hcgtv wrote:The larger and more complex the system, the more questions and problems will arise. That's why I stick with simple systems.
You are painting with a very broad brush. There are many complex systems that have matured and thus have minimal problems.
My rule? Anyone who speaks in absolutes is an ideologist and by their very nature, not correct.
hcgtv wrote:You should hire someone with broad based experience. Anyone can memorize the backend of Drupal or Wordpress, but throw them MODx and see what he or she can accomplish.
Based on your words you've obviously never been responsible for the budget required to hire people. Broad experience is of little value when the person doesn't have strong problem solving skills. That said, people with strong problem solving skills who have experience with a specific system are much more cost effective than people how have strong problem solving skills but no experience.
And why would someone need to use MODx when they are not hired for that? That's a non sequitur. If someone is needed to deal with MODx, hire for it.
hcgtv wrote:Addons can be a security nightmare, a lot of the attempts to crack into PHPXref are using known Mambot vulnerabilities. But I hear you and addons, if really needed, can be useful.
Everything can have security nightmares; open-source apps like PunBB especially because people can study the code to learn how to crack it. (I'm not disagreeing with open-source, just making an appropriate comparison.)
"Security" can be used as an argument against anything so I almost never see it as a valid argument when used as a reason not to do something. George W. Bush has been using it for 8 years and I don't view his warnings as credible either.
hcgtv wrote:But more often, addons are thrust upon users that don't really see the need for them.
Maybe, but as I'm not one of those users it doesn't apply to me.
MikeSchinkel wrote:Mike, remember one thing, this is Open Source and it plays by different rules than commercial software. Where number of users counts for bottom line revenue for vBulletin, a project like PunBB was created and nurtured out of personal love of programming. Rickard never imagined it would garner the number of followers it did and he never marketed the product, it was the community that pushed it out there.
Bottom line there are benefits to the size of a user base, i.e. Acquia couldn't exist to support Drupal users if Drupal had no more users than PunBB. The fact that you don't value those benefits does not mean that those benefits do not exist for those who value them.
Worse is the fact you try to discredit those benefits rather than to simply acknowledge that for you those benefits are not important. Whenever I come across someone who feels compelled to strenuously deny those things that other's value I wonder if the person doing the denying is trying harder to convince me or are they really just trying to convince themselves?