►
From YouTube: Backdrop Outreach - May 16th
Description
Today’s outreach agenda: http://bit.ly/2WgkRky
A
All
right
we
are
on
air
today
is
Thursday
May
16th,
and
this
meeting
is
to
talk
about
community
outreach
for
backdrop
CMS,
so
I'm
gonna
run
through
the
agenda,
which
I
know
Tim
is
not
a
fan
of.
So
if
anybody
wants
to
interrupt
and
interject
and
say
things
that
might
be
more
useful,
I
definitely
encourage
you
to
do
that.
A
Tim
noticed
last
time
that,
after
we
sent
the
gdpr
double
opt-in,
confirmation
that
we
lost
a
whole
bunch
of
people
from
our
mailing
list
and
I've
contacted
the
folks
at
Fassett,
and
they
said
they
had
have
have
had
luck,
re
contacting
people
again
so
like
we
could
send
another
email
to
our
entire
list
of
people
who
hadn't
responded
to
the
first
one
saying
like
hey
you're,
about
to
get
removed.
Please,
and
we
might
get
some
more
people
that
way
so
we'll
try
and
do
that.
But
Tim
also
point
out
that
be
good.
A
If
we
could
get
more
people
signing
up.
Obviously,
the
more
we
can
grow
the
list
constantly
the
better,
and
we
do
have
a
couple
of
sign
ups
via
our
website.
Every
now
and
then
we've
got
like
99%
of
signups
come
from
the
websites,
that's
mostly
where
the
form
is,
and
so
we
need
to
make
that
more
prominent.
And
so,
since
our
last
outreach
meeting,
we've
done
two
things
on
the
website.
A
That's
like
this
newsletter
will
go
out
this
often
and
will
contain
the
fall
and
thinks
the
time
when
I
wrote
it.
I
was
tired,
so
whatever
it's
time
so
I
don't
know
if
you
guys
think
we
need
more
information
than
that.
I
put
the
like.
We
go
ease
in
the
sidebar
and
tiny
text,
but
it's
probably
fine
for
now,
but
it's
not
it
of
all
funny
witness
a
Texas
I
think
it's
just.
A
We
also
have
a
an
a
item
to
add
the
newsletter
signup
link
to
the
social
media
links
in
the
footer
next
to
the
signup
form,
which
is
gonna,
be
a
little
redundant
because
there's
a
phone
right
next
to
it,
but
I
figure,
whatever
we'll
just
put
the
links
everywhere
and
those
social
media
links
also
appear
I.
A
Think
on
all
of
the
other
backdrop,
web
properties
and
so
I
was
hoping
to
get
some
of
the
changes
that
we
don't
have
a
crop
CMS
network,
also
to
be
on
the
forum
in
the
APA
site
and
wherever
else
localized,
whatever,
wherever
we
have
so
the
more
of
that
stuff
that
can
be
reusable
better
and
speaking
of
stuff.
That's
reusable
Jeff
made
us
a
fantastic
module
that
will
add
a
checkbox
to
the
user.
Registration
form
in
the
user,
account
form
that
will
allow
people
that
sign
up
for
our
email
lists.
A
I
think
it's
now
off
on
all
the
sites
for
a
while.
It
was
like
on
on
the
API
site
and
off
on
all
the
other
ones,
but
that
started
throwing
errors
in
some
places.
So
it's
turned
off
everywhere
now
so
right
now
we
have
this
weird,
like
our
user
information
is
spread
across
a
whole
bunch
of
different
sites,
so
I
think.
A
As
long
as
we
have
this
separation
of
like
there's
people
on
the
forum
that
are
on
the
main
site,
we
should
probably
also
allow
them
to
sign
up
for
them
and
list
on
the
pelant
site,
just
to
make
sure
that
we're
not
like
losing
the
opportunity
to
check
that
information.
So
I'm,
not
sure
Jeff.
If
it'll
work
on
second
site
but
I
think
it.
Our
priority
was
to
get
on
the
first
site
first
and
then
we
can
figure
like
if
we
need
to
add
any
additional
keys
or
anything
to
the
forum
site.
B
A
B
A
A
So
we've
done
a
lot
of
work
on
the
stuff,
but
we
have
a
lot
more
work
to
do.
As
far
as
letting
people
sign
up
for
a
mailing
list,
Tim
I
also
know
you,
you
recommended
like
adding
it
to
the
resources
page.
Did
we
do
that?
Oh
we
did
good
and
then
there
was
another
place
to
I,
don't
remember
but
anywhere.
If
anyone
has
any
other
ideas
of
good
places
where
we
need
to
put
this
information,
particularly
around
setting
for
the
newsletter.
A
That's
good
I
also
recently
started
using
Facebook
for
advertising
stuff,
which
I
know
like
I,
have
very
mixed
feelings
about
because
I
don't
like
Facebook
but
then
watching
the
amount
of
engagement,
we've
gotten
from
like
20
posts
on
Facebook,
about
like
upcoming
events
like
people
like
like
things,
and
then
they
share
them,
and
then
they
follow
the
page
and
I'm.
Just
like.
Oh
my
god,
there's
all
these
people
here
so
I
also
put
a
newsletter
signup
form
they're,
hoping
to
anyone
who
finds
back
drive
over.
A
A
Everybody's
there,
it's
just
so
easy
okay,
so
that's
it
for
mailing
list
sign
up.
We
have
a
ton
of
really
great
ideas
for
content
on
the
blog
and
no
content
on
the
web.
I
feel
like
right
now
is
sort
of
crunch
time
for
everyone,
especially
with
the
backed
up
release
coming
out
yesterday,
like
we
were
all
much
more
focused
on
that,
and
we
were
on
writing
words,
which
is
fair,
but
now
that
the
release
is
out,
it
would
be
great
to
tell
people
the
release
is
out.
A
A
Yeah
and
then
other
stuff
we
have
abundant
or
the
community
paddling,
which
is
fantastic.
We've
got
three
people
who
have
responded
to
the
questionnaire
already,
so
we've
got
three
tentative
blog
posts
that
are
currently
in
Google
Docs
forum,
but
we
could
put
those
up
and
sort
of
have
them
in
an
unpublished,
State
ready
to
go
in
case.
We
ever
have
a
level
in
content
that
we
need
to
fill,
but
that's
at
least
something
that
we
have
so
that's
good.
Then
it
looks
like
Gregory.
A
C
I
think
I
think
he
did
it
away
with
trying
to
fix
things.
So
then
I
get
sort
of
like
gravitated
around
the
things
that
I
like
doing
more
so
I
just
yeah.
With
regards
to
a
new
release,
long
usually
its
theme
that
at
least
the
thing
that
are
the
last
two
releases,
which
does
that
Tim.
Do
you
have
the
capacity
to
do
that
again
for
us
or.
C
Try
I'll
try
to
do
something
over
the
road,
especially
I,
think
there's
a
few
ones,
they're
sort
of
like
low-hanging
fruits,
but
especially
the
one
that
Hugh
started
in
with
regards
to
the
layout
sort
of,
like
difference,
I
think
that
that
needed
a
bit
of
a
editing
and
then
just
screenshots.
But
if
you
hear
nothing
for
me
till
the
end
of
the
weekend,
then
someone
else
feel
free
to
grab
them.
Okay,.
A
Because
once
we
came
out,
that
would
be
our
priority,
the
other
one
like
if
it
would
be
good
to
have
somebody
who's
used.
Layouts
in
Drupal
8
just
confirm
that
everything
I
said
about
what
layouts
doesn't
your
plate
is
true.
I
tried
to
make
it
sound,
really
positive.
That
like
drew
Boyd
solution
is
a
really
good
choice
for
your
plate.
In
fact,
drop
solution
is
really
good
choice
for
that
job
and
that's
why
they're
different,
but
they
both
have
the
same
name.
A
A
So
yeah
I
hope
I'm
just
up
in
the
unpublished
state,
which
I
guess
is
better
than
I
mean
at
all,
but
I
also
think
like.
That
also
means
now
that
we're
done
with
113
that
we
have
a
bunch
of
kind
of
finishing
stuff
up
to
do,
but
that's
good
I
think
better
than
not
having
anything
so
I
just
say
that
anyway,
I'm
a
little
tired,
okay,
other
stuff
going
on
back
to
our
planet.
A
So
we
had
a
bunch
of
people
who
are
interested
in
signing
up
for
a
backdrop
planet,
but
we
didn't
have
anyone
who
sort
of
committed
to
writing
content
for
the
planet.
So
what
we
thought
would
do
is
initially
include
all
of
the
content
on
backdrop
CMS
at
work
in
the
planet,
feed,
in
addition
to
content
that
people
might
hook
up
their
own
websites
to
stick
content
in
the
feed.
A
So
I
think
next,
us
on
that
I
think
even
a
greater
module
might
even
be
era
in
our
code
base
will
be
to
turn
it
on
make
sure
the
feeds
working
and
then
provide
some
way
for
people
to
sign
up
for
it.
So,
with
a
couple
options
here,
we
could
use
it
github
queue
which
would
be
really
easy
for
us
to
manage,
but
really
hard
for
people
to
use.
A
Next
on
the
agenda
is
events
this
weekend,
starting
tomorrow,
actually
is
Stanford
Drupal
camp
I'm
using
one
talk
tomorrow
am
one
talk
on
Saturday.
They
tend
to
have
different
audiences.
The
two
days
tomorrow
is
sort
of
internal
on
campus,
employee
stuff,
and
then
Saturday
is
more
of
a
public-facing
community
event.
One
thing:
that's
kind
of
interesting
this
year
is
Drupal
camps.
Different
has
now
turned
into
web
camp
instead
of
Drupal
camp,
which
I
thought
like
last
year.
A
D
B
Official
registrations
made
is
not
registered
yet
so
the
six
includes
you
and
me
Wilbur
and
three
new
people,
so
two
two
people
from
out
of
state
one
from
Duluth
Minnesota,
so
actually
yeah
anyway.
So
we
have
six
registrations.
My
original
goal
was
like:
if
we
got
ten
people
that
would
be
nice
camp
registration,
usually
we
get
we're
only
about
halfway
to
what
we
expect.
So
overall
I
expect
camp
registrations
to
double
in
the
next
three
week.
B
So
there's
no
reason
to
believe
that
we
won't
get
a
few
more
registrations,
but
if
anybody
has
any
ideas,
we
are
supposed
to
come
up
with
our
own
schedule.
For
that
day,
we
asked
we
have
a
forum
out
there
for
people
to
submit
sessions.
Nobody
has
I
think
that
what
we're
gonna
end
up
doing
Jim
is
that
we're
gonna
figure
out
who's
gonna,
be
there
and
sort
of
figure
out
a
schedule
and
ask
different
people
to
do
different
things.
You.
B
Thinking
that
we
have
kind
of
an
intro
session
that
people
sort
of
introduced
themselves
and
maybe
even
a
just
kind
of
a
show-and-tell
for
anybody
that
who's
there
who's
done
anything
with
back
crowd
to
have
them
show
what
they've
done
there.
Something
like
that
I,
don't
know
so
we'll
get
a
little
bit
creative,
but
but
still
create
kind
of
a
campy
type
schedule.
It.
A
B
B
Absolutely
should
be
using
I'm,
not
a
fan
of
Facebook
either
anymore,
but
we
absolutely
should
be
using
it.
Yeah
we've
certainly
tweeted
tweeted
about
it
plenty.
So
I,
don't
know
that
that's
gonna
help,
you
know,
I
mean
the
only
other
thing
I
can
think
is
to
actually
reach
out
to
some
specific
individuals.
I
mean
Wes.
It's
a
little
unfortunate
that
Wes
is
going
to
be
there,
but
he's
also
running
a
session
at
raining
that
day,
so
yeah
and
it's
like
the
most
popular
training
themselves.
B
I,
you
know
I
have
one
thought
which
is
that
we
recruit
Wes
to
do
a
session
and
see
if
he
can't
like,
at
the
end
of
the
day,
get
somebody
else.
That's
gonna
be
at
camp
to
like
cover
one
section
of
his
talk,
because
he's
grounded
a
bunch
of
times
and
I
think
he'd
be
open
to
that.
So
maybe
we
like
plan
for
him
to
do
a
theming
session
at
3
in
the
afternoon
and
then
just
again,
you
know
see
if
Joe
Chandalar
somebody
can't
step
in
and
and
cover
an
hour
for
him
yeah.
B
C
24Th
and
the
25th,
it's
the
intro
bootcamp
in
a
libre
Scotland
mm-hmm,
there's
Rob
car,
so
I
approached
him
because
he
has
this
session.
That
says,
why
have
not
bothered
with
drop
light,
so
she
said
that
she's
aware
of
backdrop
and
that
it's
going
to
get
a
mention
yeah,
but
then
he
followed
that
for
so
with
that
question
that
was
very
sort
of
like
generic
and
it
could
be
in
terms
of
because
so
he
said,
what's
gonna
happen.
C
My
question
to
you
is:
what's
gonna
happen
after
2021
and
I
know,
but
we
said
we're
gonna
make
an
official
announcement
that
PMC
is
sort
of
like
gathering
thoughts
and
what
have
you
so
I
followed
up
today,
it's
been
a
couple
of
licensed.
He
answered
and
I
offered
I
suggested
that
he
should
should
join
one
of
the
dev
meetings
because
we
have
to
a
at
the
end.
C
So
he
didn't
just
you
know,
ask
away,
but
I
also
offered
if
he
wants
to
have
a
one-on-one
session
and
I
can
answer
everything
he
might
be
wanting
to
ask
like
to
the
best
of
my
knowledge.
It's
just
that
the
question:
what's
gonna
happen
after
that
and
I
said:
what
do
you
mean?
We're
gonna,
keep
going,
that's
gonna
happen,
but
yeah.
So
yeah
there's
a
potential,
probably
that,
as
I
said,
we're
probably
gonna
get
a
wrench
in
there.
Yeah.
A
A
B
That
reminded
me
another
thing
about
mini
cameras.
Listen,
as
you
recall,
Jen
Kevin,
this
step.
So
one
of
the
advantages
of
mini
camp
was
going
to
be
that
we
could
get
a
bunch
of
sessions
recorded
Kevin
who
does
the
recordings
is
not
scheduled
to
get
into
Minneapolis
and
tall
Thursday
afternoon
I
think
he
had
said
something
about
a
$200
change
fee
to
come
in
early
or
he
could
possibly
send
the
equipment
along
ahead
and
let
you
know
we
could
record
them
ourselves.
B
A
B
A
A
With
backdrop,
whether
it's
related
to
well
backdrop
have
its
own
security
team
process
or
will
backdrop
have
another
release
right
immediately,
have
trained
them
to
backdrop,
do
I
have
to
upgrade
to
the
next
version,
or
are
there
going
to
be
enough
people
in
backdrop
to
carry
the
project
forward?
There's
a
whole
bunch
of
concerns
around
that
that
I
think
we
talked
about
like
getting
some
clear
statements.
A
That
would
be
good,
but
also
finding
more
information
on
the
similarities
between
dribble
and
backdrop,
because
I
still
feel
like
people
have
a
misconception
that
it's
vastly
different
and
the
whole
point
was
that
it's
not
that
different
and
so
I
think
I.
Don't
know
how
to
communicate
that
more
clearly
to
the
people
who
come
you're
like
oh
I,
did
a
bunch
of
research,
but
I
couldn't
find
it
and
I
was
like
oh,
but
that
obviously
means
if
you're
doing
research
like
you
can't
find
it.
A
We
must
not
have
said
it
or
not
said
it
clearly
enough
or
not
enough
places.
So
if
anyone
has
any
ideas
of
like
where
we,
where
else
we
might
put
stuff,
that
would
make
it
clear
or
if
we
need
to
add
a
specific
section
to
our
website
about,
like
I,
mean
open
adding
pages,
so
maybe
that's
not
enough,
like
maybe
we
need
more
detail.
Maybe
we
need
a
more
high-level
overview
of
it.
I
don't
know,
but
it
does
seem
like
it's.
You
know,
even
though
people
are
looking
for
it,
they
can't
find
that
information
that.
B
Don't
I
was
just
gonna
meet
up
with
and
there's
a
local
woman
who
I
think
is
at
the
perfect
demographic
for
backdrop.
I've
mentioned
it
to
her
a
few
times
she
on
occasion.
Well,
you
know,
complain,
might
be
too
strong,
but
sound
a
little
bit
exasperated
it
like
dealing
with
composure
and
how
difficult
triple-eight
is,
and
you
know,
sort
of
I've
tried
to
be
subtle
about
this
in
the
past.
I
said
you
should
really
take
a
look
at
backdrop,
and
she
gave
me
this
big
science
and
I.
B
Just
don't
want
to
learn
something
new
and
I'm
like
no,
you
don't
get
it.
That's
the
point.
You
don't
have
to
learn
something
new.
You
know
you're
great
at
Drupal,
7
and
it
just
you
know
and
and
she's
actually
been
like
at
a
demo.
I've
done
a
background
before
and
it's
like.
Why
is
that
perception
still
there
that
this
is
like
something
noodle,
yeah
yeah?
Yes,.
E
Sir,
so
I
have
a
reaction
to
this
I
I
had
a
quote
of
my
own.
There,
I
used
to
put
on
my
resume
until
I
was
told
not
to
do
that
anymore,
that
a
complaint
it
just
like.
Like
a
you
know,
marketing
kind
of
ideas
is
it
a
complaint
is
a
customer's
way
of
telling
you
that
they
care
about
your
product.
So
so,
when
I
do
that,
the
people
are
complaining
about
things
like
that's
gold,
I
totally
want
to
like
dive
in
see
like
okay.
What
is
it?
What
does
it
be?
You're
complaining
about?
E
Okay,
because
this
is
this-
is
glorious.
Customer
feedback
of
to
you
know
what,
where
the
marketing
should
be
directed
you,
what
the
product
direction
should
be,
what
the
perceptions
are.
You
know
what's
actually
getting
out
there
and
and
a
golden
opportunity
to
fix
it,
and-
and
it
often
comes
you
know
very
dude,
just
like
this-
a
like,
like
very
reluctantly,
if
you
were
like
well
I'll,
just
kind
like
mumble,
like
incredibly
important
key
thing
that
you
need
to
know
about.
You
know
how
they
can
be
reached
like
this
is
the
thing
I
care
about?
E
A
Mean
I
feel
like
this
needs
to
be
an
issue
like
on
back
in
the
back
up
CMS
that
were
cute.
It's
like
these
are
the
complaints
we're
hearing,
because
these
are
also
not
people
who
are
gonna
like
tell
us
we
have
to
like
you
said
we
have
like
pull
it
out
of
them
and
be
like
wow
like
what's
your
hesitation
and
then
eventually,
they,
like
oh
I,
just
think
you
know
I'm
running
Drupal,
7
down
so
backdrop,
probably
isn't
going
to
be
powerful
enough
for
me
and
I'm
like.
A
More
videos
that
are
like
it's
Drupal
7,
with
a
new
name
or
something
that's
like
I,
don't
know
just
having
a
different
name.
I
think
is
the
thing
that
Mason
will
think
it's
something
new
I'm
gonna
have
to
learn
something
different.
It's
not
like
I'm
gonna
have
to
migrate.
I,
don't
know
how
to
how
to
I
always.
E
I'll
start
a:
let
me
open
up
a
non-factor
TMS
thing
for
four
for
complaints
for
for
even
like
negative
publicity,
just
just
as
as
something
to
kind
of
you
know,
learn
learn
what
what
people's
you
know.
Misgivings
are
I,
just
watched
the
other
night
and
I'll
keep
it
super
short.
The
the
movie
greatest
showmen
I
shouldn't,
make
it
through
it,
but
but
like
there
there's
this
part
of
PT
Barnum,
where
it
we're
like
we're
like
a
local
theater
critic.
E
You
know
it's
a
scathing
review
of
the
thing
that
he
did
and
and
Barnum
takes
this
review
and
sends
it
to
every
newspaper
in
the
country
to
republish
it
just
cuz
cuz
like
that's
the
whole
thing
right,
you
get
you
you
get
word
out
there
and
then
then
you
worry
about
crafting
it
tuning
it
some.
But
the
hardest
thing
is
just
momentum.
It's
just
it's
just
you
know,
be
ignored
and
and
getting
out
there
somewhere.
A
Make
it
like
a
meta
and
then,
as
we
hear
these
different
things
from
different
people
in
different
places,
we
can
add
them
and
be
like
how
do
we
address
all
of
these
issues
and
I
bet
what
will
come?
There
will
be
a
whole
bunch
of
stuff
that'll
kind
of
go
along
together,
it's
being
okay.
We
need
to
answer
this
question,
but
yeah
just
have
a
place
where
we
can
keep
track
of
things.
We
hear
I.
A
G
The
thing
with
people
thinking
that
they're
different
could
that
just
be
like
a
thing:
that's
endemic
with
web
technologies
in
general,
because
it's
like
almost
every
project
I've
ever
looked
at
is
totally
different
from
one
version
to
the
next.
It's
like
it's,
not
just
a
Drupal
7
to
Drupal
8
thing.
It's
like
angular
is
almost
a
total
rewrite.
Every
version
like
HTML,
3,
4
or
5
is
totally
different.
It's
like
the
entire
web
industry.
Does
this
and.
A
So
Peter
Scott,
it's
just
developer,
driven
products
do
this
right
because
developers
want
to.
They
want
feel
better.
The
second
time,
that's
just
part
of
your
instinct.
It's
like
oh
I,
did
that
wrong.
I'm
gonna
rewrite
it
and
when
you
have
like
a
project,
was
like
a
project
manager
that
deals
with
like
people
are
using
this
app.
Where
they're
there
to
push
back
on
the
developers
and
say
no,
you
can't
do
that
because
the
people
are
using
your
software.
You're
gonna
suffer
from
that
consequence
and
I.
A
Think
in
the
open
source
world
we
don't
have
the
project
managers
holding
the
developers
back
in
controlling
the
amount
of
change
that
they're
doing,
and
so
most
projects
particularly
open
source
projects
and
things
that
are
driven
by
develops
in
general,
tend
to
go
that
direction
just
because
they
want
to
make
everything
better,
but
I
think
like
I
mean
I,
don't
know
like
in
backdrop.
We're
trying
to
be
bad.
We're
saying,
like
our
number
one
tenant
is
that
backwards.
A
Compatibility
is
important,
we're
trying
to
go
through
and
like
add
backwards,
compatibility
stuff
for
the
changes
that
went
into
early
Drupal
8
that
we
didn't
have
we're
trying
to
like
add
back
compatibility
for
court,
but
we're
forking
trim
modules
to
get
into
court,
but
weren't
we
haven't
done
it
all
right,
because
we're
still
really
excited
about
the
change
first
and
then
we're
like.
Oh,
we
forgot.
We
have
to
like
bad
ability,
layer
and
so
I
think
it's
just
I'm,
not
sure.
A
C
I
still
have
this
dream
that
in
two
years
time,
they're
going
to
have
hundreds
of
thousands
of
sites
in
d7
and
they're
gonna
realize
that
you
know
what
we
thought
that
we
would
build
migration
scripts.
We
would
we
would
sort
of
like
advocate
for
d8,
but
still
that
Ballards
portion
of
that
community,
like
in
the
hundreds
of
thousands,
will
be
in
d7,
and
there
will
be
a
huge
market
sort
of
like
opportunity
there
for
people
that
wanna
support
d7
beyond
and
then
at
some
point.
We
would
push
them
so
hard
that
they
would
eventually
say.
B
It's
so
on
a
small
scale.
Jen
was
talking
about
Twitter
conversations,
I,
don't
know
Jen
what
you
thought
about
the
one,
but
there
were
people
just
talking
about
country
and
I
mean
my
friend
Wilbur
was
gonna
write
up,
it
was
gonna,
do
a
session
at
Drupal
camp.
Actually,
it's
on
the
schedule,
but
I
think
years
ago,
called
Drupal.
7
is
dead
and
sort
of
his
point
was
gonna,
be
activity
and
Drummle
in
Drupal
development
development.
You
know
in
module,
maintainer
there's
a
lot
of
complaining
going
on
about
and
they
were
having
a
discussion
about
that.
B
Some
people
were
and
I
just
sort
of
jumped
in
and
said
you
know
for
what
it's
worth,
here's,
what
backdrop
is
doing
in
terms
of
managing
like
unmaintained
modules
and
I,
think
Jen
eventually
got
involved
and
I
thought.
That
was
a
really
constructive
exchange
and
I
thought
it
was
also,
and
maybe
a
good
example
of
just
sort
of
sort
of
not
provocatively
but
sort
of
cooperatively
jumping
in
to
disc
Drupal
discussions
to
sort
of
remind
people
how
you
know
how
close
the
communities
are
in
a
lot
of
ways:
yeah.
A
A
Those
are
really
fascinating.
Conversation
I
thought,
because
so
it
started
off
as
like
two
or
four
people,
just
complaining
about
like
seven
stuff,
not
getting
attention.
Drupal
eight
modules
not
getting
maintainer,
even
though
people
are
offering
just
it's
tough,
being
really
do.
They're,
grumpy
and
Angie
came
in
and
was
like
hey
like
you
know.
How
do
we
solve
this
problem,
and
so
somebody
I
think
it
was
one
of
Mike's
friends.
A
I
was
like
oh
I
would
love
it
if
you
could
have
like
a
group
of
people
who
are
authorized
to
make
changes
on
behalf
of
computers
and
then
Tim
jumped
in
and
said.
Yes,
we
do
that
in
fact
erm.
Actually
we
have
this
much
blood
and
then
I
read
the
issue
of
most
like
oh,
my
gosh.
This
is
perfect
like
if
only
we
had
and
a
page
like
what
the
bug
squad
does.
But
it
didn't
read
me
file
in
the
repository,
so
I
quickly
just
went
and
grabbed
the
readme
found
copy-paste.
F
F
F
A
Like
what
do
you
mean?
Are
we,
where
it's
a
nursing,
that
we
got
a
chance
to
solve
a
problem
before
tripled
in
and
recommended
a
solution
to
left?
So
I
was
one
of
the
Twitter
conversations
like
that
was
fantastic.
Another
one
was
something
that
I've
been
watching.
It
was
about
somebody
saying
that
they
didn't
think
that
Drupal
8
was
going
to
be
a
viable
platform
until
triple
org
moved
on
to
Drupal
8,
and
then
somebody
else
came
back
and
said.
Oh
well,
drupal.org
is
complicated
and
then
I
thought
that
was
really
interesting,
because
you
can.
A
But
I
didn't
want
to
say
anything
so
I
didn't
jump
into
that
conversation,
but
there
were
a
bunch
of
people
who
were
advocating
for
backdrop
in
that
thread
where
it
was
like.
Yeah
I
could
see
like
building
new
new
projects
on
Drupal
8.
If
they're
ambitious
is
good
but
like
long
term
trying
to
get
ambitious,
Drupal
7
project
on
mature
point
is
not
easy
and
I
think
that
that's
also
something
we
should
keep
in
mind
for
backed
up
CMS
two
org.
A
Is
that,
like
our
main
website,
that
surrounding
backdrop
is
not
going
to
be
a
match
to
them
like
80%
of
sites
that
are
running
and
so
trying
to
like
advocate
for
things
that
can
support
arch
sight
in
the
long
term
and
what
our
people
are
gonna
be
doing
with
our
software.
We
are
gonna
face
that
split
to
where
we're
gonna
be
in
the.
H
Sweep
conversations
about
my
backdrop
to
the
people
who
don't
know
if
you
really
look
at
our
agenda
today,
for
example,
a
lot
of
what
we're
saying
has
to
do
with
what
we
do
on
our
website
and
what
we
do
on
Twitter,
which
doesn't
really
help
for
the
thousands
of
people
that
Cronin
is
mentioning
about,
who
don't
eat,
go
to
our
website
or
don't
know
about
it?
So
I've
been
really
concerned
last
few
weeks.
What
are
we,
how
can
we
get
those.
H
H
H
We
sell
a
lot
for
what
we're
planning
to
do,
but
maybe
we
should
blatantly
find
find
several
ways
to
blatantly
say
on
Twitter
that
backdrop
is
a
drop-in
replacement
for
Drupal,
7
and
say
every
day
or
every
couple
of
days
every
week,
so
that
people
clearly
get
back.
You
know
it's
not
a
new
weapon.
It's
not
a
new
thing.
It's
just
essentially
is
stupid.
Seven
just
for
those
people
who.
C
To
comment
on
that,
first
of
all,
in
order
to
sort
of
like
penetrate
that
audience
of
the
hundreds
of
thousands,
you
have
to
be
really
cheeky
bit
or
in
a
sieve.
I
would
say
we
don't
know
how
welcomed
certain
action
would
be.
So
we
have
to
tread
carefully
if
it's
through
official
Drupal
channels
that
is
and
the
other
one
is
I
really
like
the
I
really
do.
But
at
this
point
we
need
to.
H
H
A
Yeah
so
I
have
I
had
a
campaign
up
on
a
Google
recently
that
was
trying.
I
was
trying
to
test
like
actually
running
it,
but
I
was
testing
keyword,
combinations
to
see
what
might
be
really
good.
In
particular,
I
want
to
target
people
who
are
looking
for
Drupal
alternatives,
so
that
I
was
like.
If
you
try
and
advertise
on
the
drupal
keyword,
it
gets
super
expensive
because
you're
up
against,
like
Pantheon's
and
aqueous,
and
we
can't
afford
that.
A
But
if
you
look
for
like
Drupal,
7
end
of
life
or
Drupal
alternative
or
Drupal
competitor,
it
gets
much
more
affordable
and
I.
Think
those
are
the
kind
of
places
where
we
can
start
pushing
like
the
similarity,
because
there's
gonna
be
people
are
on
7
they're
like
oh,
no,
what
am
I
going
to
do
now
and
they're
gonna
be
googling
for
something
similar
like
similar
drupal
or
whatever,
and
I
think
those
are
the
people
if
we
can
get
ads
to
them.
That
might
actually
be
within
our
reach.
That's.
C
Actually,
a
good
idea,
ting
you
added
to
the
agenda
because,
like
we
repeat
the
other
stuff,
these
are
the
ones
that
yeah
we
should
be
focusing
and
speaking
of
that
I
think
one
other
thing
that
that
is
related
and
should
go
into
this
agenda.
So
we
can
push
further,
is
the
adding
adding
back
up
to
the
d7
security
team
or
the
long
term
support
thing.
C
C
We
should
push
for
that
because
if
it,
if
it's
in
the
official
channels,
that
we
are
a
long
term
support
sort
of
like
provider,
not
not
provider,
supporter
I,
don't
know
contributor.
Something
like
that,
and
if
it's
listed
indeed
org,
then
we
won't
have
to
convince
people
will
say,
will
point
them
to
detour
organs.
How
you
look
there,
it
is
yeah
and
I
know
we
need
to
wrap
it
up,
because
we
need
to
start
the
dev
meeting.
Another
thing
that
we
wanted
to
get
out.
C
There
is
I
really
like
how
put
the
stripe
on
video
talk
about
the
upgrade
from
Drupal,
but
when
people
click
that
they
get
a
huge
page
of
literature
thrown
at
them,
and
that
doesn't
give
the
impression
that
it's
easy
so
I
was
thinking
that
convert
that
to
a
landing
page
with
sort
of
like
bullet
points
and
very
short
description
of
each
one
and
then
break
off
that
page
into
smaller
subsections.
Yeah.
A
C
And,
for
example,
in
the
home
page
also,
we
have
a
section
that
says
why
use
backdrop
see
in
this
and
we
have
this
sort
of
like
different,
potentially
marketing
material.
I
would
say
so
we
haven't
done
that
anything
with
that
for
years
and
it's
good
as
it
is,
but
see
the
first
one
upgrade
from
Drupal
7
now
has
a
home
like
a
link.
C
The
the
idea
for
them
was
to
eventually
become
a
have
read
more
links
and
be
individually,
so
like
I've,
individual
pages,
where,
for
the
first
for
the
first
one
that
says
a
patron
Drupal
7,
we
do
have
certified
now
it's
what
I
mentioned
before.
So
we
should
start
doing
separate
pages,
like
maybe
screenshots
from
or
videos
or
what-have-you,
or
more
literature
on
each
one
of
them
and
I
guess
that
counts
as
more
content
and
then
Google
ranking.
We
jump
up
a
bit
I'm,
not
in
the
next
bit,
but
that's
what
I
imagine
for.
C
Mind
you
the
same
the
same
as
the:
if
I
do
the
the
blog
post
about
the
new
release,
it's
the
same,
it
has
the
same
problem
or
it
will
have
the
same
problem
as
this
one
because
I'm
just
you
know
just
just
a
facts,
person
I
would
need
so
with
more
exciting.
Like
language
like
team
like
oh,
the
last
book
was
the
team
has
created
were
this
is
what
I'm
excited
about
and
I'm
always.
This
is
what
my
trip
can
do.
A
A
So
I
also
feel
like
the
whole
influencer
thing
too
I
think
Luke
you
and,
and
you
both
brought
up,
then
we
need
to
find
more
in
floors
to
stir
influencers
to
start
talking
about
back
sharp
again.
We
did
a
bunch
of
that
like
in
the
very
beginning,
and
we
haven't
talked
with
any
of
the
people
in
the
world
about
up
recently.
It
might
be
good
to
do
like
a
revisit,
and
all
of
that
particularly
now
that,
like
Drupal
7
and
of
life,
is
coming
out
with
people,
it's
gonna
be
more
in
people's
mind.