who??

Ric Shreves is a web applications consultant and author. He's been building CMS websites since 1999 and is currently a partner at water&stone, a web design agency focused on open source content management systems. Ric has published two books on the Drupal CMS and one book on the Mambo CMS. His newest book, the Joomla! Bible was released in January of 2010. He is currently working on another title for Wiley & Co: The Drupal 7 Bible.

 

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  • 30 August, 2010 - 00:11
    The Activity Feed module for #drupal rocks!
  • 28 August, 2010 - 14:43
    Artichoke tapenade, kalamata garlic olives, locally brewed India Pale Ale. A good Saturday!
  • 28 August, 2010 - 12:12
    Beautiful blue skies in Bali -- added bonus: peak season coming to an end, allowing us some relief from tourist overload.
  • 27 August, 2010 - 22:52
    RT @socialasia: This will put a little price pressure on the social media monitoring market! Google Realtime: http://ht.ly/2vKuy
  • 27 August, 2010 - 22:48
    @ron_miller I share your skepticism on this one.

Pick my next book

I just finished up the Joomla! Bible for Wiley & Sons and am now working on the Drupal Bible. After that? What's next? I have several choices, so I thought I'd put it out there for everyone to have a voice. Let me know -- what are you interested in? What would you like to see a book about?
>>Submit your ideas and vote on the ones received to date.

Joomla! Performance Tips

The struggle for optimal site performance is a battle all web designers & site owners face from time to time. You see a lot of sites on the web that load slowly or perform poorly. While some sites have hosting issues, most are simply built without performance in mind. Joomla!, in and of itself, is neutral in terms of site performance; it's how you configure it and what you do with it that creates -- or prevents -- solid site performance.

The Top 20: Open Source Content Management Systems

Before we could begin the research for the 2009 Open Source CMS Market Share Report, we first had to define the list of systems we considered to be contenders for the crown. Last year's report featured nineteen systems. (This year we plan to do things a bit differently, though you'll have to wait for the report itself to find out what exactly!) We started our internal discussions with the list of nineteen systems from last year, to which we added the significant number of suggestions from readers of the report.

Without giving away too much too soon, I wanted to share our final list of the Top 20 Open Source Web Content Management Systems. We list them here for you in alphabetical order, along with links to the project sites.

Open Source CMS Popularity: Project Site Traffic

Judging the market share of open source content management systems with numerical accuracy is a difficult proposition due to the lack of direct metrics on adoption rates. As a result, in creating the 2008 report, we focused on a number of indirect indicators and then cross-correlated them to reach our conclusions. One of the (many) indicators we examined was the popularity of the primary project site for each particular system.

Open Source CMS Popularity: Forum Mentions

It's time once again to take a look at the adoption rates and brand strength metrics for the most prominent open source content management systems. In July water&stone will be releasing the 2009 Open Source CMS Market Share Report. In the course of preparing that report, I will be posting various metrics and indicators that might be of interest (and stimulate some discussion).

If you remember the conclusions of the 2008 report, the top three systems were WordPress, Joomla and Drupal. One of the key issues we'll be looking at this year as how the race for market share, and mind share, has shaped up between those three strong brands. I was looking today at Forum activity as an indicator of buzz and mindshare. Here's a neat little dynamic chart from Omgili that shows the activity levels for the top three brands across the last 30 days.

50 Top Joomla! Extensions

With more than 4,000 Extensions in the Joomla! Extensions Directory, one of the most daunting aspects of selecting a Joomla! Extension is finding the right tool for the job. With thousands of Extensions to choose from, you are sometimes faced with multiple options that appear to achieve your goals. While there really is no subsitute for downloading things and trying them out yourself, in this article I provide a list of fifty Joomla! Extensions as a starting point for addressing common needs.

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