Eribium, a content managing system built with rails has been released completely free under the MIT License. http://www.eribium.org/eribium/?p=21 You can find a demo here: http://alexmaccaw.no-ip.info:3000/admin (user and pass are ''demo''). Some of the features include: * Completely Unobtrusive Javascript. * Liquid View, works with pretty much any screen resolution. * Ajax ?quick? editing. * File Management and multiple zip download. * Information Overlay. * Tags & Tag Clouds. * Theme system, built on Typo?s (so you can use the same templates). * RSS and Atom Syndication. * User Management. * Supports Markdown (Bluecloth) and Textile (Redcloth). * Web Stats and Hit Counter. * Ajax Previews & Instant page and tag Search. * Search. * Google Sitemap generation. * View/Download Logs. * Api * Pdf Generation * Export into yalm, xml and excel. Inport into yalm. * Spell Checker -- Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/.
Greg Freemyer
2006-Apr-01 16:34 UTC
[Rails] Ruby on Rails CMS released. Web 2.0, Ajax, etc
Looks like a great package. I won''t have time to try until this week, but what user authentication/role management solution does it use? I''m currently using the login engine, but I need to implement roles and the below looks like a good reason for me to select a role management solution. Greg On 4/1/06, Alex <maccman@gmail.com> wrote:> Eribium, a content managing system built with rails has been released > completely free under the MIT License. > http://www.eribium.org/eribium/?p=21 > > You can find a demo here: http://alexmaccaw.no-ip.info:3000/admin > (user and pass are ''demo''). > > Some of the features include: > * Completely Unobtrusive Javascript. > * Liquid View, works with pretty much any screen resolution. > * Ajax ''quick'' editing. > * File Management and multiple zip download. > * Information Overlay. > * Tags & Tag Clouds. > * Theme system, built on Typo''s (so you can use the same templates). > * RSS and Atom Syndication. > * User Management. > * Supports Markdown (Bluecloth) and Textile (Redcloth). > * Web Stats and Hit Counter. > * Ajax Previews & Instant page and tag Search. > * Search. > * Google Sitemap generation. > * View/Download Logs. > * Api > * Pdf Generation > * Export into yalm, xml and excel. Inport into yalm. > * Spell Checker > > -- > Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/. > _______________________________________________ > Rails mailing list > Rails@lists.rubyonrails.org > http://lists.rubyonrails.org/mailman/listinfo/rails >-- Greg Freemyer The Norcross Group Forensics for the 21st Century
Greg Freemyer wrote:> Looks like a great package. > > I won''t have time to try until this week, but what user > authentication/role management solution does it use? > > I''m currently using the login engine, but I need to implement roles > and the below looks like a good reason for me to select a role > management solution. > > GregIt''s almost straight out of Agile Web Development with Rails by the Pragmatic Programmers and at the moment doesn''t support roles. However I''m sure you could easily implement this if you need it. I would also add that it comes with an API so you can add/delete/update users that way. -- Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/.
Pretty snazzy... nice feature list too. Need to play with it some more, but after a quick perusal I have one question. The links to added pages appear to accumulate as boxes across the top of the content... Are they supposed to overlap? Seems kind of weird. One of them also splits on a line-break which is definitely weird. I''m on windows 2k with firefox 1.5. I''ll attach a screenshot. b Alex wrote:> Eribium, a content managing system built with rails has been released > completely free under the MIT License. > http://www.eribium.org/eribium/?p=21 > > You can find a demo here: http://alexmaccaw.no-ip.info:3000/admin > (user and pass are ''demo''). > > Some of the features include: > * Completely Unobtrusive Javascript. > * Liquid View, works with pretty much any screen resolution. > * Ajax ?quick? editing. > * File Management and multiple zip download. > * Information Overlay. > * Tags & Tag Clouds. > * Theme system, built on Typo?s (so you can use the same templates). > * RSS and Atom Syndication. > * User Management. > * Supports Markdown (Bluecloth) and Textile (Redcloth). > * Web Stats and Hit Counter. > * Ajax Previews & Instant page and tag Search. > * Search. > * Google Sitemap generation. > * View/Download Logs. > * Api > * Pdf Generation > * Export into yalm, xml and excel. Inport into yalm. > * Spell Checker >-------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: eribiumshot.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 28551 bytes Desc: not available Url : http://wrath.rubyonrails.org/pipermail/rails/attachments/20060401/3144ef18/eribiumshot-0001.jpg
Jon Gretar Borgthorsson
2006-Apr-01 18:57 UTC
[Rails] Ruby on Rails CMS released. Web 2.0, Ajax, etc
I believe that this is the theme''s fault. This CMS uses same themes as typo and someone included a theme that just doesn''t fit. On 4/1/06, Ben Munat <bent@munat.com> wrote:> Pretty snazzy... nice feature list too. Need to play with it some more, but after a quick > perusal I have one question. > > The links to added pages appear to accumulate as boxes across the top of the content... > Are they supposed to overlap? Seems kind of weird. One of them also splits on a line-break > which is definitely weird. I''m on windows 2k with firefox 1.5. I''ll attach a screenshot. > > b > > > Alex wrote: > > Eribium, a content managing system built with rails has been released > > completely free under the MIT License. > > http://www.eribium.org/eribium/?p=21 > > > > You can find a demo here: http://alexmaccaw.no-ip.info:3000/admin > > (user and pass are ''demo''). > > > > Some of the features include: > > * Completely Unobtrusive Javascript. > > * Liquid View, works with pretty much any screen resolution. > > * Ajax ''quick'' editing. > > * File Management and multiple zip download. > > * Information Overlay. > > * Tags & Tag Clouds. > > * Theme system, built on Typo''s (so you can use the same templates). > > * RSS and Atom Syndication. > > * User Management. > > * Supports Markdown (Bluecloth) and Textile (Redcloth). > > * Web Stats and Hit Counter. > > * Ajax Previews & Instant page and tag Search. > > * Search. > > * Google Sitemap generation. > > * View/Download Logs. > > * Api > > * Pdf Generation > > * Export into yalm, xml and excel. Inport into yalm. > > * Spell Checker > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Rails mailing list > Rails@lists.rubyonrails.org > http://lists.rubyonrails.org/mailman/listinfo/rails > > > >-- -------------- Jon Gretar Borgthorsson http://www.jongretar.net/
Ben Munat wrote:> Pretty snazzy... nice feature list too. Need to play with it some more, > but after a quick > perusal I have one question. > > The links to added pages appear to accumulate as boxes across the top of > the content... > Are they supposed to overlap? Seems kind of weird. One of them also > splits on a line-break > which is definitely weird. I''m on windows 2k with firefox 1.5. I''ll > attach a screenshot.Yes, that''s a limitation of the theme. There are other''s under ''presentation'' that I''ve included that don''t do that. Alex -- Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/.
Very nice. Hope this progresses to the stability levels and feature set of Drupal or the like. Any plan to implement multilingual support soon? I''d also add that simple role management would be a plus under many circumstances. Great work however! On 4/1/06, Alex <maccman@gmail.com> wrote:> Eribium, a content managing system built with rails has been released > completely free under the MIT License. > http://www.eribium.org/eribium/?p=21
Alexander Antonakakis
2006-Apr-02 06:50 UTC
[Rails] Re: Ruby on Rails CMS released. Web 2.0, Ajax, etc
Alex wrote:> Eribium, a content managing system built with rails has been released > completely free under the MIT License. > http://www.eribium.org/eribium/?p=21 > > You can find a demo here: http://alexmaccaw.no-ip.info:3000/admin > (user and pass are ''demo'').The feature lest looks nice. I can''t reach the url''s though to check the application -- Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/.
> The feature lest looks nice. I can''t reach the url''s though to check the > applicationYes, the demo was down last night as someone changed the default username and password. I''ve fixed that and disabled changing it so the demo (http://alexmaccaw.no-ip.info:3000/admin) should work now with user ''demo'' and password ''demo''. It would be great to add multilingual support though I''d need a few volunteers first to do some translating. Thanks -- Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/.
Jorge Sousa
2006-Apr-02 11:25 UTC
[Rails] Re: Ruby on Rails CMS released. Web 2.0, Ajax, etc
I can help with a translation to Portuguese (pt_PT). On 4/2/06, Alex <maccman@gmail.com> wrote:> > > The feature lest looks nice. I can''t reach the url''s though to check the > > application > > Yes, the demo was down last night as someone changed the default > username and password. I''ve fixed that and disabled changing it so the > demo (http://alexmaccaw.no-ip.info:3000/admin) should work now with user > ''demo'' and password ''demo''. It would be great to add multilingual > support though I''d need a few volunteers first to do some translating. > Thanks > > -- > Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/. > _______________________________________________ > Rails mailing list > Rails@lists.rubyonrails.org > http://lists.rubyonrails.org/mailman/listinfo/rails >-- ------------------------------- Jorge Sousa
Jon Gretar Borgthorsson
2006-Apr-02 13:16 UTC
[Rails] Re: Ruby on Rails CMS released. Web 2.0, Ajax, etc
And I''ll be happy to whip it into Icelandic. Just save my email address and contact me when you are ready. I also would reccomend that you would have set up a SVN service at that point. Other than that. Great CMS. There really is a need for CMS that is simple and to the point. On 4/2/06, Jorge Sousa <jhsousa@gmail.com> wrote:> I can help with a translation to Portuguese (pt_PT). > > > On 4/2/06, Alex <maccman@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > The feature lest looks nice. I can''t reach the url''s though to check the > > > application > > > > Yes, the demo was down last night as someone changed the default > > username and password. I''ve fixed that and disabled changing it so the > > demo (http://alexmaccaw.no-ip.info:3000/admin) should work now with user > > ''demo'' and password ''demo''. It would be great to add multilingual > > support though I''d need a few volunteers first to do some translating. > > Thanks > > > > -- > > Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/. > > _______________________________________________ > > Rails mailing list > > Rails@lists.rubyonrails.org > > http://lists.rubyonrails.org/mailman/listinfo/rails > > > > > -- > ------------------------------- > Jorge Sousa > _______________________________________________ > Rails mailing list > Rails@lists.rubyonrails.org > http://lists.rubyonrails.org/mailman/listinfo/rails >-- -------------- Jon Gretar Borgthorsson http://www.jongretar.net/
Luigi Rizzo
2006-Apr-02 14:39 UTC
[Rails] Re: Ruby on Rails CMS released. Web 2.0, Ajax, etc
Hello Alex, I can help with translating into Italian. My point though was about multilingual support for content, rather than for the user interface (which, by the way, would also be an essential addition to the system). I''m thinking of how setting up a multi-lingual web site where the author adds the site content in multiple languages and the menu system pulls-up the proper page after the user had selected the site default language (maybe at the site home page). I''m fairly a rails newbie but I''m willing to do some testing or discussing requirements with you for such a multilingual structure. On 4/2/06, Alex <maccman@gmail.com> wrote:> ''demo'' and password ''demo''. It would be great to add multilingual > support though I''d need a few volunteers first to do some translating.
Jon Gretar Borgthorsson
2006-Apr-02 15:57 UTC
[Rails] Re: Ruby on Rails CMS released. Web 2.0, Ajax, etc
I guess the multilingual page thing could be achieved with relative ease. Just requires a minor change in the database. A drop down language selection in the page editor and a little cookie. On 4/2/06, Luigi Rizzo <luigi.rizzo@gmail.com> wrote:> Hello Alex, I can help with translating into Italian. > > My point though was about multilingual support for content, rather > than for the user interface (which, by the way, would also be an > essential addition to the system). I''m thinking of how setting up a > multi-lingual web site where the author adds the site content in > multiple languages and the menu system pulls-up the proper page after > the user had selected the site default language (maybe at the site > home page). > > I''m fairly a rails newbie but I''m willing to do some testing or > discussing requirements with you for such a multilingual structure. > > On 4/2/06, Alex <maccman@gmail.com> wrote: > > ''demo'' and password ''demo''. It would be great to add multilingual > > support though I''d need a few volunteers first to do some translating. > _______________________________________________ > Rails mailing list > Rails@lists.rubyonrails.org > http://lists.rubyonrails.org/mailman/listinfo/rails >-- -------------- Jon Gretar Borgthorsson http://www.jongretar.net/
Luigi Rizzo
2006-Apr-03 14:01 UTC
[Rails] Re: Ruby on Rails CMS released. Web 2.0, Ajax, etc
Maybe another approach could be to use the "globalize" plugin. On 4/2/06, Jon Gretar Borgthorsson <jon.borgthorsson@gmail.com> wrote:> I guess the multilingual page thing could be achieved with relative > ease. Just requires a minor change in the database. A drop down > language selection in the page editor and a little cookie.
luigi rizzo wrote:> Maybe another approach could be to use the "globalize" plugin.I''ve been trying to integrate the Globalize plugin into Eribium but finding it''s incompatible with the "Theme Support" plugin. I wanted to clarify what exactly do people want in terms of Multilingual support for Eribium which is obviously is quite important, (looking at my stats about half of users come from the USA, the other half from all over the place). Do people want to translate the whole app, or would they rather have multilingual support in creating new pages, create one page for one language, and another for another language? On other news I''ve finished the graphs for the stats, a drag and drop menu manager and am now starting to look at Role Support. -- Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/.
Luigi Rizzo
2006-Apr-09 18:03 UTC
[Rails] Re: Re: Ruby on Rails CMS released. Web 2.0, Ajax, etc
Hello Alex. In my humble opinion ... User-side. Let''s take as an example the web site of an international organization. The web site users will arrive from several countries. As soon as they reach the web site they are welcomed with a sort of "international" page where the users can find a selector (a link, a flag, etc.) for their own language. The users click on the language selector and the web site pages characterized by the selected language are pulled out the database and shown to the user. Obviously also the menu system and the other non-page components should also be shown to the user in the proper language (the user-selected one). Admin-side. When the admin enters a page content, he specifies the language of the page too, and the page with the language attribute is saved to the database. If a second or third language version of the saved page is required (because the web site supports for example two or three languages), the site admin will enter a second and a third version, in the proper language, of the same original content of the page. The same is true for the menu system and other non-page components of the site. The administrative interface language can be chosen by the site admin (although I think this is optional and low priority, because we can assume as first cut that the admin can understand and work let''s say in English). In my opinion a site multilanguage capability is a key success factor because the Internet is "multilingual" (universal, international) in its nature, and visitors of a web site, as you have experienced, may come from everywhere and should be served, if deemed important (for example for marketing reasons), in their native language. Regards, On 4/9/06, Alex <maccman@gmail.com> wrote:> place). Do people want to translate the whole app, or would they rather > have multilingual support in creating new pages, create one page for one > language, and another for another language?