Tutr.tv: Top Drupal Videos of the Week
So What's this "Drew-paul" Thing You Do? (Explaining Drupal to Others)
by: David Needham
This video discusses the history of Drupal and how you can explain it in layman's terms to people not familiar with it. David gives some good ways to describe Drupal to people with different backgrounds.
WYSIWYG - Editor module
by: Nathan Haug
In this presentation, Nate discusses WYSIWYG editors and Drupal and the direction we need to take to get it into core. Contributed-based solutions to WYSIWYG are a start but currently all of them lack from deep integration with Drupal. At minimum, we should be targeting at a bundled WYSIWYG in core with the ability to insert an image with a caption. Even today, the solution for doing this eludes every contributed solution.
Forensic Theming: Key Techniques to Building Effective Drupal Themes
by: Emma Jane Hogbin
In this session you will learn two important techniques needed to build a successful theme: identifying Drupal page elements in your design files and things you need to recreate your design using Drupal. We will transform a design file into a Drupal theme from start to finish.
The slides for this presentation are available at: http://www.slideshare.net/emmajane/forensic-theming-drupalcon-london
Product, Framework, or Platform? What They Mean, And Why You Should Care
by: Jeff Eaton
As Drupal's popularity has grown, its core audience of hobbyist developers has exploded into an international community of businesses, nonprofits, independent developers, startups, and governments. Bubbling under the surface is a recurring debate: Is 'Drupal' a product for people who build web sites, a framework for web developers, or a platform that other products are built on?
dog: A New Era for Drupal Sitebuilding
by: Sam Boyer
DOG, Drupal on GIT. In this session, Sam discusses Dog and embracing Git in order to build portable, deployable Drupal site packages. Dog makes the process of developing, managing, and maintaining a Drupal site easier for everyone from the individual hobbyist to multi-cluster-backed Drupal sites with teams of developers.
by: David Needham
This video discusses the history of Drupal and how you can explain it in layman's terms to people not familiar with it. David gives some good ways to describe Drupal to people with different backgrounds.
WYSIWYG - Editor module
by: Nathan Haug
In this presentation, Nate discusses WYSIWYG editors and Drupal and the direction we need to take to get it into core. Contributed-based solutions to WYSIWYG are a start but currently all of them lack from deep integration with Drupal. At minimum, we should be targeting at a bundled WYSIWYG in core with the ability to insert an image with a caption. Even today, the solution for doing this eludes every contributed solution.
Forensic Theming: Key Techniques to Building Effective Drupal Themes
by: Emma Jane Hogbin
In this session you will learn two important techniques needed to build a successful theme: identifying Drupal page elements in your design files and things you need to recreate your design using Drupal. We will transform a design file into a Drupal theme from start to finish.
The slides for this presentation are available at: http://www.slideshare.net/emmajane/forensic-theming-drupalcon-london
Product, Framework, or Platform? What They Mean, And Why You Should Care
by: Jeff Eaton
As Drupal's popularity has grown, its core audience of hobbyist developers has exploded into an international community of businesses, nonprofits, independent developers, startups, and governments. Bubbling under the surface is a recurring debate: Is 'Drupal' a product for people who build web sites, a framework for web developers, or a platform that other products are built on?
dog: A New Era for Drupal Sitebuilding
by: Sam Boyer
DOG, Drupal on GIT. In this session, Sam discusses Dog and embracing Git in order to build portable, deployable Drupal site packages. Dog makes the process of developing, managing, and maintaining a Drupal site easier for everyone from the individual hobbyist to multi-cluster-backed Drupal sites with teams of developers.