[Grok-dev] Re: maintaining the Grok website
Sebastian Ware
sebastian at urbantalk.se
Sat Sep 15 11:57:06 EDT 2007
15 sep 2007 kl. 13.27 skrev Martin Aspeli:
> Sebastian Ware wrote:
>> I think it would be very valuable to have the website run on a
>> Grok based CMS. We desperately need show case applications. On
>> the other hand I can see the benefit of a mature CMS such as Plone.
>> However, being able to boast that we are so confident in our own
>> technology that we even run the Grok website on a Grok based
>> application is worth a lot to those evaluating it.
>
> *shrug* - I think you're overplaying this card. It may be a neat
> thing to be able to say, but it's not going to be the clincher. All
> kinds of lame PHP projects run their websites on PHP, that's not a
> good reason to chose them. :)
>
Shrug or no shrug. I humbly suggest that you are a bit off the mark
by comparing Grok to "any lame PHP project". Rather, consider if Zend-
corp ran their site on .NET. I think that would really make some
difference. Even if they ran it on PHP4 it would signal that they
weren't 100% commited to the latest versions of their framework and
engine.
>> It will also make a great sample application :)
>
> But there are lots of other great examples you could build. :)
After you, sir ;)
>
>> Just keep an open mind on this one.
>
> All Grok CMS' are vapourware at this point. The need for a good
> website is immediate and ongoing.
>
> Plone has been building a CMS for a long, long time. You get
> support, stability and maturity. The plone.org use case is quite
> similar to the grok.zope.org use case, and honestly we're only
> really starting to be happy with the range of features we need at
> this point (we really want plone.org to move to Plone 3 soon). It
> may seem simple at first, but you'll find that you need more and
> more. Does your CMS do versioning, for example? In-place staging?
> That's a tough use case to get right.
Change history is good, but I don't see versioning or staging as an
important feature for the Grok-website. What Grok really needs is a
really lightweight solution that has a smart knowledge base/commented
API kind of thing. So I am guessing that a lot of the benefits of
Plone are overkill at this point.
Lets keep it simple :)
>
> If you have to maintain your own CMS "for the sake of it", you'll
> take away time that you could've spent improving Grok or making
> other, more impressive demos. I think there are lots of other types
> of applications where Grok really can help you build best-of-breed
> solutions - why compete with Plone head-on?
I doubt this would take away time from making other more impressive
demos ;) I also don't think you should feel worried about a
lightweight CMS based on Grok competing with Plone.
I would rather say that this could offer adopters of Grok a
lightweight and easily customisable CMS with a fully functional back-
end that could quickly get them up to speed with a certain type of
project. This would lower the barrier of entry by an order of magnitude.
I don't know the status of the other CMS' based on Grok. I have sent
my code to Luciano because I am confident that he will make a sane
evaluation of what use it might have. :)
regards Sebastian
>
> Martin
>
> --
> Acquisition is a jealous mistress
>
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