How to migrate qt project part to qtwin and who can do what

Chris January chris at atomice.net
Thu Mar 31 12:54:12 CEST 2005


Steven Boothe wrote:
> Dave Brondsema wrote:
> 
>> Steven Boothe wrote:
>>
>>> I looked at both phpwcms and wordpress yesterday, and of those two I
>>> liked wordpress better. But still these two didn't appear to have the
>>> ease of registering to create content that a wiki would have. So I've
>>> been looking into the various wiki's and subsequently what kind of
>>> spam-abatement measures exist to keep them from getting messed up. So
>>> far I've installed mediawiki and wikkitikkitavi(?!). The latter which
>>> comes with a CAPCHA system...
>>>
>>> I'll try to upload a couple of these tonight for review and comment.
>>>
>>
>> Don't let my wiki spam warnings keep you from exploring it too much.
>> Different wiki systems will get attacked differently and if the rate is
>> low enough then reverting the pages is managable.
> 
> 
> Well I've got three default installs up and running barebones without 
> having added any content yet.
> 
> If you want to take a look at them they are:
> 
> http://qtwin.sourceforge.net/wikimedia
> 
> http://qtwin.sourceforge.net/wikitavi/
> 
> http://qtwin.sourceforge.net/wordpress/
> 
> Management and admin for these can be explored over at:
> http://www.opensourcecms.com/
> 
> I guess I'm kind of leaning toward the wikimedia. What do you all think? 
> It turns out this is the same wiki someone set up for Scribus, so if you 
> want to get an idea of how it is being used you could check out:
> http://wiki.scribus.net
> 
> OK, I really need to play with our little 11 month old girl now. :)

What is the rationale for using a Wiki for the Qt/Win website?
phpWebSite (phpwebsite.appstate.edu) is quite nice if all you want is a CMS.

Chris


More information about the kde-cygwin mailing list