[SGVLUG] Test site update -- mambo stuff
Dustin
laurence at alice.caltech.edu
Mon Aug 8 01:03:18 PDT 2005
On Sun, 7 Aug 2005, Tom Emerson wrote:
> On Sunday 07 August 2005 8:57 pm, Dustin wrote:
> > Is that your way of saying that we have a winner? :-)
> Unless someone willing to take up the plone, twiki, phpweb, or >gasp<
> edit-by-hand banner and put forth a rallying cry for that as the new site,
> well, then yes.
I suspect if anyone is waiting to champion one of the others we'll need to
smoke 'em out, so let's go into the sudden-death round. Unless someone
chimes in with Trenchant Observations or Profound Objections, let's select
Mambo as the clear winner and have done.
> (*) The way I see it, the spectrum from imposes-the-most-structure to
> least is probably mambo, phpweb, plone, twiki [edit-by-hand can fit
> anywhere, depending on the skill and perserverance of the author...]
Er, I'd say that edit-by-hand is by definition the least imposed structure
of all!
Jean, I know you preferred Twiki and Plone and didn't much like Mambo, so
it looks like you preferred the less structured systems. Care to chime
in on why?
> To be honest (fair?) there are some things I DON'T like about the way Mambo
> "does things now" [as well as many things I think could be done better]. The
> big winner, though, is the fact that Mambo is a bit more structured(*) than
> the others.
How much. Enough to be interested in alternatives still, after all this?
I've been told recently that Mambo's major competitors are Drupal and
Xoops (http://www.xoops.org/), neither of which I tried. That probably
means that I didn't pick the right alternatives to compare (though in all
fairness I was trying to get a wide variety not just one narrow segment).
In any case I didn't do a great job of research; I only came across Drupal
after I was tired of installing web pages, and missed Xoops entirely.
The point: likely one or both of them imposes more structure like Mambo,
or at least like phpwebsite. If you're complaints about Mambo are serious
we can always see if they provide a better implementation of the structure
you like. If not, perhaps everyone just wants an end to the testing
process. :-)
The only reason I even suggest Still More Testing(ack!) is that once
SGVLUG is done playing with my CMS Farm From Hell(TM) I am going to wipe
the accounts and then have my youth crew kids evaluate them for their own
website (I may be hosting CMSes for a while!). So I can justify spending
Yet More Time installing a never-ending stream of CMSes even though SGVLUG
is probably bored to tears. So, given that I'm likely to try them anyway,
instead of going with Mambo we could down-select and eliminate all the
current systems except for Mambo and one or two others for a more focused
comparison.
That's what I'd do if I were betting the web presence of a fortune-500
company on it, but SGVLUG can be much more casual! I'm guessing people
are tired of this process. Or is it enough of a learning experience to be
worth the trouble in its own right?
> -- Dustin observed the following about plone: plone is for people who
> eventually want to learn zope. (roughly paraphrased)
That's not even a rough paraphrase--it's much better, but I think it's
your own expression of my vague observation. It is what I'd have said
instead if I could have been succinct enough. :-)
I've seen some plone sites that look more or less like the base install,
and that strikes me as a profound waste. It appears to be incredibly
configurable, but the base install is quite plain. If you're just going
to stick with the base, why not use a less powerful but simpler system?
Kinda like how the base phpwebsite skin sucked but there were some very
nice ones available.
Dustin
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