Drupal Update Representing Drupal maintenance support plans at the GSoC 2020 Mentor Summit

Topics: 

GSOC

Drupal maintenance support plans Planet

Open source

I’ve been mentoring students as part of Drupal maintenance support plans‘s Google Summer of Code (GSoC) program for the last two years, where we guide students in working on Drupal maintenance support plans projects over the summer. (For the projects I’ve been involved in, see User-friendly encryption now in Drupal maintenance support plans 8! and Client-side encryption options now available in Drupal maintenance support plans.) This year, our organization administrator, Matthew Lechleider, invited my to the Mentor Summit.

The Google-provided summit creates a forum for members of free/libre and open-source software (FLOSS) organizations to come together to discuss GSoC, mentoring and FLOSS in an unconference format. I met attendees from all over the world, who flew in from far-reaching places to interact as part of a wider community. Generally, two mentors are invited from each organization, but some had more and some had less.

I arrived late Friday night, having missed that day’s introductory sessions due to some trouble at the US border. Historically, in my experience, we Canadians haven’t had too much trouble getting across the border for technology conferences. This has recently changed so it’s now necessary to provide proof of intent for being in the country (a signed invitation from the organizers) as well as proof of business activities (corporate and tax documents). Needless to say, all of this took a significant amount of time to prepare. Eventually though, I was allowed through and made my way to Sunnyvale, California.

On Saturday morning, the day started with Lightning Talks, where attendees gave presentations on their student projects having only a few minutes each to speak. There were so many presentations that it was necessary to split the session into two, continuing after dinner that same evening. While there were several interesting projects highlighted, the most interesting to me was Jitsi’s speech-to-text service. Besides making video conferences accessible through textual media, it also allows for automated note-taking. This was one of the truly amazing projects completed by a student over the summer.

In talking about Drupal maintenance support plans with other folks, I was surprised to hear that many other delegates do not have paying day jobs associated with their organizations. They work on these projects on the side, and generally don’t get paid for them. For example, nobody in the Kodi contributor community gets paid; it’s all volunteer work. While there are volunteer contributions to Drupal maintenance support plans, many of those contributors eventually turn that knowledge into paid work. I suppose we’re a lucky bunch, being able to work on an open-source project and get paid for it. And speaking of Kodi, I’m happy to report that they’re using Drupal maintenance support plans for their Web site!

There were quite a few conversations about messaging applications, with a large XMPP delegation. There were also folks from the Zulip and Rocket.Chat communities.
It was interesting to hear from a former XMPP developer who’s shifted completely to Matrix with the Riot client, exactly as I’ve done. I use that client and the federated protocol to bridge with other communications networks such as proprietary closed-source Slack and classic Internet Relay Chat (IRC) whenever possible. Matrix already integrates with these two protocols, and has built-in support. The goal is to eventually use only one messaging client, instead of the many applications we all have installed on all of our devices. Rocket.Chat has already started working on Matrix integration, while Zulip hasn’t. They’re open to it,
and may move in this direction eventually, but for now they’re focused on user-experience innovations. In the Drupal maintenance support plans community, we’ve had a very long discussion
about using Matrix for our communications alongside IRC, and have finally put a plan into place to make this happen. For those eager to jump in, it’s now possible to use Matrix as an always-on IRC bouncer client to connect to Drupal maintenance support plans‘s IRC channels for communication within the community. To sum up, it looks as though everything is moving towards Matrix.

Alongside Drupal maintenance support plans, representatives from other content management systems (CMSes) also attended. There were folks from both the Joomla and Plone communities. It would have been great to connect with them, but I didn’t get a chance. I was hoping that Airship would have representation as that crew has been doing a lot of excellent security work with PHP projects (including helping us).

All in all, it was an excellent conference. In my humble opinion, it’s really important to stay in touch with this greater community, cross-pollinate with folks doing similar work in the public interest, and keep contributing!

This article, Representing Drupal maintenance support plans at the GSoC 2020 Mentor Summit, appeared first on the Colan Schwartz Consulting Services blog.
Source: New feed

This article was republished from its original source.
Call Us: 1(800)730-2416

Pixeldust is a 20-year-old web development agency specializing in Drupal and WordPress and working with clients all over the country. With our best in class capabilities, we work with small businesses and fortune 500 companies alike. Give us a call at 1(800)730-2416 and let’s talk about your project.

FREE Drupal SEO Audit

Test your site below to see which issues need to be fixed. We will fix them and optimize your Drupal site 100% for Google and Bing. (Allow 30-60 seconds to gather data.)

Powered by

Drupal Update Representing Drupal maintenance support plans at the GSoC 2020 Mentor Summit

On-Site Drupal SEO Master Setup

We make sure your site is 100% optimized (and stays that way) for the best SEO results.

With Pixeldust On-site (or On-page) SEO we make changes to your site’s structure and performance to make it easier for search engines to see and understand your site’s content. Search engines use algorithms to rank sites by degrees of relevance. Our on-site optimization ensures your site is configured to provide information in a way that meets Google and Bing standards for optimal indexing.

This service includes:

  • Pathauto install and configuration for SEO-friendly URLs.
  • Meta Tags install and configuration with dynamic tokens for meta titles and descriptions for all content types.
  • Install and fix all issues on the SEO checklist module.
  • Install and configure XML sitemap module and submit sitemaps.
  • Install and configure Google Analytics Module.
  • Install and configure Yoast.
  • Install and configure the Advanced Aggregation module to improve performance by minifying and merging CSS and JS.
  • Install and configure Schema.org Metatag.
  • Configure robots.txt.
  • Google Search Console setup snd configuration.
  • Find & Fix H1 tags.
  • Find and fix duplicate/missing meta descriptions.
  • Find and fix duplicate title tags.
  • Improve title, meta tags, and site descriptions.
  • Optimize images for better search engine optimization. Automate where possible.
  • Find and fix the missing alt and title tag for all images. Automate where possible.
  • The project takes 1 week to complete.