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drunomics: Drupal Dev Days 2025: Innovation, Community, and Collaboration in Leuven
Talking Drupal: Talking Drupal #500 - Community Edition
Join us for an extraordinary celebration of Talking Drupal's 500th episode! In this milestone episode, we dive into a treasure trove of memories, insights, and updates from an array of special guests. From innovative Drupal contributions to the future of open-source technology, this episode is packed with valuable discussions. Don't miss appearances from notable guests like Dries Buytaert, Tim Doyle, Tim Lehnen, Mike Anello, and many more. Celebrate with us as we look forward to 500 more episodes!
For show notes visit: https://www.talkingDrupal.com/500
TopicsGuests include, in order of appearance:
- Jason Pamental
- Dries Buytaert
- Tim Doyle
- Tim Lehnen
- Carlos Ospina
- Mayela Jackson
- Mike Anello
- Jonus Cuyvers
- Jacob Rockowitz
- Antonio Estevez
- Norah Medlin
- Kevin Quillen
- Chris Wells
- Steven Jones
- Jürgen Haas
- Thomas Scola
- Chad Hester
- Matt Glaman
- James Abrahams
- Avi Schwab
- Josh Mitchell
- James Shield
Road to deprecating .module files
HostsNic Laflin - nLighteneddevelopment.com nicxvan John Picozzi - epam.com johnpicozzi Martin Anderson-Clutz - mandclu.com mandclu Stephen Cross - stephencross
The Drop Times: DXPR’s “Baby AI” Redefines Content Creation with Free AI Access for Drupal Users
The Drop Times: Growing but Not Devoid of Pain
Dear Readers,
The 2025 State of Open Source Report has dropped, and it’s raising eyebrows. Open Source adoption keeps climbing, with 96% of organizations either holding steady or increasing their usage. But behind that impressive number is a more complicated story. Many teams are pushing ahead without the skills or strategy to manage what they’ve adopted. The tools are powerful. The human side, including staffing, governance, and lifecycle planning, is struggling to keep pace.
Drupal users will recognize the tension. As one of the most mature and widely deployed open-source platforms, Drupal has long been part of the enterprise tech stack. But even here, the report's themes hit home. The risk of running outdated modules, the effort needed to stay current with security updates, and the rising demand for cloud-native workflows are all very real. It's not just about building with Open Source anymore. It's about managing it with clarity and consistency.
The key takeaway? Adoption alone isn’t success. Whether you're using Drupal, containerized services, or open-source data platforms, the same pressures apply. Unsupported code, compliance gaps, and missing talent can quietly undermine progress. The report is worth your time if you care about using Open Source in a sustainable, responsible way. Read the full 2025 report to get a grounded look at where the ecosystem stands and what needs attention next.
- Drupal Site Template Marketplace Under Review as Working Group Tests Key Assumptions
- Chris McGrath Rebuilds Drupal-Based ATS/CRM with React and AI Tools
- Jürgen Haas Sparks Community Discussion on the Future of Drupal Marketplace
- 2025 State of Open Source Report Shows Surge in Adoption, Ongoing Security Concerns
- DrupalCamp Ouagadougou 2025 Builds Momentum for Drupal Community in West Africa
- Behind the Scenes of DrupalCamp Ottawa 2025: How This Free Event Came Together
- DrupalCamp Spain 2025 Offers Free Tickets for Students in Web Development
- JetBrains to Host Free Virtual Event Celebrating 30 Years of PHP
- Drupal Events This Week: Meetups, Camps, and Community Sessions (May 5–11, 2025)
- What Happens When a Podcast Outlives a Decade? Talking Drupal Knows
- Annertech Advances LocalGov Drupal with New Features, Governance, and Media Improvements
- YMCA Website Services Distribution Upgrades to Later Versions of Drupal and PHP
We acknowledge that there are more stories to share. However, due to selection constraints, we must pause further exploration for now.
To get timely updates, follow us on LinkedIn, Twitter and Facebook. You can also join us on Drupal Slack at #thedroptimes.
Thank you,
Sincerely
Alka Elizabeth
Sub-editor, The DropTimes.
The Drop Times: Dotsquares Migrates 17 Samuel, Son & Co. Sites to Drupal 10 with Unified Architecture
Gates Foundation to open Singapore office
Drupal Association blog: Let’s support a pillar of Open source
Open source projects thrive because of the people and institutions that nurture it behind the scenes empowering innovation, collaboration, and digital freedom. One impactful institution is the Oregon State University Open Source Lab (OSL). The Drupal community owes much of our success and growth to Open Source Lab when they supported the project in 2005 by hosting our servers.
Today, OSL needs our support.
About Open Source LabThe Oregon State University Open Source Lab is a nonprofit organization with a powerful legacy in the open source ecosystem. For years, it has provided secure, reliable hosting services to some of the most widely used and mission-critical open source projects like Apache, CentOS, Debian, Django, Docker, Eclipse, Mozilla Firefox, GNOME, Go, KDE, Node.JS, OpenBSD, OpenSSL, postgreSQL, Rust, sqlite, The Tor Project, Yum, and yes, Drupal.
Open Source Lab helped shape Drupal’s journeyIn 2005, when a surge of interest melted down the shared server that was being used by Dries to host Drupal.org, Sun Microsystems donated a server but there was nowhere to host it. Open Source Lab stepped forward providing managed data center services, offering not only hosting but also long-term support through its student mentorship model. This commitment shaped the careers of many open source leaders, including former Drupal Association Infrastructure Manager Rudy Grigar and current Infrastructure Manager and Tag1 CTO Narayan Newton, both Open Source Lab alums.
While the Drupal Association has now moved to a hybrid cloud architecture, we still operate some critical infrastructure at the Open Source Lab, including pre-production environments, mail transport, and legacy systems that are still mid-migration, and will be repurposed for things like our testing infrastructure. It is our hope for Drupal to continue to be present at the Open Source Lab for years to come.
A Critical Moment for Open Source LabIn recent years, the Open Source Lab has faced a steady decline in corporate donations, leading to an operational deficit. Today the Open Source Lab is under threat, placing Open Source Lab’s future in jeopardy.
Unless they secure $250,000 dollars in commitments by 14 May 2025 they will have to close their doors.
If Open Source Lab shuts down, we lose a backbone of the open source world and a value-driven infrastructure provider. It would ripple across dozens of projects and thousands of contributors, setting back years of progress and community building.
Together, we can keep Open Source Lab alive
This is an opportunity for all of us to come together to support an unsung pillar of open source.
Here’s how you can help:-
Your donations are vital to keep this precious resource for the public good open. Consider making a donation to support Open Source Lab’s future. Donate today.
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If you are able to make a major gift, you can also reach out to: [email protected]
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Help raise awareness by sharing this post within your network and with anyone you think could help support Open Source Lab.
The Open Source Lab has played an important role in supporting the open source community, now it’s our turn to give back. By contributing today, you’re helping secure the future of open source innovation and sustaining essential digital infrastructure. It's time to come together to ensure the Open Source Lab’s legacy continues to thrive.
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Golems GABB: Functional testing on DDEV Selenium Standalone Chrome
DDEV has really changed the game for developers by making it easier to set up local development environments in no time! When you team it up with the amazing automation features of Selenium, you get a powerful duo for doing thorough functional tests. In this article, your favorite Drupal development team looks at how this combination can boost your development efficiency and enhance the quality of your projects.