Pulse can be dropped into your live beautiful HTML site with copy and paste. You can use a Pulse template as a starter. You can convert any HTML site. Or you can use a website builder such as Blocs or RapidWeaver to make your site without coding. We also have a builder that works on PC or Mac - so plenty of options!
To install, just upload some Pulse folders to your server. That's it. You can use any shared hosting and don't need to pay us any monthly fees to run your Pulse sites. Go from your idea to a live site in about 30 minutes and you'll have a secure and fast site editor. Plus, you don't need to keep updating it every week so for some projects you can "set and forget".
The Pulse site editor is easy for clients to use from any device (even mobile) and if they can use Microsoft Word, they'll be fine here. This means less hassle and training on your side. Plus with a fast and SEO-orientated site, they should see good rankings, performance and fast load speed.
Based on our record, Umbraco seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 5 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
As /u/transhumanist2000 said, the only other one I've seen that looked heavily supported and had a sizable following are dot net nuke, and I'd add, Umbraco (https://umbraco.com/). Unfortunately I haven't heard the best of feedback about these cmses. Source: over 1 year ago
I really like Umbraco (https://umbraco.com/), It has a decent community, and is on DotNetCore these days makes it very easy to use. You can setup most basic things yourself, but since it exists as a satellite to your site. You can integrate with it as deeply or not as you want. Plus the workflow for defining content is nice, the customer-facing UI is also slick, and adding custom elements to it and extending is... Source: over 1 year ago
Because of this, the Umbraco HQ created the Umbraco Heartcore project that builds upon the existing Umbraco CMS by adding a headless integration in GraphQL. The only problem with this solution is the pricing. Because Umbraco CMS is open-source and free to use, you might see this product solution as a barrier to entry. It also makes it impossible to use your infrastructure to manage your CMS as they require the... - Source: dev.to / about 2 years ago
Umbraco is the one I was thinking of in terms of popularity and being free and open (the self hosted version at least, they have a paid for cloud solution as well). Source: over 2 years ago
I work for an open source .NET CMS Umbraco and I wanted to investigate the snazzy new feature of GitHub Codespaces and VSCode remote container development. - Source: dev.to / about 3 years ago
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