redesign

Archdiocese of Saint Louis redesigns website (still running Drupal)

I used to work in the Archdiocese of St. Louis as the director of Web Development, so archstl.org (and other online Archdiocesan properties) are near and dear to my heart. I spent countless hours merging some 49 Joomla websites into the Drupal install that (still) runs archstl.org, and besides a bunch of database heavy lifting that was outsourced, I bled over almost every feature on the site (I've chronicled many experiences on this site in the past).

Archdiocese of St. Louis archstl.org redesign - blue

So, I'm very happy to see that the Archdiocese has continued to develop and improve the site. This new design has a more modern and 'edgy' feel, and is the first redesign to involve more theming and work on the 'View' of the website rather than a complete rearchitecting of the database, filesystem, etc.—which is awesome!

I wish other Catholic organizations I've worked with were in the position of not having to scrap their website and redesign from scratch every few years... I've seen too many projects where an organization will spend thousands, maybe hundreds of thousands, and end up with a site that's not very future-proof, and will again be scrapped and redesigned for much more $$$ in a few years. Don't be that organization :)

Vatican.va Getting an Upgrade!

Vatican Website Splash PageThe Vatican website (one of the oldest domains/websites on the Internet) has been due for an overhaul for some time. Looks like it's finally going to happen! Here's the news, from EWTN:

The director of the Vatican’s website, Msgr. Lucio Adrian Ruiz explained this week in an interview that the site is going through an extensive redesign to improve the Church's evangelization efforts.

The main reason for the redevelopment? Getting the Vatican website in line with Pope Benedict's call to a new evangelization on the 'digital continent.'

How long will this project take? Well, judging by the fact that the Vatican has over 500,000 pages (many, I am sure, not following any set standard of formatting... making migration scripting very tough), it could be a while.

Msgr. Ruiz said the Vatican site receives three million visits per day, with the greatest number of visits coming from the United States, followed by Italy, Spain, Germany, Brazil, South Korea, Mexico, Canada, France and China.

He also noted that the site has occasionally been the target of hackers [see an OSC report on one of the recent attacks here] and cyber attacks, but that the staff works closely with Italian online security officials to keep a close eye on their systems.

Just coming off the Catholic New Media Celebration (more info on the CNMC in a blog post here), this is a great step forward for our universal Church. Hopefully we'll see some movement soon!

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