Good ones are listed here:

http://web2py.com/poweredby

Example projects are here:

http://web2py.com/appliances

The majority of projects are closed source and used in intranets.

massimo

On Tuesday, 31 July 2012 12:23:22 UTC-5, Luther Goh Lu Feng wrote:
>
> @Massimo is there a page somewhere listing the projects derived from 
> web2py? I think maybe one reason is the lack of awareness and visibility of 
> such web2py derivative projects
>
> On Tuesday, July 31, 2012 11:51:56 PM UTC+8, Massimo Di Pierro wrote:
>>
>> I agree web2py needs a good CMS. The problem is that different people 
>> expect different things from a CMS. Some time ago I posted code for web2cms 
>> but nobody has contributed to it. :-(
>> Now I am trying put some of that logic into auth.wiki()
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> On Tuesday, 31 July 2012 10:21:24 UTC-5, Luther Goh Lu Feng wrote:
>>>
>>> I wish to share that imho one of the strengths of web2py is its 
>>> dedication towards backwards compatibility. This is something not 
>>> frequently found in other frameworks, eg in Django or in Drupal.
>>>
>>> Therefore, I believe that if a web2py project, be it CMS or otherwise 
>>> gains a sufficient following, it could possibly be very successful.
>>>
>>> Just my 5c
>>>
>>> On Tuesday, July 31, 2012 9:40:15 PM UTC+8, Mariano Reingart wrote:
>>>>
>>>> On Tue, Jul 31, 2012 at 10:08 AM, Mariano Reingart <reing...@gmail.com> 
>>>> wrote: 
>>>> > On Mon, Jul 30, 2012 at 6:13 PM, Tim Michelsen 
>>>> > <timmichel...@gmx-topmail.de> wrote: 
>>>> >>> Instant Press is built by @Martin and I dont know if he gets 
>>>> contribution 
>>>> >>> Movu.ca is built by @rochacbruno (me) and I did not get too much 
>>>> >>> contribution (two or 3 people helped with ideas and translations) 
>>>> >> 
>>>> >> Do you think muvuca could be staffed with the features shown in 
>>>> Mezzanine (I 
>>>> >> haven't know it before nor used it): 
>>>> >> 
>>>> >>     Hierarchical page navigation 
>>>> >>     Save as draft and preview on site 
>>>> >>     Scheduled publishing 
>>>> >>     Drag-and-drop page ordering 
>>>> >>     WYSIWYG editing 
>>>> >>     In-line page editing 
>>>> >>     Drag-and-drop HTML5 forms builder with CSV export 
>>>> >>     SEO friendly URLs and meta data 
>>>> >>     Shopping cart module (Cartridge) 
>>>> >>     Configurable dashboard widgets 
>>>> >>     Blog engine 
>>>> >>     Tagging 
>>>> >>     User accounts and profiles with email verification 
>>>> >>     Translated to over 20 languages 
>>>> >>     Sharing via Facebook or Twitter 
>>>> > 
>>>> > Please, take a look at web2conf: 
>>>> > 
>>>> > https://code.google.com/p/web2conf/ 
>>>> > 
>>>> > It has many of your requested features (wyswyg online editor, 
>>>> > navigation bar, user profiles, twitter and blog/rss integration, 
>>>> > schedule/ratings, translations). We are adding something similar to a 
>>>> > shopping cart for the registration system. 
>>>> > Some features are made with plugins and/or are reusable outside the 
>>>> > conference management system. 
>>>> > 
>>>> > If there is enough interest, we could improve and make it a general 
>>>> CMS. 
>>>> > Also, there are many companies and professionals that can be hired to 
>>>> > develop such a project, or contributing to existing ones. 
>>>> > A fundraising would be a good option to start this. 
>>>> > 
>>>>
>>>> BTW, measuring "community" is difficult. 
>>>>
>>>> For example, django has a larger community here in Argentina, but 
>>>> earlier web-conference projects like PyCon-Tech failed to gain such 
>>>> traction anyway, and current alternatives are too complex IMHO and 
>>>> needs highly experienced developers. 
>>>>
>>>> I would also take into consideration maintainability (backward 
>>>> compatibility, all-inclusive real full-stack features, compact code, 
>>>> etc.) 
>>>> Maybe you have to program a little more, but believe me, you will have 
>>>> a better control of the situation, specially when you need to extend 
>>>> or scale the app. 
>>>> As someone told before, most of the features of a CMS are simple to 
>>>> implement in web2py, maybe that's why there aren't many big and 
>>>> complex projects. 
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> I've made a blog post about this, telling the history of web2conf in 
>>>> Argentina (in Spanish, sorry): 
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> http://pyconar.blogspot.com.ar/2012/07/sitio-web-de-pycon-argentina-un-poco-de.html
>>>>  
>>>>
>>>> In brief, I've made a mistake selecting PyCon-Tech in 2009 for our 
>>>> first conference. 
>>>> As it was built in django (and used by PyConUS), I thought it have 
>>>> enough community to at least fix bugs and survive. 
>>>> I was wrong. 
>>>> The project literally died and we even lost the web sites (django 
>>>> 0.96, unmaitained, eat up all of our server memory) 
>>>> Hopefully, with web2py, we could resurrect our old websites and go 
>>>> ahead the last two years. 
>>>>
>>>> You can see it running here: 
>>>>
>>>> http://ar.pycon.org/2012 
>>>>
>>>> Best regards, 
>>>>
>>>> Mariano Reingart 
>>>> http://www.sistemasagiles.com.ar 
>>>> http://reingart.blogspot.com 
>>>>
>>>

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