23 projects tagged "Content Management System"
Time Star is calendar-based software to make bookings, manage work, and issue quotations, job sheets, invoices, and receipts. Full e-commerce facilities, content management, and a whole range of additional work management features are available. Set reminders and get an email with the details. Place a booking by adding an event into the calendar. Manage your jobs in day, week, and month views. You can create and manage user accounts. Mark jobs as complete then set account terms for payment. Manage complete and incomplete work. Add materials / parts and suppliers to your invoices as well as 3rd party fees. Add extra information about your jobs by setting fields and uploading files and images. Check paid and unpaid customer accounts Generate quotations, job sheets, invoices, and receipts to send to your clients. Take payments online for your completed jobs. Create graphs using client, work, and financial data.
Refinery is a Ruby on Rails content management system for small business sites where the client needs to be able to update their Web site themselves without being bombarded with anything too complicated. It is truly aimed at the end user, making it easy for them to pick up and make changes themselves.
Strelin is a content management system for Web sites based on Joomla!. It adds a flexible, enhanced access control layer, which covers not only content but other components as well. It is also possible to control access to modules, plugins, and menu items. A powerful article tagging system allows articles to be grouped by any single tag or a combination of tags.
Elefant is a full-featured, but refreshingly simple CMS and PHP Web framework. It features an intuitive, streamlined admin interface, a tightly integrated WYSIWYG editor, dynamically embeddable content objects for building dynamic Web sites without touching code, and an extremely fast, secure, and flexible framework for add-ons and themes. The core CMS includes page editing, a blogging engine, site navigation, file and user management, automatic version control, a tool for translators and multilingual site management, and an in-browser theme/layout editor. It is also extensively documented and has a small but friendly and active developer community.
Foswiki is wiki software, supporting the editing of Web pages in an ordinary Web browser by end users. What makes Foswiki special is that it supports the embedding of active and passive macros that enhance the page content (e.g. with global or dynamic information) and allow end-users to build applications that store and process data in a structured manner.
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.
Napata CMS is a CMS for sites that are biased towards sharing information, primarily with text. It is a little wiki-like, but not a wiki. The CMS's frontpage almost resembles a blog's homepage.The script has three dedicated variants depending on the syntax in use: Mediawiki-like Markup variant, Markdown variant, and WYSIWYM variant. It incorporates a simple revision system that saves a copy of any post/article that is edited. It is easy to install using an intuitive Web installer.
TYPOlight is a content management system (CMS) for people who want a professional Internet presence that is easy to maintain. The state-of-the-art structure of the system offers a high security standard and allows you to develop search engine friendly Web sites that are also accessible for people with disabilities. Furthermore, the system can be expanded flexibly and inexpensively. It features easy management of user rights, a Live Update Service, a modern CSS framework, and many already integrated modules (news, calendar, forms, etc.).