I am studying CMS, and currently looking at 2 in detail to compare.
Would somebody be able to help me to compare the difference between SHAREPOINT 2007 and DRUPAL and tell me which CMS is better. I know that SHAREPOINT 2007 is for ASP.NET and that DRUPAL is for PHP, but besides that I would like to know the difference, in for example, which has the best SEO(search engine optimization) features.
I am new to this so a simple explanation would be grateful. Thanks in advance.
im having a hard time understanding drupal is it a blog or forum place like wordpress because i acually that i could incorporate drupaul with my website i dont need a blog or anything i have a website and what i was looking for is a program or somthing to use with my website that i can click and it will let people know its under matainence and my website is www.jaysonberger.com i initially installed drupal in the root directly and when i went to drupal all i seen was log into drupal so then i uploaded it in a folder within the
The website already has lots of content in drupal but the members area now all needs to be in https (we are talking about a few thousand pages). The module that I had or was installed requires you to manually type in each url extension to put them in https. The problem is one section alone has at least 1500+ different pages and I cannot seem to put them all under https by placing the parent URL into https. I guess it has something to do with each page having a "node"? (pardon if I am explaining that incorrectly)
On firelick.com I've outlined an idea for how concepts related to Drupal could be presented using user-friendly, market friendly, jargon. Basically, concepts such as taxonomy, modules, blocks etc. would be presented under the term 'Blueprints'. The term blueprints would act as a friendly interface on which to introduce more complicated topics.
For example, a 'design Blueprint' would give an overview of themes, .tpl.php functionality, blocks etc. and give an overview on how these elements are organized and interact from a higher level perspective.