Submitted by Bryan on
osCommerce, an open source shopping cart, is one more step closer to reaching a 3.0 release.  Although the journey to completing the  osCommerce 3.0 software continues to take users and developers on a very long road,  Alpha 4 was released to the public on March 30th.  As a reminder,  alpha releases of osCommerce are for "testing to help fix and improve subsequent alpha releases for a final, stable, secure, and production ready 3.0 release".  In other words, you shouldn't use the software for a "live" store.

We've already talked about the new features added in earlier alpha versions of osCommerce 3.0 so there is no need to mention them in this article.  New features in Alpha 4 that have been added to the shopping cart since Alpha 3 include:
  • Administration Tool access levels (about time)
  • Administrator Log
  • Administration Tool batch action capabilities
  • HTML Editor for product descriptions (long overdue in my opinion)
  • Full zone entries for most countries
  • Language injection feature for similar languages
  • GeoIP Modules for the Administration Tool Who's Online section
The full list of changes to reported issues that occurred during development of the release can be seen in the change log.

In the next month of so I plan on taking a look at  at this latest alpha version of osCommerce 3.0 more closely.  I have some hopes that there will be enough changes in the software that I won't be needing to migrate a client or two to another shopping cart package in the near future.  Stay tuned to for a review in the near future...

CMS Topics: 

Comments

Joomla osCommerce Drupal

Jared Ritchey's picture

Nice article, I bookmarked it so I can keep coming back.

A little plug about Joomla and Drupal when comparing to osCommerce is that Joomla is SUPER DIFFICULT to get SSL and SEF working at the same time and Drupal is almost as difficult.

I've attempted the Joomla / OpenSEF / VirtueMart method and finally had to do a bridge for Joomla and osCommerce because SSL and navigation just would not work.

Thought I'd drop that in for those who may consider other options. osCommerce is the better solution.

I run a software store ...

Mike Robinson's picture

I run a software store, and since I wrote the software in question I am a pretty good programmer -- but this time, I don't want to be. (I'm using a somewhat-lame hosting plan (1and1.com) that understands Perl and PHP but whose Python is in the stone-age.) Here's what I want ...

  • Static pages organized in a simple way. News and features.
  • Ability to securely take orders and clear them through PayPal, Google Checkout, or any suitable credit-card-clearing provider, without me seeing or handling the card-number.
  • Immediate issue of a license-code and access to the download area upon acceptance of payment. Positive logging of all downloads that have occurred.
  • Integrated trouble-ticket system.
  • We may move into a forum once again.
  • MySQL back-end.
  • "All under one roof." From start to finish, the customer sees only a single website image.
  • Bookmarkable URLs.

Is that too much to ask for? Didn't think so. But I have neither the time nor the inclination to surf far-and-wide, trying this-n-that, knowing that somebody else (and that would be you, Gentle Reader) has already banged his or her head against this same wall before. Thanks for your help. I need this right away. Mike Robinson :: sundial.services at gmail.com