Tuesday, February 09, 2010
   
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JoomlaPack News
Saturday, 16 January 2010 20:27

2.4.1 bug-fix release

JoomlaPack 2.4.1 bug-fix is released. Minor bugs have been fixed in the component, Kickstart and installer.

Friday, 25 December 2009 22:20

JoomlaPack on Joomanuals

Joomanuals has recently began offering an opt-in JoomlaPack section in the manuals generated by their on-line Joomla! manual generation service. The JoomlaPack section consists of the basic information your clients need to know in order to successfully produce a current full site backup utilizing JoomlaPack.

Don't you know Joomanuals? It's a Joomla! manual generation service (English and German) by Lagoona. Trust me when I say that it's the nirvana of Joomla! site builders. You pay a small amount upfront, fill in a short questionnaire-like form and it generates a Joomla! site manual tailored to the site you have created for your client. What's more, it has a lot of screenshots and it even adds your company's logo on the pages. That's what a professional user's guide to a Joomla! site should really look like!

Note: JoomlaPack.net is not affiliated with Joomanuals or Lagoona. The JoomlaPack section of Joomanuals is not endorsed or sponsored by JoomlaPack.net. This is not an advertisement, either. We find their service interesting and useful and we wanted to share it with you.

Saturday, 05 December 2009 22:36

2.4 Stable

Wednesday, 21 October 2009 11:54

2.4 Beta 2

JoomlaPack 2.4 Beta 2 just released.

Monday, 19 October 2009 10:52

Video tutorials!

On popular request, we are launching a new section of video tutorials!

Thursday, 15 October 2009 13:11

2.4 Beta 1

JoomlaPack 2.4 Beta 1 just released.

Wednesday, 23 September 2009 09:32

Vote JoomlaPack for Best Extension!

We have been chose as a best Joomla! Extension finalist for the Packt Award. Now it's come time to vote and we need YOUR HELP. Please vote for JoomlaPack for best Joomla! Extension. You can vote here:  http://www.packtpub.com/joomla-award

Thank you for supporting us.
Wednesday, 09 September 2009 18:48

2.3.3 Maintenance Release

JoomlaPack 2.3.3 Maintenance Release just released.

Wednesday, 26 August 2009 10:57

2.3.2 Maintenenace

JoomlaPack 2.3.2 Maintenance Release just released. UPDATED Aug 27, 00:16 GMT.

 

Wednesday, 19 August 2009 11:58

2.3.1 Hotfix

JoomlaPack 2.3.1 Critical Hotfix just released.

 

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JoomlaPack joomlapack
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    The best Open Source site backup, restoration, migration component for Joomla!
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  • Joomla, Wordpress and Drupal – Should you look outside the big 3?

    Whenever someone decides to launch a website, or hired to do so for a client, he’s given three broad choices which will define how they’ll proceed: static HTML, a CMS or Flash. The former being practically dead due to inflexibility and the latter being not only inflexible, but extremely costly to produce, the CMS route seems a dead end; more specifically, the Open Source CMS route.

    Dead end it is. Try raising the simple, innocuous question “Which CMS should I chose for my site?” on any public forum and a war seems to spring right out of nowhere. The fighting fractions are what I usually call The Big Three: Drupal, Joomla! and WordPress fans. But is this all there is to it? Does the Open Source CMS universe revolve around only three players? Given the Open Source spirit of Freedom of choice, one would hardly expect this to be the case. In fact, it isn’t. There is more to Open Source CMS than meets the eye.

    Read my guest post on the SpeckyBoy.com design magazine

  • How to Improve Your Joomla! Site Design

    Joomla! is often paralleled to point-and-click presentation software, such as Impress or PowerPoint, in terms of ease of use. Granted, Joomla! makes it extremely easy to build a site having no knowledge of its internal working, or even what HTML is. However, in order to build a stunning site you need a bit more than that. It’s the tricks in the web builder’s bag which determine his success, both in customer satisfaction and financial terms.

    Some of the fundamental techniques for creating compelling sites is your ability to master the use of modules. Often overlooked, modules are the most practical way to integrate diverse content on a single page. Leveraging their use from mere content bearers to integral parts of your content can transform your site from boring to intriguing. The following technique has proved itself again and again in a vast array of site genres. I call it the "Faux module positions" technique.

    Read the full article on WebAppers.com

  • Improve your AdSense results with on-the-fold ads

    If you manage an ad-supported site, you are probably aware of the problem I’m going to discuss. Some of your ads are stellar, some others are stubborn underachievers, to the extent you might consider them a waste of screen real estate. The truth about ads is that they are position sensitive. Where you put them determines, for the most part, their success. You can’t avoid all bad positions altogether but you can create new competent positions no-one has ever told you about. Implementing this in Joomla! takes 5 minutes and requires no programming skills!

    Read the full article on CMSmoz.com

  • The Holy Grail of local web development servers

    If you are a serious web developer, you might have already figured out that performing experiments and untested upgrades on production servers is a disaster waiting to happen, bringing down the live site with them. Staging live servers (in the form of dev.example.com) usually don't cut it either, especially if you have a lot of file transferring or editing to do. However, local development is still a kludge, as you have to develop in a sub-directory, something like http://localhost/mysite. This has all sorts of implications, the most evident of which being that it breaks cross-content links if you try to pack it and deploy it back to the live site.

    Ideally, you would need to develop in subdomains, something like http://mysite.localhost, which would mean that you have the flexibility of local development with the peace of mind of not having to develop in a sub-directory. But, face it. Setting up subdomains is an involving process, requiring hacking around your Apache configuration files. This is suboptimal if you want to do it regularly. Unless you come up with a way to turn http://mysite.localhost to automatically understand where it should find its files.

    This article will explain you how to combine WampServer and BIND to create this kind of Holy Grail local web development server on Windows. You will configure a single DNS entry and a single virtual host in order to create a server which can handle infinite subdomains! The only pre-requisite is having a fixed IP address for your server. Well, even 127.0.0.1 will do if you can't do anything better than that!

     

  • Joomla! link handling has its shortcomings

    As the maker of JoomlaPack – the Open Source utility to backup, restore and migrate your Joomla! site – I often have to face certain challenges. Like when a user told me that as soon as he transferred his site to a different domain, all links in his content would link to the “old” site. Fighting the temptation to dismiss it as a user error, I did some digging around. Throughout this journey I found out some of Joomla!’s link handling deficiencies, their repercussions and coded a workaround.

    In this article I am going to talk about how Joomla! handles the link base and canonical URLs, as well as what happens when you migrate your site to a different domain, subdomain or even a subdirectory.

     

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Dionysopoulos.me
Not entirely Joomla!-specific, the personal site of our lead developer has some interesting Joomla!-related articles.
www.Dionysopoulos.me