pretty easy to setup. d
My bad. I actually never downloaded KT...I balked at the request for a whole lot of stuff to download their community edition. I must have mixed it up with openkm which is java based.
Hi Chris,
Bless you for the links to Epiware... I don't know that I would have every found this one otherwise. I have a client that has been asking for something like this and I was about to start writing the thing from scratch. You just saved me two months worth of coding! Bless you!!!
Glad it was of help to you.