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Joomla's Project Director Talks 1.1

daria42 writes "It's been a hectic six months for the Joomla open-source CMS since its split from the Mambo project, but according to this interview with project director Andrew Eddie there are even faster times ahead. Next week Joomla will make its formal debut at LinuxWorld Expo in Boston, with the milestone Joomla 1.1 release due towards the end of April. As Mambo and Joomla continue to diverge, Eddie says, users and developers will be forced to declare their colours and pick one or the other for production sites."

11 of 96 comments (clear)

  1. Sounds cool but wtf is Joomla? by OlivierB · · Score: 3, Informative

    Ah yes that's right, Salshdotters need to always use Wikipedia as reference guide http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joomla

    --
    Artificial intelligence is no match for natural stupidity
    1. Re:Sounds cool but wtf is Joomla? by myspys · · Score: 3, Insightful

      or you could read the summary?

      "Joomla open-source CMS"

    2. Re:Sounds cool but wtf is Joomla? by Bromskloss · · Score: 3, Informative
      or you could read the summary? "Joomla open-source CMS"

      Which would then lead you to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CMS.

      --
      Swedish plasma phys. PhD student; MSc EE; knows maths, programming, electronics; finance interest; seeks opportunities
  2. YACMS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny


    yet another CMS, add it to the list only 548 to choose from, so dont let anyone tell you OSS doesnt give you a choice

    1. Re:YACMS by WiFiBro · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Step into any OS development team and you'll soon find out why people fork.

  3. Flurbal by courtarro · · Score: 4, Funny

    When Smilnar director James Smith presented at the annual HARVL conference, he introduced that the Smilnar project would be joining the Yarbel group to create a new product code-named "Woolpun". Critics of the merger cite problems with Smilnar's compatibility problems with other Romolad systems, but Smith had some choice words for them: "Stewfoo"

    1. Re:Flurbal by Cheerio+Boy · · Score: 3, Funny

      Dead Monkeys are to split up again, according to their manager, Lefty Goldblatt. They've been in the business now ten years, nine as other groups. Originally the Dead Salmon, they became for a while, Trout. Then Fried Trout, then Poached Trout In A White Wine Sauce, and finally, Herring. Splitting up for nearly a month, the re-formed as Red Herring, which became Dead Herring for a while, and then Dead Loss, which reflected the current state of the group. Splitting up again to get their heads together, they reformed a fortnight later as Heads Together, a tight little name which lasted them through a difficult period when their drummer was suspected of suffering from death. It turned out to be only a rumor and they became Dead Together, then Dead Gear, which lead to Dead Donkeys, Lead Donkeys, and the inevitable split up. After nearly ten days, they reformed again as Sole Manier, then Dead Sole, Rock Cod, Turbot, Haddock, White Baith, the Places, Fish, Bream, Mackerel, Salmon, Poached Salmon, Poached Salmon In A White Wine Sauce, Salmon-monia, and Helen Shapiro. This last name, their favorite, had to be dropped following an injunction and they split up again. When they reformed after a recordbreaking two days, they ditched the fishy references and became Dead Monkeys, a name which they stuck with for the rest of their careers. Now, a fortnight later, they've finally split up.

      --

      "Bah!" - Dogbert
  4. When it IS released... by n00tz · · Score: 3, Informative

    You'll be able to test it out at OpenSourceCMS.com

    --
    I had college once, but I drank some fluids and got a lot of rest and eventually it was cured.
  5. User friendly? by rueger · · Score: 4, Insightful

    All well and good, but the real step needed for OSS CMS is to create one that an average user can administer. By "average" I mean anyone who isn't a hard core code geek. The kind of person who is comfortable installing these systems to their server, but who is more interested in tweaking the look and adding content than spending hours figuring out the arcane thinking of the people who wrote the code.

    I've tried Joomla, as well as few other top rated CMS, and found all of them pretty much imcomprehensible. I'm sure that there is some underlying logic to the Administration of each of these systems, but I have failed to find it. Terminology, functionality, it all cries out for testing by real users.

    Blog software like Wordpress has managed to make Administration nice, understandable, and constantly improving, so why can't CMS like Joomla do the same?

    And of course, they really do need some real documentation, not half baked wikis and forums.

  6. Looking forward to 1.1.... by joeygb · · Score: 3, Informative

    I've been using Joomla for a while now and it is definitely the way to go in the Mambo vs. Joomla decision. Joomla is really great for personal sites because of the vast number of themes/modules/plugins/etc. out there. The only problem is that a lot of these 3rd party components are far from being a stable, polished final product. I think that if Joomla wants to be used more in the business world then it probably has a lot of work to do, but for less "mission critical" uses Joomla is the way to go. I think that Joomla could learn a lot from another big open source CMS, Drupal, when it comes to building a CMS for business uses.

    As an aside, is it required that all CMSs have ridiculous names?

  7. recommendation for CMS w/o database server? by penguin-collective · · Score: 3, Informative

    Does anybody have a recommendation for a CMS similar to Joomla or Drupal that doesn't require a separate database server? Something that gets by with either the file system or SQLite? WYSIWYG content creation is a must in this application, so Wikis aren't an option.