-
Website
http://blog.joomlatools.eu/ -
Original page
http://blog.joomlatools.eu/2008/11/nooku-06-pushing-joomla-to-its-limits.html -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
David Towers
7 comments · 2 points
-
Johan Janssens
87 comments · 5 points
-
dan1dyoung
2 comments · 1 points
-
torkil
11 comments · 2 points
-
AmyStephen
10 comments · 1 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
DOCman 1.5 Stable is now available!
11 hours ago · 17 comments
-
DOCman 1.5 RC2, and a new surprise...
1 week ago · 52 comments
-
DOCman Presentation Joomla Day Italy
2 weeks ago · 12 comments
-
DOCman 1.5 Stable is now available!
Some of our Nooku partners already told us they are installing Nooku on monolingual sites, just to be able to use some of the content mgmt & SEO features. So there's no point in releasing these features separately, it's the combination of all of them that makes Nooku so interesting.
that being said, we are considering to release the RAD framework we built for Nooku. It is already being used by rmdstudio to build a social engine for joomla.
As Joomla! supports aliases to other menu items and i generally create my entire SEO from a dummy menu then alias back to that menu (it makes clean urls honest)
how would that play out, as in effect its duplication for the sake of ease, i suppose the question im asking is more related to your last post on keeping things simple... does Nooku have the brains to work this out for me... or do i need to kick it to death to go that road :P
So where is the download link?
What an irritating usability flaw..
Many people believe that it is impossible to have a viable GPL based business model. That's why there are many closed proprietary extensions on the JED. With Nooku, we are hoping to prove that is perfectly possible to make living of high quality open source Joomla extensions.
Figuring out how to do that has been part of the process. You can develop it for a year, and release a 1.0 that has not been used in the real world. On the other hand, releasing early to thousands of users, would mean we have to spend all our time in supporting the extension and no time would be left for development.
So releasing Nooku to a limited group of people in the beginning and slowly building from there, gives us the best of both worlds: the income allows us to have people working on it almost full time, and we get feeedback from professional users without having to support thousands of them right away.
So yes, Nooku is open source GPL, and it is Free Software (as in 'freedom') according to the Free Software Foundation. Developing good software takes time, and you can either support it by becoming a Nooku Partner, or wait a little longer for the public release.
Anyway, I am very curious about what the result will be and I hope the long anticipation of Nooku will not be an anticlimax (because of another comparable component being released before Nooku, or because of too great expectations).
Where is this project? It's ready?
Now nobody in joomla's world talk about nooku...