Should you be building your next website in Drupal?
This is a guest blog post I did for IS Labs.
This is a guest blog post I did for IS Labs.
I recently created a provider plugin for Drupal's CCK emfield module which allows you allows you to embed a Zoopy video by pasting the url into a cck field:
This is a lot easier than having to copy the embed code provided by Zoopy and paste this into a textarea.
The provider plugin then extracts the video code and displays the video on your Drupal site:
These are some of the thoughts I shared at the Drupal Johannesburg meetup held on 11 March 2009.
For me, it was great to see everyone again, although I was disappointed that there weren't more than 3 new faces among the 15 or so that turned up. We do need to do something to attract more new members. I particularly enjoyed hearing about what new modules people have discovered, and enjoyed the less formal discussions afterwards.
Acquia have released an all in one Drupal install which includes Acquia Drupal, Apache, MySQL, PHP, PhpMyAdmin, and an Acquia Drupal Control Panel, to allow users to easily test and play around with Drupal, without having to get into the technical details of installing separate instances of Apache, MySQL, PHP etc.
Check it out here: http://acquia.com/downloads
Drupal web developers, or anyone in fact wishing to learn more about Drupal would be well served checking out the videos from the latest Drupal conference "DrupalCon DC 2009", available at the Internet Archive.
At a first glance, here are links to some of the videos that caught my attention:
Official South Africa 2010 World Cup website, (web development by South African company eConsultant). Includes news, countdown, comments and more Drupal goodness.
Was getting irregular "500 Internal Server Error" pages on a new Drupal 6 install, running on shared hosting.
After some research it appears that the hosting company is running php5 as CGI which does not follow the PHP directives set in Drupal's .htaccess file:
Nokia is using Drupal for the "Nokia Research Center" website, which holds research publications, events, news, showcases, job opportunities and more.
The Human Rights Watch website uses Drupal to report on Human Rights, call people to action (support/donate/act), and inform the public. It makes strong use of Drupal's taxonomy system (categories), so you can view content by region and topic. Looks like the image manipulation is done using the Image Cache module.
The site is also available in many languages - just click the language link in the top right of the site to see it in action.