This default setting (e.g. 'day view') gets lost when you click on next (or previous) month in the calendar block. Then you get into the 'month view'. The problem is - when you have lots of events published (and that is probably the case when you prefer the 'day view') the site looks very confusing.
I am a Londoner, and I saw the Drupal guys at the Expo (although did not talk to them as I was busy manning one of the commercial stands).
Would anyone be interested in a regular London meetup, the first one sponsored (as in I will pay for the drinks) by my company, buddyPing ?
I know the perl mongers and local LUGS do this a lot, but a local p*ss up and talk about drupal futures would be good. Let me know by responding to this post or by private message and I will organise a time and location.
Cultural center 'De Brakke Grond' has been transformed from a quiet gallery into a bustling hub of all things Drupal for the Amsterdam Drupal Conference. Over 50 developers and users have already attended, and new faces continue to appear every morning. If you are nearby, please drop by!
Hot topic of discussion has definitely been the new forms API, which opens up a bunch of new avenues for modules and themes. End-user usability is another important point that many people are interested in.
I used flexinode to create a new node to hold events. However, since it's based on a story node, the form to create an event has a field for 'Related Books'. Doesn't make sense to me to have this field. Is there a way to make it disappear when working with events?
While I'll talking about events, is there another module out there with more features, such as reoccuring. I'd like to create a calendar for our clubhouse (I live in a condo development), which has a set weekly schedule for things happening at the clubhouse each nite.
Easy set up - Dikini (Vladimir Zlatanov) brought his laptop, pre-installed with Drupal 4.6 and HEAD, so we could do demonstrations. Thanks to Multiman (Peter Brownell) we had a projector, and we were able to draw quite a lot of attention with a rolling screen-shot slide show of prominent Drupal sites.
There were a lot of visitors through out the day, mostly a mixture of people asking what Drupal was (intrigued by the logo on the poster and the slideshow), asking how it differed from Mambo, or telling us they used Drupal and how much it rocks!