Article & Journal Resources: Ideas for a Geek Ranch Web Site

Article & Journal Resources

Ideas for a Geek Ranch Web Site

December 9th, 2007 by Phil Hughes in

In my last article I introduced the idea of the Geek Ranch. The facility will be more than just a place for geeks to write code. We are going to need a web site to promote the facility to the various audiences. All the pieces of that web site are not yet determined but we do have an initial features list.

Here it is:

* A basic "about the facility" part with sub-parts for each facet
of the facility. That means Geek Cottages will be in a different page
or section than Eco-Tourism, the conference center or the restaurant.
* Weather is a selling point. We want to offer current and
historical weather information.
* Let's toss in a web cam or two. While a sunny day with coffee
maturing in December isn't news here, it will certainly help someone
in Minnesota decide why they would rather be here.
* A section about the farm. The farm project will be
special and we want to help people understand what we are doing.
Note that the people that need to understand are not just potential
customers—locals need to get the picture as well.
* A reservation system. This might start out as a form that gets
emailed to us but needs to evolve into an on-line system to place
reservations and handle credit card processing.
* Some sort of photo gallery. This is still being thought about
but, for example, it would be nice to have photos of each type of
plant growing on the property and a description. I mean, some of you
probably can't tell your nancite from your jocote.
* Last but not least, the site need to be at least bi-lingual.

While we could conceivably write this all from scratch, we are smarter
than that. We have learned that there are lots of systems available to
produce web sites. Concentrating on the look and the content is where
we need to focus. That said, here are three possible approaches--each
with pluses and minuses. There are, of course, many more.

Karrigell is a Python-based web framework. It is
minimalist which means it does less than you might want but, on the
other hand, it is very easy to understand. The
href="http://karrigell.sourceforge.net/" target="_blank">
Sourceforge page will tell you the story.

I used Karrigell to write a radio station controller. I did that
project over three years ago. It was easy to implement and while what
I built was only a prototype, it did what I needed. As the radio
station is designed to be a Linux box with nothing but flash memory, a
wireless link and a transmitter all running off a battery and solar
panel), minimalist was important. Karrigell is compact, includes its
own web server and requires little in the way of a high-performance
system to get the job done.

The downside is that Karrigell is not a Content Management System
(CMS). While it offers a lot of tools to put together your site, you
will find yourself writing Python to get your job done. It is
a step up from writing in PHP from scratch but you will still have a
lot of work to do if you need to present a lot of dynamic content.

If, however, your site is mostly static with a few "intelligent"
pages, Karrigell might be the perfect fit. Static content can be served
directly so you only need use its magic when the page has funny stuff
to do.

Drupal has been "the answer" for sites that require a CMS for
us for years. While it is big it is efficient and modular. There is a
module to do most of the things you want and it is easy enough to
either embed PHP into a block or article or write a new module if you
have something special to do. You can find more on the Drupal site.

There are also many Drupal themes that you can use or modify a bit to
make the site look like what you want. With the advent of CSS and the
ability in most systems (including Karrigell) to include pieces to
make up a page, a pre-packaged theme is a bit less important. If,
however, you want to get on with writing content and firm up your
presentation later, Drupal is a very good place to start.

The one reservation I have is the multi-language aspects of Drupal.
The ability to have the site information--that is, all the stuff
Drupal supplies such as menus--appear in a user's choice of languages
seems to work great. Handling multi-language content, however, seems
to be less than perfect. Specifically, the internationalization module
is a bit cumbersome to use and has an array of outstanding bugs. I am
hoping that these issues get cleared up in Drupal 6.

Joomla is probably the closest competition to Drupal as far as
a CMS. Joomla grew out of Mambo. A great feature for dealing with multiple languages is a module called
JoomFish. The name clearly came from combining Joomla and Babelfish.
While it is a multi-language module it is not an automatic translator.
For a site where you want it to be correct in multiple languages, this
is actually a plus.

Joomfish intercepts content reads by the CMS front end. If the user
prefers a language different from the site default, Joomfish checks to
see if a translation is available in that language. If so, the
translated version is delivered. It has a nice management interface
that shows you what you have translated, what you haven't and what was
translated but is out of date.

If you want to see how this works in "real life", take a look at
href="http://www.nicaplaza.com"> NicaPlaza.com. It is implemented
using Joomla and Joomfish.

The Joomla site tells you a lot more
including information on a possible licensing issue. Joomla is licensed under the GPL
and there is a debate going on regarding the interpretation of
"linking" Joomla with non-GPLed code. The current stance is that
starting with version 1.5 (the next major release) this will no longer
be allowed. As many Joomla third party addon modules are commercially licensed, this
could send Joomla to the bottom of list of choices. Only time will
tell.

What will we pick? We don't know yet. The true geek in me wants to
pick yet another answer, Django a
huge and amazing toolkit that among many other things means I can
write just Python and never have to touch SQL again.

For me, Django would be the most fun but it is far from the quickest
way to get the site we need up and running. Being a bit more pragmatic
than some, I will continue to play with Karrigell, Drupal and Joomla
until I am convinced which one will get the results we need with the
least effort

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