|
|
|
Interview at the DotNetNuke OpenForce 07 conference in Las Vegas. I managed to quickly do an interview with Cathal on Thursday morning in the speakers room before the final presentation for the conference. Covering Cathal’s roles in the DotNetNuke core team, looking towards the future with website compliance and accessibility, plus thoughts on OpenForce.
Read More..
Interview at the DotNetNuke OpenForce07 conference in Las Vegas. Speaking with Joe at the end of the conference to hear his thoughts on OpenForce. Covering meeting the DotNetNuke community, learning about various businesses implementations of DotNetNuke, an international audience, the opportunity for feedback and 500,000 registered users!
Read More..
Interview at the DotNetNuke OpenForce07 conference in Las Vegas. Kelly was the last interview of the conference. I had been trying to find Kelly throughout the whole conference and we finally got the chance to meet and have a good chat at the end of the last presentation. We were the last two people left in the presentation room and it was a good way to finish the OpenForce event.
Read More..
Interview at the DotNetNuke OpenForce07 conference in Las Vegas. Covering DotNetNuke Cambrian v5, the new features from workflow to social networking, business context, widgets and new skinning engine, the sustainability of DotNetNuke and the experiences at OpenForce07. I managed to speak to Nik just at the end of the conference after the final presentation.
Read More..
Interview at the DotNetNuke OpenForce07 conference in Las Vegas. Covering an introduction to PowerDNN, typical problems they see for DotNetNuke users, through to portals and best practices, business solutions and DotNetNuke v5 Cambrian. Plus, the added bonus was the Microsoft hot models coming over for a chat mid interview, we had to leave it in! ;-)
Read More..
We discuss localisation, language packs and the future possibilities with DotNetNuke.This is a classic interview, time was always short at the Openforce conference so we managed to squeeze in an interview while walking to the speakers cocktail party. Needless to say we got plenty of funny looks walking through the Manadlay Bay Casino Hotel while Peter also video recorded us both at the same time!
Read More..
Interview at the DotNetNuke OpenForce07 conference in Las Vegas. This interview took place at the speakers cocktail party, we discussed DotNetNuke for an international audience, localization, the UDT module and tokens.
Sebastian is a DotNetNuke core team member, team lead for the “User Defined Table (UDT)” module, he creates and maintains the German language packs and is co-founder of the German DotNetNuke user group.
Read More..
We were waiting for the presentation by Charles Nurse to begin on DotNetNuke performance and started chatting about DotNetNuke, OpenForce, etc. and so I quickly started recording.
This should give you all an idea of how helpful the conference has been for DotNetNuke users. I was chatting with Joe Craig, Mike Griffiths and two other guys (sorry didn’t catch your names – let me know your details!)
Read More..
This is part of the How did they build it …? series of interviews.
This is an email interview with Tim O’Brien from O’Brien IT who has created http://www.obrienit.se
This is an interesting website because it uses CSS for the layout of the website, rather than tables. At present, there are not many DotNetNuke websites that use CSS for the layout on commercial websites, so this is a particularly interesting website.
Even more interesting is that this site fully validates to the W3C standards. This is the first DNN site that I have come across that fully validates
Read More..
This is part of the How did they build it …? series of interviews.
This is an email interview with Laurence Neville who has created two DotNetNuke sites: www.landmarkeducation.co.il and www.landmarkeducation.co.jp
We discuss how Laurence created these websites, in particular looking at the use of Languages within the sites. This raises some interesting issues, such as setting the text to display from right to left.
Read More..