Blog
Thank you so much for the great design work Clevyr!
There's a lot of features we have 90% done that we just couldn't figure out how to launch and test without getting the basic look and feel up first, so I don't want anyone thinking that we're done and heading off to Hawaii for a month. Basically we plan on updating concrete5.org at least once a week for the rest of the month until we've got everything just so.
Wow what a year 2010 has been!
We're super excited about 2011 and we thought it'd be nice to share some of our plans for the new year.
2010 Open Source CMS Market Share Report Lists concrete5 as Growing Fast
The Water and Stone annual Open Source CMS Market Share Report compares the players in the very crowded space of WCM and CMS with clear analytics. Last year concrete5 was not mentioned at all in the list, this year they are listed as one of just two systems to watch.
The report finds that concrete5 "showed the largest growth of any system in the Developer Support metric." The CMS also showed massive gains in search engine ranking and search interest, as well as a very popular project site. In summary, the report states:
"It has only been in the market in its present form since 2008. We feel the future looks bright for concrete5"
Read the full report here:
http://www.waterandstone.com/book/2010-open-source-cms-market-share-report
c5bundle.net is an independent group which is not affiliated with the core team behind concrete5 at all, and periodically undercuts the marketplace add-on price points dramatically.
We work with 3rd party developers who have approved add-ons in the marketplace and clump a bunch of software together into one big archive you can buy at an insane discount. (over 90% off!)
Check out this Developer Intro how-to we just added with the lead developer behind MojorMotor.
concrete5 is a content management system beloved by small businesses for its ease of use and stable flexibility. The CMS was originally designed to be a toolbox for web design firms providing custom design work. Over time the toolset has become so easy to use that clients are building their own basic sites with little to no technical know-how, and they're buying more and more prebuilt themes to make their websites look great.
On September 30, 2008, concrete5 version 1.0 was officially released. Since we were exhibiting at OSCON that year in August, we had a few release candidates and some beta versions available beforehand, but this was our first public, committed, upgrade-ready version, just in time for concrete5 to be named SourceForge's Project of the Month for October, 2008.
That was a great honor. I started thinking, though: how many people checked out concrete5 when it was PotM, decided it might not fit their needs, and never looked back? And how many users of version 4 have never seen some of the more humble roots of concrete5? It's with that in mind that I mark this two-year anniversary with a screenshot and feature retrospective, comparing version 5.0.0 with the about-to-be-released 5.4.1. We've come a long way.
Okay so we routinely hear from people that have setup concrete5 on some cloud based web server and find it slow. My answer is routinely, "Well of course, what would you expect out of something called ‘the cloud' speed?"
The cloud makes a lot of sense to me if you have a huge number of small computing tasks. Need to store a load of data? Sure. Want to convert a kaballion images from one format to another? Perfect solution. Even if you've got a simple webapp that you want to be able to replicate a million times some morning when you get Dugg okay, as long as the app is pretty light weight and you design it with this in mind.
Hey! Andrew again, and I'm going to recap the news.
This Week's News
- Launched some Add-ons:
- I released sone new how-to's:
- We talk about 1260.ca and Alpe! Winter
- We asked you to help us with more reviews at hotscripts.com
How we assign your karma raffle numbers
We have three databases one for each type of contribution (Promotion, Helping People, and Developing). For each Karma point a user has in a silo they get a number of tickets assigned to their name so we end up with 1,000,000 total tickets. Then to build random numbers from the data points in the TOPCON video.
The Winners, and What They Got
Watch the video to see who won what.
Hey! Andrew again, and I'm going to recap the news.