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I am considering to use a cms for my website. As I am a .net developer, I think the best ideea would be to chose a .net cms tool, but I am not sure which one to pick. I've heard sitefinity from telerik is quite good but unfortunately is quite expensive, DNN it's a pain. Umbraco seems preety good, but it lacks the e-Commerce module. What about mojo portal, have you used it?

Which one would you recommend?

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Why, in your opinion, is DNN a pain? Apart from the lack of multilanguage support? – Casper Oct 1 '08 at 14:10

10 Answers

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DotNetNuke - it's the most widely used .Net CMS and has a huge community of coders that modify it.

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As the poster said, DNN is a pain so he's probably not going to use it. It's not really flexible in multilanguage either, at this moment. – Casper Oct 1 '08 at 14:10
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If you want to go insane, try DNN. I am insane now, and went for mojoPortal instead. It seems to cover your requirements and it is a breeze to set up. :)

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Hi Harriyott,

Sitefinity has a fully functional Community Edition. This product is completely free. The only limitation is workflow is not included (meaning you can't roll-back to previous versions of a page or implement an approval process for content). There is also a "Powered by Sitefinity" logo that will appear at the bottom of your web site. Other than that, the product is fully functional and there are no hidden 500 page or 10 user limitations you'll smack into given time.

You can use Sitefinity Community Edition for personal OR commercial web sites. Some additional information can be found here:

http://www.sitefinity.com/support/forums/support-forum-thread/b1043S-bgbbmt.aspx

Sitefinity doesn't currently have a plug-n-play eCommerce solution. There are a number of efforts building on this front though. Several developers have been able to plug their own eCommerce systems into Sitefinity.

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We use Kentico for most of our clients. They have a free edition that has a few limits on it of course, but still does a lot.

It's quite extensible and all .Net based. A good amount of the source code comes with the most basic versions, and full source code is available for purchase.

There is a steap learning curve if you really want to customize it as a web developer. But it is really easy for the end-user to learn. We have clients that don't know the difference between a Word DOC and a PDF that end up putting some fairly professionally looking content even though they have no idea how they're doing it. :) Our "training" meetings usually last about an hour or two tops, with usually about 3 or 4 follow-up phone calls. The rest they pretty much run with themselves while we collect hosting fees...

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Ektron CMS 400.net 7.6 is pretty good -- excellent general CMS, great social networking and multilingual support, and now coming out with eCommerce. It's also a lot cheaper than most of the alternatives. Oh yeah, it's .net, which helps!

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Cuyahago project is a great CMS project. It has the best architecture design you can find among open source CMSs. You should take a look before make a decision

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Take a look at http://www.sitecore.net , they have stunning support, awesome architecture from the ground up and fully .NET with no external dependencies and supports multilingual options natively.

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I vote for Umbraco, they just released a new version with Life Editing and more nifty things! I worked with Umbraco for 2 years now and I'm very pleased with it!!

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Found this thread (very useful), and eventually ended up at CMSMatrix. A CMS search engine that includes detailed features for each CMS, and you can compare up to 10 side by side.

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I wanted to try out AxCMS.net for some time, but didn't have the time so far. It seems to have everything you need.

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