Also look at 
http://www.caravelcms.org


Quoting Matt Schroebel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

> 
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Anthony [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> > Sent: Tuesday, August 05, 2003 9:52 AM
> > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Subject: [PHP] Best PHP CMS
> > 
> > 
> > I'm just looking for some opinions.  I've been going though 
> > sourceforge
> > looking at different CMS systems.  There are a lot of really good CMS
> > projects out there.  I'm looking for some opinions on the 
> > best ones out
> > there.  I'm obviously looking at something PHP based and using mySQL
> > backend.  Some of the features that I'd like are an easy template
> > implementation, blog features, media gallery and something 
> > that's easy to
> > build custom modules to add features.  So far I'm looking at 
> > about 6 CMS
> > systems, I like certain things in each of them..... so what's 
> > your opinion.
> I've looked at these:
> 
> http://www.midgard-project.org/
> Midgard looked good but I couldn't get the admin to work right, and it
> requires php-4.2.2 or lower (which drove me a little nuts at first).
> It's optimized for php as it's functions are written in C and become
> built in php functions with --with-midgard, plus it has a mod_midgard to
> link into apache.  Midgard allows lots of customization and you could
> place php code just about anywhere.  Runs on *nix only and requires
> access to add modules to php and apache.
> 
> http://www.tikiwiki.org/
> TikiWiki had lots of cool features.  It looked to me to be more suitable
> for a community CMS (baseball team etc) rather than a general CMS. All
> php.
> 
> http://www.geeklog.net/
> There's also GeekLog, with a similar community slant as TikiWiki, and it
> was reviewed in last months php-architect magazine. All php.
> 
> http://www.typo3.org
> I agree with what Nick Tabbet said.  Of these 4 CMSs, this one has the
> most refined user interface, and most general purpose features.  It's
> written in all object oriented php and will easily install on an ISP
> hosted system.  Quick setup 1-2-3, and your ready to go.  It does have a
> long learning curve, but anything complex does.  Since it's all OO, has
> it's own TypoScript code to design content and big, it will really
> benefit if run with a php accelerator to cache the intermediate code.
> Has good tutorial for getting started, and another good intro to it's
> templates.  It's more for small to mid-sized sites, as anything larger
> should be written in native C, C++, etc.
> 
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