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Comment by aaronbaugher

7 months ago

Can you recommend an alternative for a non-technical organization, where there's someone who needs to be able to edit pages and upload documents on a regular basis, so they need as user-friendly an interface as possible for that? Especially when they don't have a budget for it, and you're helping them out as a favor? It's so easy to spin up Wordpress for them, but I'm not a fan either.

I've tried Drupal in the past for such situations, but it was too complicated for them. That was years ago, so maybe it's better now.

I find it very telling that there's no 2 responses to this post recommending the same thing. Confirms my belief that there is no real alternative to Wordpress for a free and open-source CMS that is straightforward to install and usable to build and edit pages by non-tech-experts.

  • Perhaps people who wanted to recommend the same thing as was already written, just upvoted instead of writing their own comment?

DrupalCMS is a new project that aims to radically simplify for end users https://new.drupal.org/drupal-cms

  • > Drupal

    > new

    Pretty sure Drupal has been around for like, 20 years or so. Or is this a different Drupal?

    • Drupal has been around for a while, but I've never heard of "Drupal CMS" as a separate product until now.

      It appears Drupal CMS is a customized version of Drupal that is easier for less tech-savvy folks to get up and running. At least, that's the impression I got reading through the marketing hype that "explains" it with nothing but buzzwords.

Yes I can. There's an excellent and stable solution called SurrealCMS, made by an indie developer. You connect it by FTP to any traditional web design (HTML+CSS+JS), and the users get a WYSIWYG editor where the published output looks exactly as it looked when editing. It's dirt cheap at $9 per month.

Edit: I actually feel a bit sorry for the SurrealCMS developer. He has a fantastic product that should be an industry standard, but it's fairly unknown.

> Can you recommend an alternative for a non-technical organization, where there's someone who needs to be able to edit pages and upload documents on a regular basis, so they need as user-friendly an interface as possible for that

25 years ago we used Microsoft Frontpage for that, with the web root mapped to a file share that the non-technical secretary could write to and edit it as if it were a word processor.

Somehow I feel we have regressed from that simplicity, with nothing but hand waving to make up for it. This method was declared "obsolete" and ... Wordpress kludges took its place as somehow "better". Someone prove me wrong.

  • Part of that is Frontpage needing a Windows server, and all that entails.

    The other part is clients freaking out after Frontpage had a series of dangerous CVEs all in a row.

    And then finally every time a part of Frontpage got popular, MS would deprecate the API and replace it with a new one.

    Wordpress was in the right place at the right time.

  • A previous workplace of mine did the same with Netscape (and later, Mozilla) Composer. Users could modify content via WebDAV.

Statamic https://statamic.com/

We have a (internally accessible only) WP instance where the content is exported using a plugin as a ZIP file and then deployed to NGINX servers with a bit of scripting/Ansible.

Could be automated better (drop ZIP to a share somewhere where it gets processed and deployed) but best of both worlds.

We’re developing https://bluocms.com/

- very hard to hack because we pre render all assets to a Cloudflare kv store

- public website and CMS editor are on different domains

Basically very hard to hack. Also as a bonus is much more reliable as it will only go down when Cloudflare does.

Static site with Jekyll?

  • Jekyll and other static site generators do not repo Wordpress any more than notepad repos MSWord

    In one, multiple users can login, edit WYSIWYG, preview, add images, etc, all from one UI. You can access it from any browser including smart phones and tablets.

    In the other, you get to instruct users on git, how to deal with merge conflicts, code review (two people can't easily work on a post like they can in wordpress), previews require a manual build, you need a local checkout and local build installation to do the build. There no WYSIWYG, adding images is a manual process of copying a file, figuring out the URL, etc... No smartphone/tablet support. etc....

    I switched by blog from wordpress install to a static site geneator because I got tired of having to keep it up to date but my posting dropped because of friction of posting went way up. I could no longer post from a phone. I couldn't easily add images. I had to build to preview. And had to submit via git commits and pushes. All of that meant what was easy became tedious.

  • Its sad software like citydesk died and did not evolve into multiuser applications.