Quote:
Originally posted by BandChick
so does that mean it is NOT customizable yet? or only partially?
|
I'm saying that PHP-Nuke and Post Nuke have different objectives.
The Post Nuke team WAS part of the PHP-Nuke team, but when PHP-Nuke began to take a turn towards "user friendliness" as opposed to customization they broke off to form the Post Nuke project.
Post Nuke's aims are to allow complete customization. They're based off of the PHP-Nuke code, so they are very similar in software maturity and in functionality.
PHP-Nuke is sort of the de facto standard for portal software. I prefer other solutions to these (Geeklog or a custom solution), but PHP-Nuke is the easiest to maintain and setup, but you sacrifice a certain degree of cusomization in order to gain this ease of use.