16 Jan 2026

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DrupalCon News & Updates: What to Expect from Trivia Night in Chicago

DrupalCon Chicago 2026's Trivia Night promises to be an unforgettable evening filled with fun, laughter, and the perfect opportunity to meet fascinating people. The event is being organized by a dedicated and diverse team eager to showcase the best of Chicago and welcome everyone into the fold.

Trivia is taking a new form this year - three questions per round and six total rounds, each with different point values and levels of difficulty. You and your team will go head-to-head with other groups, tackling a variety of topics, including Drupal, Chicago, and pop culture. Our amazing DJ Kerry will be in charge of the music and the scoreboard. Get ready to "name that tune"-music rounds will count for points too! Oh, and you might want to practice your handwriting, because this year, trivia is going back to analog.

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Trivia Night DrupalCon New Orleans

Photo Gobinath Mallaiyan licensed as CC BY-NC-SA 2.0

Between rounds, why not make a new friend? Trivia Night isn't just about answering questions-it's a celebration! We come together to mark the end of another amazing DrupalCon, sharing stories of the week and preparing for the work to come. Take this chance to strengthen old connections and forge new ones.

Chicago might be cold outside, but our gathering will be full of warmth and excitement! Enjoy the night, make plenty of toasts, share lots of laughs, and most importantly, have fun. That's what Trivia Night is all about!

Mark your calendars for Thursday, March 26 from 6pm - 9pm at the Weather Mark Tavern (1503 S Michigan Ave, Chicago, IL 60605). Free food and drinks and awesome prizes for the winners!

16 Jan 2026 1:59pm GMT

15 Jan 2026

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DDEV Blog: Planning for another great DDEV year in 2026

DDEV 2026 Plans

2026 Plans and Notes

Every year we try to lay out a bit of a plan for the coming year.

One of DDEV's primary strengths is our connection to a wonderful community, so each year turns out a bit different than expected. As we listen to people's actual experience, we try to adjust. And of course as upstream changes bring new features and bugs, we get lots of fun things to work on that we could never have anticipated. The items listed here are notes about what we think we understand at this point, but the year ahead and user experience and requests will affect what really happens.

We look forward to your input as the year goes forward.

Community

Community is core to our strength and growth. We are committed to maintaining the outstanding support that we offer for free and keeping that communication line open. And we want to continue to grow the amazing corps of contributors who offer improvements to the DDEV ecosystem.

Board of Directors

In 2025 we established Board of Directors, but now we have to learn what that means. The Board will have to establish itself, begin helping to determine priorities, and find its way to a strong oversight role. Here are a few issues to toss to the board early:

Features and Initiatives

Procedures

2026 Planning Additional Notes

Recognized Risks

We are a very small organization, so we try to pay careful attention to the risks as we go forward. In many ways, these are the same as the 2025 noted risks.

Minor Notes

Past Plans and Reviews

Previous plans and reviews have obviously framed this year's plans: 2025 Plans and 2024 review, 2024 plans

In preparing for this, we have been discussing these things in regular advisory group meetings and a specific brainstorming meeting.

We always want to hear from you about your experiences with DDEV as the year goes along!

Want to keep up as the month goes along? Follow us on:

15 Jan 2026 5:49pm GMT

A Drupal Couple: I Wanted to Celebrate Drupal's 25th. So I Built Something for Our Moms.

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Drupal 25th anniversary celebration with code floating over a birthday cake representing modern
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January 15, 2026 marks 25 years since Drupal 1.0.0. Twenty-five years. From a simple message board to powering some of the world's most complex websites. I wanted to do something to celebrate, but not just write a "happy birthday" post. I wanted to test what's actually possible with Drupal today.

Anilu and I had found some recipe PDFs. Two Colombian ones that I had. Five or six Costa Rican ones from her side. We'd also been cooking from the Accademia Italiana della Cucina website for a while. Our moms are both 75+, they love cooking, and these recipes were scattered around... difficult to read, impossible to search.

So we had an idea. What if we built them something? A real site. Multilingual. Searchable. Something they could actually use and we could share with friends. And what if I did it using Claude Code and modern Drupal to see how far things have come in 25 years?

The result is https://laollita.es. It took 3 days.

The Challenge

Let me be honest about what I was facing.

The Spanish PDFs were challenging. Massive amounts of content. The OCR quality was inconsistent. Recipes formatted in ways that made extraction tricky. Getting clean data required multiple passes of reading and confirmation because of the sheer volume of information.

Beyond the content problem, I needed multilingual support with AI-assisted translations. I needed search that actually worked. Facets. Filters by country and region. An interface accessible enough for someone who didn't grow up with computers.

Could Drupal and AI actually handle this without turning into a month-long project?

The AI-Assisted Development Journey

I started with the Umami demo. This is important. Umami gave me a Recipe content type, a structure, a foundation. It functioned exactly like what Drupal Recipes and templates are designed to do... get you started with something real instead of building from zero. The repetitive work was already done, so I could focus on improvements.

From there, Claudito (my Claude AI assistant) became my development partner. Not a magic wand. A helper.

Here's what AI handled well:

  • Analyzing PDFs and extracting recipe information

  • Initial translation passes and export to JSON

  • Creating migrate plugins to import recipes and translations

  • A special migration plugin specifically for translations

  • Building Views and fixing UX and CSS issues

  • Search API integration with autocomplete and facets

  • Creating a View to find recipes missing English translations

  • Bulk operations for translation (this was 100% Claudito, with me directing it to read the VBO module to understand the approach, and re-reading the AI translate module to use the right plugins)

Here's where I had to step in:

  • Redirecting AI to the right module, the right approach

  • Making sure AI read the right code or files before doing anything in Drupal

  • Guiding AI to follow best practices and modern Drupal development

  • Decisions about architecture and information structure

  • Changing fields to use more taxonomies to better standardize the recipes

Let me give you some examples. At one point, Claudito wanted to create a module to add CSS classes to a template. I redirected it to change the CSS to add selectors instead. Another time, Claudito started creating a custom module when the code could simply go in the custom theme. These redirections kept the project clean and maintainable.

Claudito let me focus on the decisions that matter. This is the human-in-the-loop approach I've written about before.

For translations, AI did most of the work in the first round. I imported those via the special migration plugin. But we still needed the View for recipes that we identified were missed in the first round, plus an extra PDF we found later. That View now serves as a way to bulk translate in the future when our moms or us add new recipes in Spanish or any other original language.

The Result

https://laollita.es is live.

Our moms can browse recipes in Spanish. Our friends can read them in English. The Italian originals are preserved. You can search by name, filter by country, filter by region. The interface is clean enough that someone who's 75 can use it without calling me for help.

Three languages. Thousands of recipes. Search, autocomplete, facets, AI translations. Three days. One person.

What This Means for Drupal at 25

Here's what surprised me. Not that it was possible. I knew Drupal could handle this technically. What surprised me was how quickly the pieces came together when you combine modern Drupal with systematic AI assistance.

The Umami demo acting as a Recipe/template meant the repetitive groundwork was already done, making modern Drupal more accessible than ever. The Drupal AI module meant translations weren't a separate nightmare. Claudito let me focus on decisions, guidance, and architecture. The ecosystem worked together.

And here's the forward-looking part. I didn't use Drupal CMS. I didn't use Canvas. I didn't use the newer Recipe installation tools. I decided to test it this way because Umami had already given us a solid foundation.

Imagine what this build would look like with those tools added. Drag-and-drop layout building. Even faster site assembly. More accessible for people who aren't command-line comfortable.

Drupal at 25 is not the Drupal I learned a decade ago. The learning curve is flattening as the ecosystem evolves. The AI integration is real and practical. The Recipe/template approach (demonstrated here with Umami) changes how fast you can get to something functional.

If you've been wondering whether Drupal is still "hard"... try building something. Give yourself a few days and a reason that matters to you. Then tell me what you built.

Happy 25th birthday, Drupal. Thanks for letting us build something for our moms.

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For Drupal's 25th anniversary, I built laollita.es-a multilingual recipe site-in 3 days using AI. Here's what modern Drupal can actually do today.
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15 Jan 2026 3:27pm GMT