29th November 2011
We are delighted to announce the release of Pinax 0.9a2. This release represents a dramatic change in the way we do things but lays the foundation for Pinax 1.0 and beyond.
more announcements →
Featured Post
by
James Tauber in
Community on
10th October 2011
The Pinax platform has had its ups and downs since it was launched in 2008. People either love it or just don't get it. About the only thing everyone agrees on is that it doesn't seem to be progressing as fast as it once did. This talk took a fresh look at the goals of Pinax, what we did well, what we didn't do so well and what we're (slowly) doing to fix it.
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Features
Pinax provides:
standard project layout for consistency and easy deployment starter projects that can be used as the basis for any Django website as well as some tailored to community sites, company sites, intranets and sites in closed beta reusable apps providing both back-end functionality and user-facing components default templates to enable quick prototyping
...including apps for:
account management
openid e-mail verification password management
profiles notifications activity streams private betas / waiting lists
badges tagging wikis forums blogs task tracking friend and follower relations
by
James Tauber in
Announcements on
29th November 2011
We are delighted to announce the release of Pinax 0.9a2. This release represents a dramatic change in the way we do things but lays the foundation for Pinax 1.0 and beyond.
by
Patrick Altman in
Articles on
1st November 2011
One common feature request we've had for Pinax is the ability for users to indicate that they "Like" some object. So, we wrote an app called phileo and open sourced it under a BSD license for use in Pinax and Django projects in general.
by
Patrick Altman in
Articles on
18th October 2011
There are times when you have a publicly available site, so you don't need invites to join a private site. However, you would like to encourage users to tell people about your site and reward them for doing so. This is where anafero comes in as a referral app.
by
James Tauber in
Community on
10th October 2011
The Pinax platform has had its ups and downs since it was launched in 2008. People either love it or just don't get it. About the only thing everyone agrees on is that it doesn't seem to be progressing as fast as it once did. This talk took a fresh look at the goals of Pinax, what we did well, what we didn't do so well and what we're (slowly) doing to fix it.
by
Patrick Altman in
Articles on
31st August 2011
It's a fairly common feature these days for sites to permit users to invite others to join the site. This is even more popular in closed, private beta sites that haven't launched yet where it is desirable for the user base to grow in an organic but controlled fashion.
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Developer Information
Pinax is available under an MIT license. The source code is available from GitHub.
Tickets and Wiki are at code.pinaxproject.com
Most discussion about Pinax takes place on the IRC channel #pinax on Freenode or the pinax-users mailing list on Google Groups.
more sites built on Pinax →
“I have started using pinax only recently and already I don't do django sites without it. It is such a great improvement to my process.”
— Toni Milovan, FWD.hr
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Events
6th–10th September 2011, Portland, Oregon