• 0

Redesigning/Modernising Website ... which CMS?


Question

So I have a website with hundreds of static html pages all made years ago, and I need to get with the times. I want to make a new website from the ground up, and i'll just manually import the content to the new setup. So I'm thinking using a CMS is the best solution seeing as I'm too old to learn all the new tricks and coding standards etc. but the question is - which?

I want the website to be dynamic enough to be able to resize content depending on whether you are on a PC or a tablet or a phone. I like the look of Squarespace but it is the monthly fee that puts me off, I'd like a solution that is either free or 1-off payment. My website posts a lot of media of different types, articles with images or embedded youtube videos, as well as having a shop (though I will likely keep the shop I have and link to it externally as it would be a lot of work starting the shop again)

Can anyone offer any advice to someone who has been out of the game for a long time?

Thanks!

17 answers to this question

Recommended Posts

  • 0

Wordpress or Drupal. Depends on how you're organizing the content. Out of the box, I think it's a bit easier to use Views to get some relatively complex pages set up with results using Drupal, but if it's just a homepage->content->other content->other content sort of site, Wordpress is easier to use overall.

As for the responsive part, that comes down to the theme, and pretty much all CMSs have some responsive theme at this point. If not, taking a base Wordpress / Drupal theme and applying something like Bootstrap to it is pretty easy.

  • 0

Wordpress. That will probably be one the easiest for you to get to grips with.

Has great support and 1000s of existing free themes you could use for your new site.

It also has a tonne of plugins which may help you.

Years ago it was only really recommended as a blogging platform but recent years it is becoming a nice tidy little CMS.

I've not tried Fork so i can't really say much about it. The only reason i recommend Wordpress is because of the large community it has and great documentation.

  • 0

I have a quick look at fork and it didn't seem to resize too well, as opposed to squarespace which is very intelligent with resizing, though not sure if there are settings you can tweak to make it so...

While I am a bit of a noob when it comes to CMS, please understand the website gets a fair amount of traffic and currently looks good in the sense that I spent about $2000 on a custom build 6 years ago that still looks attractive today, just isn't very web2.0 so all the static pages are a pain in the backside when it comes to adding new content. A lot of the CMS stuff i've seen looks very, very plain/simple. There is some pretty decent templates for joomla, is that still being supported/updated?

The main content is guitar lessons, and would be good to have some method of sorting through them all, like by adding tags to each one or something. Not sure if I'm delving too far into database territory though?

  • 0

Another vote for Wordpress, you could easily do what you want and achieve a great result.

I did exactly what your doing with or companies old website, it was just a mess of static HTML pages. Now we have a modern looking Wordpress design we did in-house, with a CMS various people can log in to and post new content. What's more is we have a SEO plugin that helps the people writing the content to ensure its as search friendly as possible.

Wordpress is probably the most easy CMS to work with, and of course you can tag all your posts and pages, create links to view content with certain tags, or in categories. If you can find a theme you like, or get someone to maybe port your existing design i think it would work well for you.

  • 0

Hmm a quick peek and wordpress looks OK, maybe that will do.. I always thought the general consensus was that wordpress is for personal websites/blogs/idiots haha is that not the case? (I appreciate the irony because i probably fall into the idiot category anyway in asking this)

  • 0

Its very modular, you can find addons for all kinds of content, videos, galleries, articles, reviews, etc.. Not sure whether it resizes the content formatted for phone/tablet by default but there will probably be an addon for it if it doesn't.

  • 0

Wordpress, always Wordpress :)

Its used for personal sites because its great, flexible and easy to use. They aren't the only people that use it though.

Here are some well known users and some examples of how flexible it is.

http://www.bbcamerica.com/

http://blog.gettyimages.com/

http://a-ha.com/

http://usainbolt.com/

They are all wordpress

  • 0

Hmm a quick peek and wordpress looks OK, maybe that will do.. I always thought the general consensus was that wordpress is for personal websites/blogs/idiots haha is that not the case? (I appreciate the irony because i probably fall into the idiot category anyway in asking this)

Nope. It's used for a lot of big sites out there and it can look and feel however you want it too.

The back end is great too. I used to develop in WordPress, Drupal and Joomla but my clients always loved WP the best so i dropped Joomla and Drupal completely. Haven't looked back.

Just going through here http://wordpress.org/showcase/ makes you realize how flexible it can be.

  • 0

As for the responsive part, that comes down to the theme, and pretty much all CMSs have some responsive theme at this point. If not, taking a base Wordpress / Drupal theme and applying something like Bootstrap to it is pretty easy.

Thanks for that Bootstrap, very cool.

  • 0

Hmm a quick peek and wordpress looks OK, maybe that will do.. I always thought the general consensus was that wordpress is for personal websites/blogs/idiots haha is that not the case? (I appreciate the irony because i probably fall into the idiot category anyway in asking this)

I think the main complaint with Wordpress these days is that it's complete overkill for most personal websites/blogs/idiots :laugh:

A CMS is a CMS, you can do whatever you want with it. Wordpress' default workflow happens to be very refined for blog-type sites, but you can customize it for anything. If content is your main focus (and, if you have a stack of static pages currently, it is), Wordpress works out best. I think some of the other CMSs are better if you're dealing with primarily displaying / sorting / adding data from a database.

Also, if you've used Wordpress in the past, it has improved considerably since 3.0 was released. My only real gripe is that they add/depreciate features on a rolling basis, so if you're searching around for solutions, just verify with the Wordpress codex that it's the correct way to currently do something.

  • 0

I think the main complaint with Wordpress these days is that it's complete overkill for most personal websites/blogs/idiots :laugh:

Spot on.

The amount of time clients come to me stating they want 'WordPress' but have no idea what it is, what it does or don't really even need a CMS at all.

I had one client wanting a holding page with a logo, contact link and Twitter feed... oh and it had to be running on WordPress :s

  • 0

Haha thanks guys, looks like we have a winner! And that bootstrap thing looks useful. I think I was actually thinking of Frontpage for some reason, as being the crappy option, for some reason got it muddled up with wordpress which i have obviously never actually seen properly until now. Thanks again for the help!

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • I must admit, this is probably the only game at the moment where I can see that $80 price point being ok. The issue will be when other developers think they can get away with it with half of the work.
    • Google Wallet expands TSA PreCheck Touchless ID access to more travellers by Fiza Ali Google has announced that Google Wallet is becoming the first digital wallet to integrate with TSA PreCheck Touchless ID. It is a programme that lets eligible travellers move through participating airport security checkpoints using facial recognition instead of showing a physical ID or boarding pass. While the TSA PreCheck Touchless ID programme has been available for some time, using it hasn't always been straightforward. The programme currently operates at 65 airports across the US, but participation has largely depended on flying with a limited number of airlines. Travellers also had to upload passport information separately through participating carriers. Now, the tech giant's new integration is designed to remove some of those extra steps. With the update rolling out in the coming weeks, travellers with TSA PreCheck membership will be able to enrol in Touchless ID through Google Wallet and use the service with any of the 100 airlines participating in the programme. Rather than repeatedly submitting identification details, users can store a digital ID in Google Wallet and use it to streamline future trips. Setting up the feature is relatively straightforward as well. The process starts with users creating a digital ID in Google Wallet using their passport information. After checking in for a flight and saving a boarding pass to the app, eligible travellers will see a "Get started" option that directs them to the TSA enrolment process. Once users choose to share their ID pass and boarding pass information with the TSA for a specific trip, the agency will verify the enrolment. If approved, a TSA PreCheck Touchless ID indicator will appear on the boarding pass stored in Google Wallet, signalling that the traveller can use designated express Touchless ID lanes at participating airports. As privacy and security are likely to be key considerations for many travellers, Google says users must explicitly opt in before any information is shared with the TSA, and authentication is required through a device PIN, pattern, or biometric verification. The company also notes that digital IDs stored in Google Wallet remain encrypted and are kept on the user's device. For frequent flyers who already use TSA PreCheck, the new integration could remove a few more steps from the airport security process, making travel slightly faster and a little less cumbersome.
    • Even though MS had to sunset the Windows Subsystem for Android, you can apparently use BlueStacks to run Android in Windows now. I haven't tested this yet, so if anyone has any feedback, I'd love to hear it.
    • Or, if you want to teach your kids how to hallucinate and lie like AI slop, introduce them to a Crazy MAGA Grandpa on LSD.
    • Ventoy 1.1.14 by Razvan Serea Ventoy is an open source tool to create bootable USB drive for ISO/WIM/IMG/VHD(x)/EFI files. With Ventoy, you don't need to format the disk over and over, you just need to copy the ISO/WIM/IMG/VHD(x)EFI files to the USB drive and boot them directly. You can copy many files at a time and ventoy will give you a boot menu to select them. Both Legacy BIOS and UEFI are supported in the same way. Most type of OS supported (Windows/WinPE/Linux/Unix/Vmware/Xen...) Ventoy features: 100% open source Simple to use Fast (limited only by the speed of copying iso file) Directly boot from ISO/WIM/IMG/VHD(x)/EFI file, no extraction needed Legacy + UEFI supported in the same way UEFI Secure Boot supported (since 1.0.07+) Persistence supported (since 1.0.11+) MBR and GPT partition style supported (1.0.15+) WIM files boot supported (Legacy + UEFI) (1.0.12+) IMG files boot supported (Legacy + UEFI) (1.0.19+) Auto installation supported (1.0.09+) File injection supported (1.0.16+) ISO files larger than 4GB supported Native boot menu style for Legacy & UEFI Most type of OS supported(Windows/WinPE/Linux/Unix/Vmware/Xen...), 550+ iso files tested Not only boot but also complete installation process ISO files can be listed in List mode/TreeView mode Linux vDisk boot supported (vdi/vhd/raw) "Ventoy Compatible" concept Plugin Framework Menu Alias/Menu Style/Customized Menu supported USB drive write-protected support USB normal use unaffected Data nondestructive during version upgrade No need to update Ventoy when a new distro is released Ventoy 1.1.14 changelog: Update secure boot shim file to solve the UEFI CA 2023 issue. The new release use a new CA, so you need to enroll the new key for the first boot time. VentoyPlugson update synchronously. Global control plugin add a VTOY_SECURE_BOOT_POLICY option. Notes Download: Ventoy 1.1.14 | 15.9 MB (Open Source) Download: Ventoy Live CD | 187.0 MB Link: Ventoy Home Page | Project Page @GitHub | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
  • Recent Achievements

    • Dedicated
      Scoobystu earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • First Post
      Tom Schmidt earned a badge
      First Post
    • One Month Later
      D0nn13 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Rookie
      +ChiefOfNeo went up a rank
      Rookie
    • One Year In
      Tom Schmidt earned a badge
      One Year In
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      457
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      177
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      123
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      83
    5. 5
      Xenon
      76
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!