Article / Data warehouse cms software
Stephen Partington
cryptworks at gmail.com
Tue May 26 15:55:33 MST 2015
Well if you are looking to store a digital library you can consider
something like D-Space
http://www.dspace.org/
It is a bit finicky to set up but it does work on revision management and
actually managing and maintaining your data. do some reading before you
decide to try it. it is not for the feint of heart.
On Tue, May 26, 2015 at 12:48 PM, Mark Phillips <mark at phillipsmarketing.biz>
wrote:
> Nathan,
>
> I am in the same boat. I have lots of scaned documents (pdfs, tiffs,
> jpegs, etc.) to tag and make searchable. I tried a wiki and did not have
> much luck. I stumbled upon mayan edms (http://www.mayan-edms.com/) and it
> looks pretty good. It is a django based open source project for storing,
> tagging, and searching documents such as I have. It also does ocr as
> documents are imported, so the searches cover both meta tags and document
> content. It keeps a modification history for all documents. It can use
> SQLite, MySql, postgress, etc. as the db. Django is a pretty simple
> framework to understand. The only downside is that the community support is
> sparse and the docs are also sparse. I am just now looking at the code to
> see how well it is documented.
>
> Most of the archival software I looked at are Java based, and I prefer
> Python because for this small project it uses less resources.
>
> Let me know if you plan to use it. Perhaps we could help each other
> understand the project.
>
> Mark
>
> On Tue, May 26, 2015 at 11:19 AM, Stephen Partington <cryptworks at gmail.com
> > wrote:
>
>> If you know wordpress i would stick with it. additionally there are
>> plugins for wiki as well.
>>
>> https://wordpress.org/plugins/search.php?q=wiki
>>
>> and knowledge base functionality. (might have to investigate these for my
>> own use)
>>
>> https://wordpress.org/plugins/search.php?type=term&q=knowledgebase
>>
>> On Tue, May 26, 2015 at 10:00 AM, Matt Graham <mhgraham at crow202.org>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> On 2015-05-25 21:08, Nathan England wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> I have a project to store a lot of data. Articles, stories, and
>>>>> encyclopedia type stuff. My first thought was to use a wiki
>>>>> (wikimedia) as it makes the contents easily searchable, but what about
>>>>> other cms systems like wordpress?
>>>>>
>>>>
>>> Wordpress is generally more "centralized", as it puts the most recent
>>> blog posts up on the main page. Whether you'd use it or a wiki really
>>> depends on what the users will be doing since there are things wikis do
>>> better than wordpress. The default wordpress search seems to work OK.
>>> Writing internal links using wordpress is more difficult than doing that in
>>> a wiki.
>>>
>>> I am not familiar with wikimedia and its maintenance requirements.
>>>> I can say that WordPress does not require a lot of attention.
>>>>
>>>
>>> This depends greatly on the users. Setting up a wiki and running it is
>>> not really difficult or resource-consuming if you don't have many users and
>>> none of them are actively trying to destroy the site. If you have a bunch
>>> of active users, you're going to need moderators and handle the inevitable
>>> flame wars. They come out with a new version of wordpress every couple of
>>> months, and updating usually doesn't break anything or take a lot of time.
>>> If you have comments enabled on wordpress, you will need to periodically
>>> get rid of the spam since there are many people out there comment-spamming
>>> wordpress sites.
>>>
>>> If you are doing something very heavy duty Drupal might be a
>>>> candidate.
>>>>
>>>
>>> I'd say "avoid drupal unless you know you need it" but that's just MHO.
>>>
>>> --
>>> Crow202 Blog: http://crow202.org/wordpress
>>> There is no Darkness in Eternity
>>> But only Light too dim for us to see.
>>>
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>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> A mouse trap, placed on top of your alarm clock, will prevent you from
>> rolling over and going back to sleep after you hit the snooze button.
>>
>> Stephen
>>
>>
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>
>
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--
A mouse trap, placed on top of your alarm clock, will prevent you from
rolling over and going back to sleep after you hit the snooze button.
Stephen
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