11 Dec 2025

feedDrupal.org aggregator

Drupal AI Initiative: AI at BADCamp 2025

Guest Blog Post by Luke McCormick

BADCamp, the Bay Area Drupal Camp, has been a Drupal gathering in the Bay Area most years since 2007. This year's BADCamp had a particular focus on artificial intelligence. There were many exciting things to see and hear about AI, and the overall programme reflected a blend of practical tooling, architecture, and community direction.

Drupal Core UX Manager Emma Horrell set the stage with the opening keynote, Turning Feelings into Features - Why UX Is an Innovation Catalyst for Drupal (video). While not framed as an AI talk specifically, the keynote grounded much of what followed. Emma emphasized UX as an active, user-centred practice rooted in trust, language, and real-world workflows, principles that are especially critical for the effective use of AI tools. Her keynote flowed directly into the next session in the same room, underscoring how closely UX and AI strategy are now intertwined in Drupal.

Immediately following the keynote, Drupal AI Initiative lead Kristen Pol presented Accelerating Innovation: The Drupal AI Initiative (video), outlining the current state and direction of Drupal's AI efforts. Kristen described how the initiative is moving beyond isolated experiments toward coordinated work across providers, UX research, contributor experience, and shared infrastructure. Shortly thereafter, André Angelantoni's Drupal CMS Late 2025 Update (video) highlighted how AI capabilities are becoming part of Drupal CMS planning itself, signalling a shift from AI as an add-on toward AI as expected infrastructure.

Building Drupal Sites with AI

The AI momentum continued with a wide range of additional sessions devoted to artificial intelligence at BADCamp. Several talks focused on hands-on, builder-friendly uses of AI in Drupal. J. Matthew Saunders led Getting Hands-On with Drupal AI: Build Smarter Sites with Zero Code (video), while Sal Lakhani presented 3 Ways to Use AI in Drupal (video), covering practical patterns such as chatbots, search, and code generation. Sal also delivered a second session, The #1 Drupal AI Demo, Development, and Learning Platform (DrupalForge) (video), demonstrating how hands-on experimentation and learning can be supported in a structured way.

Sal Lakhani presenting on Drupal AI at BADCamp 2025

Jordan Koplowicz explored the easy way and the hard way to create AI Chatbots in Drupal. The "easy" way requires no code, which he explains in Creating an AI Chatbot in Drupal: The Easy Way (video), which he followed up the next day with the "hard" way in AI on Headless Drupal (video), where he showed how to create a headless AI chatbot. Meta's Prabhakar Singh rounded out this group with Building Smart Content Moderation for Drupal: AI-Powered Spam Detection and Community Safety (video), illustrating how AI can be used to increase trust, safety, and community health.

BADCamp also featured sessions that took a more strategic and forward-looking view of AI. Steve Carlson presented Preparing for the Future: AI, the Changing Consumption Landscape, and Combating AI Threats (video), focusing on how organizations must adapt to shifts in how content is created and consumed. Alongside this, James Sansbury presented Preparing Your Pipeline for the AI Revolution (video), addressing organizational readiness, governance, and workflow implications. Satish Kumar Nagireddy presented AI-Powered Content Intelligence: Multi-Modal Analysis for Drupal Media Management (video), demonstrating how AI can analyze and enrich media across formats while remaining compatible with Drupal's content and editorial models.

Drupal Coding with AI

Developers were well represented in the AI programming as well. Mark Ferree's session, AI Dev Tools: How Not to Get Lost in the Chaos (video), surveyed the rapidly evolving landscape of AI-assisted development tools from the perspective of someone with extensive engineering experience. In contrast, Luke McCormick focused on pragmatic techniques that can be used even by people who do not consider themselves full-time Drupal coders in Quick and Easy Migrations and Upgrades Using AI (video), which demonstrated how to use AI-enabled editors like Cursor to speed up common Drupal development, upgrade, and feature-building tasks.

The BADCamp AI Summit

Beyond individual sessions, BADCamp 2025 featured its first dedicated AI Summit, a deeper-dive gathering focused specifically on AI in Drupal. The summit brought together speakers and organizers from across the conference and included a live remote discussion with Jamie Abrahams, who joined from the UK to share an update on the broader Drupal AI landscape. Jamie emphasized that Drupal AI has moved beyond theory and proof-of-concept demos into the stage where real-world use cases and case studies are the next critical need. Rather than flashy demonstrations, the focus is now on reliable, high-value applications that build on Drupal's strengths in UX, governance, trust, and longevity.

Jamie Abrahams joining the BADCamp AI Summit remotely

Taken together, the sessions and the AI Summit showed a Drupal community that has moved past speculation and into execution. The conversations at BADCamp reflected a shared understanding that AI's impact will be shaped not just by what is technically possible, but by how thoughtfully it is designed, integrated, and governed. Across sessions, summits, and hallway conversations alike, the message was consistent: this is work the whole community can and should engage in, and BADCamp 2025 demonstrated that Drupal is actively rising to that challenge.

11 Dec 2025 12:03am GMT

10 Dec 2025

feedDrupal.org aggregator

Freelock Blog: What Does That Image Say? Non-text Content

Day 10 - Non-text Content


If you know anything about web accessibility, you probably know about alt text. It's the most widely recognized accessibility technique - that little text description you add to images so screen readers can announce what the image shows. But there's more to non-text content accessibility than just slapping some alt text on every image and calling it done.

Let's dig into what you might not know about making images, icons, charts, and other non-text content accessible.

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10 Dec 2025 4:00pm GMT

LakeDrops Drupal Consulting, Development and Hosting: ECA brings great value to Drupal CMS, and still has to improve

ECA brings great value to Drupal CMS, and still has to improve

Dollar note in a back pocket

Jürgen Haas

ECA (Event-Condition-Action) is a powerful no-code automation tool included in Drupal CMS that provides features like content duplication, customizable login/logout redirects, form alterations, privacy protections, and automatic configuration for integrations like Mailchimp. Beyond user-facing features, ECA also handles behind-the-scenes tasks such as dynamic breakpoints, automatic sitemap configuration for new content types, and SEO meta tag defaults. While ECA offers significant flexibility without requiring additional modules or code, the user interface needs improvement to make it more intuitive for users who want to customize or create their own automation models.

10 Dec 2025 3:36pm GMT

LostCarPark Drupal Blog: Advent Calendar day 10 – EditTogether: Real-Time Collaborative Editing Comes to Drupal

Advent Calendar day 10 - EditTogether: Real-Time Collaborative Editing Comes to Drupal james

Door 10 contains a selection of hands holding pencils, preparing to edit a document together

Today we hand over to AmyJune Hineline to tell us about the presentation behind today's door…

EditTogether brings real-time collaborative editing, the familiar experience many people know from Google Docs, directly into Drupal while keeping full control of content in the hands of site owners.

Portrait on Alex Jones

I saw the session, Collaborative Editing in Drupal with EditTogether, at Florida DrupalCamp in 2025, where Alex Jones and Ken Rickard introduced the project and walked through its purpose, technology, features, and future. Their session offered a clear look at how Drupal content creation could evolve with…

10 Dec 2025 9:00am GMT

09 Dec 2025

feedDrupal.org aggregator

Dries Buytaert: 'Source available' is not open source (and that's okay)

I have spent twenty years working on open source sustainability, so watching a fight ignite between Ruby on Rails creator David Heinemeier Hansson and WordPress founding developer Matt Mullenweg this week felt uncomfortably familiar in a way I wish it didn't.

David Heinemeier Hansson (also known as DHH) released a new kanban tool, Fizzy, this week and called it open source.

People quickly pointed out that the O'Saasy license that Fizzy is released under blocks others from offering a competing SaaS version, which violates the Open Source Initiative's definition. When challenged, he brushed it off on X and said, "You know this is just some shit people made up, right?". He followed with "Open source is when the source is open. Simple as that".

This morning, Matt Mullenweg rightly pushed back. He argued that you can't ignore the Open Source Initiative definition. He compared it to North Korea calling itself a democracy. A clumsy analogy, but the point stands.

Look, the term "open source" has a specific, shared meaning. It is not a loose idea and not something you can repurpose for marketing. Thousands of people shaped that definition over decades. Ignoring that work means benefiting from the community while setting aside its rules.

This whole debate becomes spicier knowing that DHH was on Lex Fridman's podcast only a few months ago, appealing to the spirit and ethics of open source to criticize Matt's handling of the WP Engine dispute. If the definition is just "shit people made up", what spirit was Matt violating?

The definition debate matters, but the bigger issue here is sustainability. DHH's choice of license reacts to a real pressure in open source: many companies make real money from open source software while leaving the hard work of building and maintaining it to others.

This tension also played a role in Matt's fight with WP Engine, so he and DHH share some common ground, even if they handle it differently. We see the same thing in Drupal, where the biggest companies do not always contribute at the same level.

DHH can experiment because Fizzy is new. He can choose a different license and see how it works. Matt can't as WordPress has been under the GPL for more than twenty years. Changing that now is virtually impossible.

Both conversations are important, but watching two of the most influential people in open source argue about definitions while we all wrestle with free riders feels a bit like firefighters arguing about hose lengths during a fire.

The definition debate matters because open source only works when we agree on what the term means. But sustainability decides whether projects like Drupal, WordPress, and Ruby on Rails keep thriving for decades to come. That is the conversation we need to have.

In Drupal, we are experimenting with contribution credits and with guiding work toward companies that support the project. These ideas have helped, but also have not solved the imbalance.

Six years ago I wrote in my Makers and Takers blog post that I would love to see new licenses that "encourage software free riding", but "discourage customer free riding". O'Saasy is exactly that kind of experiment.

A more accurate framing would be that Fizzy is source available. You can read it, run it, and modify it. But DHH's company is keeping the SaaS rights because they want to be able to build a sustainable business. That is defensible and generous, but it is not open source.

I still do not have the full answer to the open source sustainability problem. I have been wrestling with it for more than twenty years. But I do know the solution is not renaming the problem.

Some questions are worth asking, and answering:

If this latest fight nudges us away from word games and toward these questions, some good may come from it.

09 Dec 2025 10:22pm GMT

Freelock Blog: Can You Read That Tooltip? Content on Hover or Focus

Day 9 - Content on Hover or Focus


You hover over an icon to see what it does, and a helpful tooltip appears. But before you finish reading it, you accidentally move your mouse slightly and the tooltip vanishes. Or you're using a screen magnifier and the tooltip appears, but it's positioned right under your mouse pointer, making it impossible to read the magnified version. Or you're navigating with a keyboard, the tooltip appears when you tab to a button, but you can't move your mouse over the tooltip text to select and copy it.

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09 Dec 2025 4:30pm GMT

Matt Glaman: Automating Drupal release notes in Dependabot PRs

09 Dec 2025 3:00pm GMT

LostCarPark Drupal Blog: Advent Calendar day 9 – How to Land an EPIC Contribution in Drupal (Without Losing Your Mind)

Advent Calendar day 9 - How to Land an EPIC Contribution in Drupal (Without Losing Your Mind) james

Door 9 reveals a group of people in a circle touching outstreched arms
Matt Glaman looking surprisedMike Herchel looking smart

At DrupalCon Vienna Matt Glaman of Acquia and Mike Herchel of Dripyard talked about how to get contributions from the initial idea stage, and bring them to fruition.

The best contributions often start from finding something that annoys you, and asking "why is it like this?"

Matt and Mike talk about finding things that can be fixed, pitching to stakeholders, assembling a team, actually doing the work, communicating your needs, and getting your idea over the finish line.

One important thing I took from it was that you don't have to work alone, which is something I tend to do a lot.

I liked the way…

09 Dec 2025 9:00am GMT

Specbee: CMS Integrations: All the questions you’ve been wanting to ask

Marketers feel the pain of inefficient CMS integrations more than anyone. Agree? We've answered some of the most popular questions about CMS integrations and even give you the clarity you need to get your systems talking. Check it out!

09 Dec 2025 6:12am GMT

Cheppers: Are recipes replacing Drupal installation profiles?

For many years, installation profiles have been the main way to set up a Drupal site. They define which modules are enabled, what configuration is applied, and often include demo content to help teams get started quickly. Well-known distributions have relied on this approach to deliver ready-made solutions for specific use cases. That approach made sense when most Drupal projects started from scratch. But that isn't always the case today. Many teams are working with existing sites that are live and need changes. These might be new features, performance improvements, or updated design elements. Installation profiles are not built for that kind of workflow. Once they are applied during setup, they can't be reused later.

09 Dec 2025 12:00am GMT

08 Dec 2025

feedDrupal.org aggregator

ImageX: Get Ready for Drupal Canvas, the Page Builder You’ve Been Waiting For

What if building pages in Drupal felt as effortless as sketching ideas on a digital canvas - yet powerful enough to satisfy a developer's need for precision and control? That's the promise of Drupal Canvas: a new visual builder that merges the best of what Drupal has offered so far with today's most modern approaches and best practices.

08 Dec 2025 7:17pm GMT

Talking Drupal: Talking Drupal #531 - Drupal as an Application Framework

Today we are talking about Drupal for Applications, Types of Applications Drupal can build, and How we change our thinking of Drupal with guests Alexander Varwijk (far-vag) & Jürgen Haas. We'll also cover Drupal Remote Dashboard as our module of the week.

For show notes visit: https://www.talkingDrupal.com/531

Topics

Resources

Guests

Alexander Varwijk - alexandervarwijk.com/ Kingdutch Jürgen Haas - lakedrops.com jurgenhaas

Hosts

Nic Laflin - nLighteneddevelopment.com nicxvan John Picozzi - epam.com johnpicozzi Fei Lauren - feilauren

MOTW Correspondent

Martin Anderson-Clutz - mandclu.com mandclu

08 Dec 2025 7:00pm GMT

Freelock Blog: Can You Undo That? Error Prevention for Critical Actions

Day 8 - Error Prevention


Imagine clicking "Submit" on a legal contract, only to realize you meant to click "Save Draft." Or transferring $1,000 to the wrong account with no confirmation step. Or deleting your entire photo library with a single misclick. These aren't hypothetical scenarios - they happen every day when websites don't implement proper error prevention.

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08 Dec 2025 4:30pm GMT

The Drop Times: A Shift for Drupal

Drupal Canvas 1.0 arrives with the quiet confidence of a system finally deciding to make itself easier to work with. Drupal has always been capable-sometimes overwhelmingly so-and often assumed its users were ready to meet it on its own terms. Canvas doesn't change Drupal's nature, but it does make the day-to-day experience less like operating heavy machinery and more like arranging things in a room you actually use.

In the official announcement, product lead Lauri Timmanee explains how organisations have long had to choose between settling for something generic or diving into complex code. Canvas sits between those extremes with a component-based visual builder that allows layout adjustments while preserving developer-level control. It's not a shortcut-just a clearer path through familiar terrain.

Dries Buytaert, in his post, frames Canvas 1.0 as a way to meet modern expectations without compromising Drupal's foundations-structured content, permissions, and scalability. The biggest change lies in workflow: fewer dependencies on developers for routine tasks, and a more intuitive rhythm for teams shaping pages.

Early community feedback helps contextualize the release. Aaron McHale, Technical Lead at The University of Edinburgh, says Canvas positions Drupal more clearly within the low-code space without reducing flexibility. Jillian Chueka, Product Design Lead, expressed appreciation for the project's long development journey and its successful execution.

As Canvas 1.0 marks a notable shift in Drupal's editorial experience, it's just one of several updates shaping the ecosystem this week. Below are more highlights from across the Drupal community, from AI innovation to upcoming events and module releases.

DISCOVER DRUPAL

ACCESSIBILITY

Green UX in the Age of AI: Digital Products for a Sustainable Future

EVENT

DRUPAL COMMUNITY

Call for Designers: 2026 Aaron Winborn Award Seeks Creative Maker

ORGANIZATION NEWS

BOOKS

Matt Glaman Finalizing Drupal Caching Guide with Drupal 10.2 Updates Ahead of Release

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, Bluesky, and Facebook. You can also join us on Drupal Slack at #thedroptimes.

Thank you.

Sincerely,
Kazima Abbas
Sub-editor
The DropTimes

08 Dec 2025 2:42pm GMT

Dripyard Premium Drupal Themes: Dripyard joins Drupal Certified Partner program at silver level

We're super happy to announce that we've joined the Drupal Association's Drupal Certified Partner Program!

What is the Drupal Certified Partner (DCP) Program?

The DCP program was created to incentivize the makers (as opposed to takers) within the Drupal ecosystem. The ultimate goal of the project is to enable potential customers to recognize the value of organizations that are contributing to Drupal.

There are several different tiers, starting from "bronze", and going all the way up to "top tier".

08 Dec 2025 2:38pm GMT

The Drop Times: 10 AI-Powered Translation Modules for Drupal

The DropTimes concludes its eight-part Drupal AI series with a spotlight on AI-driven translation modules that streamline multilingual content workflows. These tools integrate Translation Management Tool (TMGMT) with leading AI and enterprise platforms, enabling scalable, high-quality translation for global audiences.

08 Dec 2025 1:49pm GMT