Joomla!
Joomla!
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Joomla! is a free, open source content management system written with PHP for publishing content on the world wide web and intranets using a MySQL database. Joomla! includes features such as page caching to improve performance, web indexing, RSS feeds, printable versions of pages, news flashes, blogs, forums, polls, calendars, website searching, and language internationalization.
The name is a phonetic spelling of the Swahili word jumla meaning “all together” or “as a whole”. It was chosen to reflect the commitment of the development team and community to the project. The first release of Joomla! (Joomla! 1.0.0) was announced on September 16, 2005. This was a re-branded release of Mambo 4.5.2.3 combined with other bug and moderate-level security fixes. In the project’s roadmap, the core developers say Joomla! 1.5 will be a completely re-written code base built with PHP 5.
The project site can be found at http://www.joomla.org, and an online demo of Joomla! is available at http://demo.joomla.org/
Joomla! is released under the GNU General Public License.
History
Joomla! came into being as the result of a fork of Mambo between Miro Corporation of Australia, the trademark holder of the Mambo name at that time, and the bulk of the core developers. The two groups parted ways on August 17, 2005. The Miro Corporation formed a non-profit foundation with the stated purpose to fund the project and protect it from lawsuits. The development team claimed that many of the provisions of the foundation structure went against previous agreements made by the elected Mambo Steering Committee, lacked the necessary consultation with key stake holders, and included provisions that violated core Open Source values. However none of these claims have ever been substantiated.
The development team created a web site called OpenSourceMatters to distribute information to users, developers, web designers and the community in general. The project team leader Andrew Eddie, also known as “MasterChief,” wrote an Open Letter to the Community, which appeared on the announcements section of the public forum at mamboserver.com.
By the next day, 1000 people had joined the opensourcematters.org forum web site, most posting words of encouragement and support for the actions of the Development Team. The web site received a slashdotting and news articles regarding the event appeared at newsforge.com, eweek.com, and ZDnet.com. Miro CEO, Peter Lamont, gave a public response in an article entitled The Mambo Open Source Controversy - 20 Questions With Miro.
This event has stirred deeply held feelings in the Open Source movement regarding what shall constitute “Open Source”. Forums at many other open source projects were active with postings for and against the actions of both sides. Rumor and accusations of wrongdoing by Miro and the Mambo Foundation were rampant.
In the two weeks following Eddie’s announcement, teams were reorganized, and the community continued to grow. On September 1, 2005 the new name was announced to a mixed reception of 3000+ faithful followers of the Development Team. This is a developing event.
