Posts Tagged ‘WordPress’

4
May

Drupal ? Should I Use it for My CMS

Getting a search engine friendly website with effective content management system is something that we all dream about. Well, if something can help to realize your dream, it’s none other than the open-source Drupal content management system. With this CMS, individuals, user communities and enterprises can organize, publish and manage content of their websites in an effective and easy way. There are thousands of people and enterprises that making the most of Drupal to power myriad variety of websites.

You may ask why you should use Drupal when other CMS like WordPress, Joomla and many other seem to do equally well and have earned quite name as established content management systems. If you are, too, thinking why drupal, before going into any  details must keep in mind that the world’s leading organizations like the UN, Forbes, the Discovery Channel, AOL, Warner Brothers Records and even Yahoo are using Drupal websites. And it indicates that it has something which makes it a preferable tool for the world’s leading organizations.

Many drupal experts say that Drupal can be the best pick for those who want to develop some SEO-based website development projects. As it allows you to get precise control over your website URL structure and you can find the same in WordPress and you are bound to one kind of permalink URL for all your posts.
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25
Jan

WordPress Foundation Launched

wordpress-logo-stacked-rgbThe WordPress Foundation is officially open for business. The foundation is a non-profit organization with a mission to ensure access to a stable and free platform for Web publishing.
There’s not a ton of information on the site just yet, but it does spell out the philosophy of the organization and general information about the new organization.
Free software advocates will be pleased to see that the first item of the philosophy is that all software under the foundation should be released under the GNU General Public License. It also goes a bit further to specify that the framework should allow software to be easily translated. However, it seems that the foundation also wishes to be commercially friendly as well. The philosophy page also says that “should provide a framework for extensions so modifications and enhancements can be made without modifying core code,” which paves the way for proprietary add-ons and services.
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