Archive for the 'Server Side Software' Category

Drupal

Friday, April 14th, 2006

For anyone in need of a CMS and blog setup for their web site we have recently added Drupal installation and customization to our line of services.

Drupal is software that allows an individual or a community of users to easily publish, manage and organize a great variety of content on a website. Tens of thousands of people and organizations have used Drupal to set up scores of different kinds of web sites, including:

  • community web portals and discussion sites
  • corporate web sites/intranet portals
  • personal web sites
  • aficionado sites
  • e-commerce applications
  • resource directories

Drupal includes features to enable:

  • content management systems
  • blogs
  • collaborative authoring environments
  • forums
  • newsletters
  • picture galleries
  • file uploads and download

and much more.

Drupal is open source software licensed under the GPL, and is maintained and developed by a community of thousands of users and developers. Drupal is free to download and use.

After much testing and evaluation we feel that Drupal is a good option for setting up a CMS, blogs and much more within one package.

If you’re interested in Drupal setup and/or customization please request a quote.

Open Source Software

Friday, January 20th, 2006

One of the greatest things about WordPress and the WordPress community is that the plugins and themes are all released under the GPL License but for some people this poses a problem, and I can understand why.

I think the GPL is great, and I think that the original authors should always get credit for their hard work, in the form of a link back to whatever site they want. I also believe that providing a service is much more reasonable when it comes to WordPress, but I wish there was a better structure to compensate the individuals that take massive amounts of time out of their day to create beautiful themes, and plugins for the hundreds of thousands, if not millions of WordPress users.

I am sure that if Michael Heilemann was given even just one American dollar for every five Kubrick and K2 installs, he would need to buy another apartment to hold it all. Think about that for a minute next time you complain about a plugin, theme or even WordPress, as the majority of the people that make the software work as well as it does, are doing so for free, using time they could instead be working on a project that would make them money.

[via Blogging Pro]

David has some very valid points on WordPress development and open source software in general. I’ll expand on the topic a bit by focusing on the WordPress plugins that Watershed Studio has released.

So far for the month of January the WordPress E-mail Notification Plugin has been downloaded 813 times and the WordPress Category Posts Plugin has been downloaded 101 times. So lets be liberal and say only half of the downloads result in the plugins being used. That would leave us with a total of 457 “in use” downloads between the two (not including people who download once and install in multiple places). You can do the math and easily see that even small donations of up to $5 from everyone that downloads and uses a plugin in any given month would add up quite nicely and encourage a faster development cycle and more responsive guidance. (For the record we’ve received a total of $5 this month in donations.)

Could the development cycle be sped up? Of course it could if you didn’t have to worry about paying the bills. It would be nice to have the luxury of doing something for “the greater good” most of the time, but the truth is that money does indeed talk. In our case new releases of our plugins have occurred either when we “get around to it” (downtime in which we’d otherwise not be getting paid anyway — which isn’t all that often) or people have came to us with sizeable donations in order to “free up” some time to work on a specific functionality.

But money isn’t everything and is *not* our motivational factor behind releasing open source software. When it comes to Watershed Studio, there are really two goals from doing so.

1) To give back to the open source community. Open source is a lovely thing and to be honest if it weren’t around we wouldn’t be anywhere near where we are today with the vast knowledge we’ve gained through picking apart other projects. And while we’re not working on the internals of WordPress, we’re doing what we can to add value to the software so they can be freed up to hone the core system.

2) Promotion. We honestly could not buy the amount of promotion we receive from people all around the globe. (A few examples: [1] [2] [3] [4] [5]) Roughly half of all our traffic comes from sites like these plus through the major search engines for people searching for WordPress. This in turn gets our name “out there” and leads to projects. Thus that is extremely valuable to us because it does lead to helping us pay the bills.

So there is a brief rundown of Watershed Studio’s take on open source software. If you have the means to donate to any open source project that you use, please do so. And if you can’t donate at the very least give credit where credit is due. In the end it will keep the development ball rolling.

WordPress 2.0 “Duke”

Tuesday, January 3rd, 2006

WordPress 2.0 has been released and offers a multitude of enhancements.

You can see the major highlights here.

WordPress MU

Monday, November 7th, 2005

This weekend I gave WordPress MU a test run and have came to the conclusion that at this moment I can’t recommend that anyone use it in a production environment unless they’re *really* comfortable with how it works.

Don’t get me wrong. It’s a nice system once you get it up and running. But this is still considered pre-alpha software. I have a great understanding of what I’m doing when it comes to installing software, yet installation was a bit frustrating even for *me*, mainly because decent documentation is hard to come.

If you want to give it a whirl, try it out on a development domain first (it should be setup at your web root and you have to setup a wild card DNS entry). And make sure that you’re comfortable with figuring things out on your own (there are forums that may prove helpful). And you should have a decent understanding of how Apache & PHP work.

With that said, I think the future of this package could prove to be a bright one, but it needs time to mature first. I’ll be keeping my eyes open for a stable release, but until then I’ll only be testing out the nightly builds from time-to-time.

WordPress 1.5.1.3 “Strayhorn”

Friday, July 1st, 2005

WordPress 1.5.1.3 has been released. Check out the changelog for details.

WordPress 1.5.1.2 “Strayhorn”

Friday, May 27th, 2005

If you’ve upgraded to WordPress 1.5.1 and are having problems, upgrade to WordPress 1.5.1.2. Check out the changelog for details.

WordPress 1.5.1.1 “Strayhorn”

Tuesday, May 24th, 2005

If you’ve upgraded to WordPress 1.5.1 and are having problems, upgrade to WordPress 1.5.1.1. Check out the changelog for details.

WordPress 1.5.1 “Strayhorn”

Monday, May 9th, 2005

WordPress 1.5.1 “Strayhorn” has been released.

The upgrade was easy as usual, but one plugin I use seems to have an issue.

Open Source Shopping Carts

Friday, April 8th, 2005

For the past few years I’ve been scouring the net looking for a good, open source, PHP based shopping cart. I never really found everything I wanted so I just settled with hacking away at osCommerce and Zen Cart.

Functionality wise (user end), these two packages are pretty decent, but for my needs the code layout is horrid. Zen Cart allows you to template your site to some extent, but it’s not very easy or intuitive. And this frustrates me since it doesn’t have to be that way.

Since I can’t seem to find the features I want anywhere, I’m considering starting a SourceForge project…that is if I can get a handful of other people together who are committed to getting this off of the ground. If you’re interested, let me know.

For a decent shopping cart, here’s my wish list, in no particular order:

  • PHP based
  • MySQL driven
  • Easy to use and setup template system
  • CSS layout (not tables)
  • Plugin API
  • Well documented
  • PayPal IPN
  • RSS feeds (new/updated products)
  • Integrated blog
  • WYSIWYG editor
  • GPL license
  • Gift certificates
  • Discounts (Group, product, person)
  • Etc, etc, etc…the list could go on

However, there’s no need to reinvent the wheel…I plan on taking a look at the components of other GPL packages and using what I can.

If you have any questions, comments or suggestions, fire away.

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