PostNuke: A Flexible Open Source Content Management System
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You've reached the PostNuke community website, the epicentre of PostNuke development. If you're new here, you might find this a little overwhelming, so we recommend you check out www.postnuke.com first for some documents explaining what PostNuke is, as well as other useful information.

Otherwise, if you'd like to look around, you should register to get the most out of this website.

About This Site

This site contains the newest, most up to date information about the project, as well as being the central place for help and support for the PostNuke CMS.

We've written a short document explaining this website, just to help you get yourself oriented. It's quite intuitive, so you should get used to it quickly. Feel free to read the document.

Download current stable PostNuke version - .764

Requires PHP 4.1.0 + MySQL 4.1 Minimum

general After the plannings for this year's meeting (23th and 24th of August 2008) had started a few weeks ago (as we reported), we can finally publish first procedure aspects. As usual there will also be a kick-off event on friday evening (the 22th) this time. We won't have a private barbeque this time though, but move a little and indulge in the wines of Bingen from a winemaker afterwards.
 
Posted by Guite  on Wednesday, May 14, 2008 Read More  ·  Comments (4) · 219 Reads
development

The PostNuke team is pleased to announce the release of RC4. Unfortunately, due to unforeseen upgrade issues we have had to announce another release candidate to ensure move to the central categories system runs as smoothly as possible.

We hope that there will only be a short gap between this RC and the final release, we do not recommend using RC versions on a live website.

PostNuke 0.8 RC4 Full Package Download

Download (ZIP) MD5: a51b1ad1efbffbc19bb20a0720a59bde SHA-1: b93b61bed4a3e9b8eb539ce14a0f8170f8561fdc

Download (TAR.GZ) MD5: bc501a0d9bfa4a0a88c7bd49cac54e92 SHA-1: 4bdbcd652aa0aa2b945119dd5e0e1f7c6fcb239c

PostNuke 0.800 RC4 Core Download

Download (ZIP) MD5: 2e594dc157daf5075cd36a5b7fd756f8 SHA-1: 86b98fc97c35762e70e5ec01e6c9660c483792ad

Download (TAR.GZ) MD5: 830fea7781ad1a16ad5770503478a53d SHA-1: bce57386012e91fc40867ac956d51eeaf4dffbc0

PostNuke 0.800 RC4 ValueAddons Download

Download (ZIP) MD5: 53d74cd605083f3d420fe43b57c54586 SHA-1: 8371903297b5cfdf218bcc6e94ef5876e2873b45

Download (TAR.GZ) MD5: 519067f0553953c176e96c0c2c0e9ca6 SHA-1: 7a8ff79566f94047d95a9d3f7ef7835bf4f79958

 
Posted by Simon  on Monday, May 12, 2008 Read More  ·  Comments (6) · 531 Reads
website It's nice to be able to announce, that following our numerous problems with GForge at the NOC over the last year the replacement solution that we promised is ready to go. Chris Hildebrandt, known as slam on the forums has been hard at work for a number of months producing a trac installation on which third party developers can host their PostNuke projects.

Some of you may not be familiar with Trac. Taken straight from the Trac website - "Trac is an enhanced Wiki and issue tracking system for software development projects... It provides an interface to Subversion, an integrated Wiki and convenient reporting facilities."

See trac.postnuke.com in action!
 
Posted by Simon  on Saturday, May 03, 2008 Read More  ·  Comments (14) · 902 Reads
security The calendar module PostSchedule is vulnerable for a SQL injection. Some sites have already been hacked after the public announcement of the exploit on milw0rm.com last week.
 
Posted by Landseer  on Monday, April 28, 2008 Read More  ·  Comments (4) · 687 Reads
development

As mentioned in our previous article on the Summer of Code, we're hoping to publish an interview with each of our SoC students for this year. This is the first in the series, with Mathieu Prevel, who will be undertaking the revisions control project.

1. Please tell us a little about yourself: your name, where you come from, what you study and where you attend university. Perhaps you run a website or have an interesting hobby?

My name is Mathieu. I am 21 student and I live in South of France in a little (very small) town "La Canourgue". I am studying water management and in the future I would like to create softwares about water management, water supply, or any linked to water treatments. My website is a game in PHP http://www.NeorgGenesyS.fr. I am interested in Linux, PHP, C, (x)HTML, CSS, JavaScript and all kinds to program. I like flyfishing and sports.

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Posted by Simon  on Sunday, April 27, 2008 Read More  ·  Comments (1) · 485 Reads
development

As mentioned in our previous article on the Summer of Code, we're hoping to publish an interview with each of our SoC students for this year. This is the third in the series, with Carlos Mauro, who will be undertaking the usability project.

1. Please tell us a little about yourself: your name, where you come from, what you study and where you attend university. Perhaps you run a website or have an interesting hobby?

My name is Carlos Mauro Cárdenas Fernández. My from is Perú and i live in Lima. I'm studing Engineering Systems in the National University of Engineering (www.uni.edu.pe). I am studying the tenth cycle. I'm course the tenth cycle. I am doing my thesis topic regarding the usability of software.

I am a member of the association of Peruvian Free Software APESOL. I participated also as president of the organization of the Festival of Latin American Free Software Installation in 2006. I also like make hack as issues at a time when I did something VoIP, streaming, CdLive, and others.

I always liked the theme of web development as well as aesthetics. So usability is a subject that interested me.

I also like the systems engineering, important to understand the complexity of life. I think many in this community are countrymen of Ludwig Von Bertanfly :D.
My Blog is: http://unimauro.blogspot.com
My Hobby: read a lot of... running in the morning
Lately I like to cook :$
Well i like the Free Sofware and OpenSource.

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Posted by Simon  on Sunday, April 27, 2008 Read More  ·  Comments (1) · 667 Reads
development

As mentioned in our previous article on the Summer of Code, we're hoping to publish an interview with each of our SoC students for this year. This is the second in the series, with John Pritchard, who will be undertaking the categories project.

1. Please tell us a little about yourself: your name, where you come from, what you study and where you attend university. Perhaps you run a website or have an interesting hobby?

My name is John Pritchard and I'm currently in my second year of a Maths and Computer Science BSc at Bristol University in the UK. I'm originally from Newport in South Wales (only about 30 mins away from my university but far enough from home so that my parents don't constantly visit me :P). At the moment, the only website I run is the Bristol Real Ale Society website (http://www.bristolrealale.co.uk/) but the society is suffering a bit at the moment because a lot of people only signed up for the cheap booze rather than for social events (though I can't say I blame them lol).

Continued in the extended text

 
Posted by Simon  on Friday, April 25, 2008 Read More  ·  Comments (3) · 479 Reads
development

As mentioned in our previous article on the Summer of Code, we're hoping to publish an interview with each of our SoC students for this year. This is the first in the series, with Daniel Byrd, who will be undertaking the search engine project.

1. Please tell us a little about yourself: your name, where you come from, what you study and where you attend university. Perhaps you run a website or have an interesting hobby?

My name’s Daniel Byrd, I’m currently approaching the end of my second year of a computer science degree at Oxford University England. Ironically, my mentor is doing the same but at Cambridge (Simon Birtwistle [HammerHead]), so I think that settles once and for all any rivalry the universities have ever had in the past.

Continued in the extended text

 
Posted by Simon  on Tuesday, April 22, 2008 Read More  ·  Comments (3) · 610 Reads
general I'm glad to report that Google has announced the projects accepted for the Summer of Code 2008. PostNuke has had four students allocated, who are undertaking projects from our ideas page: a new search module, categories module changes, usability enhancements and a revisions control system.

We hope to publish a short interview with each student over the next few days. Meanwhile, today marks the start of the community bonding period, which students should use to get to know the project and what makes PostNuke so great. Please make them feel welcome.

The four students accepted are Daniel Byrd, Carlos Fernandez, Prevel Mathieu and John Pritchard. You can read the abstracts of the project proposals on the Google SoC website.
 
Posted by Simon  on Monday, April 21, 2008 Comments (5) · 628 Reads
general There's a lot going on at the moment which is not visible to everybody. I would like to summarize some of the developments in this article.
 
Posted by kaffeeringe.de  on Monday, April 21, 2008 Read More  ·  Comments (8) · 795 Reads

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