Portalware: Difference between revisions

The educational technology and digital learning wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 40: Line 40:


; C3MS
; C3MS
*[http://phpnuke.org/ phpnuke] & [http://www.postnuke.com/ postnuke]: PHP & MySQL
*[http://phpnuke.org/ phpnuke]: PHP - one of the oldest systems. Still alive.
* [[Drupal]] ([http://drupal.org/ drupal home page]): PHP & MySQL/PostgreSQL/SQL server...
*[http://www.postnuke.com/ Postnuke]: PHP & MySQL - A fork of phpnuke. Both lost some popularity in recent years. E.g. PostNuke didn't manage to crank out new versions in the last few years until very recently. It was renamed [http://zikula.org/ Zikula] in 2008. Not enough reports to judge yet.... - [[User:Daniel K. Schneider|Daniel K. Schneider]] 16:07, 22 September 2008 (UTC)
*[[Drupal]] ([http://drupal.org/ drupal home page]): PHP & MySQL/PostgreSQL/SQL server. Probably the best bet for educators currently (2008)
*[http://www.xoops.org/ XOOPS]: PHP  
*[http://www.xoops.org/ XOOPS]: PHP  
*[http://www.midgard-project.org/ midgard]: PHP  
*[http://www.midgard-project.org/ midgard]: PHP  
*[http://plone.org/ plone]: Python/Zope
*[http://plone.org/ plone]: Python/Zope
*[http://www.mamboserver.com/ Mambo Server]: PHP and MySQL
*[http://www.mamboserver.com/ Mambo Server]: PHP and MySQL
*[[Joomla]]: fork of mambo server. PHP and MySQL
*[[Joomla]]: Popular fork of mambo server. PHP and MySQL. A good bet since this system is very popular and well documented.
*[http://www.cmsmadesimple.org/ CMS Made Simple] - PHP/MySQL. Probably the best simple one (2008)
*[http://www.cmsimple.dk/?CMSimple:Features CMSimple Content Management]: no database needed, PHP powered
*[http://www.cmsimple.dk/?CMSimple:Features CMSimple Content Management]: no database needed, PHP powered
 
*[http://www.dotnetnuke.com/ DotNetNuke]: Microsot .Net - Probably the most popular open source and free portal with MS technology.
* Other (I have to test if they are still alive): GeekLog, Xaraya, PhpWebLog


=== Big portals ===
=== Big portals ===

Revision as of 17:07, 22 September 2008

<pageby nominor="false" comments="false"/>

Definition

Portalware is software to create various kinds of portals through a relatively simple and installation/configuration process. Portals are a kind of web application.

Daniel K. Schneider thinks that typical portalware for educational use can be installed in an hour and be used after an extra hour of configuration work. Fine tuning may require an extra week of work (or more if the software doesn't work as advertised). In any case, we clearly want to make a distinction between portalware and toolkits to build portals (web application frameworks).

As increasingly powerful alternative, see rich internet applications

Principle

Portalware is a kind of server software that is usually installed within a webserver / database / scripting language combo, e.g. LAMP.

Portalware should not be confused with so-called web application frameworks, i.e. software stacks that are used to build portalware, rich internet applications, etc.

List of portalware

(incomplete, used in education ....)

Small Content management systems

We refer to content management systems in the more narrow sense, i.e. systems specifically designed to edit contents through a "structured" interface, contents that must fit designed templates, information that is more organized than just lists (like in blogs, or news engines).

Big systems
  • An example would be Vignette (Wikipedia article). These usually cost over 10K and require rather substantial development investment.

Small Portals

We call most of these C3MS (since they allow to manage content, communities and collaboration). In pure CMS functionality, most are rather weak. Here is a list of popular open source software:

News engines
C3MS
  • phpnuke: PHP - one of the oldest systems. Still alive.
  • Postnuke: PHP & MySQL - A fork of phpnuke. Both lost some popularity in recent years. E.g. PostNuke didn't manage to crank out new versions in the last few years until very recently. It was renamed Zikula in 2008. Not enough reports to judge yet.... - Daniel K. Schneider 16:07, 22 September 2008 (UTC)
  • Drupal (drupal home page): PHP & MySQL/PostgreSQL/SQL server. Probably the best bet for educators currently (2008)
  • XOOPS: PHP
  • midgard: PHP
  • plone: Python/Zope
  • Mambo Server: PHP and MySQL
  • Joomla: Popular fork of mambo server. PHP and MySQL. A good bet since this system is very popular and well documented.
  • CMS Made Simple - PHP/MySQL. Probably the best simple one (2008)
  • CMSimple Content Management: no database needed, PHP powered
  • DotNetNuke: Microsot .Net - Probably the most popular open source and free portal with MS technology.

Big portals

  • uPortal A kind of enterprise portal made for education
  • Jahia Integrated Enterprise Content & Portal Management software. Adopted by some Swiss educational institutions.

"Web 2.0" systems

Not sure what that web 2.0 means, but we usually mean a subset of social software and integrators like webtops. It also relates to things like the virtual office (aka office 2.0), etc. Most well known systems are:

Special purpose porwalware for education

Many portals designed for education (both e-learning and blended designs) do have CMS components. In particular an authoring tool to edit educational materials.

Not that these systems are the only ones used in education, you may use all of the above in particular in more constructivist designs, e.g. project-oriented learning or writing-to-learn.

Educational frameworks

(something in between educationl portalware and web application frameworks

Security

I have been using portalware for long years now and I never met any php/mysql based application that was totally safe. Sometimes the central engine is usafe (e.g. we had problems with Dokeos or PostNuke) or installed extensions are - Daniel K. Schneider

To prevent hacking, spamming, defacing etc.

  • Upgrade frequently (each time an upgrade is out)
  • Register with the makers in order to be noticed about security updates

Alternatively:

  • Do not install portalware, but rather use on-line services (e.g. Ning for a community portal)

Links:

Links