We have had a tradition since 2005. Every new year we have a posting on the predictions for the year ahead for our beloved open source CMS and community. Sometimes this posting went up in december, sometimes in January. But never in February.
Time to start a new tradition, predict the year ahead from February on :-)
A living style guide - a way to control markup or CSS - has been making a name for itself. And for a good reason; they’re an important tool for web development. They keep developers in sync, communicate design standards, and help organize complex interfaces. In this post, I want to discuss how and why living style guides are important and how to implement one for Open Social using Drupal for software.
It wasn’t a question of if, but a question of when and the Drupal.org weekly usage statistics are showing it’s happening now. Usage of Lingotek’s Drupal 8 Module finally caught up to and exceeded that of Drupal 7. Is this the tipping point? Is the community finally making the switch to the latest Drupal module?
Seventeen years ago today, Dries Buytaert open-sourced the software behind Drop.org and released Drupal 1.0.0. As we celebrate Drupal's birthday, we're proud that it is one very few content management systems that remains relevant after so long.
Drupal provides a spectrum of architectural possibilities tuned to diverse needs. The flexibility of fully decoupling Drupal, progressively decoupling it, or traditional Drupal gives teams the ability to make an educated decision about the best approach for them.
If you’re a marketer considering a move from Drupal 7 to Drupal 8, it’s important to understand the implications of content migration. You’ve worked hard to create a stable of content that speaks to your audience and achieves business goals, and it’s crucial that the migration of all this content does not disrupt your site’s user experience or alienate your visitors.