public-demo
KeystoneJS
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public-demo | KeystoneJS | |
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8 | 56 | |
123 | 8,848 | |
4.9% | 1.2% | |
8.8 | 9.4 | |
6 days ago | 5 days ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
- | MIT License |
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public-demo
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Can I use ghost like this?
If you're open to other headless CMS, I'd really recommend Payload. You can get a blog content structure setup SUPER easily and it is all code based and extensible. You can poke around this demo to get a feel for it and see if it's something that interests you https://demo.payloadcms.com/
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Launch Week Day 3 - Bulk Operations
Update your own Payload project or head on over to the public demo and give it a shot.
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Launch HN: Payload (YC S22) – Headless CMS for Developers
Hey HN, my name is James and I founded Payload (https://payloadcms.com/) with two close colleagues, Dan and Elliot. We're a dev-first headless CMS [1] that's half app framework and half CMS. We're closing the gap between the two.
Imagine you're going to build a new SaaS app. Would you think of building it on a headless CMS? Probably not. To devs, "content management system" is usually a swear word. If a team of engineers gets assigned a CMS project, it's less than thrilling. Engineers want to avoid roadblocks, write code, and build things they're proud of—but existing CMS get in the way of that left and right.
Rather, you'd build your backend on an app framework like Django, Laravel, etc—and for good reason. Ownership over the backend, better access control, customizable auth patterns, etc. Typically, headless CMS are super limiting; you'll end up fighting the platform more than having it help. But, with app frameworks, you're often left to roll your own admin UI, and that takes time. Not to mention building CRUD UI gets old quick after you do it a few times. That’s where a headless CMS could shine, because they instantly give you admin UI that non-technical teams can use to manage digital products. That saves a ton of UI dev time but without an extensible API, headless CMS are far too limiting.
Payload provides the best of both ends—a powerful and extensible API and a fully customizable admin UI out-of-the-box. All with a developer experience that we obsessed over.
Typical CMS’s squabble over winning the minds of marketers, but we know that marketing teams pretty much need table stakes when it comes to CMS. Log in, create a draft, preview the draft, publish the content. Go back and update some pages. Define editor roles and localize content. There's no point in competing with that noisy market, so we're undercutting it wholesale and treating developers as first-class citizens.
It uses your own Express server, so you can open up your own endpoints alongside of what Payload does, and you can extend just about every single thing that Payload does all in TypeScript. It's MIT and open-source, fully self-hosted, comes with GraphQL and REST APIs, and completely customizable.
We realized the need for Payload while we were building the corporate website for Klarna. The Klarna engineers we were working with were among the best in the world, and while they evaluated headless CMS options, they saw restrictions in how all of the normal contenders "black-box" away the API. They wanted to build their CMS, deploy it on their own infrastructure, and truly "own" their CMS. They fell back to using WordPress. When that happened, Klarna inadvertently shined a spotlight on the CMS market and pointed out a significant void in proper code-based, developer-first CMS. There was no one to give them the DX they needed. So we built Payload.
Our business model is based on two things:
1. Enterprise features like SSO, audit logs, publication workflows, and translation workflows. Of course, as Payload is open-source, you can build these functions yourself, but enterprises are opting to pay for our official functionality and SLAs rather than rolling it themselves.
2. Cloud hosting. Now that Payload 1.0 is released and ready for production after more than two years of development and dogfooding, we've shifted focus to building a deployment platform for Payload that will deliver permanent file storage, database, API layer, and CI. It will be the easiest way to deploy Payload, but not mandatory to use—much like the NextJS and Vercel model.
You can get started in one line by running `npx create-payload-app` or you can try out our public demo at https://demo.payloadcms.com. The code for the demo is open source and available at https://github.com/payloadcms/public-demo.
We would love to hear your feedback. If we don't have something, we'll build it. If there's a sticky spot in the DX (developer experience!), we’ll fix it. Looking forward to hearing what you think—and thank you!
[1] Quick refresher: CMS stands for "content management system" and headless just means "API-based", with no restrictions over where you use the content on the frontend.
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Responsive Headless CMS
Payload CMS has a responsive admin UI. Check out the public demo on your phone to see what it looks like!
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Payload, a TypeScript headless CMS, just launched its first major version and is now out of public beta
Here's a screenshot of our public demo where you can see a custom YouTube element built. You can go play with it and check it out for yourself. That's fully custom. Also, the source code is available here.
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is this true?
Hey I know that software! If you haven't already, could you file an issue on their public-demo github page? If you already have, thank you for contributing to OSS!
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Payload is now completely free and open source
Our public demo is open source which can probably give you a huge learning head start, and we've also got a very in-depth video series on our YouTube channel that shows you how to build a high-end website with NextJS and Payload. There will be a lot more coming from us on YouTube as well.
KeystoneJS
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Open-Source Headless CMS in 2024
Keystone 6: The GraphQL Behemoth
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Is Prisma ORM ready for production?
Also, there are lots of exciting web frameworks that use Prisma as their default ORM layer (like RedwoodJS which is built by the founder of GitHub, Amplication which recently raised $6.6M in seed funding, Wasp (YC W21) or KeystoneJS) which should give you some more validation that Prisma is being used in a lot production applications :)
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Seeking advice on the best headless CMS for an expanding news site
KeystoneJS https://keystonejs.com
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Free CMS for Next js
https://keystonejs.com/ is a nice smaller alternative.
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10 Node.js Frameworks Every Developer Should Know
Keystone.js is a content management system and framework for creating server-side applications that interact with a database. It is based on the Express platform for Node.js and uses MongoDB for data storage. It is an alternative to CMS for web developers who want to create a data-driven website, but do not want to move to the PHP platform or too large systems such as WordPress.
- APITable open-source 500k lines code, the best Airtable alternative
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Help implementing Heroku Data For Redis (+bull & throng) / `ioredis`
I have a website I've built in nextjs frontend using keystonejs as a cms written in node.
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How do I implement Heroku background processes?
I have a working graphql server written in Keystone CMS and hosted on Heroku.
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which is best blog package to integrate in existing nextjs project?
Even you can use WordPress through their API, I would recommend you to try KeystoneJsKeystone Js CMS, as others suggested before, there are several headless CMSs but Keystone is totally free, open source and self hosted, you can even deploy on vercel. take a look
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Next.js+Wordpress or Next.js+Contentful?
The most ok alternative would probably be something like Keystone.
What are some alternatives?
payload - The best way to build a modern backend + admin UI. No black magic, all TypeScript, and fully open-source, Payload is both an app framework and a headless CMS.
Strapi - 🚀 Strapi is the leading open-source headless CMS. It’s 100% JavaScript/TypeScript, fully customizable and developer-first.
keeptrack.space - 🌎📡 TypeScript Astrodynamics Software for Non-Engineers. 3D Visualization of satellite data and the sensors that track them.
Directus - The Modern Data Stack 🐰 — Directus is an instant REST+GraphQL API and intuitive no-code data collaboration app for any SQL database.
AdminJS - AdminJS is an admin panel for apps written in node.js
ApostropheCMS - A full-featured, open-source content management framework built with Node.js that empowers organizations by combining in-context editing and headless architecture in a full-stack JS environment.
Nest - A progressive Node.js framework for building efficient, scalable, and enterprise-grade server-side applications with TypeScript/JavaScript 🚀
Prisma - Next-generation ORM for Node.js & TypeScript | PostgreSQL, MySQL, MariaDB, SQL Server, SQLite, MongoDB and CockroachDB
Ghost - Independent technology for modern publishing, memberships, subscriptions and newsletters.
Express - Fast, unopinionated, minimalist web framework for node.
PencilBlue - Business class content management for Node.js (plugins, server cluster management, data-driven pages)