I got two e-mails this morning with responses to "We the People" petitions that I signed a long time ago. At the bottom of the e-mails is the text, "Tell us what you think about this response and We the People," with links that redirect to URLs of the form:
Suggestion : it would be great and useful if we could vote on Modules (upvote, thumbs-up, stars).
For example, I just installed the Simple Google Maps, and it made my day, after days of gruelling building of a site. I sent the maintainers a thank you message, but it made me think about how seeing others votes could be helpful when choosing modules.
Mind you, I of course use the Usage statistics also to evaluate :P
Although the number can easily grow as it tends to oscillate, but noticed today, July 26, 2015 as the first day it hit the last ten for those into countdown stuff. While making note of irrelevant trivia it also happened before the release of beta13.
If you're working in the PHP content management space (a fancy way of saying building websites with WordPress, Drupal, etc.) you've likely heard about Symfony. While it is just one part of a larger renaissance in the PHP community, it's probably the best known brand known to developers and business folk alike.
Using Symfony as a concept, however is quite ambiguous. Let's take a look at how three different content management tools have done just this.
Hi everyone!
So I am fairly new to Drupal, and just got hired full-time as an implementation specialist at a digital media agency. I have been working part-time in a similar position for 5 months, and began to take my daily tasks seriously when I got offered full-time a few weeks ago.
My days consists of organizing client files, and implementing content to live sites. When there are tasks that require development, I communicate with vendors to reach design goals.