Author Topic: Past Due Changelogs  (Read 106 times)

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Past Due Changelogs
« on: June 29, 2025, 05:09:29 PM »
https://control-webpanel.com/changelog

Anyone ever going to catch this thing up? 1206 for pro was just released and no up0date on the changelog since the beginning of 2024...SMH. Gonna start considering a replacement for CWP it seems to be going downhill for sure. I mean crap you can't even get this company to fix bugs let alone add new features.

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Re: Past Due Changelogs
« Reply #1 on: June 29, 2025, 06:26:20 PM »
Still no viable alternative in my POV... unless you want to pay cPanel $$$ annually. (I could get away with it on one server, but another server has so many accounts as to put me in a $$/mo tier. I can put up with the lack of communication as long as we have a semi-solid product.

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Re: Past Due Changelogs
« Reply #2 on: June 29, 2025, 09:42:32 PM »
ispconfig is looking good to me i used to use it.

cwp is rated in 6th place right now.

https://www.veeble.com/blog/10-most-popular-web-hosting-control-panels/

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Re: Past Due Changelogs
« Reply #3 on: June 30, 2025, 12:44:19 AM »
Changelogs are very minor.
They are working on getting EL9 stable, so they can already start on EL10.

cPanel & Plesk will always to high, they have been around for 25 + years, and people are use to them, and some people don't like change.

I would rate them to:

1. cPanel (But high Cost)
2. Plesk (Same - High Cost, and then nickel & dime you to death with plugins)
3. Webuzo (Again - Cost)
4. CWP
5. ISPConfig
6. ISPManager
7. VestaCP
8. DirectAdmin
9. VirtualMin (Webmin's cousin)
10. Ajenti 2 (Looks like it has some promise)

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Re: Past Due Changelogs
« Reply #4 on: July 01, 2025, 03:44:48 PM »
DirectAdmin is also very expensive if you have any number of user accounts. A lot of this thread's ground was already covered in this other thread:
https://forum.centos-webpanel.com/informations/future-of-cwp/
shoulders put together this fairly comprehensive comparison of panels:
https://quantumwarp.com/kb/articles/64-cpanel/1001-cpanel-alternatives-and-linux-web-interfaces

Again, a lot of the downfall of each is high monthly cost, putting you right back into cPanel-land. Either that or they are young, unproven, or downright clunky (and some are eye gougingly ugly).