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Featured post: A Reflection on Karen McGranes DrupalCon Portland Keynote

Katelyn Fogarty's picture

I just finished listening to the DrupalCon Portland’s Wednesday keynote presented by Karen McGrane about UX experience and content for all devices.

[I'll add the keynote video once it is posted, but I didn't want to wait to share my thoughts]

What I took away from her talk was, we need to start thinking about our content in a way that can be used in many places and not just thinking about the one spot we want it in at this very moment we request it. Wow is this really a new way of thinking? I’ve been working with Drupal for the past 5 years starting with Drupal 5 in 2008. At my last job prior to Acquia the team I worked on built all our sites on Drupal 6 exactly how Karen was recommending, but the end users weren’t ready for that approach. We built a content type that would create just a page full of meta data related to each one of our products. Some example fields we used were; image fields to upload the product box image at every angle, 150 character product overview field, 300 character product overview field, feature list field, benefits field and so on. This node was then used to populate views and template files that created our product pages, store pages and paid search landing pages throughout our website. Those fields were then able to be edited in one place and changed everywhere. We didn’t build the site responsive at that time but we would have easily had all the content available to use however we wanted if we did.

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Business

A Reflection on Karen McGranes DrupalCon Portland Keynote

Katelyn Fogarty's picture
I just finished listening to the DrupalCon Portland’s Wednesday keynote presented by Karen McGrane about UX experience and content for all devices. [I'll add the keynote video once it is posted, but I didn't want to wait to share my thoughts] What I took away from her talk was, we need to start thinking about our content in a way that can be used in many places and not just thinking about... More

Technology

Automate review for security risks with source code analysis

Ben Jeavons's picture
Security issues are created in custom code when developers cut corners during development or don't make proper use of the APIs, among other reasons. There are several ways to discover such issues, including peer-review, code scanners, vulnerability scanning, and even by being exploited -- tho certainly undesirable! While each has its place and individual merits, let’s talk about security-focused... More

Design

Notes from Views Mini-Course, Part II: Creating Flexible Views with Drupal

Heather James's picture
Here are notes from the 2nd class in our Views mini-course. Watch the recording Views Mini-Course, Part II: Creating Flexible Views with Drupal 7. Review the notes and recording from last week. Sign up to Views Mini-Course, Part III: How to back up your Views safely. May 15th. In today's class we will look at the Views UI in detail. I'll show you how to create flexible views.... More

Messages récents

Tom Erickson joined Acquia as CEO

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Acquia's subscription business has taken off as expected, and we are now launching a number of new initiatives as announced in the Acquia 2009 roadmap. With the coming release of Acquia Search, new projects like Acquia Fields and Acquia Gardens, all in addition to our existing subscription business, there is a ton of stuff going on at Acquia. We've set ourselves some very ambitious goals. With all these new projects and opportunities, we needed... More

Company craftsmanship in evidence

Jay Batson's picture
Acquia isn't my first company; I've constructed a few before. In fact, bringing well-suited people together to achieve something together is one of those things that (I think) I just naturally do. I've done it over and over in life. Maybe it comes from my dad being a guy who was always pushing the envelope when it came to things like health foods for long life, etc., and then trying to convince others to do likewise. Whatever the source, this is my natural behavior. Not that I'm perfect at it. But I love it because the results are so amazing. First, the total group's chances of reaching... More

Drupal in the New York Times

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The Drupal NYC group just hosted its sixth annual DrupalCamp on Saturday, February 28th, at the Polytechnic Institute of New York University in downtown Brooklyn. Held the weekend before DCDC, the event was attended by some seventy people and can boast of something not many DrupalCamps have -- a writeup in The New York Times (subscription may be required). As the article notes: "Drupal is free software used to run web sites, and participants at the event said they were drawn there, despite differences... More

Calculating test coverage

d hubler's picture
Here's how you can determine test coverage of your tests by generating a report like this one:http://acquia.com/files/test-results/index.html Step 1: Install xdebug php extension. On ubuntu I run apt-get install php5-xdebug Step 2: Checkout simpletest trunk anywhere on your disk. In this example I will choose /usr/local/simpletest svn co \  https://simpletest.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/simpletest/simpletest/trunk \ /usr/local/simpletest Step 3: Add simpletest to the php.ini loaded by apache. On ubuntu the file is /etc/php5/apache2... More

DrupalCon DC

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Drupal has thousands of contributors. About twice a year, we stop contributing long enough to have a beer together. We call that DrupalCon. ;-) DrupalCon DC, or DCDC for short, is this week, and I'm leaving in a few moments to attend. DCDC's official events are held March 4th through the 7th at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center. There is little doubt that this will be our largest DrupalCon yet. In fact, the conference has been sold out at 1,300 ticketed attendees since early in February (before... More

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