On 9-Aug-06, at 11:48 AM, Kieran Lal wrote:
On Aug 9, 2006, at 10:00 AM, Dries Buytaert wrote:
Thanks for doing this work, Kieran! It's important. I do have some questions though:
On 09 Aug 2006, at 04:54, Kieran Lal wrote:
Non-technical user developing community or social change web site forced to become "accidental technologist"
Does it matter what the user is developing? Maybe the following is sufficient:
Non-technical user forced to become "accidental technologist"
Yes it matters a lot. If you want to build an online community or social change website you are going to end up being recommended to use Drupal. Drupal's community knowledge extends beyond just CMS development but is now a expert community in online community building and social change websites. This is important to know because this growing user base has certain expectations and goals. This was clear from the interviews, maybe 4+/10 people fell into this category. We need to get a sense of how many Drupal sites are falling into this domain.
So...then add that as another category. You may be an accidental technologist building things for a death metal band. I suspect a lot of the folks you interact with fall into the social change category...and I agree it is important to capture. However, another huge category is "HTML Website developer adopting a CMS platform" or "Process consultant learning to us collaborative tools" (the former is more technical in terms of web stuff, the latter is less technical).
I don't understand how this answers above question. Whether the Drupal community innovates shouldn't be of concern to users of, say, twit.tv.
Many communities are limited by the commercial constraints of their community tools. For example, yahoo groups feature set hasn't changed much in 5 years. Users know that with Drupal they get more features faster to better meet their needs. For commercial communities like Twit this doesn't make much of a difference. But for more grassroots communities we are seeing a tipping point. "Go with Drupal they have the best and newest community stuff! "
And not just community stuff. Consultants (especially non-developer consultants) can pick Drupal and become experts at the modules available...the availability of configurable, themeable, well-written modules that perform a wide variety of things means they can deliver more functional websites at lower cost. Picking Drupal means always having well-written cutting edge options available. Client: "Hey, I heard new standard X came out...can we do that?" Consultant: "Why yes, the pants module implemented standard X just last week!" -- Boris