Drupal 7 – a true 'multi-scenario' best fit?

Drupal Commerce in action (click for larger view)

Before I go offline for the summer months to enjoy the UK sun (yeah right 😉 ), here is a summary of my findings from spending the last 9 months immersed in Drupal – and particularly the new Drupal 7 offering.

Since becoming involved with web development in the mid 90’s and spending most of the last decade working on CMS orientated projects, I have become a great supporter of the Real Story Group and their excellent approach to CMS evaluation.

The terms ‘scenario‘ and ‘best fit‘ are synonymous with its analysis and I have always found its commentary insightful and bang on the money.

For my latest wave of professional and personal web projects, I have become drawn increasingly to the Drupal community and with the excellent support of a former colleague Simon at Holistic Drupal now have a range of commercial and social sites running on the platform – each of which has provided some different learning experiences. Continue reading

iCar = Efficient + Intelligent + Fun

When I first started my current role in the automotive industry last year, I met with a bunch of publishers to understand more about the industry and how the media were covering it. Towards the top of the list was Future Publishing with titles like Fast Bikes, Fast Car and Redline and well known car mod events such as TRAX, JapFest and FordFair.

Fast forward 12 months and Future has just launched Issue One of iCar described as ‘The Definitive Guide to More Efficient Motoring’ and with a tagline of Efficient, Intelligent, Fun.

Now, there are posts on this blog that make it clear I like ‘fast’ and I like ‘fun’ however, having attended a few of these car mod events in the last year, I have to be brutally honest and say that the words ‘Efficient’ and ‘Intelligent’ would be pretty low down the list of adjectives I’d associate with them. Therefore, reading the manifesto of the iCar editorial team is like taking a breath of fresh (exhaust fume free) air… Continue reading

"The Internet is inherently a force for democracy" …or not?

This is the conclusion of a debate that ran on The Economist website a couple of month’s back. In what appeared to be a well structured debate the conclusion of the moderator was as follows…

“By a narrow margin, the floor has chosen to oppose the motion. In so doing, you have declared your belief that the internet is “inherently” a force for democracy.

The motion did not ask to what extent the internet favours democrats or tyrants. Yet it is notable that in comments from the floor contributors on both sides of the argument frequently played down its significance. “Just another tool” was a commonly used phrase. Perhaps, as I suggested in my opening, such caution is a reaction to breathless media coverage of the web’s role in revolutions. Perhaps you are naturally cool-headed.

Over the past two weeks, supporters of the motion frequently refused to accept that such a “tool” could inherently favour either side. Such a question, they argued, was nonsensical. Sometimes it was used for democratic means. Often it was not.

But the majority disagreed. The internet is naturally inclined to encourage the free circulation of information, many contested. And the free circulation of information, they argued, is inherently incompatible with authoritarianism—even if some governments have succeeded so far in inhibiting the internet’s full power. It is this view that has largely carried the day. I hope such optimism proves well-founded.”

While I accept the moderator’s view and the weight of current public opinion on this particular debate I remain ‘uncomfortable’ with the conclusion. Continue reading

A year of Desire

It’s 12 months now since I first started using an HTC Desire smartphone and I can’t think of a more aptly named device.

Before I expand on these comments – some context…

At the outset of this new century, I was involved in the development of 3G mobile internet technologies with US telco giant Lucent where we were envisaging what future services might look like. By the middle of the decade I was working for a hosted services company specializing in Windows Mobile and Blackberry based mobile email services. And, right now, I am working for a company immersed in how mobile and smartphone technologies can be integrated into cars, homes and the workplace.

So, here are five main reasons why I find the Desire so desirable? Continue reading

Something well worth boasting about…

In contrast to my previous post about the self-congratulatory double page spread McDonalds had in The Times the other day, IBM took a more modest single page today to publicise their 100th anniversary.

As readers of my often cynical and sceptical blog posts about the murky activities of corporate organisations may know, I have deep respect and a bit of a soft spot for ‘Big Blue’. To say that it is an organisation with substance and authenticity is an understatement and just those few highlights of achievements in the advert below reinforce that view.

click for larger view

The 100 Icons of Progress can be read more easily and in its entirety here. Here are my top ten from an organisation that really has changed the world for the better… Continue reading