On 1/30/10 4:55 PM, Mark Stosberg wrote: > > MT5 did bring some significant changes. First, it dropped support for > PostgreSQL and SQLite, so the MySQL backend is required. ( This is a downer > for > me, but not a deal-breaker. ) Second, the core now has support for revisions, > an important feature of wikis. The core does not include a "diff" feature, > but > I suspect this could be provided by a plugin, and is something we may be able > to contribute ourselves. > > I use MT for my personal blog. I find it attactive, pleasant to use, and > fairly > easy to install. I can vouch for it being light on server resources. I run it > under CGI. The admin area is a little slow this way, but tolerable. The static > public pages are of course "fast". I also wrote a couple of plugins for it, > which was reasonably easy. > > I put a lot of my own time into setting up the original CGI::Application wiki, > as well as writing and editing a fair amount of the content. Someone else > will > need to play that role the second time around. > > Are there folks here that are intested in volunteering to help admin and > maintain a new wiki / web presence ? What tools would you like to do that > with? >
Does MT5 still use PHP or is it pure Perl now? Bob ##### CGI::Application community mailing list ################ ## ## ## To unsubscribe, or change your message delivery options, ## ## visit: http://www.erlbaum.net/mailman/listinfo/cgiapp ## ## ## ## Web archive: http://www.erlbaum.net/pipermail/cgiapp/ ## ## Wiki: http://cgiapp.erlbaum.net/ ## ## ## ################################################################
