Question

Does anyone ever found/used an ASP.NET application similar to Joomla?
I need to set up a quick and dirty CMS on a Windows Server and our client doesn't want us to use something else than ASP.NET.

Was it helpful?

Solution

Here is a list of a dozen or so CMS systems for ASP.NET, with a little commentary about most of them. They are not all open source, but a number of them are.

OTHER TIPS

I've been told by a friend that Umbraco is everything you would ever want in a CMS (and it was in the list that Nathan included in his answer). This recommendation is coming from a guy who's built several CMS solutions over the years and after taking a brief look at it, I think I'm going to try to push my clients towards using it over their current solutions.

DotNetNuke is quick to set up and get running. It is the best ASP.NET CMS that I have used.

It comes with many modules, and can be extended with numerous commercial and free 3rd party modules.

It is very easy to change to look of a DNN site by simply changing the assigned skin, and many 3rd party skins are available as well.

Warbeats.com runs on DNN, and handles quite a bit of traffic.

Community Server is a very well built CMS for ASP.NET, a free version is available.

Graffiti is Telligent's CMS (makers of the previously mentioned Community Server) and my be more appropriate depending on your requirements.

There are also many CMS projects on Codeplex.

I tried Graffiti and DotNetNuke and thought both were troublesome, then I tried Umbraco based on a recommendation from a friend and I love it! So much that I recommended it to Kooshmoose... I should also note that dasBlog is not a CMS, it's just blog software (which I use on my personal site and love, but it's not a CMS...)

http://code.google.com/p/pigeoncms/ but it's still work in progress

Only thing that comes close that I know of is dasBlog
You might be able to use it as a starting point.

Did you Look at DotNetNuke (http://www.dotnetnuke.com/) Its seems to be a good Systems to Start off as a base , But I doubt I could call it a Full CMS ? (Upto the users to decide)

MojoPortal might be worth a look into. Other than that, the list linked to by Nathan is well-worth looking into

umbraco gets my vote as a good CMS that comes close to Joomla in maturity and out of the box functionality. I'm not that fond of DNN, but it's been at least a year since I ran it thru its paces.

See also Oxite. It's an ASP.NET MVC Blog engine that you can use it for CMS.

If the concern isn't really about the ASP.Net language but about keeping a Windows server, you can use Joomla on IIS.

You can also check the list of CMSs on Microsoft's Web Platform

Licensed under: CC-BY-SA with attribution
Not affiliated with StackOverflow
scroll top