For the informative comparison. I have been learning Drupal for the past year and a half or so, and it has been quite a challenge (I have a designer/illustrator background), but the thing that I like is that Drupal has a large and growing community. It also seems to keep getting better over time. I recently learned about EE when looking at Veerle's Blog (I noticed she uses EE) and got scared for a moment that EE was possibly superior to Drupal. But reading your comparison, I was relieved to see Drupal as the stronger (at least in popularity) of the two.
I'm learning theming and site construction; the large Drupal community means more books to buy and sites to learn from, without which I would be hopelessly lost.
I tried WordPress as well, which was ok but too blog-centric for what I want to do.
Thanks Ivica
For the informative comparison. I have been learning Drupal for the past year and a half or so, and it has been quite a challenge (I have a designer/illustrator background), but the thing that I like is that Drupal has a large and growing community. It also seems to keep getting better over time. I recently learned about EE when looking at Veerle's Blog (I noticed she uses EE) and got scared for a moment that EE was possibly superior to Drupal. But reading your comparison, I was relieved to see Drupal as the stronger (at least in popularity) of the two.
I'm learning theming and site construction; the large Drupal community means more books to buy and sites to learn from, without which I would be hopelessly lost.
I tried WordPress as well, which was ok but too blog-centric for what I want to do.
Thanks again for your even-handed review.
Daniel from Los Angeles