Keeping the faith – Drupal 6/7/8/9

I was first introduced to the Drupal web platform back in 2009 by a developer friend who I had worked with closely during the development and marketing of a successful proprietary content management system called Immediacy.

That system was based on Microsoft’s .Net platform and was sold to the UK’s biggest CMS development company at one time – Mediasurface – which in turn was sold to Alterian and then SDL Tridion (which I’ve just noticed has now also been ‘acquired’ recently).

That in itself illustrates the fate of most proprietary software systems – an endless tale of acquisition which is usually about ‘buying’ customers and partner relationships to scale rapidly and improve profitability rather than anything to do with improving the technology itself.

In that respect, the relative stability of the Drupal framework and community since its inception in 2001 is a massive achievement. Those 20 years have seen phenomenal development and disruption in the way information is communicated and used – so any organisation that has succeeded in keeping pace and charting a course for the future should be applauded, particularly as many in the Drupal community volunteer their time and efforts.

The other massive achievement is that it is still entirely ‘open source’ and 100% free to use. That means that essentially all the capabilities of an extremely broad and capable web application framework are at your disposal for absolutely no license costs at all. By way of an example, when Drupal was first launched at the start of this century I was working on an ‘enterprise content management’ project for the one time largest telecoms company in the world and it had a $25 million price tag for the software licensing alone. Today I could easily replicate the scale and functionality of that project for zero dollars of license cost.

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The biggest thank you – ever!!!! … (again!)

So during March last year I was messing about with writing stuff on Medium – mainly about my experiences with going through the cochlear implant process.

I also wrote an article thanking my wife Debbie for supporting me over the years in my ongoing battle and challenges with progressive hearing loss.

However, when it became clear that Medium is no better, and in some ways worse, than other ‘social’ platforms in creating filter bubbles and designing things to keep you hooked and distracted, I dumped it 🙂

Therefore that public expression of gratitude disappeared too 😦

Given the tumultuous events of 2020, which had always been milestone for my previous blogging activities, I’ve since decided to revisit and relaunch my old blog

I started it originally back in 2009 and it was called “2020 Visions – Imagining the World my children will inherit”

As you can see, the reinvigorated blog is called “Beyond 2020 Visions”.

Anyway, coming back to the gratitude, I’ve said many times how lucky I feel to have got my implant operation done via a standby cancellation before the first pandemic lockdown hit us. Given the coverage about the massive backlog of non-critical/essential operations now building up it could have been very different and, quite frankly, soul destroying story.

As it is, the operation at the beginning of last year was just the start of what has been a long process of learning to hear again.

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Why I’m proud to be a cyberpunk V 1.0

Once in a decade I have a bit of a binge on computer games.

Ever since I used to bunk off Friday afternoon maths with a few mates to play the very basic, first generation of computer games on my ZX Spectrum I have had a general interest in how games have developed over the four decades since.

Occasionally a game will leap out as being interesting.

In the late 90s I remember watching my nephews play the James Bond ‘Goldeneye’ game on Nintendo and being amazed at how ‘awesome’ the graphics were and how aspects of the film had been recreated in the games.

A few years on I borrowed a copy of Die Hard: Nakatomi Plaza to play on my PC and was fleetingly addicted to rampaging around the digitally created tower block killing off the terrorists.

That experience got me venturing into PC gaming for a while when I bought a copy of Half Life for myself.

Latterly, through buying consoles and games for the girls, I have ventured occasionally in first person/multiplayer shooters for the Wii and Call of Duty on the xBox and enjoyed watching Georgia playing Grand Theft Auto and Chloe playing Red Dead Redemption.

So a combination of lockdown enforced downtime and being a bit in limbo following the cochlear implant operation and learning to hear again electronically has created a ripe environment for me to venture into gaming again.

I spotted a while back that Google was experimenting with a cloud based gaming platform called Stadia and having switched more and more to cloud based platforms in many aspects of professional life it seems like a natural and logical path for gaming to follow.

A few minutes of account creation and parting with £40 on my credit card and I was the proud new owner of a Stadia 30 day trial and my own ‘cloud’ copy of Cyberpunk 2077. The promotion also threw in a free Stadia controller set-up, usually priced at £80 – so all in all a decent sounding opportunity 🙂

This spur of the moment purchase means that I approached the Cyberpunk game with no pre-conceived ideas or expectations and the criticism hadn’t gone mainstream at that point so I was pretty much unaware that the hardcore gaming community were not impressed.

I, on the other hand, have been extremely impressed and I’ll go as far as saying that for a spur of the moment purchase that £40 has delivered the best value for money entertainment I’ve ever experienced.

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20 hopes for the 2020s

I guess it follows that having written ‘Ten hopes for the Tens’ I should double the effort for this new decade.

As 2020 was such a tumultuous year, it also follows that I should wish to double my hopes for the remaining years of the decade – as we already have some serious catching up to do.

So, in the next decade I hope that …

  1. As our children navigate their early adult life, we continue to support them in whatever ways we can
  2. We are grandparents by 2030 (but definitely no pressure G&C)
  3. I have helped find a cure for genetic deafness
  4. I make the most of my regenerated hearing abilities
  5. I make my dear departed parents proud
  6. I finally grow up
  7. We have not retired
  8. We are still selling stuff online
  9. I provide my wife with the security and peace of mind she deserves
  10. I complete my ‘grand designs’ (to my wife’s satisfaction)
  11. I develop healthier interests
  12. I develop new skills
  13. We spend extended time in the sun
  14. We do more to pay it back and forward
  15. We’ve seen the last of Donald Trump and his like – America’s Worst President
  16. We see more of Kamala Harris and her like – Vice President Harris
  17. Technology starts helping society again rather than increasingly undermining it – Tech causes more problems than it solves
  18. We truly ‘build back better’ following on from the pandemic – Build Back Better
  19. We truly start listening to ‘the science’ – Climate Change Action
  20. We make the world a better place for our children and their children – Making the World a better place

21.21.21.21.21

So, on the twenty first minute of the twenty first hour of the twenty first day of the twenty first year of the twenty first century I have relaunched my personal blog.

(OK, I’ll admit that with the last two ‘twenty ones’ I cheated using the publish tool on WordPress, as I was only reminded of the significance of the date and time after the event. I do have the receipt to prove I bought the new domain – beyond 2020visions.blog – and a new WordPress subscription on the 21st of January 2021 though 🙂 )

Looking back over my last 10 years of posts is also a reminder of the ‘significant date number’ ones I’ve done in the past on dates we will never experience again in our lifetimes like 11.11.11 , 10.11.12 and 12.12.12

The title of my original blog, that I started in 2009, was ‘2020 VisionsImagining the World my children will inherit‘ and it was a platform for personal musings on family, work and personal interests.

I started writing it with good intentions but ran out of steam half way through the decade. In more recent years I have experimented with other writing platforms like Medium but found them far too distracting as they employ all the addictive tricks of the main ‘social media’ platforms to keep you unhealthily hooked.

On balance though I do like the discipline of putting thoughts in writing from time to time. It encourages you to really ‘think’ about things and also to both ‘review’ and ‘plan’.

In terms of reviewing the last decade there was one particular post I wrote in 2009 that has provided a benchmark for my thinking back then and also one mechanism by which to measure the passing of time.