29 Dec 2025

feedDrupal.org aggregator

Talking Drupal: Talking Drupal #534 - Webhaven.io

Today we are talking about Webhaven.io, What it is, and How it helps build Drupal faster with guest Fons Vandamme. We'll also cover Metatag Simple Widget as our module of the week.

For show notes visit: https://www.talkingDrupal.com/534

Topics

Resources

Guests

Fons Vandamme - webhaven.io f0ns

Hosts

Nic Laflin - nLighteneddevelopment.com nicxvan John Picozzi - epam.com johnpicozzi Martin Anderson-Clutz - mandclu.com mandclu

MOTW Correspondent

Martin Anderson-Clutz - mandclu.com mandclu

I also wanted to give a shout out to the Drupal.org Infrastructure Working Group. In the lead-up to this recording there was a media server failure that brought down the entire site. They worked as furiously as Santa's elves and were able to quickly get the site back up. It was a reminder for me of how much we all (and this segment in particular) depend on the tireless work they do. In this season of giving please consider supporting the Drupal Association, and if you already do, maybe see if you could give a little more.

29 Dec 2025 7:00pm GMT

The Drop Times: A Year on The Record

Dear Readers,

This issue marks the conclusion of Volume 3 of Editor's Pick and the final newsletter of the year. As we close 2025, we would like to express our sincere appreciation to everyone who has followed The DropTimes, engaged with our work, and trusted us as a source of record for the Drupal ecosystem.

Over the past year, The DropTimes has continued its effort to document Drupal as more than a technology. Through news, interviews, events, case studies, and curated updates, we have focused on capturing the people, contributions, and decisions that collectively shape the community. Our work is guided by the belief that visibility, continuity, and context are essential for any open-source ecosystem to remain healthy and sustainable.

As a not-for-profit, community-driven initiative, our responsibility goes beyond publishing content. We see The DropTimes as part of the ecosystem it covers, with a duty to support makers, amplify meaningful work, and encourage shared responsibility. This perspective informs our editorial choices and reinforces our commitment to independence, fairness, and long-term relevance.

In 2026, we will continue to build on this foundation with sharper editorial focus, improved processes, and deeper engagement with the community we serve. Your feedback plays an important role in shaping this work, and we welcome your thoughts at editor@thedroptimes.com

Thank you for being part of this journey, and we look forward to continuing it with renewed purpose in the year ahead. With that, for one last time in 2025, let's spotlight the key stories form last week.

DISCOVER DRUPAL

EVENT

ORGANIZATION NEWS


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.

Alka Elizabeth
Sub-editor
The DropTimes

29 Dec 2025 11:50am GMT

28 Dec 2025

feedSymfony Blog

A Week of Symfony #991 (December 22–28, 2025)

This week, most Symfony contributors were enjoying the holidays, so development activity focused on miscellaneous bug fixes. Meanwhile, we released the first tagged version of Symfony AI, as the first step on the road to a stable release. Symfony development…

28 Dec 2025 8:16am GMT

25 Dec 2025

feedDrupal.org aggregator

Gizra.com: Microsites and Organic Groups at Scale

We've developed a huge platform for over half a decade to host the official sites of the United Nations' member countries, and we've never really posted about it. It's 170 Microsites, built on top of a single code base and database. Having the word "Micro" before Microsites is really stretching the definition. There's nothing micro about them. Head over to your favorite UN member country to see it in action. Here are a few completely random ones:

This post is a reflection of why we always try to avoid such architecture, and why we almost always still end up going with that level of effort; how much it should cost (less than having 140 independent sites); the common pitfalls we've gathered over the years (many).

What are Microsites

Microsites are sites that share the same structure and purpose, usually under one organization, but are meant to serve different branches, offices, or audiences. They can have their own content, languages, and editors, and sometimes even a different look. In a setup like the UN's, each country office site is technically similar, but each is managed by a different local team, with its own priorities and style. They're independent enough to feel separate, yet still connected through a shared foundation.

The term "microsite" is misleading. Once you have hundreds of them, each with custom permissions, content, and translations, there's nothing "micro" left about it. It's a big system pretending to be many small ones.

The Options - From Worse To Bad

None of these options are easy. Microsites are the kind of problem where every path feels wrong; you just choose which pain you can live with.

25 Dec 2025 12:00am GMT

24 Dec 2025

feedSymfony Blog

Symfony AI v0.1.0 - First Tagged Release

After our first announcement of the Symfony AI Initiative in July, and bringing it to the big stage at SymfonyCon in Amsterdam, it is about time to release the first tagged version of our Symfony AI packages! It is only the very first tag, it is a v0.1, but…

24 Dec 2025 8:32am GMT

21 Dec 2025

feedSymfony Blog

A Week of Symfony #990 (December 15–21, 2025)

This week, we published an article about how we controlled 1,200 screens in real time with Symfony during SymfonyCon Amsterdam 2025. We also celebrated a new SymfonyCasts course on building Symfony bundles. Finally, we shared a blog post detailing 20 years…

21 Dec 2025 8:27am GMT