Journal module adds additional fields to all forms in a Drupal site to allow developers and site administrators to record and track all changes that have been performed to setup a site or alter its configuration. Journal also allows developers to maintain a log of applied patches and customizations on a Drupal site, including links to issue trackers like Drupal.org issue queues (starting from 6.x-1.3 / 5.x-1.5).
Journal is primarily useful for developers and site administrators working in a team environment. Since Drupal is a fully-fledged content management framework, it is often not easy to communicate, track and audit all changes that have been applied to a site. Even without contributed modules one is able to build a totally customized site.
Maintaining a log of patches and customizations helps in determining whether a module can be safely updated, and moreover in building sustainable, well-documented Drupal sites.
Journal's log is comparable to the watchdog log in Drupal core. However, watchdog logs can be truncated or emptied at any time, so one would loose all entries.
This module display a adjustable text size changer or a zoom function on the page for a better web accessibility.
The zoom function is comparable to the text zoom function in Firefox 3, but this module resize also variable media objects, variable pixel images and vector images. No JavaScript required (WCAG/BITV 6.3).
This module exposes the 'upload picture' element to the registration form. It also gives you the ability to set a picture as required in the module settings.
The jquery_plugin module provides miscellaneous jQuery plugins, which can be loaded from any module or theme by calling jquery_plugin_add($plugin) in Drupal 6 or drupal_add_library('jquery_plugin', $plugin) in Drupal 7. The Drupal 6 version supports jQ, a jQuery plugin registry.