Linux and Open Source

Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols & Paula Rooney

Microsoft debuts early test version of Oxite open source blogging engine

By | December 9, 2008, 6:41am PST

WordPress has more competition to be. Microsoft’s Codeplex team has developed an open source blogging engine that can support simple blogs and large web sites such as its own MIX Online.

The project, revealed by ZDNet’s Mary Jo Foley on Monday, offers content management features that will extend its use beyond the simple blogsphere, Microsoft claimed.

“Oxite was developed carefully and painstakingly to be a great blogging platform, or a starting point for your own web site project with CMS needs,” according to Microsoft.com.

Oxite, for example,  offers support for “pingbacks, trackbacks, anonymous or authenticated commenting, gravatar support, RSS feeds at any page level, support for MetaWebLog API, a web admininstration panel and support for Open Search format allowing users to search your site using their browser’s search box, Microsoft pointed out.

 It’s an apha release and available under the OSI-aproved Microsoft Public License. Oxite, which was made available on December 5,  is a provider-based architecture that allows users to “swap out database and search providers,” Microsoft said, adding that SQL Server Database and local and Live search providers are included.

Oxite offers support for multiple blogs per site.

 ”Oxite includes the ability to create and edit an arbitrary set of pages on your site. Want an ‘about’ page? You got it. Need a special page about your dogs, with sub-pages for each of those special animals? Yep, no worries,” Microsoft continues. “The ability to add pages as a child of another page is all built in. The web-based editing and creation interface lets you put whatever HTML you want onto your pages, and the built-in authentication system means that only you will be able to edit them. And if that’s not enough, well, you have all the code, don’t you?”

A developer on the project said the .NET blogging tool will see the light of day once the “kinks” are worked out.

” In addition to on10.net and Channel 9, the team has also built a smaller single-person blog engine that we have currently deployed to our personal sites (see duncanmackenzie.net as an example). Once we have worked out the kinks in this code base, code-named “Oxite,” we’ll be shipping that code out (in C# and the .NET Framework 2.0),” wrote Duncan Mackenzie, a developer on the project.

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Paula Rooney is a Boston-based writer who has followed the tech industry for almost two decades.

Disclosure

Paula Rooney

Paula Rooney owns no stock in the companies that she covers. She holds a 401K that is managed by Morgan Stanley.

Biography

Paula Rooney

Paula Rooney has covered the software and technology industry for more than 20 years, starting with semiconductor design and mini-computer systems at EDN News and later focused on PC software companies including Microsoft, Lotus, Oracle, Red Hat, Novell and other open source and commercial software companies for CRN and PCWeek. She received a silver award from the American Society of Business Publication Editors in 2005 for her profile on Linus Torvalds and edited and co-authored "Partnering With Microsoft," a book about Microsoft's channel published by CMP Publishing in 2004. Rooney graduated from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism in 1997. In her off time, she enjoys scuba diving, sailing, sun worshipping, running, reading, surfing (the net) and hanging out with her family. She resides on the shores of Scituate, Massachusetts.

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RE: Microsoft debuts early test version of Oxite open source blogging engin
Tamas Biro 18th Dec 2008
As usual, Microsoft is in danger of over-marketing its latest offering. Performing a huge U-turn ??? and turning up incredibly late to the open source party ??? Microsoft's ???Oxite??? blogging platform claims to be ???highly extensible content management???. Rather, the key point here is that Microsoft is shunning its proprietary roots.

Oxite is nothing more but a nice sample code demonstrating how to write great code on the .NET web platform. It is not a complete application, has very little documentation and no support. It is essentially a blogging platform, like Blogger or WordPress, with a small amount of content management functionality. Businesses need to be wary, and understand Oxite???s CMS limitations despite the hype it is likely to generate.

By claiming to have arrived in the open source CMS arena, Oxite???s launch also questions the credibility of SharePoint. Until now, Microsoft has been so vehemently anti-open source ??? so something has obviously changed in the boardrooms of Redmond. Is Oxite really innovation ??? or just Microsoft jumping on another bandwagon?

This isn???t an enterprise-grade tool; it???s the early stage of a blogging offering. In these hard times, people need real application suites, with support and services, not just coding tutorials.

Tamas Biro,
Co-founder, Sense/Net
0 Votes
+ -
CMS with blogging
mrkstc 10th Dec 2008
We have been using few different CMS systems for bloging and finally end with the free edition of Kentico CMS for ASP.NET. It's powerful and works pretty well.
As usual, Microsoft is in danger of over-marketing its latest offering. Performing a huge U-turn ??? and turning up incredibly late to the open source party ??? Microsoft's ???Oxite??? blogging platform claims to be ???highly extensible content management???. Rather, the key point here is that Microsoft is shunning its proprietary roots.

Oxite is nothing more but a nice sample code demonstrating how to write great code on the .NET web platform. It is not a complete application, has very little documentation and no support. It is essentially a blogging platform, like Blogger or WordPress, with a small amount of content management functionality. Businesses need to be wary, and understand Oxite???s CMS limitations despite the hype it is likely to generate.

By claiming to have arrived in the open source CMS arena, Oxite???s launch also questions the credibility of SharePoint. Until now, Microsoft has been so vehemently anti-open source ??? so something has obviously changed in the boardrooms of Redmond. Is Oxite really innovation ??? or just Microsoft jumping on another bandwagon?

This isn???t an enterprise-grade tool; it???s the early stage of a blogging offering. In these hard times, people need real application suites, with support and services, not just coding tutorials.

Tamas Biro,
Co-founder, Sense/Net

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