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Developer

Barry Madore

3 July 2010
Barry Madore
Local team/staff
Personal information
Advantage Labs
United States
Language (Primary) English
Social information
bmadore
49282
@bmadder
bmadore

Barry has been enthusiastically involved in the Drupal community for the past 4 years primarily as a member of the team at Advantage Labs in Minneapolis, MN.

Their primary focus is to provide a sustainable platform for managed Drupal hosting, training and community participation, and to continue to support the development of Drupal modules for Mail, CRM, Geospatial and community engagement solutions.

Building a Drupal community of practice

Barry Madore 3 July 2010
Type:  Not planned session

Drupal thrives when it is supported by robust communities of both Drupal end-users and developers. To sustain these communities we need to provide support and opportunities for growth.

Drupal thrives when it is supported by robust communities of both Drupal users and developers. To ignite these communities we need to provide opportunities for people to learn about Drupal and how it can help them. To sustain these communities we need to provide support and opportunities for growth.

Additional Presenters:  Allie Micka

Chris Miller

3 July 2010
Local team/staff
Personal information
trellon
United States
Social information
beretta627
274027
beretta627

Drupal and the semantic web

Kristof Van Tomme 2 July 2010
Type:  Not planned session

Want to find out why all the geeks are so excited about that four letter word (RDFa) that's now supposed to be in Drupal 7 core?

As of Drupal 7 we'll have RDFa markup in core, in this session I will:

  • explain what the implications are of this and why this matters
  • give a short introduction to the Semantic web, RDF, RDFa and SPARQL in human language
  • give a short overview of the RDF modules that are available in contrib
  • talk about some of the potential use cases of all these magical technologies

Slides for a former incarnation of this presentation are up at:
http://www.slideshare.net/kvantomme/semantic-web-and-drupal-an-introduction

For every site, a .make file

Jeff Miccolis 2 July 2010
Type:  Session in official program

Tools like Drush and .make files are changing how Drupal sites are built and making building them faster. This presentation will demonstrate the process of using these tools on real client work. We'll cover what works really well, how to start using it now.

For every site, a .make file

Tools like Drush and .make files are changing how Drupal sites are built and making building them faster. This presentation will demonstrate the process of using these tools on real client work. We'll cover what works really well, how to start using it now, as well as where the rough spots still are. Approximately half of the time will be lecture style presentation about how this process works, the other half will be demonstrations of the various tools. Some topics we'll cover include:

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Drupal project management tools: time to build our own dogfood

Kristof Van Tomme 2 July 2010
Type:  Session in official program

Are you still not using Drupal to manage your projects? Since July 2009 excuses are running thin. And if Open Atrium didn’t do everything you ever expected from your project management system, it’s about time that we join forces and build our own dog food.

Are you still not using Drupal to manage your projects? Since July 2009 excuses are running thin. And if Open Atrium didn’t do everything you ever expected from your project management system, it’s about time that we join forces and build our own dog food.

In this session I’ll present a review of Drupal built tools for project management. You'll get an introduction to Open Atrium and the tools we developed for Knowledge and Project management in Open Atrium.

Learning Drupal the fun way: Drupal games!

Kristof Van Tomme 2 July 2010
Type:  Not planned session

What to experience the awesomeness that is the Drupal way? Come play the Drupal game...

“The Drupal way”: a set of behaviours that make you a good community player and that lets you maximize your sites built/kittens killed ratio is one of those things that a lot of people only learn to appreciate the hard way. In this session you’ll play a game that teaches you some of these values, cause some messages will only stick if you've experienced them.

It’s generally accepted that serious games are way more effective tools for providing learning experiences that aim to change the behavior of a group of participants.

Paying for the plumbing

Allie Micka 2 July 2010
Type:  Not planned session

It's easy to make a living building Drupal solutions, and there's a good business case for contributing patches, documentation and new features to modules. But increasingly, we all depend on "tools to build tools", such as CCK, Views, Drupal core enhancements, and other frameworks or API's that make our work point-and-click easy.

These efforts are more difficult to fund because it takes a long time to architect and perfect a reusable solution before it begins to save us all time and money. Usually, that means that one intrepid developer or company must invest a lot of up-front effort. How do we make these efforts sustainable, or support other work that provides a long-term return on investment without immediate gains?

It's important to showcase business models that are making this work, but in contrast with the company showcase sessions, this panel will include both business leaders and individual developers who are making this work on their own. We had a fantastic dialog using this format in Paris, and it will be great to see what has changed during the past year.

It's easy to make a living building Drupal solutions, and there's a good business case for contributing patches, documentation and new features to modules. But increasingly, we all depend on "tools to build tools", such as CCK, Views, Drupal core enhancements, and other frameworks or API's that make our work point-and-click easy.

Drupal-ecology: how to stay relevant in a fast evolving eco-system

Kristof Van Tomme 2 July 2010
Type:  Not planned session

You thought evolution under environmental presure, symbiosis, neural networks, hive mechanics and religion have nothing to do with Drupal? I've got news for you...

Drupal is only in the second place an open source software. In the first place it’s a collective of humans, more so than most other softwares. As a result we can recognize both in the code and the community patterns that are also present in biological systems and ecologies.

Cécile Muller

2 July 2010
Local team/staff
Personal information
Wildpeaks
France
Language (Primary) French
Language (Secondary) English
Social information
wildpeaks
104628
wildpeaks