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MODX.EVO.Custom 1.0.13RC2-d6.5: Changelog and Community Build Notes
Custom Evo builds mattered because many teams worked from maintained distributions, not only from the base package.
The MODX.EVO.Custom 1.0.13RC2-d6.5 post was a compact changelog note for one of the community-maintained custom builds around Evolution CMS. These builds were important at the time because they bundled fixes, editor improvements, and workflow tweaks that active teams were already using in production.
Why these custom builds mattered
- they made active patches easier to test in one package
- they helped teams standardize on the same toolchain
- they often moved practical manager improvements faster than the main stable line
How to read this release historically
This was not a separate CMS fork in the modern product sense. It was a community build with a changelog, a test audience, and a clear intention: make day-to-day Evo work more comfortable while the main release line continued to stabilize.
That is why the original post linked directly to a changelog page and the tracker version. The value was in the delta: what changed, what was fixed, and what people were expected to test next.
Source: MODX Evo Custom repository.
MODX EVO Console: A Small Desktop Tool for Working with Data Imports
A look at the old MODX EVO Console utility, what problem it tried to solve, and why import-focused tooling mattered for Evolution CMS teams.
Building Small Business Sites with MODX Evolution
Why MODX Evolution remained a practical fit for compact brochure-style websites with TVs, PSD-based layouts, and a small content team.