I recently stood before a room of fellow builders at Drupal Developer Days Athens 2026 and asked a question: "How many of you use Drupal distributions?" Lots of hands shot up across the room. But when I followed up with, "And how many of you are actually happy with them?" the room went quiet, only a couple hands remained in the air. Distributions were our solution for long to make starting easier with Drupal, so this was sad.
07 May 2026
Symfony Blog
SymfonyDay Montreal 2026: Empower creativity with ExpressionLanguage
SymfonyDay Montreal 2026 schedule is live! Join us on June 4, 2026, at L'Espace Quartier Latin (UQAM) for a day of pure PHP and Symfony expertise. 🎤 Speaker announcement! Florian Merle, Backend Developer, baksla.sh, will present "Empower creativity…
07 May 2026 1:00pm GMT
Drupal.org aggregator
Drupal AI Initiative: Call for Papers: Enterprise AI Summit Europe 2026

The Enterprise Drupal Summit Europe 2026 will take place on 28 September 2026 in the SS Rotterdam.
We are now accepting session proposals.
Focus of the summit
The program focuses on Drupal in enterprise contexts, with emphasis on:
- Large-scale Drupal architectures
- Digital experience platforms built on Drupal
- AI use in enterprise content and delivery workflows
- Composable and API-driven architectures
- Governance, security, and compliance in regulated environments
- Operating Drupal at scale in complex organizations
The event is aimed at practitioners and decision-makers working on enterprise digital platforms.
What we are looking for
We are prioritizing submissions that are based on real implementations.
Relevant topics include:
- Case studies from enterprise or public sector deployments
- Architecture decisions in complex Drupal systems
- AI integration in content management or delivery
- Multi-site and multi-brand Drupal setups
- Sessions should be grounded in practical experience rather than product positioning.
Format
Accepted formats include:
- 20 minute talks (MAX)
- Case study presentations (focus on the business side)
- Architecture or strategy sessions
Selection criteria
Proposals will be evaluated on:
- Relevance to enterprise Drupal use cases
- Clarity of problem and solution
- Evidence of real-world implementation
- Transferable lessons for other enterprise organizations
- Technical or organizational depth
Submit a proposal
Submissions are open via Pretalx.
Looking forward to seeing you there!
07 May 2026 10:58am GMT
Gábor Hojtsy: Stability & Innovation: Web Acceleration with Drupal Core and Drupal CMS - session recording
Stability & Innovation: Web Acceleration with Drupal Core and Drupal CMS - session recording
07 May 2026 10:35am GMT
Drupal AI Initiative: The skills that matter for leaders, builders and doers in the age of AI
Article by: Aidan Foster, Foster Interactive

The three human skills that turn AI into a multiplier.
Creativity, strategic thinking, and articulation are the three skills that decide whether AI makes you better or just faster.
- Strategic thinking comes from experience. There's no shortcut.
- Creativity can be learned, but it's more like going to the gym than reading a book. You build it through reps.
- Articulation lets you craft quality prompts and specs for AI, and it's the most trainable of the three. But it only matters when there's something worth articulating. The value lives in the other two.
What Everyone Is Getting Wrong
The AI discourse has one dominant message: automate faster, cut the grunt work, reduce headcount, ship more.
Most leaders are responding by getting better at execution. Better prompts. Faster workflows. More output per person.
Execution still matters. It's just not where the constraint is anymore. The leaders who pull ahead in the next three years won't be the ones who automated the most; they'll be the ones who understood where the real constraint moved.
The Bottleneck Moved
Think back to five years ago. A new landing page meant a brief, a copywriter, a designer, a developer, a round of revisions, and three weeks of calendar time. A campaign asset required coordinating four people across two time zones for something that might run for six days before you killed it.
That friction was real. Teams were sized around it. Agencies were built on it. Budgets accounted for it. That friction is gone.
A capable team can now produce a landing page in hours. Drafts, variants, and structured content at a pace that would have required six people two years ago. The execution ceiling collapsed.
The bottleneck didn't disappear. It moved upstream, to the quality of thinking that goes in before AI touches anything.
Strategic clarity. Creative direction. Precise articulation of what you actually want.
That's where the value lives now. That's where most teams are dangerously underprepared.
Strategic Thinking
A CMO walks into a strategy review and knows something is wrong. They've seen this pattern fail before, in a different market with a different product. They remember exactly how it ended.
That's not intuition in the mystical sense. It's pattern recognition built through immersion. You watch your confident calls go wrong, you figure out why, you adjust.
Strategic thinking requires experiencing consequences. You have to have been wrong, and had something depend on you being right.
Researchers studying scientists at the frontier of human knowledge found the same principle. The best of them use cultivated judgment to ask better questions, to know where to go next. AI needs to be pointed. It executes brilliantly within a defined frame. The frame has to come from somewhere.
Our sense for aesthetics, meaning and embodiment give us a vital advantage over our technological creations.
Why Human Intuition Is Still Science's Greatest Tool In The Age Of AI - Noema Magazine, 2026
Creativity
Most people believe creativity is an innate trait. Either you have it or you don't. That's wrong.

86% more ideas after 3 months of training. The untrained control group barely changed.
Creativity is a muscle. It responds to reps, to practice, to deliberate exposure to new inputs. A controlled study at Radboud University found that students who went through structured creativity training nearly doubled their ideation output in under a year. The untrained group stayed completely flat. (PLOS ONE, 2020)
You cannot read your way to it. You have to do the reps.
Research across Nobel laureates and major creative contributors identified two distinct types of creativity with two distinct peak ages. Conceptual innovators - the ones who execute one brilliant overarching idea - tend to peak young. Experimental innovators - the ones who synthesize across years of accumulated experience and observation - peak in their 50s. (Galenson and Weinberg, via Big Think)

The kind of creativity that matters most in marketing is the experimental kind. The kind that gets better the more you've seen.
The senior strategist who's been in the game 15 years isn't past their creative peak. The research says they may not have hit it yet.
Articulation
Articulation gets your thinking and creativity out of your head and into a form AI can use.
A VP with sharp strategic instincts and genuine creative range can still get generic output from AI if they can't extract what's in their head and structure it precisely.
Imprecise input produces generic output. Always.
The model doesn't know what your brand sounds like. It doesn't know who your buyers are, what language they use, or what keeps them up at night. It doesn't know what you've learned over three years about what actually converts.
All of that has to come from you, structured in a way AI can use. Articulation responds to deliberate practice faster than the other two. Most people never treat it as something worth developing. (Canadian Marketing Association AI Playbook, 2025)
Experience Is the Advantage If You Use It Correctly
The skills AI cannot replicate are the ones that take years to build. But knowing that doesn't help unless you act on it. Three things worth doing now:
Audit your process assumptions, not your expertise. The judgment you've built is the asset. The habits formed around the old production bottleneck are what need to change.
Treat articulation as a skill to develop deliberately. Document what you know about your buyers, your brand, your market. Structure it. That structured knowledge is what separates useful AI output from generic noise.
Do the creative reps. Consistent exposure to new inputs and new problems. New disciplines.
Give yourself and your team time to be creative. Whiteboard ideas as a group. Collect interesting work and express what specifically about it grabbed your attention.
Skip the reps and your creative edge fades.
Leaders who invest in all three first will pull ahead. The advantage compounds.
Where does your team sit?
Most teams I talk to are strong on execution. The upstream work - the strategic clarity, the creative direction, the structured articulation of what makes them different - is where the gap is.
That gap is also where the opportunity is.
Drop a comment. I'd like to hear how others are thinking through this.
Sources: Noema Magazine (2026), Radboud University / PLOS ONE (2020), Galenson and Weinberg / De Economist (via Big Think), Canadian Marketing Association AI Playbook (2025)
07 May 2026 10:04am GMT
Symfony Blog
New in Symfony 8.1: Deep Cloner
Contributed by Nicolas Grekas in #63612 ,…
07 May 2026 7:38am GMT
06 May 2026
Symfony Blog
Symfony 8.1.0-BETA1 released
Symfony 8.1.0-BETA1 has just been released. This is a pre-release version of Symfony 8.1. If you want to test it in your own applications before its final release, run the following commands: 1 2 3 $ composer config minimum-stability…
06 May 2026 2:29pm GMT
01 Apr 2004
Planet PHP
ezSystems are classy folks

Last week I helped the folks at ezSystems debug some APC problems they were having. The problems ended up being a 64bit architecture problem (they have uber-fast Opterons) and the bug is now fixed in 2.0.3.
Today I received Python & XML from them (off my Amazon wishlist). Thanks guys!
On a side note, my wishlist seems borked. The list I get when I search on my email address or name is not the same one I can edit when I log into the site.
01 Apr 2004 6:53pm GMT
PHP april fools...
1st of April 2004 get's to it's end and I guess it's time, to summarize the recent April fools a bit. Not that I think anyone in the world believes in them, but some were quite funny:
1. Changes to case sensitivity in PHP.
Alan Knowles announced that PHP will change to the studlyCase API and therefor will get everything broken by changing established functions.
2. IBM takes over Zend.
Myself hacked a little article about IBM taking over Zend to make PHP a compete of Java.
3. The first PHP virus has been seen.
Wasn't there one last year, too?
4. PHP has been overtaken by Micro$oft.
Mhhh... a little bit unreliable, if they had been taken over by IBM this morning... Maybe one should first look, what others wrote...
5. And finally, PHP4 and 5 showed their real faces...
Take a look at a phpinfo() output!
I guess I missed some, so feel free to comment on this entry, if you found another!
01 Apr 2004 5:49pm GMT
PHP Virus Attacking Web Hosts
Symantec have a report of the virus here. I've yet to see any of the PHP news sites picking up on it but, using a virtual host account, managed to deliberately expose some PHP scripts to it. From examining the infected scripts, what's disturbing is once infected, every tim...
01 Apr 2004 12:19pm GMT