I decided to go with WordPress. My hosting company provided me a
WordPress blog for free so I'm a bit familiar with the UI and
administration.
Setup on my client's server was as easy as could be and the editing of
the templates was fairly straight forward. I'm not sure if I'll do
another traditional web site ever again for a client with the exception
if the client needs a high performance static content. It's hard to
think of a circumstance were that would be the case, however.
My only criticism so far is that I haven't found a "permanent link"
section where the URL looks like a static one. I think this would help
with indexing by the search engines.
Kevin Cully
CULLY Technologies, LLC
Sponsor of Fox Forward 2006!
http://foxforward.net
Ted Roche wrote:
So, I've been looking for a FOSS solution, preferably with a database
backend, and I've been hacking at the WordPress solution for a while.
The data's in MySQL and easily parsed, the middle tier is PHP, the
front end is a combination of pretty easy-to-hack templates and clean
XHTML/CSS. Looks like a winner.
I'll be transitioning officially as my hosting contract runs out at
weblogs.com.
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