I'm currently learning Drupal, on advice from a friend. I seem to recall a lot of people liking Expression Engine and Wordpress.Is there a "best" in terms of CMS?
8/21/2009 5:39:46 PM
This is also relevant to my interests.I was considering Contribute (my school already has a license) for some technologically impaired teachers.
8/21/2009 5:54:14 PM
Joomla is stupidly powerful.
8/21/2009 5:55:23 PM
i've used both wordpress and joomla. both are easy as hell to set up and get something working. if you want to start customizing stuff, expect a steeper learning curve
8/21/2009 6:00:09 PM
I would like to start customizing stuff! There was another CMS I heard about that's supposed to be more powerful that Drupal, but a lot harder. I think it was called Xoops.
8/21/2009 7:08:02 PM
I've used all of these:Drupal - stupid hard to themeJoomla - too many fucking plugins, plus there's 2 different branched versions that are supported, so some plugins aren't available for one or the other - plus their site is a general organizational nightmare. the CMS itself isn't too too bad, though.Wordpress - by far the most painless to install and maintain, although if you're deciding to do anything HEAVY, then you'll probably want to look elsewhere.Expression Engine - sort of the same as wordpress to me, I'm pretty "meh" about it.MODx - The most robust one I've used, and by far the most accessible.One I've been meaning to try out:Umbraco - ASP.NETOverall, "best" is determined by your initial scope-of-work.Meaning: What are you going to be doing with the site?[Edited on August 21, 2009 at 7:56 PM. Reason : .]
8/21/2009 7:55:09 PM
I'm actually just trying to build my skill set. Several people have stated Drupal is the way to go (but I hang around a bunch of FLOSS nerds).I'm finding Drupal to be fairly easy and to have a lot of neat plugins. Perhaps I will give MODx a try.
8/21/2009 8:12:56 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Content_management_system
8/23/2009 12:01:44 AM
A couple of people at my company have websites that are run by Movable Type. They said its stupid easy to setup and simple to customize stuffs.
8/23/2009 9:23:26 AM
i like wordpresswhats everybodys take on dot net nuke?
8/23/2009 10:51:54 AM
I meanIt would be nice if Spontaneous actually gave us some small hint of what he was trying to accomplish. There is no one "best" CMS.
8/23/2009 11:27:54 AM
That's fair. I'm just trying to learn all of the tools that are out there, primarily free and/or open source. I had several ideas for web sites, but after doing some research, they turned out to be too broad, too niche-y, or too daunting for one person to take on.To narrow the search, what do companies want people to know or have experience with? I'm guessing all of them.
8/23/2009 5:48:58 PM
Are we talking major corporations? Because the answer is most likely their own custom CMS. There are plenty of huge websites than run on common platforms, though; Ford.com runs on Wordpress (or at least used to).If you're trying to learn some type of marketable skill, don't pigeonhole yourself by becoming a "Wordpress expert." Know PHP (or ASP or whatever) and SQL backwards and forwards and you'll be able to easily adapt to most environments.--Also
8/23/2009 6:13:53 PM
i use and generally dislike drupali would like to try out modx and/or impresscms next chance i get
8/23/2009 6:51:57 PM
^^ Fuck, it's high school and college all over again (the figuring out what I want to do part, not people being frustrated with my short attention span part).I should probably just take some classes at Wake Tech. I'm so out of touch with what people want these days and I'm also afraid that all the great rich internet applications have already been made.[Edited on August 23, 2009 at 7:37 PM. Reason : .]
8/23/2009 7:35:48 PM
Don't worry, the dudes with all the good ideas yet to be created need code monkeys, too.
8/23/2009 7:44:17 PM
8/23/2009 8:10:30 PM
I am learning PHP and SQL, sweet!I downloaded a video series that actually shows you how to make a lightweight CMS. It's ostensibly simple.
8/23/2009 9:14:58 PM
i tell you what though. during my recent job hunt, there were many fewer open php positions, and they almost always paid less than say a .net or java or dba position.i cut my teeth on php though, so it's not a bad place to start. esp if you're building something that YOU want to build. iow, if you have ideas and want to create something, use php. if you are trying to learn a skill that will be marketable to employers, php might not be the best choice.[Edited on August 23, 2009 at 9:34 PM. Reason : now that i think about it, php was the fourth language i learned. so not really teeth cutting]
8/23/2009 9:23:49 PM
100% trueThe Indians have learned PHPWe're all doomed[Edited on August 23, 2009 at 9:30 PM. Reason : PHP is the easiest language to learn programming concepts, imo. That's why people laugh at PHP devs.]
8/23/2009 9:27:35 PM
lol
8/23/2009 9:29:47 PM
.NET, eh? Ugh. If that's where the jobs are, I guess...
8/23/2009 9:44:28 PM
8/23/2009 9:50:52 PM
8/24/2009 12:45:33 AM
8/24/2009 8:38:24 AM
8/24/2009 9:27:33 AM
yeah i saw a fair amount of sharepoint jobsbut i wouldn't wish working primarily with sharepoint upon even my worst enemies
8/24/2009 9:44:13 AM
8/24/2009 9:45:57 AM
why not? it's kinda nice to be able to set up a site for someone and let them go wild, instead of having them pester us all the time for development needs...not that it works for everything, but it works for a lot.i haven't dont that much with it personally so im curious whats so bad about administering it]
8/24/2009 4:29:50 PM
Sharepoint is a fucking nightmare. The front-end and some of the back-end is fine, but once you delve into the code, you'd be better off slitting your wrists sooner rather than later.and it's not really a CMS per-se, in the conventional senseSharepoint is an enterprise-level collaborative workspace, used as either an intra or extranet[Edited on August 24, 2009 at 7:46 PM. Reason : but there are a SHIT TON of jobs available for it, not that you'd want to work them]
8/24/2009 7:46:19 PM
After watching a video series on Drupal, I think I'm going to go with Joomla. The video series turned me off when I got to a chapter on membership management and that aMember (and the aMember Drupal plug-in) would be a good thing to buy. However, I don't have $200 to just drop on software, since I'm still not sure what type of site I want (or what the general public wants) and Joomla has been indicated to be stupid powerful and I've dabbled in it before.Anyway, thanks for your help everyone!
8/28/2009 8:01:19 AM
8/28/2009 8:55:54 AM