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Jon Stahl
Jon Stahl is the Director of Web Solutions at ONE/Northwest, in Seattle, Washington, USA. He has over 13 years of experience in technology consulting for non-profit organizations, and leads a team of Plone consultants who have launched several hundred Plone-powered sites for environmental organizations. Jon serves on the Plone Foundation board of directors, and is an active leader in the Plone community. His blog can be visited at http://blogs.onenw.org/jon.
Martin Aspeli
Martin Aspeli is an experienced Plone consultant and a prolific Plone contributor. He served on the Framework Team for Plone 3.0, and is responsible for many new features such as the improved portlets infrastructure, the “content rules” engine, and several R&D efforts relating to Plone 4.0. He is a former leader of the Plone Documentation Team and has written a number of well-received tutorials available on plone.org. He is also the author of Professional Plone Development and was recognized in 2008 by Packt Publishing as one of the “Most Valuable People” in Open source Content Management Systems.
David Convent
David contributed several times to the Plone documentation effort with tutorials and how-tos covering key theming techniques. He developed DIYPloneStyle, a product and a tool that helps theme developers start with the basic generated code. The effort started with DIYPloneStyle is now merged in the theming templates of ZopeSkel, which he maintains.
David is currently employed at the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences. He's been working there for the MARS (Multimedia Archaeological Research System) project; a collaborative system based on Plone designed for Archaeologists and Anthropologists, and is now helping the web team at the institute.
Darci Hanning
Darci Hanning has a BSEE from Washington State University (Pullman) and received her MLIS from the University of Washington. She brings over 15 years of experience in software and web application development to her position as the Technology Development Consultant at the Oregon State Library. For the past three years, she has been using Plone, an Open source Software Content Management System, to create and deploy dynamic, easy-to-maintain web sites for small libraries in Oregon. Since Spring 2006, she has been providing technical leadership for the Plinkit Collaborative, a multi-state co-operative, to deploy Plinkit in Colorado, Illinois, and Texas. She has given presentations on both Plone and Plinkit at national and international conferences, has recently served as the President of the Plone Foundation Board, and was selected as a "2008 Mover and Shaker" by Library Journal.
Ricardo Newbery
Ricardo Newbery is a web applications developer and a consultant with over 15 years of experience with Internet technologies. A former physics researcher supporting the Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation Division of the U.S. Naval Command, Control, and Ocean Surveillance Center (NCOSC NRaD), Ricardo also taught Physics and Information Systems college courses for over ten years. He has recently chucked it all to move to beautiful Central Oregon, and focus on developing his own consultancy (http://digitalmarbles.com) while mule deer, and quail loiter outside his office window.
A member of the Plone community since 2004, much of Ricardo’s current consulting work involves customizing Plone installations and optimizing high-performance web applications. Ricardo is the current release manager for CacheFu, a Plone add-on product used to help accelerate Plone web sites.
John DeStefano
John DeStefano has accrued over 10 years' worth of experience in writing technical information and working with web-based technology. He has written documentation and technical training material for commercial and open source products, which include Adobe Dreamweaver and Flash, Microsoft Visual Studio and Windows Server; web programming languages, which include ASP.NET, SQL, and XML; and technical certifications, which include Network+ and Oracle Database.
John has been rolling out, administering, and hacking (his own) Plone sites since 2006, and has contributed information and technical edits to the vast store of documentation on Plone's web site.
John resides in Long Island, New York, with his wife, Jody, and their four children: Benjamin, Zachary, Sophia, and Jacob. He is currently a technical engineer in the Physics department at Brookhaven National Laboratory.
Clayton Parker
Clayton Parker has been creating dynamic web sites using the Plone Content Management System since 2004. He started out at Six Feet Up, Inc. as a Systems Administrator, which gives him an interesting take on Plone deployment. In 2007, Clayton started using zc.buildout to manage and deploy their Plone sites. As a Senior Developer at Six Feet Up, he has created and contributed to buildout recipes in use by the Community.
Alex Clark
Alex Clark is a Plone Consultant from Bethesda, MD, USA. He runs a thriving Plone consultancy along with his wife, Amy Clark. Together, they service a wide variety of government, corporate, and non-profit organizations in the greater Washington, D.C. area, and worldwide. For more information, please see http://aclark.net.This is his first book and he hopes that people enjoy the result and get inspired to use Plone.
Veda Williams
Veda Williams has worked in software development for 18 years, which includes her three-year stint as a Plone skinner. She currently works for ONE/Northwest in Seattle, Washington. Veda is an editor for the documentation section of plone.org, and in addition to this book, she is writing a book on theming for Plone, due for publication in Spring 2009.
Tom Conklin
Tom Conklin is an Information Technology manager for a manufacturing company in the Syracuse, New York metro area. Tom has a keen interest in building business solutions in a way that makes IT transparent to the end users.
Sam Knox
Sam Knox hails from Seattle, Washington where he works as the Support Manager for ONE/Northwest – a consulting group that focuses on helping environmental non-profits adopt and effectively use online technology. ONE/Northwest has served hundreds of organizations in the Pacific Northwest and beyond over the last 12 years. Sam regularly conducts Plone trainings and writes end user documentation for a wide variety of audiences and skill levels. He is also primarily responsible for the highly successful online Plone documentation web site, learnplone.org.
Steve McMahon
Steve McMahon lives in Davis, California, where he's a partner in Reid-McMahon, LLC; a web development partnership specializing in developing Plone-based web sites for non-profit organizations.
Steve is currently in-charge of the maintainance of the Plone Unified Installer and OS X installer. He's the developer of the popular PloneFormGen add-on, and is the current release manager for the Plone Help Center. He was elected to the Board of Directors of Plone Foundation in 2007 and in 2008, and served as its secretary.
Matt Bowen
Matt Bowen is a web developer for a Public Relations firm in Washington, D.C. Matt has shown a keen interest in helping non-technical people share their knowledge over the web, and uses Plone to empower them for the same.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
covers lots of intermediate and advanced topics,
By
This review is from: Practical Plone 3: A Beginner's Guide to Building Powerful Websites (Paperback)
With the proliferation of content management system (CMS) software, a need has arisen for good manuals. When a CMS starts out, user forums are usually the main place for help; then someone will start a wiki, and a few people will write tutorials on their blogs. But if the user base for a CMS grows rapidly, docs quickly go out of date, and it becomes hard to figure out which parts of the docs still apply for the latest release. That poses a risk for someone wishing to buy a technical book (or write one). Technical publishers use several methods to future-proof their books. This includes: focusing on core features unlikely to change between releases, anticipating future development, publishing smaller books that require less time to produce and group writing. Group writing (assigning different people to contribute chapters) has been a popular method because it reduces the burden on one person. As long as the assigned topics don't overlap and are well organized, group-written technical books can be extraordinarily helpful and can be released quickly, as in the case of Packt Publishing's latest Plone book (Practical Plone 3).
First, a little background. Plone is a python-based CMS that has a large user base and many enterprise features. It is deployed on many nonprofits and governmental sites and historically has been easier to secure than LAMP CMS's like Drupal. Data is stored in an object database (ZODB) as opposed to relational databases (although adapters have been written to connect to mysql, postgresql, etc). Plone is based on a platform called Zope, and in fact Plone's version 3 release in 2007 implemented many architectural changes. Packt has published several Plone books already (including Martin Aspelli's well-regarded 2007 book Professional Plone Development), and the latest book is bigger, covers more topics and should interest a wider audience. About half of the pages (and a third of the chapters) in this 565 page book contain screenshots to demonstrate functionality which can be controlled with the web interface. However, the book's audience is not really for novice users or content creators (despite the book's subtitle that is a "beginner's guide"). If you wish for something like that, try the excellent Users Guide to Plone -- downloadable for free). Practical Plone 3 covers basic topics in Chapters 4-6, but it focuses on several topics which are not easy to find the answers for. This book would be useful for the website administrator or the developer or designer trying to customize Plone for an organization or company. First, Plone includes lots of features not enabled by default which are hidden in the administration menu (called "Plone Site Setup"). Unlike Drupal (which seems to have a massively complex control panel), Plone Site Setup looks deceptively simple, but lots of things are hidden under the hood. So you need to know where to look. Practical Plone 3 explains how to use a lot of these features: versioning, managing groups and roles, creating custom workflows and using the portlet manager to control what sidebars appear on the left or right of the web page. Plone differs in many ways from LAMP CMSs both in architecture and concepts. Usually, these differences remain hidden from users. But understanding these differences can help you understand why things work differently in Plone. For example, Plone uses the folder-file metaphor for content objects. They can have states and properties; they can be copied/cut/pasted into other Plone folders even though they don't really exist as files or folders on the file system itself. Another easily overlooked feature is the extensive metadata fields that exist for content types. (it exists in a secondary horizontal tab). The book chooses (wisely) not to talk too much about third party Plone products (i.e., plugins). But it does go into great detail about using PloneFormGen (an auto-generator of web forms) and cache-fu (an indispensable product for caching performance). These two sections were very well done. The last half of the book describes how Plone development proceeds, beginning with creating new content types. In Chapter 16, the book covers how to use a graphical UML tool called ArchGenXML to create a new content type based on the builtin content types. Here you use Archetypes, a Plone-specific way of building content types. (Archetypes have been around since Plone 2). After you use the graphical tool to create UML, the ArchGenXML script will generate the product code for you to upload to the server's file system. Later, in Chapter 17, there is a good walkthrough of using Generic Setup to export configuration changes you make in the Zope Management Interface (ZMI) into an XML file on the file system. That allows you to replicate site configuration more easily and keep configuration information outside of the database. Chapter 17 also covers the Zope 3 architecture underlying Plone and how to set up browser views in ZCML configuration files and viewlets and portlets. Chapter 18 covers the creation of themes and css for a Plone site. This process is slightly complicated because you make your changes to a themed product which is later installed/enabled from Plone Site Setup. The book walks you through the steps of using a python script called paster to generate a series of files which make up the theme product. Editing the css for the theme is possible only if you understand how viewlets work and which files you are supposed to edit (it is not simply a styles.css file). The last two chapters cover caching and performance tuning. Overall, well done. In general, this is an excellent guide and it covers a lot of ground thoroughly. Unlike the Drupal series of books by Packt (which struck me as flimsy-they have 12 separate books!), this book combines all the important aspects of Plone 3 into a single book. Everything in the book struck me as important-none of the material seemed like padding. The usage information in the first section was very well done (although it probably needed better coverage of Kupu, the rich text editor). The section on workflows was great, and the explanation about Zope 3 views seemed well done, but the look-and-feel chapter looked imposing. If editing a CSS class means having to edit a theme product and re-add it, that might discourage doing too many tweaks (especially on a live site!). It would have been nice to have an appendix summarizing the configuration files, location of important objects in the ZMI and CSS classes. I did not see any chapter about uploading images or multimedia files on the file system; that seemed to be outside of the book's scope. I am not a developer (I just play one on TV), but there seemed enough meat in the advanced sections to address many contexts. Finally, it's worth pointing out that the plone.org site has a well-organized documentation section. The book may lack a good section on kupu, but plone.org has several help topics about Kupu. (In fact, many of the book's contributors also produce documentation for the Plone.org site). One doesn't read this kind of book for narrative; nonetheless, most of it was easy to read and easy on the eyes. Except for chapters 17 and 18 (which were a little deep), the rest of the book got straight to the point quickly. In summary: this book is a substantial guide which covers a lot of intermediate and advanced topics. Very well written and organized (with lots of illustrations), but the section on themes was hairy and even a little confusing
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Nice book to have around the office,
By
This review is from: Practical Plone 3: A Beginner's Guide to Building Powerful Websites (Paperback)
This is a book which is aimed at beginners, tough I dare say that the term beginner in this case is stretched a bit. That is because the book is divided in four parts and I think that the reader of parts one and two might not be the kind of reader that will ever get to parts three and four, because the skill levels required are so wide apart. I guess the idea was to cover the basics and then keep at hand the required knowledge for people who might want to learn more, but I'm not sure it works.
Even so, the material in the book does cover beginner and intermediate levels, which fits nicely with the advanced profile of Packt's other Plone 3 book, Professional Plone Development, by Martin Aspeli. In those two books, we have close to 1,000 pages of Plone 3 knowledge combined. This is really a very good thing for the Plone community. Speaking of community, the book is a real community effort, as 13 different persons wrote at least one chapter. I think both the authors and editors did a good job at making the text flow without abrupt style changes, so overall I think this idea worked pretty well. As for the content of the book, I find the authors did a good job too. The book is well written and covers the material aptly. In fact, I feel the parts where the reader is more likely to get lost or find some difficulty understanding the concepts, are more the result of Plone's shortcomings than of the author's skills.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great introduction to Plone.,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Practical Plone 3: A Beginner's Guide to Building Powerful Websites (Paperback)
Practical Plone 3 is just what you need if you are new to Plone. It starts with the basics and guides you through to more advanced topics. Every Plone administrator needs to have this book handy.
Plone is not a system that's easy to learn, but the authors take you by the hand and kindly teach you the most important concepts. If you've ever tried Plone and thought it was too hard to learn, please get this book and try it again. It covers installing Plone, configuring the many options, and creating a new theme to customize the "look" of your site. There are even chapters on more advanced topics like creating your own content types, caching, and connecting Plone to an Active Directory or LDAP user directory. One of the great things about Practical Plone 3 is that the different topics are covered by different authors, all of whom are experts in their areas. This brings a great deal of knowledge from different sources into one volume. If you use Plone, you should buy this book!
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