Thanks for all the great feedback so far.  Most of the comments confirm my
thoughts.  One hope was by starting with a simple site, it might make it
easier to swallow learning a new framework.  Rather than having to bite it
all off for a large project the first time.

Jeff, can you provide links to the sites you built with Plum?
 
 
Constanty "Connie" DeCinko III
Web Architect, Webmaster, Web Developer
Lone Jet Enterprises
Glendale, Arizona
www.LoneJet.com
 
 

-----Original Message-----
From: Jeff Fleitz [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, July 26, 2005 3:44 PM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: Re: Frameworks for simple web sites

Hi Connie,

Plum is overkill for this, only by the fact that it will generate more
functionality than you need initially, probably.  But you can just easily
ignore the functionality you don't need by simply removing the links in the
navbar (leave the content on your development machine so you can use it
later if you need to)..

I have built a couple small sites with Plum that took about a day to build
and deploy. I built some content pages for the administrators to work with
and they were off.

On the plus side, you can generate a starter app in 5 minutes (as you
know) that has all kinds of starter content that you can just modify or
discard if you don't need it.  The simple, but effective CMS built into will
easily let you setup your customer's newsletter, that he can manage easily.
Plus you have a complete access control system built in.

There is always that learning curve.  But it will be that way with Fusebox
also, or onTap, or whatever you use.

v/r,
Jeff Fleitz




On 7/26/05, Connie DeCinko <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Now that I've had the opportunity to take a closer look at Plum, I can 
> see that it is a very powerful and good code generator/framework for 
> ColdFusion apps.  However, for fairly simple sites, it seems to be 
> overkill.  I could be wrong.
> 
> What would you recommend for a simple site that's just a step beyond 
> simple HTML?  I have to build a site where the end-user needs to be 
> able to post a newsletter each month and make very minor changes, no 
> e-commerce or embedded apps.  I was thinking this might be an excuse 
> to try out a framework but am having second thoughts.
> 
> 
> Constanty "Connie" DeCinko III
> Web Architect, Webmaster, Web Developer Lone Jet Enterprises Glendale, 
> Arizona  <http://www.lonejet.com/> www.LoneJet.com
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 



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