[Zope] (Fwd) Zope musings
Paul Everitt
Paul@digicool.com
Wed, 17 Feb 1999 15:09:30 -0500
David wrote:
> Paul mumbled:
> I'll jump in, since this is an issue I worry about w.r.t
> Zope's success
> well for places I know, such as university departments where
> faculty, not
> hackers, do web page editing and e.g. my organization, where
> I want e.g.
> the HR manager to be able to edit the web pages and
> blissfully ignore all
> of the cool Zope features that the webmaster really likes...
Is there are reason these folks can't use Netscape Composer? It doesn't
sound like they would ever grok DTML...
> All sounds fine, of course. It does sound distant -- which
> is fine in the
> long term, but worrisome in the short term. I don't know of a single
> WebDAV client I can play with, let alone a full-featured
> WebDAV-aware HTML
> editor.
That's true. If, however, Mozilla sprouted WebDAV capabilities in the
next three months, is that near enough term?
> > If someone has Linux on their desktop, how do they manage CF sites?
>
> Irrelevant if your shop (as mine does) has a single Linux box as the
> server, and oodles of macs and PC's on desktops.
Correct. But I don't think Zope should pursue a direction that excludes
platforms such as Linux.
> > Let me ask a question that tries to quantify the situation.
> IMO, the
> > current Zope IDE is pretty unproductive. On a scale of 1
> to 100, its
> > *productivity* level is about a 5 compared to NetObjects Fusion,
> > Dreamweaver, etc. On other factors it shines -- it is based on
> > standards, is completely portable, source code is available, is
> > mind-numbingly easy to modify the IDE, etc.
> >
> > Just for argument, let's say that CF Studio is a 90. If we came out
> > with an improved IDE that retained the factors listed above that CF
> > Studio fails at, what number would it need to move up to
> for you to give
> > an unqualified "Yes!" ??
>
> In our case, I suspect, a 20 or 30 would be enough. What's
> most important
> is, I think:
>
> - a GUI for the 95% of the web page editing tasks (a-la Netscape
> Composer, Frontpage, etc.).
OK, fortunately Zope 1.10 appears to have solid Netscape Composer
integration. FrontPage 2000 should be out within, say, four months, and
(theoretically) we'll get that with WebDAV.
> - a clean, robust, and simple interaction between the user
> (someone who
> does not want to learn HTML but wants to manage their web page
> nonetheless) and the "web server" -- Zope in this case.
OK, we have that with "Netscape Publishing" (HTTP PUT).
> > If *we* is your shop, how about...XEmacs? Using ZServer to
> publish your
> > object system by HTTP, you can be *significantly* more productive:
>
> Again, emacs is irrelevant for my HR manager, who'd quit if
> she was told
> she had to learn it (and, I dare say, she'd be right =). It
But she would also quit if she had to learn ColdFusion Studio. You're
mixing up the discussions -- Alan was asking about that comparison. I
imagine he'd quit if he had to manage web sites using FrontPage :^)
> *could* be
> that Netscape Composer is the answer for my shop -- I haven't tried it
> with the FTP-enabled Zope.
You don't need ZServer and FTP for it. Download Zope 1.10pr1 and use
ZopeHTTPServer. It *appears* to work well, and works well with
PCGI/Apache as well.
> > It would still be missing a *whole* lot of things vs. CF
> Studio, such as
> > link checkers, a list of variables that can be inserted, syntax
> > colorization of the markup, etc. Let's say it moved up to a 25.
>
> From the perspective of someone who wants to use tools and
> not hack code,
> emacs is useless. The folks I'm trying to convince rave
I agree that *content managers* won't adopt Emacs. However,
*developers* such as Tom and Alan might find it a wildly productive
environment.
> about GoLive or
> whatever it's called. I looked at it and couldn't get it to
> manage Zope
> pages, but that could be me.
>
> So, as a summary:
>
> - emacs is fine for folks that already use emacs, but...
> - emacs is not an HTML-editing tool. It's a swiss-army chainsaw, as
> we all know. (Besides, what about the vi shops? =))
> - I think Zope is an easy sell to webmasters who think ahead.
> - I think Zope is currently a hard sell to folks who like
> shrink-wrapped
> software with lots of buttons and gizmos and WYSIWYG.
Right. And Zope needs to be more productive for both content managers
and developers.
--Paul