Qlweb is a Polish webdirectory and directory script of the same name. Unfortunately, there are no no English instructions. Backend interface is in Polish at the moment, though the author wrote he plans German and English translations. Frontend can be configured in English, it is rather easy, but there is no mention of how in docs, you are on your own to figure out (basically just change to language file value from PL to EN one in one of the config files). Version 2.8.7 is reviewed here, latest release at the time of writing.

Implementation example: Hotel Web Directory

Features:

Categories: It seems to me it has only one level of subcategories, ie. you can only have:
main page->category->subcategory. You can’t have further subcategory of that subcategory. What other scripts miss: qlweb will import list of categories easily. Cool!

Google sitemap support

Frontend: user submits url, script grabs meta information, but user can rewrite with own description and keywords.

Easy to add new pages to the category, for example Contact, About, few articles, or whatever else…..

Probably easy to do templates (css, and few simple files). Comes with three ready templates.
Voting. Cool mod_rewrite/seo friendly url’s. Auto approval of categories and links. Captcha. Last added websites. Easy banning. Sorting. Pagerank import. Caching.

Drawbacks:

Free version, requires you to keep two sitewide links to author.

Doesn’t support paid nor featured links.

Usable for English speaking admins only after Polish admin interface is translated (Shall be not too hard. Might happen that I will have to do it myself.)

Qlweb is easy to administer, simple backend interface, and I really love the way it produces the SEO friendly url’s, and the banning feature. There are some commercial scripts that could learn a thing or two from Qlweb. If development will continue and the English verison will see the light, Qlweb will definitely find it’s place in webmaster’s arsenal.

I have always enjoyed Dan’s insightful comments on directories, seo and marketing, and admired his writing style on his other sites, so finding out his freshly started SEO friendly blog was a good news. Though so far it seems it will be mostly technical one (there is even no welcome, no hello world, starting right out with the list updates) , dealing with aspects of updates to his famous list of directories, I’m sure there will be some valuable tidbit of information posted every now and then. In my book, this is one of those hidden secret places (it will not even be promoted probably, just being a small slightly hidden corner of his site) that you might want to bookmark right now or subscribe to the rss feed.

I remember the Barracuda script, back in the old times (well… maybe just a year or two ago), before Boonex bought it out. It was probably the first one I tried (afer Boonex took over), the one I liked, but somehow couldn’t get it run. The support was nonexistant, upgrading painful, and generally….something that only worked for advanced php admins and webmasters that are able to make a patch here and investigate an issue there and fix it all on their own.

Received a note about their new 2.0 version few days ago. There wasn’t a simple thing there that would persuade me. Script is no more free, support is $50 per month, and who knows whether the bugs were fixed or not. If not, $50 per month is probably still cheap.

Whatever I said above, Barracuda is still worth trying out. Maybe it will work for you. Nowadays, there are so many free scripts of comparable capabilities that any paid-for one must be significantly better. I’m not the one going to pay for it to test this one, but if someone got any experience, don’t hesitate to comment.