Phpnuke VS WordPress


Wordpress vs phpnuke

Phpnuke Vs WordPress

Phpnuke is a content management system allowing webmasters to create community-based portals (websites), allowing users and editors to post news items ( user-submitted news items are selected by editors ) or other types of articles. Registered users can then comment on these articles.

Modules can be added to the Phpnuke system allowing additional features such as an Internet forum, Calendar, News Feed, FAQ’s, Private Messaging and others. The site is maintained through an administration interface.

WordPress is a free and open source blogging tool and a dynamic content management system (CMS) based on PHP and MySQL. It has many features including a plug-in architecture and a template system.

Started as just a blogging system, but has evolved to be used as full content management system and so much more through the thousands of plugins, widgets, and themes; WordPress is limited only by your imagination.

Details about Phpnuke and WordPress

Product Name Phpnuke WordPress
Developers Francisco ​Burzi Matt ​Mullenweg,​ ​Ryan ​Boren,​ ​Donncha ​O ​Caoimh
Latest Stable Release Phpnuke ​8.​2 WordPress ​3.​3.​1
Application Server Apache Apache
Operating System Platform Independent Platform Independent
Programming Lang. PHP PHP
Database MYSQL MYSQL
Full text search Yes Yes
Multi-user Yes Yes
Plug-in Optional Yes
WYSIWYG-Editor Yes Yes
Template Language PHP PHP

WP-Nuke brings Phpnuke and WordPress together

This package brings together two great worlds: Phpnuke and WordPress. This is free software, released under the GPL (of course!).

WP-Nuke has two main objectives :

  • Bring all the features found in actual blogging packages to the Phpnuke environment (most notably, the XML publishing and automatic responding, that are a must on the blogosphere).
  • Make WordPress a real multi-blog environment, where each (allowed) user can have his/her own blog, without interfering with other blogs.

The result is a dual interface, one provided by the usual Phpnuke module, and the other by the WordPress app.