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PIC.tv - The Public Internet Channel

I have had the great pleasure of working with the team at One Economy Corporation since last December on their exciting new venture, PIC.tv, the Public Internet Channel, a network with a public purpose. always on. What exactly does this mean? A snippet follows below, but you can visit the site to learn more.

The Public Internet Channel (PIC.tv) is a next-generation, public-purpose online network. It inspires, informs, and entertains, helping people live better lives.

The Public Internet Channel combines compelling programming with a launching point into relevant information that provides the opportunity for people to take action.

Everything on the Public Internet Channel is relevant, current, accessible and, whenever possible, local — and always with a clearly-defined public purpose. The Public Internet Channel shows real people in real situations tackling everyday topics, from health to money to living a sustainable lifestyle.

It also provides users with an interactive “Make It Easy” toolbox that gives people instant access to local information and the tools they need to take action based on what they learned. By providing this tool directly to all Americans, we hope to narrow the “information gap” that divides communities and provide a common space that crosses racial, gender, age, religious, geographic and political barriers.

The site features original and licensed video content, which is streamed from the Brightcove platform. The site itself is based on the excellent open source Drupal content management system and web application framework, with significant customizations, mostly at the theme level. Special thanks to Greg Spies of The Interactive Department for his work in helping to develop the Flash rotators in use througout the site.

I have been honored to be involved with this project and it is a rare opportunity indeed to get a chance to combine one's professional skills with broader goals. That, combined with the smart and passionate people I have had the opportunity to work with, has made this one of my most rewarding projects. As Dan Fellini, the project's producer put it,

Savor it, believe in it, and let it energize you forward. There’s work to be done, for sure. There always will be. But it’s important work and we’re up for the challenge.

The site is still in beta and currently requires registration, but I encourage you to spend a moment looking around and provide your feedback.

Drupal Camp PDX 2008

Just winding down from a great day at the first ever Portland Drupal Camp. This was an unconference in the barcamp tradition, put on the Portland Drupal Users Group. The group that put the show together did a really fantastic job. It was a free to the public, all volunteer event, and was organized better than many paid events I have been to. Hats off to Grant and all the other volunteers who clearly spent a lot of time putting together a great event.

Speakers include many local Drupal wizzes, including Matt Westgate, president of Lullabot and co-author of Pro Drupal Development.

I was a co-panelist with Dan Mendell about at a talk titled Drupal in business, pitfalls, concerns, features for the business owner. Dan is the President and CEO of NeutralSpace, a new company whose focus is experimenting with and deploying collaborative technologies. He have a great presentation about his experiences with Drupal as a business owner, in many ways concluding that while is a good platform with many features available out of the box, successful projects still require a great deal of planning and talent to get them done. I then spoke about running a consulting business based on Drupal and, I think more interestingly, the pros and cons of using Drupal as platform for a web startup.

Working on launching MomHub, GreeRenter, and Newsvetter (for a client) has taught me a few lessons about the latter, although none of those sites have scaled to the point where a platform decision might really start to hurt. The basic takeaway in my opinion is that Drupal is a great tool for getting the common tasks done in an elegant and flexible manner. These include things like a user account system and managing content postings. Having these tasks taken care of lets project teams focus on adding value at the top of pyramid so to speak, not on the basics that any site needs to have. On the other hand, a truly unique idea (at the time) like Twitter probably lends itself better to custom development.

Portland Web Innovators

This is WAY over due, but I've been meaning to mention a new site that I helped put together and launch for the Portland Web Innovators.

PDXWI was founded in 2006 to encourage discussions and collaboration amongst Portland's many multi-talented Web professionals. In addition to working the Web during the day, most of us also have side projects that fill the evenings. Sound like you? Come share it!

This has been one of my favorite professional development and networking groups since I first attended an event over a year ago.  I had a hard time finding a group of people who are entrepreneurial, technical, independent, and creative.  Many other groups also have a narrow focus, which is also critical to have, but being more of a generalist myself, I find this one appealing.  Great job to Adam Duvander and Ryan Williams for starting it up.

 The site was a very natural fit for Drupal, since one of the primary goals is to connect a community of users. We took advantage of an excellent theme called Deco.  The site is in its infancy with many features to come, but please sign up and get involved in the mean time.

Ignite Portland

I had the pleasure of attending the first ever Ignite Portland event last month. For the uninitiated, Ignite events consist of set of short, fast paced, presentations on everything from Twitter to unicycling.  From the Oreilly site:

If you had five minutes on stage what would you say? What if you only got 20 slides and they rotated automatically after 15 seconds? Around the world geeks have been putting together Ignite nights to show their answers.

If you missed the first event, the next one is just around the corner.  Be sure to check it out.

UPDATE

I had the pleasure of attending Ignite at the Bagdad Theater last night. Over a 1000 people showed up for the event after it received considerable coverage, including in the Oregonian, and several hundred had to be turned away at the door. The overall atmosphere was bubbling with creative energy and anticipation. Some of the presentations touched on a "why Portland, why now" theme, and being at this event drove home the answers to those questions for me. I count my blessings every day that I can live in Portland, with my family, as a part of this community. Presentations can be seen below in the embedded Splashcast (PDX company) player, posted by a devoted fan, LinuxAid.

Add Ignite Portland to your page

Lullabot Drupal Workshop - Day 2

Day 2 of the workshop was much more rewarding. We covered some truly advanced topics, including automated unit testing, modifying the core search index, manipulating node access, best practices for writing secure code, and how to contribute and get involved in the Drupal community. Matt Westgates presentation on security was the best of the day - I may not be an expert in securing my sites yet, but I have enough ammunition to cause some trouble on others! I'll skip posting my notes since they are likely only valuable to me, but if anyone is curious, let me know and I'd be happy to share. I also have a couple of great presentations which I can post.

Overall, while I felt the workshop was over priced ($900 for 2 days), I did some tricks and and met some great folks. I was really surprised to find that I was the ONLY Portlander attending the workshop. The other 50 or so attendees were from all over the country, and even a few form oversees. I think this speaks to momentum Drupal has as a web platform, which is great for everyone involved.
Thanks to the Lullabot team for a very informative couple of days.

Lullabot Drupal Workshop - Day 1

I have the pleasure of attending the Lullabot Drupal Advanced API and Module Development workshop this week. I've enjoyed getting to know the Drupal platform and community over the past year and have based many successful projects on it. The team at Lullabot are known for their Dupal training and consulting work, and have some great sites and contributed modules under their belts to prove it. If any Drupal geeks happen to come across this, what follows are some tidbits I picked on day one.