Umbraco seems to be getting a lot of mention these days.

 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umbraco

 

A couple of my mates absolutely love it, and won't go back to DNN.

It's free, open source, but also has the option to get an enterprise support
licence.

 

T.

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Grant Maw
Sent: Tuesday, 16 March 2010 9:08 PM
To: ozDotNet
Subject: Re: .NET CMS

 

Hey David

 

Thanks for the detailed response.

 

We have to use a .net solution because the client is heavily invested in
.net already and we want to re-use as much as we can in terms of existing
skills and existing code. We are already working with DNN but Sitefinity
came onto our radar and I was just curious as to what people's experiences
were. We'll probably grab the free copy and evaluate it, as well as the one
you mention below.

 

Cheers

 

Grant

On 16 March 2010 15:10, David Connors <[email protected]> wrote:

On 16 March 2010 14:40, Grant Maw <[email protected]> wrote:

Wondering if anyone has used Telerik's Sitefinity product before, and if so,
what are your thoughts on it as opposed to the other .net CMSs (DotNetNuke
in particular). How do you rate it in terms of the learning curve from a
developer perspective, ease of deployment of apps, source control issues (if
any) etc

 

Any and all comments appreciated

 

I've not used Sitefinity (looks pretty simplistic from the screenies) but as
far as my wide and varied search has gone over the years, there are no good
content management solutions for .NET. If you're after something that
doesn't pump out some debacle based on web.forms with multiple URLs for the
same piece of content, etc then you're fresh out of luck. We have always
ended up doing bespoke solutions for customers - at least that way we can
ensure we're generating content that is not clogged up with
viewstate/__dopostback/entire-page-wrapped-in-<form>-tags and other
web.forms junk.

 

We did an eval of DNN as a basis for making ozdotnet a web based forum
(using ActiveForums + the mail connector) and found it particularly
irritating in terms of the final content rendered and the general pain of
using the content management application. You end up spending so much time
fighting their crappy framework that you start to think you might just be
better writing it all yourself. It is also heavy on the data tier so, like
most open source amateur night endeavours, a caching strategy (and
associated pain for highly dynamic sites) is mandatory, not optional. There
was a whole bunch of stuff in DNN screwed at the time like the scheduler not
working - and the developers did not appear to give a rats about fixing the
issues (only to give you the normal useless nerd tech support answer of a
lecture about not using a web based scheduler but writing a service instead
- which is good advice except if you're trying to make a COTS package like
ActiveForums work and it is built around the web based scheduler)

 

The best thing we've come across is KenticoCMS however it has a lot of odd
behaviours (multiple URLs for the same piece of content,
www.codify.com/lists is not the same as www.codify.com/lists/, confusion
between folders and pages, scalability issues and so on). The content
management application experience is still less than ideal (you really need
to know HTML to get the result you want online) and you end up writing
everything in MS Word and then converting it to ASCII then marking it up
again in HTML inside the CMS. Their HTML rich editor will defeat your every
attempt at getting a consistent result on the page. Simple tasks like
rearranging ten pages is very difficult due to tree views refreshing on
every operation and so on. Plus it is not cheap if you want to host multiple
sites. But it is the best of a bad bunch in my view and lets you get the
fundamentals around content tagging/meta data right. 

 

What are you specifically trying to achieve? That might guide the advice the
list gives you.


-- 
David Connors ([email protected])
Software Engineer
Codify Pty Ltd - www.codify.com <http://www.codify.com/> 
Phone: +61 (7) 3210 6268 | Facsimile: +61 (7) 3210 6269 | Mobile: +61 417
189 363
V-Card: https://www.codify.com/cards/davidconnors
Address Info: https://www.codify.com/contact

 

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