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The Definitive Guide to Plone

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Title: The Definitive Guide to Plone
by Andy McKay
ISBN: 1-59059-329-4
Publisher: APRS
Pub. Date: 28 June, 2004
Format: Paperback
Volumes: 1
List Price(USD): $44.99
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Average Customer Rating: 4.5 (2 reviews)

Customer Reviews

Rating: 4
Summary: Powerful Content Management System
Comment: The list of open source projects grows steadily. Amongst these is one that has gained wide appeal in just a short time. Plone. It is a Content Management System geared towards the managing and presentation of content on a web browser. McKay furnishes here a comprehensive guide to its virtues.

To any of you who have dealt with a proprietary CMS that eschews the Web, or predates it, and who have paid the typically hefty licensing fees, this book may be a pleasant surprise. McKay shows how Plone draws upon well tested ideas like separating content from presentation; the enabling of internationalisation so that it can be used in any language; the creation of user accounts for those who can modify the data; a framework for the inclusion of metadata. The last item is especially useful, given all the recent todo about Google. The problem that a general purpose search engine like the latter faces is that often metadata about Web documents is rudimentary, lacking or inconsistently filled out. By contrast, Plone gives you a means for your CMS to have consistent and detailed metadata. This can be used to return more accurate and relevant search results. A vital competitive advantage for a commercial website.

Plone gives you all these abilities for free. Raises the bar for any competitive CMS, open source or proprietary.

Rating: 5
Summary: The Authoritative Guide to Plone 2
Comment: The Authoritative Guide to Plone 2

I started using Zope almost 2 years ago, and I discovered Plone in its early stages when looking for something that worked out-of-the-box. It is easy to install a Plone site, but it is not so easy to customize or build around Plone without some fundamentals. Andy McKay solved this problem and others for me creating The Definitive Guide to Plone.

I bought the book last week, and I have read all 13 chapters and skimmed through chapter 14. I had previously read a fair amount of documents and howtos about Plone and Zope, such as the Zope Book, Plone Book (covering version 1), or "Zope Web Application Development and Content Management." However, I could not understand fully how Plone 2 used different technologies, and I was somewhat confused. After reading "The Authoritative Guide to Plone" I feel confident about what is really going on behind the scenes or at least were to look for answers. As a consequence, I believe that I can experiment and develop new products on my own the right way. The book covers every aspect I was looking for with detail and even some extra aspects I did not know about, these provided the necessary structure to my perceptions about Plone.

The content of the book is valuable taking into consideration both Windows and Unix-like users. The book's content, which includes practical connections between different subjects, flows with a thoughtful structure, and it moves to broader concepts after reviewing the fundamentals. McKay does a outstanding job exposing the material. There have been several "what-if" situations about which I had been wondering, but McKay covered successfully those scenarios a couple of pages after. I appreciate McKay's design considerations, such as "sometimes metadata can't contain everything, but it's worth considering in the design (p. 343)," pointers, such as "Overall, most of the Plone development team has adopted Archetypes as the way to develop products (p.388)," experiences, such as "I've stored more than 100,000 objects in BtreeFolder (p. 417)," or advices, such as "My advice is to put as much logic into Python as possible and keep page templates as simple and as clean as possible (p. 149.)

Overall, this book is the source to find authoritative and consistent answers about Plone. I would recommend this book to any Plone user or anyone interested in implementing a Content Management System (CMS).

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