Category: Drupal

It’s a CMS! It’s a portal! It’s a community platform!

Acquia to provide vertical solutions, commercial support

In this CMSWire interview with Drupal founder Dries Buytaert we get a glimpse at what Dries’ new company, Acquia, is all about.

Acquia will provide added value to Drupal users by reducing risk and saving them time. Users who are cautious about deploying Drupal will have the option to purchase a commercial subscription from Acquia to help them maintain and monitor their Drupal website.

Dries goes on to say that Acquia will provide solutions built on top of Drupal, but the specific vertical (Media & Publishing, Education) and/or horizontal (Corporate Intranets) is still being finalized.

AIIM & Drupalcon in Boston 3/3 – 3/6

I’ll be at AIIM again this year in Boston March 3rd through 6th. It’s always a huge and diverse conference. If it has anything to do with content, it will be in Boston. You’ve got the imaging guys with their giant scanners, copiers, and printers, you’ve got the obscenely large booths from some of the closed source ECM folks, and you’ve got the more modest (but much more interesting!) booths from the open source contingent (Alfresco and Optaros will be in the same booth this year).

This year I was happy to learn that Drupalcon is going on at the same time and place as the AIIM conference so we’ll see a much-needed injection of people who care about open source content management at the event.

InfoWorld reviews five open source CMS offerings

InfoWorld published a review of Alfresco, DotNetNuke, Plone, Drupal, and Joomla. Heck ranks Alfresco the highest out of the five, which is a good data point for people evaluating these products, but most folks should consider deeply the scenarios they will use the package for when making a decision because each package has a “fitness to purpose” that’s more important to consider than just “fit” alone.

For example, although the article gives a good high-level description of the pro’s and con’s of each package, there’s a more fundamental characteristic of Alfresco that makes comparison to the others an apples-to-oranges exercise. That characteristic is that unlike the others in the list, Alfresco isn’t focused on community-centric functionality. Can you build a community site that is managed by Alfresco and/or uses Alfresco as the back-end repository? Of course. And the new REST framework makes that even easier than it used to be. But you won’t find consumer-facing wiki, blog, or forum functionality out-of-the-box with Alfresco. In fact, you can take your entire web site, as-is, and manage it with Alfresco without any changes to the front-end code. That’s a fundamentally different model than the other packages evaluated.

So you should read the article. But when people ask you to compare Alfresco to Drupal, back them up a bit and instead, figure out the purpose and goal of the site and the business processes needed to manage it (the “how”) and then talk about the open source CMS options.

IBM developerWorks evaluates open source CMS

A team at IBM’s developerWorks has written an article on their evaluation of open source content management software. They were looking to build a closed community web site with freely-available software and ultimately chose Drupal for the task. The article covers the requirements, design, selection process, and gives a highlight of the customizations they made.

(I came across this while taking a look at Krugle, which is a code- and technology-centric search engine).