Hi guys,
Content is our main problem, not a technology behind te website. We really need someone to rewrite it into something nicer, more modern, simpler, and correct. Next step is a new design. Here some professional designer is IMHO needed. Or we can borrow designs from other CMS guys, which can be then adapted to our CMSes.
I agree with Colin that our website is not so complex yet not so easy to be handled with out-of-the box CMS without additional tweaking. And staying in Smalltalk have obvious advantages. It is true we don't have all those components ready to integrate as Joomla, Wordpress... Here is the biggest disadvantage of our CMS offerings and it will always be. But except those pletora of out-of-the-box modules we can do whatever we like quite easily comparing to other CMSes.
Last but not least: running such website is, yes, a Smalltalker's pride, but more important: it is an opportunity to advance our web technology as well.
Best regards Janko
Dne 09. 03. 2013 02:14, piše radoslav hodnicak:
I don't know what's in the admin backend but the only non-static things I see on the current homepage are stats and search, both of which could be handed off to Google. I imagine duplicating the current site would require zero or close to zero PHP programming, you'd "just" import the articles into a cms.
If the web team thinks it's fun to build the technology as well as the content then fine. I'd rather not reinvent the wheel for the Xth time and spend that time elsewhere, but then again I'm not the web team. Carry on.
rado
On Sat, Mar 9, 2013 at 1:50 AM, Colin Putney <colin@wiresong.com mailto:colin@wiresong.com> wrote:
On Fri, Mar 8, 2013 at 4:22 PM, radoslav hodnicak <rh@4096.sk <mailto:rh@4096.sk>> wrote: I know it's a question of pride to have the homepage of a programming language done in said language but these cycles of "rewrite in technology X/abandonment/how do we update the site again?" are pretty silly. Is the anything on the website that's actually benefiting from having a smalltalk implementation? Why not just slap a wordpress or any of the zillion externally maintained cms systems on the server and be done with it? It should be the content that counts. So you're saying that instead of rewriting it in Smalltalk, we should rewrite it in PHP? Bear in mind that it isn't just a bunch of static pages—it's not hugely sophisticated, but it's not trivial either. No matter what we do, it'll take some time and effort to update and maintain. Personally I'd rather do that work in a language that doesn't make my eyes bleed. Perhaps the web team feels the same. Colin
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