Tip of the Trade: Drupal
By libervisco on 29 Jun 2006
Tip of the Trade: Drupal - Deploying and using it may not be completely painless, but Drupal is a great content management system (CMS) framework that is lightweight, modular, and not too difficult to navigate. [GNUs]
Carla Schroder talks about Drupal at ServerWatch.com. Right on I say!
I didn't actually know that CafePress.com runs on Drupal too - that's quite impressive. As you well know, Nuxified.org does too.









Comments
you should learn the
by tbuitenh | Fri, 2006-06-30 07:41you should learn the difference between quiet and quite, and loose and lose ;-)
YOu're right. I fixed my
by libervisco | Fri, 2006-06-30 14:33YOu're right.
I fixed my post.
They're just so similar and yet with a whole different meaning.
Even though I was an English
by supermike | Sun, 2006-07-02 05:16Even though I was an English major in college, I always got homophones mixed up and I still do today. I have to go back and edit my code carefully. Perhaps this is also why I'm a little dyslexic too when typing or writing??
I still don't get how quite
by free-zombie | Sun, 2006-07-02 09:24I still don't get how quite and quiet are homophones... but there are a lot of tricky ones like your you're their they're its it's whether weather flour flower
and I could imaging Hummer and hammer is some parts of the world
Quite and quiet aren't
by tbuitenh | Sun, 2006-07-02 10:16Quite and quiet aren't homophones, but they often appear instead of each other as typos that aren't caught by a spellchecker and can "get into your fingers" the wrong way if you type fast without paying much intention.
I often type "democrazy" instead of "democracy", it happens every time. And the x is too near the c when you type "wait a sec" in chat... I wonder what Freud would have to say about that.
tbuitenh wrote: Quite and
by libervisco | Sun, 2006-07-02 10:28Quite and quiet aren't homophones, but they often appear instead of each other as typos that aren't caught by a spellchecker and can "get into your fingers" the wrong way if you type fast without paying much intention.
How come, they're practically pronounced the same way. Or maybe I don't pronounce it correctly..
I often type "democrazy" instead of "democracy", it happens every time. And the x is too near the c when you type "wait a sec" in chat... I wonder what Freud would have to say about that.
:lolol: