miniLOL is a highly modular CMS written in Javascript, but it’s more than that, it’s a development platform.
miniLOL comes with some useful libraries and extensions for module developers, and the event driven nature of miniLOL makes it easy to develop modules that interact with the content.
Well, at first miniLOL was written to be used by me on a slow server, so having less work load on the server was a good idea, because it would be faster.
I’m deliberately going against the web trend of cloud computing because I don’t see it as a good thing.
Why having 100 people downloading content that’s been generated by a server would be better than having those 100 people generate the content from some XML files?
I think it’s a pretty neat idea having everything on the client side.
The core is Javascript only, modules are written in JS and can have the backend in whatever language you want.
This means that on a server that has CGI with C you can write your own backend and everything will work as expected.
In this way you can put miniLOL on embedded hardware as long as there’s a web server that can serve static files.
The Blog module for example can be used without the PHP backend, you just have to edit the XML file and upload it to the server, and the blog will be updated.
Well, I DO NOT WANT to be indexed, but I know most do, so there’s a Static module which is a PHP implementation of miniLOL.
It’s modular as well, so you can get module adapters that make real modules work in the Static version and there are even Static modules, like URL Rewrite that enables Apache URL rewriting.
It’s obviously less powerful than the real one, but you should use it just to give content to search engines or text browsers, so deal with it.