NCCC Forum

Boards => Website => Topic started by: karlos on May 20, 2009, 08:33:09 AM

Title: Website facelift and under the hood support
Post by: karlos on May 20, 2009, 08:33:09 AM
I've gotten a few comments on the "new look." The NC3 website is now organized and managed by a Content Management System (CMS) Joomla (http://www.joomla.org/). This is free, open source software which I installed on our site. There were a few reasons I did this:

The Joomla CMS easily addressed all of the issues to make our site much more easy to maintain and expand in the future:
Someone commented that now our site "looks like all other sites." Using a CMS is what a lot of other websites have done (some even use Joomla, but there are other alternatives, including expensive commercial software for the real pros). The corporate website where I work is a huge CMS and, for all the reasons I stated above, as a CMS it is much easier to maintain a consistent look and feel and to distribute website content responsibility over a large group of people.

If anyone has any problems with page displays, links, etc. please reply here. I know Frank Dumville had some issues with Internet Explorer 8 (still under construction by Microsoft, in my opinion), but I installed a patch which makes IE8 display nicely. Judy Frankel reported some links which worked in a funny fashion due to a mixture of the new Joomla content and external links. The site has been tested on several browsers: firefox, safari (mac), chrome, and IE6,7,8 (the only glitches occurred with Internet Explorer - go figure...). The two little validation buttons (CSS and XHTML) at the bottom right of each page ensure that page is standards-compliant, meaning any standards-compliant browser should not have a problem (in theory, sigh) displaying the pages. My personal preference is firefox - page display is snappy and there are some really cool add-ons which help me both at work and play. I don't think firefox has ever displayed pages weirdly while, when I was previously editing the static html pages, making them look right in Internet Explorer (any version) was always an adventure (another issue which I hope is gone forever).