April Fools’ Day, if recent events are any indication to future trends, is as good a day as any to launch a good product. And so today we are very excited to present a much awaited piece of news which has kept many of our customers and supporters waiting since the launch of EditGrid Confluence Plugin for Confluence Hosted: EditGrid Confluence Plugin is now available for licensing customers.
In the enterprise software sector, Atlassian’s Confluence has been the leading enterprise wiki of choice for over 4,600 organisations from 75 countries. To many of these Confluence users, an easy-to-install and -maintain wiki software with enterprise-class security hosted in-house is a major reason for participating in the wiki revolution and enjoying all the benefits of having an in-house platform for text and document collaboration, where it has never been so easy for teams to collaborate and share knowledge.
And now, with EditGrid Confluence Plugin, Confluence users will be able to add data, tables, formulae and charts to the equation. No more head-scratching wiki markups to add a table to a page — a spreadsheet is, for many people, the natural interface to design and present tabular data. Spreadsheets are stored securely as attachments to pages, with access control, revision history and indexing all managed by Confluence natively. And best of all, with RTU Confluence users can collaborate with each other in real-time — every edit is synchronised. Just like EditGrid.
EditGrid Confluence Plugin, while leveraging the Confluence plugin framework, is different with other plugin in one key aspect — it requires the EditGrid Server to function properly, and the EditGrid Server, unlike the plugin itself, requires Ubuntu Linux 6.06 (Server Edition), Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 or CentOS 5.1. As such, we offer two flexible deployment modes to customers:
- Standalone Version: the plugin is shipped with EditGrid Server Confluence Edition for a completely in-house installation.
- Hosted Version: the plugin is installed in-house with Confluence and connects to the EditGrid Server hosted on our infrastructure at editgrid.com. Spreadsheets are still stored locally but would be uploaded to editgrid.com in a secure manner and hosted there temporarily while being edited or viewed.
With a competitive pricing scheme, the plugin will become a mission-critical value-adding component to every Confluence installation. As FSJ would have said: I honor (sic) the place where unstructured text collaboration (wiki) and structured, logical data sharing (spreadsheet) become one.
Why wait any longer? Buy now, or better still, download a free-trial copy of EditGrid Confluence Plugin and install in on your licensed copy of Confluence today (you’ll need a 30-day evaluation key from us; get it here free-of-charge). See also the Confluence Plugin FAQ to learn more.