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What do you think is the easiest to use CMS

Discussion in 'Content Management' started by pood, Jan 31, 2008.

  1. #1
    What's the easiest CMS to use and lightweight?

    I'm a BIG fan of Wordpress, have used to for years, but it's more blogging than CMS.

    I've used drupal and Joomla, neither are easy to use, especially for people that know nothing about computers.
     
    pood, Jan 31, 2008 IP
  2. Goran

    Goran Peon

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    #2
    I was going to say the same exact thing you did. Modified Wordpress can be a good CMS other than that it's Joomla or Drupal.
     
    Goran, Jan 31, 2008 IP
  3. Claudek

    Claudek Well-Known Member

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    #3
    Depends on what you want done and what you define by lightweight.

    One CMS I use a bit is SNews. As it consists on only 1 file, I guess it's as lightweight as you can get. Does the job for me and if you want extra features/mosules, there are quite a few to choose from as well.
     
    Claudek, Jan 31, 2008 IP
  4. daringtakers

    daringtakers Well-Known Member

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    #4
    If you have very simple requirement than SNews or wordpress is the way to go.
    otherwise drupal or joomla are also gud altranatives
     
    daringtakers, Feb 1, 2008 IP
  5. Karc2007

    Karc2007 Peon

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    #5
    I didn´t had any experience with cms before, i started using it and its really easy to use for beginners. It´s also Open Source, but you won´t have as much plugins and mods as drupal offers, but still enough, if you want to maintain a website (forums, polls, search, votes, ratings, serveral picture-gallerys etc)

    url: cmsmadesimple.org

    P.S.: I already sent this message, but it wasn´t displayed... don´t know why.
     
    Karc2007, Feb 1, 2008 IP
  6. pood

    pood Active Member

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    #6
    drupal and joomla/mambo are still too hard for my customers. some of these guys are completely computer illiterate.


    Perhaps a custom solution is a better way to do this?
     
    pood, Feb 1, 2008 IP
  7. DomainManMike

    DomainManMike Peon

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    #7
    Mambo has been the easiest for my clients to understand, but I much prefer Drupal. If you're going to learn one yourself, by all means go with Drupal. It's got a great userbase as well.

    Good luck!
     
    DomainManMike, Feb 2, 2008 IP
  8. MeetHere

    MeetHere Prominent Member

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    #8
    Joomla and wordpress are best and widely used. :)
     
    MeetHere, Feb 2, 2008 IP
  9. blade007

    blade007 Peon

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    #9
    WordPress FTW. It's very easy to use and has a load of plugins .

    If client is not technically minded then Wordpress.

    Joomla and Drupal and Xoops and MODX are far too complicated for normal people.
     
    blade007, Feb 2, 2008 IP
  10. KrazyPRican

    KrazyPRican Active Member

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    #10
    i like joomla. once you get the hang of it u'll really like it. i'm experimenting with wordpress now because going to be creating some blogs.
     
    KrazyPRican, Feb 2, 2008 IP
  11. tibberous

    tibberous Well-Known Member

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    #11
    tibberous, Feb 2, 2008 IP
  12. WriteInYourVote

    WriteInYourVote Banned

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    #12
    I agree, joomla and WP are great, I haven't used any others....
     
    WriteInYourVote, Feb 3, 2008 IP
  13. VirtualF

    VirtualF Active Member

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    #13
    My vote for Joomla. I can only spend a few minutes to post a new article. It is such an easy tool and you just don't have to worry about the rest, once it's fully set up.
     
    VirtualF, Feb 3, 2008 IP
  14. drcode

    drcode Peon

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    #14
    Here's an excerpt from a new article on my website:

    First, you need to have a good idea of how you're going to organize your content. Then, you create sections based on broad divisions in your content. Within each of these sections you further define categories based on finer distinctions in your content. Some content will not fit in to these sections and categories and will be primarily static, such as your copyright information, contact us information, and such. This sort of content will be placed into the static content area.

    Once you have organized your content and added some of it to the interface, you can then define menus that will control how this content is displayed to the user. The most common menus are used to display either a list of available articles or display articles in a blog like format. Other available menu types can be used to link directly to particular articles, or to components such as forums.

    I cover most of the building blocks in the rest of the article: components, modules, access control, and mambots.

    The article is at:

    http://myinternettutorials.com/content/view/28/

    Michael
     
    drcode, Feb 3, 2008 IP
  15. poytspot

    poytspot Peon

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    #15
    my vote goes to Joomla! simply becoz it's my 1st CMS tool
     
    poytspot, Feb 5, 2008 IP
  16. hotpop

    hotpop Peon

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    #16
    If you have some budget, just try vivvo ,very easy to use.
     
    hotpop, Feb 5, 2008 IP
  17. engadven

    engadven Peon

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    #17
    If the question is the easiest and lightweight CMS then Joomla cannot be a solution. It's got loads of facilities but difficult for non IT people even to enter content and not particularly quick or easy to setup.
    As web designers I think we need big CMS systems like Joomla but for text based sites there are smaller CMS solutions that can are much quicker, easier and lighter.
    I like PC based parsing engines which have no online database to worry about.
    Just cut and paste text in very quickly to create huge sites within hours.
    One simple form entry so that secretaries etc only need 10 minutes training to master.
    Push one button and the content is parsed into a static .htm pages via a simple blogger style template.
    Install the software once and you can build hundreds of sites. In fact some extreme versions claim to be able to create 100 sites a day and all you have to put in are the keywords.
    Although I think thats a little too easy and lightweight.
     
    engadven, Feb 5, 2008 IP
  18. richrf

    richrf Active Member

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    #18
    The only one I would touch is Wordpress. I think it is more cost-effective, from a long-term maintenance point of view, to build from scratch then deal with the idiosyncrasies of Joomla and Drupal. However, if I wanted a really sturdy piece of software, I might go with ExpressionEngine.

    Rich
     
    richrf, Feb 5, 2008 IP
  19. Tetragon

    Tetragon Active Member

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    #19
    doctors differ .... and patients die ............. cms nightmare

    so anyone ever do a study/comparison? etc.
     
    Tetragon, Feb 12, 2008 IP
  20. spartax

    spartax Active Member

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    #20
    webdesigner goes to template designer by the cms.......
     
    spartax, Feb 12, 2008 IP