Chris Pirillo
Chris Pirillo's big Drupal itch (and the call for some collective, collaborative scratching)
Some exciting Drupal buzz was heard yesterday when Chris Pirillo made a call for extending functionality and enhancing the shine and usability of Drupal's powerful community architecture.
For the geeks: Drupal has so much power in its core, and enough fantastic community-contributed modules, that I think it’s time to assemble an Install Profile, complete with beautiful (accessible, microformat’ed, high quality) themes, pre-set Views for any Web community to either install on their own or have hosted at any given Web host that supports Drupal with optimizations. The benefits to you should be more than obvious.
And I don’t mean just the framework for the community platform, I mean… like, it’s ready to go. “It’s not the features, it’s the implementation.” This all started when we began to migrate the existing Lockergnome community to Drupal (5.x, as 6.x had not yet been released and many favorite modules have not yet been brought up to speed). OpenSocial, OpenID, OAuth… just there.
I’m posting this because it’s my hope that I can find partnerships, angels, brain-power, etc. - either from other communities or businesses willing to take part in an open source project that could benefit everybody and themselves at the same time.
The post is quite long and well worth reading. Chris offers a kind of stream-of-consciousness list of features he'd like to see, such as:
Why don’t I have the options to set the colors site-wide, or per content type? Why don’t user avatars indicate my relationship with them at a glance (either with a tiny corner color or border change)? Why do I have to load a completely separate page to launch a contact form, to sign up, to sign in? Why aren’t my notification mails filled with more information? Why can’t I… make this relevant?
Drupal experts will see that some of his feature ideas already exist in contrib, some are more about theming approaches, and others are new and quite interesting.
There's a lot more, with ideas that can also leverage existing modules (such as the Content Recommendation Engine into accessible, usable features.
He already has a growing pool of interested parties, and has set up SVN, an IRC chatroom, and a way for people to donate cash to the endeavor. There's also a module contribution from the effort.
I hope that the discussion in the greater community is fruitful, if nothing else - and I’m also hoping that holy wars don’t break out over which platform is better, because the best platform is always the one that works well for the person or company that uses it. For my personal blog, I’m quite happy with WordPress (can’t wait for v2.5 to go final). For my communities, it’s going to be Drupal.
My biggest fear isn’t that people will talk about it - it’s a fear that they won’t.
We're talking. Having this kind of energy coming into the Drupal community is a wonderful thing -- especially now that we're really just getting underway on the Drupal.org redesign effort.
















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