[nycphp-talk] PHP Project Groups
Donald J. Organ IV
dorgan at optonline.net
Wed Nov 20 04:03:58 EST 2002
Actually I would be interested in doing some page creation or anything, i
would just like my name metioned.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jaz-Michael King" <JMKing at ipro.org>
To: "NYPHP Talk" <talk at nyphp.org>
Sent: Tuesday, November 19, 2002 10:30 AM
Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] PHP Project Groups
> I've been using sitellite for content management, it's not as messy as
nukes and it is a lot less heavy handed with the layout, I have some sites
running no tables - all CSS layout using sitellite. have a look at it for
the nyphp site, it's at simian.ca
>
> it allows users to edit pages and/or news and/or any thing you allow.
>
> j
>
> >>> hans at nyphp.org 11/19/02 09:56AM >>>
>
> Donald,
>
> --- "Donald J. Organ IV" <dorgan at optonline.net> wrote:
> > What type of projects are we talking about? I would like to get
involved
> > in something that interests me.
>
> Well I'm assuming you'd be most interested in pure PHP coding (which is a
> shame, because there's a couple web pages, large forms, and a Word
document
> to work on - any takers? :)
>
> It pretty much falls into this:
>
> -- The NYPHP mailing list is written inhouse and is composed entirely of a
> CLI PHP script. While it's worked fairly well, there has been problems
with
> it and it needs a revision, plus new features, including:
> -- Vast performance improvements (50% complete - know sendmail/qmail?)
> -- MIME parsing and attachment processing
> (95% complete, but testing need)
> -- Foolproof threading, regardless of email client, user, etc.
> (75% complete)
> -- Additional bells-and-whistles, including tip and URL scraping and
> compilation, building a "FAQ-ON-DEMAND" of sorts.
> (5% complete, if that)
> -- Full integration of all this with a web based forum.
> (not very difficult, but the above 3 need to be in production first)
>
> The user authentication/authorization for all this is already written as a
> RPC, and would just need be properly hooked into the above.
>
> -- Redesign of NYPHP.org, from a layout/aesthetic standpoint.
> (25% complete)
> -- Then, improved CMS system, to allow maintenance of articles, news, etc.
> (10%-15% complete)
> (Yeah, I know the Nukes do some of this, but it wouldn't be worth dropping
> boilerplate software into such a dynamic/different environment, unless you
> know a Nuke so well as to make a nice hack).
>
> If you, and/or others, find something interesting, please let me know. I
> might be leaving something out, but the above is the main development push
> for NYPHP.org, and any other recommendations/projets are welcome, as we
have
> the system resources to support them (just not the time to write them).
>
> Best,
>
>
> =====
> Hans Zaunere
> New York PHP
> http://nyphp.org
> hans at nyphp.org
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> --- Unsubscribe at http://nyphp.org/list/ ---
>
>
>
More information about the talk
mailing list