The purpose of this egg is to create populated plone sites with dummy content and users. RSS feeds are crawled to generate realistic content for testing against. Textual content, links, images, groups, users and local roles are generated. Content profiles can be specified and there are two default ones supplied - intranet and public.
In order to then migrate your existing file content to blobs you can use the
migration interface provided at http://localhost:8080/plone/@@blob-migration,
where "plone" should be replaced with the id of your "Plone Site" object. The
page will show you the number of available ATFile instances and lets you
convert them to the provided blob content type by clicking a button.
Whist the subject of the tutorial is not Plone, this is a nice example of a Flash-based tutorial. The sort of visual guide that I'd like to see used to introduce users and developers to Deliverance/Plone/Zope/Python whatever.
n order to then migrate your existing file content to blobs you can use the
migration interface provided at http://localhost:8080/plone/@@blob-migration,
where "plone" should be replaced with the id of your "Plone Site" object. The
page will show you the number of available ATFile instances and lets you
convert them to the provided blob content type by clicking a button.
Defocusing from Plone: beware of using the 2004 and 2008 editions of Microsoft Office with _any_ WebDAV-connected volume: data loss/corruption may occur. Where the Microsoft product suites fail with Microsoft formats, NeoOffice succeeds.
LDAP, Active Directory and SQL
World-class Support
Open Standards
Open Source
avoids vendor lock-in, expensive licenses
freedom
to innovate
Innovative and Extensible
collaboration tools
blogs
NASA,
Oxfam,
eBay,
Trolltech,
Nokia,
Utah State University, the
CIA and
Novell
use Plone