New Mango Blog Theme: Business Mango
In an attempt to get an inventory organized, we stumbled across a design that was never utilized for a project. The instant thought was that this design would be perfect to use for a first-attempt at a from-scratch Mango Blog theme. While we have worked with Mango on several sites, we mostly adapted existing designs/templates to the look we needed. This rediscovered design was a good idea for our first, very own, Mango Blog theme.
We came across the open source ColdFusion blog application Mango Blog over a year ago and fell in love with it instantly. The potential is huge and the ideas are near limitless. It is very much the "WordPress of ColdFusion", with one important difference: Mango is alot easier to skin!
To promote the continued use of Mango Blog, the nerds at Brice Cheddarn have decided to embark on a Mango Crusade to spread the word. Call us the Tom Cruise of Mangotology.
As a part of that, we will begin to code a series of plugins and themes released under the Creative Commons so that anyone can download and use freely, or change as they see fit.
The Business Mango Theme is the first of many free theme ideas we have in mind. This theme is very simple and rather plain but, it is good for throwing a site up in a hurry and is very professional looking, making it a good choice for any number of business oriented websites or personal blogs. It is validated XHTML and CSS as an added bonus. As time allows, updates and enhancements will be made.
categories: coldfusion - css - Laura Arguello - mango blog - mango theme - nerd
A bonaza of ColdFusion News
There is a lot going on right now in the World of ColdFusion. First, July marks another birthday for our dear ColdFusion. Joseph JJ Allaire and his brother Jeremy released CF in July 1995, making it 14 years old this month. Not surprising, Adobe wished ColdFusion a happy birthday by officially releasing the public beta version of ColdFusion 9 (Centaur) and ColdFusion Builder recently. Since then, the CFers have been blogging machines. Below is a good sampling of the news floating around.
Adobe releases public beta of ColdFusion 9 and ColdFusion Builder [ColdFusion Jedi]
Adobe ColdFusion CFML Reference
Adobe ColdFusion 9 Videos [Adobe]
Getting Started With The New ColdFusion Builder [Ben Forta]
Adobe wires ColdFusion into Microsoft Office and SharePoint
categories: development - tech news - links - coldfusion - adobe - coldfusion jedi - ben forta
Raymond Camden - Twitter Jedi Master?
In the world of ColdFusion, Raymond Camden is definitely a Jedi Master. His ColdFusion blog is one of the most popular websites for CF developers, not to mention his blog engine (BlogCFC) is one of the most popular CF apps out there. He writes books about ColdFusion, gives seminars about it, makes his wife speak to him in backwards ColdFusion...the guy does it all. Now he is Tweeting about ColdFusion.
Twitter, the ridiculously popular microblogging site, has allowed CF developers from around the world to collaborate. So, it comes as no surprise to know Ray has amassed a large and loyal following on there, too. Not only is he Tweeting about ColdFusion, @cfjedimaster is harnessing the power of the Jedi to thwart any web nerd that comes even remotely close to putting #coldfusion in the same tweet as *gulp* a negative word.
categories: nerd - coldfusion - collaboration - coldfusion jedi - twitter - raymond camden
Hackers causing havoc in the World of ColdFusion
Nothing like waking up on a Friday before a holiday to discover that Hackers have been causing havoc in the world of ColdFusion. Our inbox this morning contained a message from one of our preferred ColdFusion Hosting companies Crystal Tech (now Newtek Technology Services) about the attacks and several CF sites are reporting on the coordinated efforts.
Hackers are exploiting sites running older installations of some ColdFusion applications, such as FCKEditor (a popular HTML text editor) or CKFinder (an Ajax file manager). The potential security vulnerability exists in a popular ColdFusion shopping cart application CFWebstore that allows uploading of a shell script to a vulnerable site and gain root access to the server. For less technical readers, this isn't a good thing. This allows hackers to take advantage of the vulnerabilities to plant malicious scripts onto compromised websites, as part of a drive-by download attack that ultimately aims to infect visitors to the hacked site.
Luckily, none of our CF sites are in danger, as we don't use FCKEditor for anything in our development (TinyMCE rocks!) and CFWebstore is not a product we use for our sites. Plus, Crystal Tech has assured us that that they "have already taken steps to minimize the potential for compromise".
categories: development - tech news - web news - coldfusion - hackers






