Changing the default...

Who would believe that there would be an open source CMS based on Microsoft's ASP.NET?

A CMS that can support any modern browser and that even allows editing with Microsoft Word.

One where designers can create accessible and valid xhtml with their markup left intact.

Where developers can integrate any .net based control right out of the box.

If someone tells you "won’t happen", then they have never used umbraco...

Editors love

  • Beautiful, user-friendly interface
  • Integrated WYSIWYG Editor
  • Support for editing in Microsoft Word
  • Versioned and scheduled publishing

Read about the rest of the features that makes umbraco enjoyable

Developers love

  • Full support for own .NET Controls
  • Documented API
  • Use any .NET Language like c# or VB.NET
  • Full source code available (open source)

Read about the rest of the features that makes umbraco enjoyable

Designers love

  • No limits to design
  • Super simple template engine
  • Full support for web standards
  • Full support for accessibility standards

Explore the visual diversity of sites running umbraco

Multilingual 1-1 sites - keeping features low

Thursday, July 03, 2008 by Niels Hartvig

When doing multi-lingual sites with umbraco, you often have each language as a root node. That's the recommended approach and how umbraco is designed, based on the assumption that most multi-lingual sites (95%+) don't share the same content structure. A site in a new language is often a site for a new market, which means different way of communicating and maybe even variants in the products/services you want to promote.

When we design the features of the umbraco core, we always design for the majority while making sure that the minority can extend. That way the core doesn't get bloated; the UI stays simple which is a benefit for the most which is how everything should be designed. Conventions over configuration.

Those few where umbraco seems like a perfect fit except a little detail can enjoy the richness of the umbraco extensibility – that umbraco is designed in an open way with great possibilities of customizing without modifying the core.

That’s what umbraco Certified Developer Torleik Ravn from the Danish company Kraftvaerk did for a client. They needed multi-lingual 1:1 sites and he wanted to use umbraco. Not problem due to the framework nature of umbraco and in the spirit of openness he wrote a great tutorial in the book section.

Hopefully the great work of Torleik will inspire others. Sharing your work and knowledge is a great way to contribute to the umbraco project and is as valuable as a strong, well-defined core.

UK Umbraco Meetup confirmed

Tuesday, July 01, 2008 by Warren Buckley

Hello all. To follow up from the last blog post that Niels done, the UK users in the forum have set a date and a venue for the UK Umbraco Meetup.

Julien Decaudin from SAS Design is kindly hosting the event for us, so here are the details.

UK Meetup

Date: Fri 18th July 08
Start: 10am
Venue: SAS Offices, London

A rough agenda for the day:

  • Look at the new features of V4
  • Give a demo of Umbraco to any people who are new to it
  • Show off/demo anything cool you have done with Umbraco
  • General networking
  • Apart from that go with the flow

If you are interested in attending please add yourself to the Upcoming Event page so we know you are attending, unfortunately Julien has limited space at his offices and we won't be able to take anymore than 15 this time around.
http://upcoming.yahoo.com/event/854544/

OK, what are you waiting for? Go and sign up!