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	<title>Joomla Friends &#187; Dialup Isp</title>
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		<title>From A Wildcat BBS To A Marriage Of Joomla and WordPress</title>
		<link>http://www.joomlafriends.org/2010/06/from-a-wildcat-bbs-to-a-marriage-of-joomla-and-wordpress/</link>
		<comments>http://www.joomlafriends.org/2010/06/from-a-wildcat-bbs-to-a-marriage-of-joomla-and-wordpress/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 13 Jun 2010 08:32:51 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Internet And Businesses Online]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dialup Isp]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Game Board]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Role Playing Game]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[I got my first computer in 1982 &#8211; an IBM PC 8088 (no dash-2), 64k of SOLDERED system memory, 2 full height floppy drives, a green screen with no graphics, and an 80cps Epson printer, with Graftrax&#8230;woo hoo!I was guilted into starting my first BBS (bulletin board system) by my son, who had started his [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><br/><br/><br/>I got my first computer in 1982 &#8211; an IBM PC 8088 (no dash-2), 64k of SOLDERED system memory, 2 full height floppy drives, a green screen with no graphics, and an 80cps Epson printer, with Graftrax&#8230;woo hoo!<br/><br/>I was guilted into starting my first BBS (bulletin board system) by my son, who had started his own, known as Druid&#8217;s Keep&#8230;a dos-based role playing game board. Mine had to be bigger of course, and ultimately sported 3 gigabytes of files, multiple CD drives, including CD-changers, all on a 3-node Lantastic network, running Wildcat Multiuser BBS. Wow<br/><br/>Fast forward a few years, and I needed software to go into the dialup ISP business. I prowled around, did not like the cost of what I saw (never mind the technical savvy required) and settled on Worldgroup, the newly named successor to The Major BBS, which had a powerful plugin available called Major TCP/IP, making it Internet dial-in-enabled, incoming telnet, ftp-able, etc. In addition, it supported Radius, so I could plug in my beloved Livingston portmasters&#8230;the year was 1995.<br/><br/>A few years (and several business changes and IT providers) later, I began testing out a new form of community software known as ecobuilder (e community builder)&#8230;unfortunately written in cold fusion. Running on Microsoft NT servers with SQL7, and requiring the cold fusion server, it never really took off. So I poked around and joined a merry band of miscreants who had shown the inventor of php-nuke the door and branched &#8211; into Postnuke, a CMS that, along with phpnuke, was largely responsible for the widespread acceptance and depth of features evident in the modern CMS&#8217; we enjoy today. If you would like to see what some of the original cast of characters from Postnuke are doing these days, check out &#8211; Xaraya &#8211; it is not for the CMS newcomer, but what a powerhouse.<br/><br/>I have now moved on from Postnuke, and, contrary to half-hearted attempts over a year ago with the platform, am happy to report that the relatively young open-source fork project of Joomla &#8211; a breakaway from an older CMS known as Mambo, has a developer community literally on drugs, churning out high-value components, add-ons and themes, SEF (search engine friendly) URLs, and most important of all: MARKETING CAPABILITIES!<br/><br/>When choosing a platform on which to blog, I kept going back and forth between the towering open source giant in the industry: WordPress and the increasingly robust, though more complex true CMS &#8211; Joomla, before determining that it did not make any sense to pick between the two when I could use BOTH! Since then, I am finding all sorts of platforms doing the same thing &#8211; sticking with their old tried and true, and simply adding their WordPress blog to their Internet presence. The best of both worlds.<br/><a href='http://www.momentsofelegance.com/catalog/bath-wedding-favors-c-66.html'>bath wedding favors</a></p>
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