The latest Joomla! does not have built in granular user access control,[1] although this is planned for Joomla! 1.6.[2]
The built in section/category feature is limited by the simple section/category/article hierarchy,[3] however flexible category structure support is planned for Joomla 1.6
Each website requires a separate Joomla! installation.[4]
The Joomla! package consists of many different parts, which allow modular extensions and integrations to be made easily. An example of such are extensions called "Plugins".[1] (Previously known as "Mambots".) Plugins are background extensions that extend Joomla! with new functionality. The WikiBot, for example, allows the author of Joomla! content to use "Wikitags" in Joomla! articles which will auto-create dynamic hyperlinks to Wikipedia articles when displayed.[2] There are over 4,000 extensions for Joomla! available via the Extensions Directory.[3]
Joomla! has an official and many unofficial communities. By July 2008, the official Joomla! forum had more than 300,000 threads and over 1.3 million posts from more than 255,000 registered members in 40 languages.[1] Unofficial sites are published in many languages, often with Joomla! extensions that are region specific. Bi-directional text support for the Hebrew and Arabic languages, for example, can be found on 3rd party community portals.
Light a candle in the memory of all of those unforgotten heroes who have died from acts of terrorism over many years, as well as to all the common people or personalities that we remember with love.
An adaptation of a PHP-Nuke script of the flash games for other CMSs(Joomla and Mambo, Xoops, PostNuke, CPG-Nuke, etc.): Arkanoid, Boules, Chess, Dare Dozen, Joga Tangram, Moebius, Pacman, Poker, Spore Cubes, Super Albi, Tangram, Tetris, Zoo Keeper and ZX Globe.