This is a summary of my social network activity for August 5th, which included 15 events:
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Lifestream Digest for August 5th
August 5th, 2009Time for Redesign
August 5th, 2009
I’ve been threatening to do it for years, but I think it’s really time — time to redesign this site, for real. If what I have now (or will accomplish in the end) can be called ‘design’. Maybe it would be better to say ‘re-theme‘, so as to avoid ridicule from actual designers. And speaking of which, I’ll happily accept any design advice along the way!
So. Time to start over. I’m really going to do it this time. No more of this “one day…” stuff. In the next few days (by the beginning of next week), I will start with a fresh, unaltered theme, then I will customize it over time. As I go along, I’ll try to document the changes I make as much as possible (at least, as much as time and my poor memory will allow).
Lifestream Digest for August 3rd
August 3rd, 2009This is a summary of my social network activity for August 3rd, which included 10 events:
Lifestream Digest for August 2nd
August 2nd, 2009This is a summary of my social network activity for August 2nd, which included 5 events:
Lifestream Digest for August 1st
August 1st, 2009This is a summary of my social network activity for August 1st, which included 22 events:
Lifestream Digest for July 31st
July 31st, 2009This is a summary of my social network activity for July 31st, which included 25 events:
Lifestream Digest for July 30th
July 30th, 2009This is a summary of my social network activity for July 30th, which included 9 events:
WordPress Packages?
July 30th, 2009
On my way to work recently, I was listing to a Drupal podcast (because I had already listened to all of my WordPress-related podcasts). The participants spent some time talking about something they called “Drupal Distributions”. This is a Drupal feature that lets a developer pre-package the Drupal CMS with a set of modules and settings to create a custom install tailored to a specific task.
Each distribution takes some set of Drupal themes and modules and packages them together with the Drupal core, along with custom installation steps, documentation, and so on. For example, one could create a distribution called “Drupal for Education”; it could have pre-configured roles and permissions for both teachers and students, and ship with additional modules that allow one to offer online courses and testing.
They went on to talk about various aspects of this feature, what was good, what still needed improvement, etc. I’m not terribly familiar with the inner-workings of Drupal, but it sounded like this feature is used to good effect, and that they had some really good ideas for how to make it better.
If you are a developer who sets up web sites for clients, then you can probably see how this would be useful. You probably have a favorite set of plugins that you typically install on your client sites. And you probably have to do it from scratch each time, installing and activitating the plugins, then visiting the settings pages and tweaking the default settings to your needs each time. There’s got to be a better way, right?











