I’m back on IRC for the foreseeable future, and loving it. Thank you Shout IRC.
With Plone 5 heating up, it’s time for me to go all-in again on Plone.
Whenever I answer tech support questions, I usually begin with a clean slate
One of the subjects I find myself thinking about a lot is: Plone (surprise!)
“Plock Pins are the greatest thing to happen to Plone since Buildout” — Alex Clark
A few months ago I introduced Plock: the Plone-installer for the Pip-loving crowd.
Plock is a Plone Installer for the Pip-Loving Crowd.
Recently I upgraded plone.org from Plone 4.2 to Plone 4.3.
Is Plone the next great static website generator? Probably not, but it definitely could be.
Regarding some of the criticism or objection to some of the content of my blog entries, etc.,
Actually: re-introducing the Plone Kitty from Plone 1!
This is a non-technical post on the Plone community, why it’s so great, how it functions, and some details that may help one understand it from the outside looking in (AKA The “secrets”)
The Plone community consists (roughly) of Founders, Contributors, and Users.
I owe PACKT a review of this book, so here it is.
I love upgrading Plone. Given the choice between an afternoon in the sun and upgrading Plone… OK I’d probably pick the sun, but it’d be close.
With Diazo theming on the rise (going in to 4.3 core) I’d like to take a look at the Diazo theming ecosystem again.
Including many Plone add-ons.
Since Day 1 with Plone circa 2004, I’ve always taken pride in and greatly enjoyed refining my development environment.
I am planning to do some work on the plone.org server and website by the end of the year.
This just in from the production department: use Varnish. (And please forgive the heavily meme-laden approach to describing these techniques.)
The Plone community and software fit nicely within the larger Python ecosystem. Here’s why.
Another one from the: “wow, this approach is totally and completely non-obvious to beginners” department.
You know who uses the (Plone) Collective Python buildout?
Today I am introducing a new category of blog entry called Plone secrets.
Due to the new Diazo theming features now available, I am very excited about the recent release of Plone 4.1rc2
About a year ago, I was frantically trying to finish ‘Plone 3.3 Site Administration’ …
I have yet to finish my obligations to Plone Conference 2008 until NOW.
A long time ago (several years ago, or more) one of my first Plone jobs was importing content from the file system.
The Cioppino Sprint was recently held in Bodega Bay, CA.
With what must be the fifth or sixth round of apologies to both Erik Rose and PACKT publishing for the delay (very sorry guys), here is my review! Better late than never.
It’s been a few years since I last attended a Plone sprint.
Edit: In addition to “cool overlays”, I added a couple Plone-core todo items (that I may like to PLIP/implement)
This is a follow up to my ‘Getting Excited about Plone as Eggs’ post.
This is a follow-up to Martin Aspeli’s introduction to repoze and Plone from last year
A project to jump start my return to Plone development.
Upgrade to Plone 3 before the conference
Join 300-400 of your closest friends for a 7-day party
For some themed location /foo/bar, you want “bar” and everything below it to look different than “foo”.
Another high-profile Plone site