If I built this website today and not in 1994, http://runeberg.org/irescan/0014.html
(you can see it hasn't changed much, http://web.archive.org/web/19970227191652/http://www.lysator.liu.se/runeberg/fstal/1b.html ) then I would probably use CSS rather than HTML tables for layout, I would probably use a MySQL database instead of plain text files, and I would probably use some open source content management (CMS) or digital asset managment (DAM) software rather than a Perl script that generates static HTML files. But which open source framework would I use? Greenstone? XTF? DSpace? Mediawiki? Django? WordPress? I found the Mark Twain Project, which uses XTF, and it looks quite nice, http://www.marktwainproject.org/ Then I saw the video showing how to add a new document to an XTF website, and that didn't look so good, http://xtf.cdlib.org/getting-started-tutorials/the-exercises/exercise-1/ in particular I didn't like these steps: 5. Shut down tomcat. 6. Do an incremental re-index (2) to include the new document. 7. Start up tomcat. ... To be clear: I need a platform where regular users, logged in or not, can upload new books through a web interface. Does that leave me with anything else than Mediawiki? -- Lars Aronsson (l...@aronsson.se) Project Runeberg - free Nordic literature - http://runeberg.org/