3 Results for OpenSourceCMS

Publishers Are Switching to Drupal, Cost Savings Reported

Open source content management system (CMS) Drupal, is gaining many new types of users, but, as I've noted before, publishers, in particular, should look into it due to the cost savings that it offers over proprietary publishing systems. Part of my conviction on that front comes from the fact that OStatic runs on Drupal, as do publications such as InfoWorld, The Onion, and FastCompany. Now there are some interesting data points on Drupal trickling in from publishers using Drupal, and publishing industry analysts.?


OpenSourceCMS: You Take the Wheel of Top Content Management Systems

In recent years, free, open source content management systems (CMS) have become very powerful tools for building, deploying and managing web sites, blogs and more. You're probably familiar with some of the big names in this arena, including Drupal (which Ostatic is based on) and Joomla. OpenSourceCMS is a site that lets you put on your administrator gloves and try top, free CMS tools for free. You can spend hours as an administrator, and watch free video tutorials for CMS systems targeted for blogs, e-commerce sites, and other site categories. Check out the details here.?


Free Online Content Management and Web Development Tours

Open sourcers are increasingly producing web-based and software-as-a-service applications. This calls for developers to use top-notch content management systems, and deploy strong web development skills. To improve your odds of doing both well, see my post on OpenSourceCMS and W3Schools on WebWorkerDaily. OpenSourceCMS gives you an admin log-in for many top PHP- and MySQL-based CMS systems--from Drupal to Joomla. You can build content and see how it will look, free. Likewise, W3Schools is free, and lets you input tags and instructions, publishing results on-site, as you work with HTML, JavaScript, PHP, AJAX, Flash, and more. More at WebWorkerDaily.