Whatever we use has to be hackable.
The benefit of even a trivial CMS is that we can hack at the content level, not at the infrastructure level.
My thought is that a CMS should be used in a no-brainer way, not in a fancy way. You don't need to be a DB guru to use MySQL, and the same is true of a simple CMS. Just install it and run it; don't get sucked into complicated uses.
The benefit you get with an RDBMS is that you can stop thinking about code and start modelling data. The same is true of a CMS, you can stop thinking about implementation, and start thinking about content.
If you want a "fast and wrong" start, then let's be fast and wrong in the right ballpark: content. That requires no code or infrastructure, just a static and trivial website with a weekly review of logs to see what readers are attracted to. Styling unnecessary; navigation minimal.
- Nigel. _______________________________________________ mozilla-documentation mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.mozilla.org/listinfo/mozilla-documentation