|
|
DotNetNukeThis forum post has messages dated from 01/27/07 through 02/17/07, please be sure to read all the messages. If you feel it is old or outdated, please follow up with a question or comment and someone may be able to update it, or reply with newer information if you have it. Web - Design - Web - Design
| DotNetNuke I am looking at developing a site in DNN (DotNetNuke), but after looking at some of the sites running on it, I'm not sure whether the performance is good enough. I'd be interested to hear what experience people have had, because it seems an amazing free platform. |
| I think that performance is not going to be lightning fast, but I have seen a number of DNN sites achieving quite good performance figures. Secret seems to be to use caching of the modules efficiently and avoiding running any that use up excess bandwidth. I know of someone who deleted a module which logged the users online because it slowed his site down tremendously. A little thing like that can make a tremendous difference. |
| I've used DNN version 3 but haven't tried the newer version 4. Apparently there is no easy upgrade from V3 to V4 so once you've set up a website using V3 you are going to have to start from scratch again. Possibly V4 is faster, but I find DNN to be pretty reasonable speed-wise if cached correctly. |
Reply Options Share your opinions, advice, questions or comments on this post. | Be Heard: Forum reply options: We encourage everyone to share their opinions, comments, thoughts and information, please consider sharing... Please register or login in to reply to this post: It is quick, easy and offers many advantages when using our site. |
Social NetworkingShare this with your friends on facebook, twitter and Google+ | | Social sharing because it feels good:
| | |
Tags and TaggingTags help organize related posts and resources by topic. | |
|