session 4 of our continued Usability Sprint
Only for hungarian speakers :D
Kiket várunk
Mindazokat várjuk, akik érdeklődnek a rendezvény iránt, vagy szeretnének segíteni a konferencia szervezésében.
This is a small informal presentation of the guitar module (http://drupal.org/project/guitar) which lets you put guitar chord diagrams on your website.
Depending on the interest, we can go through how to use the module, how it works, potential use cases and planned features.
Any business or consultant using Casetracker. We will compare notes, discuss use-cases and helper modules.
This was rescheduled.
A short meeting to prepare for the road map of the French Drupal Community post Convention
Agenda
* Training, Training, Training !
* DrupalCon Paris ???!!!
* Association, no Association?
* Newsleter to the whole of the community
* Schedule work on Drupal'n'GO
Overview
The same way Google has summer of code, this idea is to have something like Google year of code.
We're talking about a website where the community can collectively fund projects (ie bounties), design them collectively and fund them collectively.
This session is to hear your thoughts and ideas about the matter.
Agenda
* FOSS Factory, an introduction
* Does the community need this model
* If so, what's the idea way of using it (ie implemented within the drupal website or left as an external site)
* what kind of problems would be posted on it, what level of expertise would be required to solve them.
Goals
Basically I would like to know if this idea makes sense at all, and if it does, I would like to know how to make it happen.
Resources
please see www.fossfactory.org
We will cover the current state of the Semantic Web in Drupal, what can be done and how this can all be used to make a difference in climate change.
What are you waiting for? Hack Climate Change
The BoF is in the Main Floor. If you don't know where it is contact me.
So come one and come all... Bring your ideas and your brilliance. I plan on talking little and listening a lot!
Useful links
Here are some links to wet your appetite (shameless plug!)
* http://www.sitepoint.com/blogs/2008/03/05/drupal-7-a-living-breathing-se...
* http://www.sitepoint.com/blogs/2008/03/16/why-rdfa-is-the-only-web-scale...
* http://www.sitepoint.com/blogs/2008/02/22/one-small-step-for-yahoo-one-g...
* http://www.sitepoint.com/blogs/2008/03/14/preparing-your-sites-for-the-d...
Bios
David Peterson has been a Semantic Web believer for a few years now. He is based in Queensland Australia and works with BoaB interactive (a science communication and knowledge management company). I have a wonderful wife and 2 (soon to be 3) children and want the world to be a better place for them.
Hack Climate Change is a personal passion of his and he believes the Semantic Web is the perfect vehicle to make this happen.
I blog for Sitepoint and cover Semantic Web and Drupal topics: http://www.sitepoint.com/articlelist/497.
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Nicholas Roberts is a producer/project manager from Sydney Australia who works with BoaB interactive - a science and sustainability web company - in tropical north Queensland near the Great Barrier Reef.
He has 10 years of experience in internet, IT & media including a few years in newspapers for News Corp. Has worked for left-leaning think-tanks, an oil conglomerate, a university, a global multi-media empire, advertising firms and community arts. His most intense work experience was working as webmaster for News Corp in Australia from 2000-2003 during Sept 11 and the invasions of Afghanistan & Iraq.
Lately his focus has been on the intersection of internet, sustainability, media and democracy. He is in Europe for September to attend Drupalcon and the European Social Forum in Malmo in Sweden, September 17-21. He is also researching organising the Australian Social Forum to be held late 2009 and a multi-platform media cooperative.
He is a sucker for punishment.
Extra BoF Spot for the Usability Sprint
Group working on the Node Forms
This is the third session of a series of 4. Participants will pick up where we left off, and continue to design for the tasks they chose.
Building a website for Drupalcon.org is a challenging matter. There are lots of features to work with, the site should adapt to the needs at any time and of course should show that when Drupal is used to build its own conference website, it should do cool stuff for its attendees and other interested parties.
There were lots of design decisions made on the site given the needs we specified based on our look at previous Drupalcons and our own expectations. Sometimes existing modules fit well into our plans, quite a few times we needed glue code or our own code to do the work. Sometimes our own code resulted in superb end results but then also sometimes made mistakes. It also turned out that some of our design choices were not perfect and in some cases our implementation was not adaptive as we wished.
I hope to tell stories about these experience, dive into some details about the implementation, glue code, own code. You will most probably not get clear recipes, and definitely not ready to use code.
Ps. (If we have time and interest, we can get into the making of do.drupaltown.org - our management website for this event and lessons we learned using and sometimes not using that).