I'd definitely recommend mambo/joomla over contribute. I have clients with both, contribute is way more complicated to get setup , install on separate machines, etc... once mambo or joomla are setup its cake to edit content. I'm doing the exact same thing for the exact same reasons with the same type of (nonprofit) client. ;) Juliet Jacobson wrote: > ** Be a Good Dobee and help the group, you must be counted to post . > ** Fill out the survey/skills inventory in the member's area. > > > Hi > > I'm redesigning a site for a very non-technical, no-webmaster, > non-profit type organization that wants to edit and maintain their > site on an ongoing basis. I was thinking of using Contribute > (step-child of DreamWeaver) and setting up the site to be as > idiot-proof as possible (putting all navigation into includes, > controlling all styling with css.) Now I'm thinking maybe I'm > reinventing the wheel and I should use Mambo instead. Would Mambo be a > good solution for this scenario? Is it difficult for a > marginally-technical person such as myself to set up and use Mambo? > > thanks in advance for advice, > Juliet Jacobson > > _______________________________________________ > Hidden-discuss mailing list - home page: http://www.hidden-tech.net > Hidden-discuss at lists.hidden-tech.net > > You are receiving this because you are on the Hidden-Tech Discussion > list. > If you would like to change your list preferences, Go to the Members > page on the Hidden Tech Web site. > http://www.hidden-tech.net/members > -- Thanks, Matt Lampiasi, President 413-303-9167 or http://florenceit.net Florence I.T. - A Community I.T. shop.