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Free and open source tool #6: Joomla!

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

Home About Me Subscribe Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology Thoughtful and sometimes snarky perspectives on nonprofit technology Free and open source tool #6: Joomla! It installs easily on generic virtual hosts, and has a very sweet, eye-candy full admin interface. Mambo is way less popular than Joomla at this point.

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27 Recommended Affordable or Free Nonprofit Software Tools

Bloomerang

This can streamline everything from new employee onboarding to cross-team collaboration and secure file sharing. WordPress Platform overview: WordPress is a free, open-source CMS, meaning anyone can view and change the software’s code to suit their needs. Prices vary based on the hosting provider you choose.

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Coding Basics: HTML, CSS, and JavaScript Explained

Tech Soup

The Internet can be a confusing place, and often Internet concepts, like coding a website, may seem complicated and overwhelming. At its most basic level, a website is a collection of files inside folders that visitors can access when they type an URL into their browser. You can watch her full, in-depth presentation.

Files 37
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Wiki Syntax madness

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

I love it because it’s really easy to set up and back up (it’s all files, not in a database,) and it’s has draft autosaves (yay!). I have two other wikis ( a public and private wiki) that are in Mediawiki, on my web host. And I contribute to varied other wikis, which are on varied other wiki platforms. Be Helpful.

Wiki 100
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Nonprofit Radio: How to Make Podcasts That Promote Your Brand and Engage Supporters

NTEN

From questions about the actual production of the files, to distribution, to listener metrics and feedback, there are plenty of moving parts that can raise questions. Think of it as TiVo ® for Social Media on the Internet: People can get precisely what content they want, whenever they want it.

Podcast 59
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The search for good web conferencing, take 2

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

WebHuddle is free, and open source. This is what I want: The community edition of DimDim that integrates with an open source VOIP system and Moodle. Earlier, I’d found that the only tools that would work with presenters using Linux were ReadyTalk and WebHuddle. ReadyTalk is proprietary and not free (as in beer).

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15 Steps to an Awesome Website Launch

Care2

Cross browser compatible tested – Make sure that your site loads well in all major web browsers including Firefox, Google Chrome, Safari, and yes, Internet Explorer. Set up scheduled backups your web host or from within your Content Management system. Most open-source CMSs have tools or plugins for setting up daily backups.