Collaborative publishing - Establish workflow processes to collaboratively author, review, and publish content. Define different review paths at the template level, whether a single approval for an internal web page or multiple sign-offs for a public page.
In-browser editing - Edit pages directly in your web browser without having to open another application. The Contribute CS5 in-browser editor supports most browsers, including Firefox 2 and Internet Explorer 6 and 7.
Adobe Dreamweaver® CS5 compatibility - Easily edit advanced layout components. Contribute CS5 works with Dreamweaver templates and allows you to design the site while letting content contributors add to it without risk.
Enhanced CSS support - Enjoy improved CSS support and complete rendering fidelity between Contribute CS5 and Dreamweaver CS5.
Content expiration notification - Keep website content fresh with the new expiration notification feature. Set the expiration value for a single Contribute page or multiple pages, and Contribute will notify the designated content contributors when the expiration date nears.
In-context shared reviews - Enable multiple reviewers to comment on drafts simultaneously with the in-context collaboration tool for faster and more effective web publishing cycles.
Dynamic website editing - Add content to dynamic websites powered by Movable Type, TypePad, or WordPress with Contribute CS5. Simply define your Contribute site with the proper settings, and site content is instantly available for updating.
More secure editing with Auto-Save - Protect your content contributors’ ongoing edits with the new Auto-Save feature, which enables you to specify how frequently updated drafts are saved. Content remains in draft format until the review and publish process is initiated.
Visual blog configuration - Avoid editing the BlogHub.csi file manually in a text editor to achieve specific goals such as allowing images wider than 150 pixels. Now, all such preferences are accessed visually for rapid adjustments.
Site root–relative links - Gain a finer degree of control over code than ever before. Website administrators can quickly specify whether links to pages or other elements are written as document-relative or site root–relative links.