2006/10/25, Quim Gil <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > As a matter of fact I think we can get a decent wgo with the 5 tools, in > an ideal world with no time constraints and a good team of savvy CMS > hackers. But we need to end up with one tool, the one that brings the > best results with the minimum headaches for the type of website we want.
Agreed. I suggest using the GoodEnough pattern ( http://c2.com/cgi/wiki?GoodEnough). About Tiki: I think Tiki is a very bad choice. I have not so much experience but I know that it is not very secure and has bad code quality. It does not scale well. I know of a case where somebody had given up to use TikiWiki because it could not deal with large amounts of data. TikiWiki gives you all you want, but not the quality or security About Midgard: I have the feeling that it is similar from the goals (security, stability) as Drupal. So I also would say one of the two (Drupal, Midgard) should be chosen. BTW: KDE had also chosen Drupal for spreadkde.org. Why is here: http://www.spreadkde.org/about/faq#newsite I think the whole process to decide which CMS to use was too complicated (too many goals, too many requirements. I know this was done with the best intentions, but I also see it this way: Drupal or Midgard- one of them might even be better today - but is it tomorrow? So only real interesting question are: * Does it a good enough job? and: * Does the development go in the right direction? Are errors fixed or are the implementing features soon that we might want to use I think to look in future decisions sometimes it is better to act and trust in the spontaneous community feedback instead of going through intensive testing that takes YEARS and in the end the results reflect tests that have been made before some bugs where fixed. I Don' t think detailled testing makes sense. I think every month that GNOME lives without a choice is a lost month. Again: I think the intentions where very good, but I think it was a bit overkill. Thilo -- Blog: http://vinci.wordpress.com Linked In: http://www.linkedin.com/in/tpfennig -- marketing-list mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/marketing-list
