Thanks to Drupal 6.3 I was able to whip together bantler.com in a little less than a week. (100 hours development during seven rainy Seattle days).
The site brings popular "deal of the day" sites such as Woot, Steep and Cheap, and Amazon goldbox into one unified interface, allowing you to keep up to date on the sites you like while easily filtering out the ones you don't.
The goal was to make the site as easy to use as possible, so there's no need to register to save your preferences...thanks to jQuery and Cookies your personal settings are persistent between visits.
Contributed Modules used: CCK, Currency Exchange, ImageAPI, and ImageCache.
One custom module handles the site aggregation/display along with the related jQuery behaviors.
I'm working on a new template for my site. It still needs a lot of work but then again I'm never happy with anything and everything turns into a never ending project.
Have a look and let me know what you think. It's a small site for the local music scene in my home town.
I just wanted to post this article to show how well Drupal works for a photography web site. I had tried many CMS's and at the advice of a friend with with Drupal. At the end of the day, I had to wind up asking him to build it for me as I needed more customization than I was able to do.
I'm a Plurk fan, and wasting my time just by plurking and checking responses. :) Since last week, when Plurk announce that users can modify their own theme, I've been testing and making few templates/themes for my profile.
Drupal is awesome, it's been almost a year now and I am finally happy with
the amount of work done on my website thus far. The site is still in it's BETA
version so comments and testers are welcome.
Joblet is the first Greek job site dedicated to the on line & new media professions. It was created with the ambition to fill in the gaps where traditional means of finding jobs fall short. Among other things, job hunting for these professions is quite hard as they are quite rare, and are not yet classified as "main stream" in the local market.