The Nucleus CMS core development team has released Nucleus CMS v3.5. Although Nucleus CMS contains a lot of bug fixes, it's the new features that will catch your attention.
Highlights of the new features in this release include two new plugins in the core system:
NP_Text eases the translation of Skins
NP_SecurityEnforcer improves the security of the core.
The first step to an universal SQL API is done. This should allow easier use of other back-end database engines, like pdo or sqlite, but only MySQL will be officially supported in 3.5.
Some changes are made to make Nucleus CMS compatible to PHP5.3.
There are no urgent security fixes in this release so that you have not to hurry up. The Nucleus CMS core developers still recommends that site owners update their software so that your blog software is up to date and work with all plugins.
This has been a very cold week in the Dakotas. Sunday morning the temperature dropped to around -14 degrees Fahrenheit (that's around -26 degrees Celsius). These are real temperatures and not wind chill.
Needless to say, I am not spending a whole lot of time outside this month. However, these cold temperatures are very geek friendly. I am spending my time at the computer and getting some very needed things done.
Some of the items I have been working on that may be of interest to you:
I am starting to make some decisions on where I want to take CMS Report
from here. I'm considering to go more "professional" with the site.
The changes I would like to make may involve some willingness on my part to partner with someone
who has similar interests and more experience in these matters.
Around this time last year, Packt Publishing announced the "top five" finalists for their award (no separate categories in 2006). In 2006, those CMS projects that made it to the finalist list included Drupal, e107, Joomla, Plone, and Xoops. When those five CMS were announced, I chose to double my efforts on covering those applications here at CMS Report. Although the extra categories this year have brought quite a few more Open Source CMS into the foreground, I still don't see why I couldn't keep most of them on my CMS Focus radar scope. With 16,000 people nominating their favorite CMS for this award, that amount of generated interest is hard to ignore. Luckily, I already cover many of the CMS that did make it as a finalist...but there are still many new CMS on that list that will shake things up a bit here at CMSReport.com.
This release fixes a recently discovered cross site scripting issue. While there are no new features in this release, upgrading is recommended when your Nucleus installation has the "Allow Visitors to Create a Member Account" option enabled.
By the way, thanks to the folks at Nucleus for recommending users to upgrade to the new version and not saying that it is a required or mandatory upgrade. I don't know why that gets my goat, but the rebel geek inside of me always resists doing what others think I should be required to do.
The folks at Nucleus announced the release of version 3.23. This release fixes a recently discovered security issue. While there are no new features in this release, upgrading is highly recommended by Nucleus