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This is the follow up to Open discussion on Drupal's themeing capabilities and templating engines., and is more technical in nature than the previous artic

[Editor's note: In the 8 years since this was written, all but a few of the links have rotted.

After an extensive testing period, the Drupal project has released version 4.4.0 of its open-source content management and community platform.

With Drupal 4.4.0 around the corner, it is time to share what each of us are up to. If you plan to work on something in particular, or to contribute to Drupal in one way or another, please share your personal battle plan in the comments.

Earlier this week I committed a new profile module to the development branch. I just finished upgrading drupal.org to take advantage of these new improvements.

A few hours ago, I uploaded a package of Drupal version 4.3.2 to Debian unstable. This upload will hopefully fix all the critical bugs of the previous package (and introduce no new ones).

With Drupal 4.4.0 on the horizon, this marks a good time for a new round of website suggestions. In short, is there any way in which our website, http://drupal.org/, could serve you better?

We are pleased to announce that the first Drupal 4.4.0 release candidate is available. A list of the major changes can be found in the CHANGELOG file.

I'm thrilled to announce the release of a collection of modules used to drive a full-fledged ecommerce system from within Drupal.

After some playing around with static pages, books, and a variety of other organization techniques for my magazine content, I've decided that there are just some key features I want to implement that I don't see in existing modules.

Pages

Articles from Drupal.org frontpage posts for ...

This is the follow up to Open discussion on Drupal's themeing capabilities and templating engines., and is more technical in nature than the previous artic

[Editor's note: In the 8 years since this was written, all but a few of the links have rotted.

After an extensive testing period, the Drupal project has released version 4.4.0 of its open-source content management and community platform.

With Drupal 4.4.0 around the corner, it is time to share what each of us are up to. If you plan to work on something in particular, or to contribute to Drupal in one way or another, please share your personal battle plan in the comments.

Earlier this week I committed a new profile module to the development branch. I just finished upgrading drupal.org to take advantage of these new improvements.

A few hours ago, I uploaded a package of Drupal version 4.3.2 to Debian unstable. This upload will hopefully fix all the critical bugs of the previous package (and introduce no new ones).

With Drupal 4.4.0 on the horizon, this marks a good time for a new round of website suggestions. In short, is there any way in which our website, http://drupal.org/, could serve you better?

We are pleased to announce that the first Drupal 4.4.0 release candidate is available. A list of the major changes can be found in the CHANGELOG file.

I'm thrilled to announce the release of a collection of modules used to drive a full-fledged ecommerce system from within Drupal.

After some playing around with static pages, books, and a variety of other organization techniques for my magazine content, I've decided that there are just some key features I want to implement that I don't see in existing modules.

Pages