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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

Web 2.0 New York: Is sales always this much fun?

Kieran Lal's picture
It's been a couple of weeks since Web 2.0 New York. The event was a success and early reports indicated it exceeded expectations for the event organizers. For Acquia it was a successful event. We met over 214 people who were running Drupal sites and gave out Acquia t-shirts to each of them until we ran out. We gathered over 400 leads that we qualified as interested in or likely to be building a social publishing site. What was new for Acquia was that those leads were closely followed up by our inside sales team. I'll touch more on that at the end of this post. One of the key goals for my... More

On corporate blogging policies

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Acquia launch coverage

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Cheers to the Acquia launch, which went really well. Hundreds of people signed up for a free community subscription. Also, check out Jeff Whatcott's blog post covering some of the blog posts, press articles, and Tweets about our new product and service offerings. Awesome! Cheers! More

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Kieran Lal's picture
It's political season here in the United States, and that means it's rumor time. Research has shown that if we are exposed to information as little as eight times we are more likely to believe it. Logic, facts, reason don't necessary apply to our human brains. Political strategist know this, marketers know this and they can use it in influencing you. Journalists know this too. On Monday morning, Drupal got caught up in a [Updated]conjecture that it was the source of a bug that led to a $6000 hosting bill. It... More

Acquia launch round up: looking back on a big day

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I spent most of the day yesterday reading and participating in Drupal.org threads, blog posts, press articles, forum threads, Twitter feeds, and IRC transcripts of full of conversation about our new product and service offerings.  Here are a few of my favorites: Press Articles SitePoint: "This is definitely a big move in the open source world of Drupal. I think it is a great move. They have taken some of the best modules already available, mixed in some new things and are realising a... More

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