Web site
Prototype GRASS site
- based on CMS Made Simple (here at FEM, we are running 10+ portals for two years)
Pages to be transferred from old to new Web site
HTML Site Map (incomplete): http://grass.osgeo.org/sitemap.html
HTML Site Map (complete): http://grass.osgeo.org/sitemap_full.html
- ...
Pages already transferred
- ...
Pages to be transferred from old website to wiki
- Documentation
- Tutorials
- Books
- News
- Screenshots
- Applications
- Support
- Community
- Mailing lists
- Commercial support
- Development
Pages to be modified before transfer from old to new Web site
- ...
Pages to be archived
- ...
Pages to be deleted
For sure, some old stuff is superfluous...:
- ...
Pages to be newly developed
Inspired by other sites, some new content must be developed:
- ...
- Terms of Use: http://www.unoosa.org/oosa/terms/index.html - some text to be added to this page
Leftovers
(a complete list of old pages to be allocated into above categories during the transformation process - are we able to automagically generate it?)
CMS Made Simple editing tricks
- Select editor to use in "My Preferences"
- Error "Smarty error: ... unknown tag - ...":
- You need to protect curly braces '{...}' with '<literal>{...}</literal>'
GRASS Web Site planning
The current GRASS web site appear a bit overloaded and unmodern (since it has been kindly handcrafted with vim since 1998, of course following some evolution from plain HTML to HTML/PHP with RSS integrated). The question is:
- go Content Management System (CMS)?
- or stick with static pages?
To keep in mind:
- traditionally low number of contributors (hey, this could be better with a CMS)
- mirror sites want to copy/clone the site without more efforts than using rsync (i.e., static copy)
- the new layout should be modern, fresh and attractive
Update 7/2010: grass.osgeo.org is now running on new hardware on Debian Lenny.
Nice sites
Here a list of sites which are looking nice:
reSt + Sphinx
- Geotools.org
- System: Sphinx
- Advantages:
- Page files can be maintained in SVN
- Disadvantages:
- No WYSIWYG editor
- I think the GeoTools site is about as fancy as you can get with it (not very).
CMS Made Simple
- CMS Made Simple
- System: CMS Made Simple
- Advantages:
- WYSIWYG editor
- Access control via roles
- Static mirroring seems to be possible via http
- Very light system, installed in a few minutes
- Disadvantages:
- Requires browser for editing
Drupal
- OSGeo Foundation
- System: Drupal
- Advantages:
- WYSIWYG editor
- Access control via roles
- Static mirroring seems to be possible via http (? check)
- Can be run within OSGeo's Drupal server
- Disadvantages:
- Requires browser for editing
- Rather heavy system, installation may be complex but OSGeo can provide it
- see prior attempt on the Web Migration to Drupal wiki page
- a command-line admin tool called Drush is available.
- "Drush is a command line shell and scripting interface for Drupal, a veritable Swiss Army knife designed to make life easier for those of us who spend some of our working hours hacking away at the command prompt."
- Geopublishing
- System: Drupal (? unsure)
- Advantages:
- see OSGeo above
- Disadvantages:
- see OSGeo above
PmWiki
- LyX
- System: PmWiki
- Advantages:
- Looks professional, it's very hard to tell that their front page is actually a wiki
- Does not make the homepage look like a personal blog (/node12345) or wiki site
- Wiki editing means low barrier to entry
- Lightweight (200kb) & snappy
- html→pmwiki converter: libhtml-wikiconverter-pmwiki-perl
- The LyX people took good notes on how to set it up (here) and are approachable.
- A good philosophy (more)
- Stored on disk in flat files so you can use unix command line power tools to bulk maintain pages.
- thus Mirrorable
- See lyx's www-* svn
- See lyx's RSS feeds
- Active, monthly/quarterly new releases for the last 5 years
- Translations status looks nice
- Disadvantages:
Wordpress
- this page is mostly a "It Works!" placeholder, but gives the idea.
Unknown
- unknown
- unknown
- Sakai
- It's obviously using one but I'm not sure which one it is
- (the page code contains "jQuery.extend(Drupal.settings...")
- Thunar
- It's obviously using one but I'm not sure which one it is.
- or handcrafted with vi? See last line in source code
New OSGeo Web site
- One proposed suggestion: http://svn.osgeo.org/osgeo/marketing/website/design/draft2a.jpg