Posts Tagged ‘drupal’

DrupalCon Preview: Q&A With Chapter Three’s Zack Rosen

The annual DrupalCon conference is coming up, April 19th to 21st at San Francisco’s Moscone Center.  Drupal, of course, is the increasingly popular open source content management system founded by Dries Buytaert, and OStatic itself runs on the platform.

See the article here:
DrupalCon Preview: Q&A With Chapter Three’s Zack Rosen

DrupalCon Preview: Q&A With Phase 2′s Jeff Walpole

The annual DrupalCon conference is coming up, April 19th to 21st at San Francisco’s Moscone Center.  Drupal, of course, is the increasingly popular open source content management system founded by Dries Buytaert, and OStatic itself runs on the platform. There will be many movers and shakers from the Drupal world at the conference, and we’ve been running a series of Drupal-focused guest posts in advance of it.  In this latest Q&A post, Jeff Walpole, CEO of Phase2 Technology, discusses training slated for the event. What training session are you leading

Read the original:
DrupalCon Preview: Q&A With Phase 2′s Jeff Walpole

BitNami adds Ubuntu to the Stacks

Want to run WordPress, Drupal, or whip up a DJango instance on Ubuntu without all the hassle of configuring an operating system and support stack? Now you can . BitNami has added the most recent release of Ubuntu to its virtual appliance stacks.

See original here:
BitNami adds Ubuntu to the Stacks

Towards a Beautiful WordPress Future: Automattic Hires Theme Wizard Ian Stewart

Gearing up for WordPress 3.0, Automattic has hired Ian Stewart as a Theme Wrangler to help an assembling “Theme Team” for Automattic. The move is good news for the millions of users with WordPress blogs, especially for those looking to extend their blogs with better themes.

Visit link:
Towards a Beautiful WordPress Future: Automattic Hires Theme Wizard Ian Stewart

The Silver Lining in the Cloud is Open Source

A lot of people are gloom and doomy about the prospects for free and open source software in the cloud. Some even argue that software as a service or cloud computing should be avoided , but you can’t fix the market , you can only adapt.

Link:
The Silver Lining in the Cloud is Open Source