open source

Drupal 7 Released - Have You Tried Drupal Lately?

Get Started with Drupal 7

Today, January 5, Drupal version 7.0 was released (download Drupal here). Drupal 7 release parties will be held worldwide on January 7 (which also happens to be my birthday - yay!).

I'll be posting my experiences in upgrading to and extending Drupal 7 both here and on my blog at Midwestern Mac, LLC (see D7 stories).

Congratulations to the team of almost 1,000 developers who helped make Drupal 7 a reality, and congratulations to Dries Buytaert, the founder of Drupal, and webchick, the person who shepherded (and continues herding) the community as the Drupal 7 core maintainer!

This website is still running on Drupal 6 (on a multi-site installation with about 5 other sites), but I'm slowly beginning the process of redesigning and upgrading the rest of my sites (notably, so far, Midwestern Mac, LLC) to Drupal 7. The Archdiocesan website and St. Louis Review will take a bit longer, since there's a lot of custom code that needs to be refactored.

If you run a website, have you checked out Drupal before? It's a lot more extensible (in my experience) than Joomla or Wordpress, the two other top contenders. If it's good enough for large sites like the White House and Examiner.com, it's good enough for you ;-)

The Value of Open Source / Contributing Back

Open Source InitiativeToday I released my first contributed Drupal module, Gallery Archive (backstory here). I had already created the Drupal theme Airy Blue (in use on this site) some time ago, and have created many modules and themes in use on this site and many other Drupal sites I manage. However, it takes a lot more polish, a lot more work, and a lot more long-term dedication to release a module for public consumption!

So, why would I do such a thing? I'm have little time for such projects as it is... and it's not like releasing a module on drupal.org, thus opening up the issue queue for time-consuming support requests is going to make my life any easier.

Well, I have piggybacked on the success and support of tons of other generous Drupal users over the past two years—I have gone from being a complete programming newbie to a competent (but still learning) PHP programmer, and I have gone from learning what 'node' means to understanding much of Drupal's node API (which, of course, is all changing again ;-). I have joined thousands of charitable souls who devote quite a bit of time—personally and professionally—to making great projects like Drupal stronger... without any compensation besides a 'warm fuzzy feeling.'

I feel it's time I 'pay it forward,' as it were. When I read the book "Hackers," I sympathized with the movement of software developers who wanted to simply create new and amazing things for the betterment of humanity (in my case... humanity and the Church). Continue Reading »

Drupal Gardens Beta - A Giant Leap in Community Building...

Creating your Catholic site - Drupal Gardens beta

I was just invited to the Drupal Gardens private beta today, and I have to say, it's a leap forward in terms of building out quick, beautiful, and well-designed websites. But it takes things many, many, many steps further than a simple Wordpress or Blogger site.

Drupal Gardens is built with Drupal at its core, and every site instance you set up is basically an entire Drupal website (and it's completely exportable, so if your needs grow beyond the Drupal Gardens garden, you can re-plant on another server). This means you can have multiple users (with multiple permission levels). You can do relatively advanced theming, right out of the box (and without knowing too much about HTML, CSS, etc.!). You can set up multiple content types and set up specialized databases and queries. There are a thousand and one things you can do with DG much more quickly than by-hand.

Catholic Prayer Resource site - Drupal Gardens beta
From nothing to full site, in about 2 minutes.

There isn't a whole lot missing from Drupal Gardens. I think it will transform the way I approach smaller website design jobs - instead of working locally and starting from scratch, I might as well build out a Gardens site (collaborating with my clients, or whomever I'm working with), then let the client take over and run with it.

Once Drupal Gardens is out of beta, expect to hear a lot more. I think this system could help a lot of parishes in a lot of ways—not the least of which is financially!

FOLCS: Free Or Low Cost Solutions

This blog will be a forum to introduce and share information about free or low-cost (software, web applications and occasional hardware) solutions for libraries, non-profits, small businesses and others who want functionality and ease-of-use but at no cost or a very low cost. Our primary audience is people with low to average computer and Web skills, who would appreciate an easy-to-understand resource, a go-to place for free or low-cost solutions, and a place to exchange their success stories.

Go to:  http://www.folcs.blogspot.com

Open Source Catholic Theme Released to Drupal.org

What is open source without people who freely give of their time to make open source projects better? It's no source at all!

In the spirit of good stewardship and Christian charity, the code/files in the Open Source Catholic website's theme was released today (around 1 a.m.!) on drupal.org as "Airy Blue," a 'contrib' theme. This allows anyone browsing Drupal's directory of themes to download it and use it on his own site!

We encourage everyone to think about how many benefits they derive from open source projects like Drupal, Wordpress, GIMP, and Linux distros every day, and to give back in any way they can... even if it's just a few bucks for beer!

Check out the newest Drupal theme: Airy Blue

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