| Damian Caynes aka idigital |
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| Written by Arthur Konze | |
| Sunday, 19 September 2004 | |
He is the enfant terrible of the official Mambo forums. Damian Caynes aka idigital has been banned 3 times already from Mamboserver.com. If he is not getting banned somewhere, he successfully creates backend templates, works together with Arnes Hadzic at Allmambo.com and helps his fellow Mambers over at Mambers.com. He currently works at a very promising project called Mambo Desktop. Enough for me, to talk with Damian for our Who is Who section. Read on, to see his interview.
Personal Information Name: Damian Caynes Mambo and You When Did you get in Contact with Mambo? I was amazed by both the power of Mambo and its evolution. I was shocked by the attitudes of some in the community and the subsequent melodrama that has eventuated. It's been the best and worst of both worlds for all involved, I'm sure, although I believe that we can all move forward from these eruptuions to greater things. It's all good. What is your current role in the Mambo community? Apart from a forum addiction I'm trying to shake, I have been hacking away at Mambo quite a bit in the months since I've started using it. When the backend templating features were still emerging, I hacked together the Javabean Admin template as a demonstration of what would be possible. In the past month that has had over two thousand downloads, and I know has been altered for at least one production site. I've found that with it's very open model, Mambo is ideal for anyone who wants to get into php and mysql development as well as design and content management. In some ways it is the ultimate learning tool for these technologies, and everyone can make it grow into a mature platform. I'm just one of those mambers getting to know Mambo and php as I go along. We're all hackers at heart. Do you have any Mambo projects beside the above? I've put together a javascript DOM windowed administrator, Mambo Desktop, that will get finished at some point. It's a different way of accessing the backend, with the feel of windows within your browser, although it could end up a bit of a novelty. Another concept I'm playing with is packaging CMTs in various ways, administrator templating and customisation has opened up a new world for Mambo developers. I'm also a team member over at allmambo.com, and I'm happy to help out or contribute to any worthwhile project. That takes up most of my waking hours. Of course, there are also the secret projects, but they are secret! ;) What are you doing, when you are not working for Mambo? About Mambo What is Mambo's biggest advantage against other CMS? And the biggest disadvantage? Also the closed door development mentality of Mambo Project Management seems to stunt the development process of third parties creating new CMTs, we all really need to know where Mambo is going at all times. A roadmap is a good step, hopefully at some point we'll be able to see where that road leads. Without that full knowledge, it's hard for developers to know whether to stick with the old or pioneer the new. Where do you see Mambo in the future? I also think that we'll see other branches of Mambo, projects using the Mambo "engine" to power their web applications. We know Mambo as a CMS, in the future it will probably become more of a web application framework than simply content management. Your final word to the community? |


He is the enfant terrible of the official Mambo forums. Damian Caynes aka idigital has been banned 3 times already from Mamboserver.com. If he is not getting banned somewhere, he successfully creates backend templates, works together with Arnes Hadzic at Allmambo.com and helps his fellow Mambers over at Mambers.com. He currently works at a very promising project called Mambo Desktop. Enough for me, to talk with Damian for our Who is Who section. Read on, to see his interview.