It might be worth investigating WordPress http://wordpress.org/, as well, as it has similar features to TextPattern. It's a little more blog-oriented, but that's not necessarily a bad thing. I used it for my "Introduction to Shakespeare" class, and it handled the job pretty well: http://erikanderica.org/erik/category/class/luc-274/.
Erik Vorhes Loyola U. Chicago
Date: Fri, 20 Oct 2006 08:58:03 -0600 From: Herdsman Caedmon caedmon@uleth.ca Subject: Re: [dm-l] Personal Web site maintenance To: Bill White minutiae@gmail.com Cc: Digital Medievalist Community mailing list dm-l@uleth.ca Message-ID: 1161356284.26544.0.camel@odonned-eng06.eng.uleth.ca Content-Type: text/plain
You're right the component parts look very interesting.
-dan
On Fri, 2006-20-10 at 09:20 -0500, Bill White wrote:
On 10/20/06, Bill White minutiae@gmail.com wrote:
On 10/20/06, Daniel O'Donnell caedmon@uleth.ca wrote:
Hi,
Does anybody have advice on how to maintain a professional academic homepage--I mean the page one uses for class material, information on research, etc.
I stumbled across this a few days ago while googling for cms systems that can work with my local mediawiki installation:
I haven't used it, but it may be worth investigating. I'd never heard of the strangely-named tools they're using - moodle, elgg, drupal.
Whoops - I think that website may be offering/selling services. At any rate, the links they provide to moodle et al. may be useful.
Cheers -
bw