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Graham Perrin

Plone and its competition: choosing a CMS - Martin Aspeli - 0 views

  • Plone and its competition: choosing a CMS
  • Martin Aspeli
  • Jul 06, 2009
  • ...79 more annotations...
  • evaluate a whole slew
  • eye-opening
  • quite Plone-oriented
  • vendors' marketing materials decidedly do not help
  • if you're paying someone by the day to come up with a recommendation
  • Vendor Subway Map
  • features they have in their product arsenal
  • Plone sits on the intersection of the "Web content management", "Social software & collaboration" and "Enterprise portal" lines
  • cost (both licensing and likely implementation costs), fit with your existing IT architecture, and usability/end-user experience become a lot more important
  • focus on getting a list of requirements for your end solution
  • Vendor demos have a tendency to gloss over the warts
  • The word "CMS" - Content Management System - is quite overloaded
  • Plone is really a Web CMS
  • vendors sometimes focus mainly on content production
  • Other vendors include a dedicated presentation server
  • Some systems, like Plone, accommodate both in a single server
  • away from tight integration
  • towards federation of services on heterogeneous platforms
  • The "federated" view of IT is more realistic as an option these days
  • better support for standards
  • more use of higher level "glue"
  • Deliverance
  • plone.org, for example, "deliverates" Plone and Trac
  • federated architecture that presents a unified user experience
  • In the Java world, there are more formal standards (notably JSR168 and it's successor JSR186)
  • in theory
  • built once and deployed onto different portal containers
  • An intranet or public website should largely present
  • a stable, well-thought-out information architecture
  • a richer, more bespoke, less application-like user experience
  • a shift away from this one-platform-to-rule-them-all mentality
  • some of the "platform" arguments are red herrings
  • External Editor
  • training your in-house staff
  • pick a solution that is supportable
  • specialist vendor
  • Most modern systems are so complex that you can't just expect your IT staff to be able to support them without at last some investment in training
  • Bake vs. fry
  • Assets vs. content
  • In Plone, there is a structured hierarchy
  • content tree
  • mirrors how files are managed on the desktop
  • Folders and taxonomy
  • Plone is comparatively weak
  • Pages and fragments
  • Managing code and content
  • Zope and Plone communities have done a lot of work to move development out onto the filesystem
  • The contenders Below is a list of systems I think are worth looking at and learning from.
  • Usability is king
  • Even Open Text/RedDot, which says in every "datasheet" that Gartner calls its usability "legendary", is confusing to use at times, and many of the other systems - especially the older ones - are downright shocking
  • just to install the system and click
  • most enlightening evaluation
  • If I can't figure it out easily, it's not good enough
  • What Plone can learn All in all, this evaluation exercise has confirmed my belief that Plone can hold its head high in the web content management world.
  • support for the "bake" model
  • file representation of all content
  • upload content easily
  • browse the site via WebDav
  • IT support staff need to be able to feed and water the servers your CMS runs on
  • Morello has an interesting take
  • integration with Microsoft Office and the desktop
  • dragged from the desktop and dropped into the CMS
  • Open Text/RedDot has a nice model
  • RESTful web services
  • integration with other systems much easier
  • group workspaces
  • already decent add-on products
  • dashboard
  • first thing users see
  • content notification
  • "star" content they care about
  • content re-use
  • support for taxonomy
  • multi-site support
  • through-the-web content types and templates
  • page composition
  • Deco system
  • Conclusion
  • Plone UserVoice forum
Graham Perrin

Minutes, May 29, 2008 - Plone CMS: Open Source Content Management - 0 views

  • impact of faster 0.1 releases
  • messaging and perception
  • deprecation policy
    • Graham Perrin
       
      deprecation ≠ support
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • the intent is to support two major versions
  • our official policy is that we support the most recent two major versions
  • need to update version numbering policy
  • http://plone.org/documentation/manual/upgrade-guide/introduction
  • reflect current practices
Graham Perrin

Minutes, December 11, 2008 - Plone CMS: Open Source Content Management - 0 views

  • Supported versions
  • 2.5.5 has been marked “unsupported”
  • All board members
  • ...9 more annotations...
  • support two major versions
  • tacit policy
  • consider the lengthening of the release cycle
  • we’ve also spoken of 1-year support
  • definition
  • Security fixes
  • if technically feasible
  • we ask that the "unsupported" marker be removed from 25
  • Unanimously passed
Graham Perrin

Why do none of the bookmarks refer to Plone support forums? - 6 views

The combination of Nabble embedded content + forced redirection to plone.org - in particular, the way in which all topics and all messages within a forum are represented as myriad anchors to a si...

started by Graham Perrin on 12 Nov 08 no follow-up yet
Graham Perrin

Good coding practices - Plone CMS: Open Source Content Management - 0 views

  • traditionally supported the two most recent versions of Zope (2). This is generally a good model for add-ons to inherit: supporting the two most recent (major) versions
  • Plone 2.5 and Plone 3.x
  • contributions available to a much broader audience
Graham Perrin

Plone 3.1.4 - Plone CMS: Open Source Content Management - 0 views

  • Plone 3.1.4
  • no longer supported
    • Graham Perrin
       
      contentious
Graham Perrin

Approving articles and edits - 0 views

  •  
    Treating this mozilla.com page as a comparator.
Graham Perrin

PloneEdu - 0 views

  • PloneEdu
  • Promoting open source web publishing for all levels and types of education
  • collaboration, knowledge sharing, and support of Plone
Graham Perrin

Update your workflows to use GenericSetup profiles - Plone CMS: Open Source Content Man... - 0 views

  • Plone 2.1/2.0 (which are unsupported releases when Plone 3.0 is released)
Graham Perrin

Plone 3.1.1 released! - Plone CMS: Open Source Content Management - 0 views

  • If you're running older Plone 2.x sites and are unable to upgrade — make sure to follow some simple rules
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