So, this is the first CMS ever that had me wondering if I would legitimately ever switch away from EE. Of course, it’s not publicly available for licensing yet, but it is running the new site, Obsessable.com. Something tells me, though, that with the right modules, EE could have similar functionality. I’d love to get thoughts of others.
Here is a great writeup on ReadWriteWeb:
http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/blogging_dream_team_joins_forc.php
Specifically in terms of the CMS:
The Crowd Fusion blogging platform was built by CEO Brian Alvey and CTO Craig Wood. It is the foundation of the company. Alvey was Jason Calacanis’s less obnoxious co-founder at Weblogs. He built the BlogSmith platform that now powers AOL properties including gossip mega-site TMZ, Engadget and many others. With Crowd Fusion, Alvey and team have tried to take the lessons they’ve learned as some of the most experienced high-scale blog publishers on the web and build an even better publishing system.
What’s so special about it? The system has a built-in RSS reader that team leaders seed with subscriptions (writers can add more at will), it’s easy to push related links from other blogs out onto the published site and the system allows for the management of multiple responsibilities for posts like finding and sizing images, copy editing and more. Obsessable says it is aggregating about 1,000 topical links each day from around the web. It’s all pretty involved but we couldn’t help but be jealous of the publishing interface.
The company has 12 people working in Corporate and Tech departments and so far has around 10 freelance writers covering gadget news on Obsessable. It describes itself as “a new web publishing platform, built to solve the pain points of publishers at scale.” That platform will not be available for licensing for some time.
Will a heavy duty publishing system help this new company challenge some of the biggest blogs on the web? The team involved certainly improves the odds.
Thoughts? Are these features already available, either natively or by using modules, and I just haven’t figured it out yet? 😉