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02-03-2012, 11:14   #1
banjacksed
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ecommerce software

Anyone tell me whats the best ecommerce/open source software for creating a website? I mean kinda user friendly stuff
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02-03-2012, 11:29   #2
syklops
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OScommerce is probably the most common one. A list of the top ten can be found here:

http://www.webdistortion.com/2008/05...orms-reviewed/
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07-03-2012, 12:47   #3
Citizen_Kane
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Depends on where you wanna go with your site?

Have you considered pre-packaged services such as Etsy or even Ebay?
Defo the easiest but probably not what you want, otherwise you would not be asking!

Easiest is going to be Wordpress linked into a third party payment operator via plugins. Wordpress is easy, but limited. Basically a blog with ability to buy things.

Next step up would be something like Drupal with a plugin such as Ubercart. Drupal is not as limited as Wordpress - you can build anything you want including blogs, forums and custom pages. Your imagination is the limit, but some assembly required!

If you see yourself growing into a large business, something like Magento is going to be the business. The advantage here is you can link into back-end ERP infrastructure such as OpenErp to manage you stock, warehouses, customer relations, sales leads, payroll, accounting etc, etc, etc..............
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28-03-2012, 15:56   #4
willows
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Originally Posted by Citizen_Kane View Post
Depends on where you wanna go with your site?

Have you considered pre-packaged services such as Etsy or even Ebay?
Defo the easiest but probably not what you want, otherwise you would not be asking!

Easiest is going to be Wordpress linked into a third party payment operator via plugins. Wordpress is easy, but limited. Basically a blog with ability to buy things.

Next step up would be something like Drupal with a plugin such as Ubercart. Drupal is not as limited as Wordpress - you can build anything you want including blogs, forums and custom pages. Your imagination is the limit, but some assembly required!

If you see yourself growing into a large business, something like Magento is going to be the business. The advantage here is you can link into back-end ERP infrastructure such as OpenErp to manage you stock, warehouses, customer relations, sales leads, payroll, accounting etc, etc, etc..............

Emmm be careful of magento, very nice looking admin end with some lovely animated graphs hides a horrible engine that cannot be extended cheaply. There are many companies making a living ont he complexity of magento. Load in a few hundred product and run for 3 months. You'll have a dog slow site and though it may look nice, slow = less sales.

Lots of opensource carts out there will do the trick.
Zencart, Loadedcommrce, oscommerce, opencart, etc etc.

There are plent of pretty templates available for all.
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07-05-2012, 18:34   #5
georgiecasey
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Emmm be careful of magento, very nice looking admin end with some lovely animated graphs hides a horrible engine that cannot be extended cheaply. There are many companies making a living ont he complexity of magento. Load in a few hundred product and run for 3 months. You'll have a dog slow site and though it may look nice, slow = less sales.

Lots of opensource carts out there will do the trick.
Zencart, Loadedcommrce, oscommerce, opencart, etc etc.

There are plent of pretty templates available for all.
Magento is complicated because it was built with one thing in mind; flexibility and customisation. You can create a magento module that overrides nearly anything without touching the core code. There's a big ecosystem around it with extensions for a lot of things if you need them, the package can do most things from a standard install.

Yes, it can be very slow if you don't invest in the hardware. On my 16gb, i7 2600k server with caching and APC, performance is great.

But you're right, I suppose I'm one of the developers banking on the complexity of Magento
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