9 projects tagged "CMS"
Geeklog is the weblog software that concentrates on performance, privacy, and security. It features Web-based administration, surveys (polls), user-customizable boxes, a friendly administration GUI with a topic manager, an option to edit or delete stories, an option to delete comments, a search engine, backend/headlines generation (RSS/Atom format), calendaring, and much more.
Bricolage greatly simplifies the complex tasks of creating, managing, and publishing vast libraries of content. With advanced features such as fully-configurable workflows, customizable document types, and comprehensive Perl and PHP templating support, it has been designed from the ground up to scale to meet the demanding needs of large organizations around the world.
SCMS is an MVC based secure content management system. It is designed from the ground up to withstand common Web application vulnerabilities such as SQL injection, XSS, CSRF, session fixation/hijacking, and many others. It is designed for PHP 5.0-5.2.x and MySQL 4.1+, and it can optionally support PostgreSQL as a database backend.
MojoMojo is a Web2.0 wiki with AJAX live preview, hierarchical structure, tags, diffs, pluggable syntax, permissions/ACL, attachments, RSS feeds, a photo gallery, edit conflict resolution via 3-way merge, themes/skinning, localization, built-in full-text search, and a reverse index. Since it's built on top of the Perl Catalyst Web framework, MojoMojo supports any Web server, and includes its own standalone one. It also support any database backend supported by the DBIx::Class ORM, and has been successfully tested with PostgreSQL, SQLite, and MySQL.
MapZoom is software for the creation of different thematic maps in a form of a geo-aware content management system (CMS). MapZoom provides the user with a map as its main interface, providing for interaction and refined searches. The sample application helps people searching for a house or an apartment with some specific characteristics.
Wolf CMS simplifies content management by offering an elegant user interface, flexible templating per page, simple user management and permissions, and the tools necessary for file management. It is a fork of Frog CMS, which was itself a PHP migration of the Ruby-on-Rails app Radiant CMS. Wolf is now forging its own development path, although a family resemblance with these two systems can still be seen.
Gnew is a simple content management system. It is fully customizable using a template system, and supports multiple languages. It features easy installation, a simple but complete administration section, multi-level categories, article management, news management with an advanced comments system, poll management, user management, a forum, search engine, RSS feed generation, BBCode and HTML support, emoticons, and more.
papaya CMS is a Web Content Management System based on open standards (including XML, XSLT, PHP, and MySQL/PostgreSQL). It is compatible with almost every operating system, is platform-independent, is multi-lingual, offers great usability, and is easy to extend via its plugin system. It is scalable and perfect for business websites.