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netsperience 2.x
web development, web site design, seo and smo

acquia

Drupal 7 default content type "Article" chosen to engage the Joomla crowd?

Prior to Drupal 7, content writers often had to decide between a "Page" and a "Story" content type. Ok, it's not a blog or a forum post or an image... but which is it, Page or Story? I generally differentiated them by making the Page like a standard HTML page, clean, and the Story more like a blog post, with author metadata. The writer still says, "I have no idea what you're talking about, I just want to post some content, so which one should I use?"

Drupal 7 has simplified the decision by introducing a new default content type: the "Article" which should be familiar to Joomla users as the default post type in that CMS.

Makes sense. Drupal 7 and Drupal Gardens will probably blow Joomla out of the water, so might as well make it comfortable for Joomlaists to transition.

During an Acquia webinar about Drupal 7, I asked if "'Article' was specifically chosen as the default content type to make Drupal more friendly for Joomla users?" Moderator Lynne Capozzi tried to brush it off as a "rhetorical" question, but Drupal creator and curator Dries Buytaert answered that much thought had been given to it and "Article" was chosen as the best option. Excerpt follows:

View entire Acquia webinar about "Making Drupal 7 Simple to Use for Everyone"

Get Drupal 7 via Acquia       Get Drupal 7 from official Drupal.org project page

(Drupal 7 is in alpha release - for production sites use Drupal 6 instead)

New Official Web Site for Faith the Dog Using Acquia Drupal

Faith the Dog

 

We're building a new site, it's already live at http://faiththedog.info


I'm hoping this post will speed its search indexing..

 

Replay of Acquia eSeminar on Ziff Davis: The Demise of Web Content Management

The Demise of Web Content Management: How to Innovate More Quickly with Open-Source Social Publishing

On June 18, 2009 Acquia presented an eSeminar about Web Content Management.

The panelists were Kathleen Reidy, an analyst from the 451 Group (whom I met the previous day at a presentation by Squiz) and Bryan House, Marketing Director at Acquia.

The seminar was primarily oriented at publishers who are keeping up with trends in social publishing, and presented Aquia's brand of "supported" Drupal as a solution.

I asked one of the questions at the end, about how a web developer can leverage the services of Acquia to add value to a project for a client.

The one-hour recorded presentation will be available until either December 18, 2009 or June 10, 2010.

Launch the player, which I could not scale so it will scroll out of the iframe. 

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