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Whats the best software to create and edit websites
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<blockquote data-quote="BidNo" data-source="post: 1837183" data-attributes="member: 70516"><p>I've been doing internet development since '94 and can speak with some authority. I would recommend shifting to a content management system (CMS). CMS are geared towards developing and maintaining sites at a larger scale or volume than the single-site frontpage/WYSIWYG model. Theyâre generally feature-rich and include things like URL rewriting, scheduled publication, versioning, etc. not generally available in WYSIWYG tools. Learning curve is about the same. </p><p></p><p>I personally use the mojoPortal CMS. Its interface is simple to the point that HTML knowledge is optional or it can be extensively customized. And it's rock-solid. Youâll find it at a number of web hosts (or can self-hosted). I would love to see domainers using mojoPortal. Hereâs its <a href="http://www.mojoportal.com/features.aspx" target="_blank">feature set</a>. </p><p></p><p>Depending on your preferred technical stack (Windows/Lamps), technical expertise, etc. other CMSs that are frequently mentioned include: DotNetNuke, Umbraco, Joomla, Drupal, etc. Though extended with similar features, Wordpress is not in the same class and you will encounter roadblocks if scaling-up. </p><p></p><p>Realize some CMS camps (incl. open-source) have profit-driven ecosystems that are quite vocal on the net. Make your decision based on what best meets your needs.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BidNo, post: 1837183, member: 70516"] I've been doing internet development since '94 and can speak with some authority. I would recommend shifting to a content management system (CMS). CMS are geared towards developing and maintaining sites at a larger scale or volume than the single-site frontpage/WYSIWYG model. Theyâre generally feature-rich and include things like URL rewriting, scheduled publication, versioning, etc. not generally available in WYSIWYG tools. Learning curve is about the same. I personally use the mojoPortal CMS. Its interface is simple to the point that HTML knowledge is optional or it can be extensively customized. And it's rock-solid. Youâll find it at a number of web hosts (or can self-hosted). I would love to see domainers using mojoPortal. Hereâs its [URL="http://www.mojoportal.com/features.aspx"]feature set[/URL]. Depending on your preferred technical stack (Windows/Lamps), technical expertise, etc. other CMSs that are frequently mentioned include: DotNetNuke, Umbraco, Joomla, Drupal, etc. Though extended with similar features, Wordpress is not in the same class and you will encounter roadblocks if scaling-up. Realize some CMS camps (incl. open-source) have profit-driven ecosystems that are quite vocal on the net. Make your decision based on what best meets your needs. [/QUOTE]
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Whats the best software to create and edit websites
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