

Pulse CMS
Pulse CMS is the easiest way to build and deploy a responsive, content managed website. Since it's a flat file CMS there is no complicated database setup, just copy it to your server and go.
Features
- WYSIWYG Support
- Text Highlighting
- Flat File CMS
- Content Management
Tags
- Responsive design
- web-content-management
Pulse CMS News & Activities
Recent activities
Pulse CMS information
What is Pulse CMS?
Edit Content Edit your site with an easy to use WYSIWYG editor.
No Database No messing with database installation. Just upload and go.
Beautiful Galleries Create beautiful photo galleries with captions.
Customizable Form Build a custom contact form in seconds, delivered to any email.
Responsive Fully responsive frontend and backend, ready for mobile.
Built-In Backup Automatic backups keep your data safe on your server.
Extensible Select from a growing library of themes and plugins, or roll your own.
Clear Stats Built-in visitor statistics give you the data you need to know.
Blog with Ease Adding a blog with comments to your website is a breeze.







Comments and Reviews
Pulse is a databaseless CMS, which is quite flexible. Your pages can have different templates, and with blocks you define different content areas per page.
And Pulse is easy. There is no special template language like Smarty or Twig or whatever – you only need HTML and CSS and some specific Pulse tags.
On the other hand, it might be not so easy. Customers will certainly not understand the difference between pages and blocks, and they could cause some chaos. But fortunately, you can create a user group for your customers, let’s call it _editor_, and only give your customers access to edit blocks, but not pages—since I think, best practice is to use pages only for layout purposes, and blocks only for the content.
But I'm sorry that I have to say that the blog capabilities and features are weak and unintuitive, in my opinion. And there are bugs, at least I think they’re bugs. When you are on the blog main page and click on an entry to get to the single article, you only receive a _page not found_ error. As it seems, the system does not build the URLs correctly. There's some other flaws, but that would go too far right now.
So I have to say that Pulse CMS 5.x is a good CMS, but not such a good blog system.
Pulse Core is free for organizations with under $400K USD in revenue and is limited to 1 user login.
Sounds nice, but you have to give them your name, email address, phone number and so on to be able to download the free version. No, thanks, forget this CMS.