Announcing ThoughtFarmer Intranet 3.0 Multilingual
Chris| June 8th, 2008 3 Comments »
Today, at the Enterprise 2.0 Conference in Boston, we’re announcing the third generation of our wiki-inspired intranet platform: ThoughtFarmer 3.0 Multilingual. Read the official press release.
Localized interface and multilingual content management
ThoughtFarmer now supports a localizable interface, easy language switching, and multilingual search. Pages automatically display in your home language, if available, or intelligently fall back on your secondary language preference. Watch a 90-second video overview.
Create blogs
Create department blogs or employee blogs. Use them for project reports, status meetings, and for sharing your latest insights and ideas.
Create and share calendars
Create multiple event calendars. Share launch dates, project schedules or important deadlines. Control who views and edits each calendar.
Create forums
Now, in addition to inline comments on any ThoughtFarmer page, you can create dedicated discussion forums.
Support for high-capacity, load-balanced deployments
ThoughtFarmer 3.0 contains numerous performance enhancements that results in drastic speed improvements in all environments. Data replication across distrubuted data centres is now supported.
ThoughtFarmer 3.0 contains over 100 enhancements and improvements, as well as minor bug fixes. A full list of changes will be available in the release notes.
This entry was posted on Sunday, June 8th, 2008 at 9:12 pm and is filed under Events, Intranets, ThoughtFarmer. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.










Nice job guys, looks great. Forums are a great addition. *sticky*
[...] ThoughtFarmer is in Boston today for the Enterprise 2.0 conference and will be introducing Intranet 3.0 Multilingual. This new release allows for multilingual content management, along with a localizable interface, [...]
[...] ThoughtFarmer released version 3.0 of their Intranet system—I’m glad they’ve stopped calling it a wiki—which is expanding on the already impressive feature set:ThoughtFarmer Blog » Announcing ThoughtFarmer Intranet 3.0 Multilingual. [...]