I agree. An intranet is simply a network location accessible only by the people within the firewall. Typically the users access sites on it using an IP address. But no matter how they access it, a Drupal site on the intranet would run just like a Drupal site on the Internet. There need be no difference other than access, unless the content requirements etc. are different for the site. It is not much different than having a local version of a Drupal site running on your own machine, other than other people within the firewall can access it.
On Feb 12, 2013, at 2:10 PM, Miles Fidelman mfidelman@meetinghouse.net wrote:
Kind of depends on what you mean by "intranet," but a Drupal instance, with access limited only to employees (and maybe business partners), sounds a lot like an Intranet to me. For internal access only, put it behind a firewall. For finer grained access control, and/or for remote/outside access, require log in for all access.
Beyond that, it's more a matter of what functions you want.