@julian said in Reasons why we switched to WordPress and quit flarum:
That said, I suppose the difference lies in what we perceive as necessary in terms of “batteries included”. It essentially boils down to what proportion of people would want feature X? If it’s something higher than say, 80%, then that’s a pretty good reason to include it out-of-the-box.
And there lies the exact answer. GDPR and SEO are in my view fundamental basics which should be included with the core product. Interestingly, when I left flarum, they still had no functional GDPR extension and took a somewhat maverick view as to how it should be handled, which as a privacy advocate and security expert by trade, this didn’t sit well with me at all.
They are also marketing Blomstra, their paid service out of Europe where for example, Germany have some of the toughest data protection laws around - yet have no formal GDPR facility. Complete madness.
NodeBB has GDPR and SEO out of the box, amongst a whole array of other utilities which makes it light years ahead of flarum. Even with all this extra functionality, NodeBB easily outperforms flarum mostly due to being nodejs based against PHP - and it’s never slow.
I totally understand the concept of a lean core, but when that comes at the cost of negating what should be a baseline for any forum to be able to operate, it’s the wrong model and will cause damage in the long run. Sure, you can’t accommodate everything, and I’m no fan of bloat, but going from flarum to NodeBB was literally night and day in terms of the overall experience alone.
Flarum has an extensive community, but with so much reliance on third party extensions and a product that took 5 years to leave beta, it’s future is questionable in my view.