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From YouTube: Backdrop Outreach - April 30th 2020
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A
I'll
live
on
YouTube
today
is
Thursday
April
30th.
This
is
a
meeting
to
check
in
on
community
outreach
tasks
for
backdrop
CMS
before
we
jump
into
the
agenda,
I'd
like
to
go
around
and
do
some
quick
introducing
into
duck
shins.
What's
your
name
where
are
you
from
and
if
you
want
to
add
something
today
in
30
seconds
or
less
a
non-agenda
fun
life
item
feel
free
to
do
that.
Let's
start
with
Lee.
B
B
C
I'm
not
wanting
to
get
in
so
Drupal,
8
and
I'm,
wanting
to
basically
promote
backdrop
as
the
go-to
for
almost
all
of
the
nonprofits
and
small
businesses
and
all
the
kind
of
people
that
are
kind
of
getting
roped
in
to
WordPress.
And
to
do
this.
I'm.
Looking
at
the
steps
that
I'm
going
through
in
creating
a
new
website
and
documenting
everything
and
going
through
step
by
step
and
then
putting
together
a
guide
based
on
that,
so
I've
been
working
with
Tim
a
little
bit
on
his.
C
Everything
two
parts
of
the
guide
already
and
Tim
is
looking
at
those
and
what
I'm
realizing
is
you
know
if
you're
building
a
website,
you
really
need
a
list
of
the
pages
that
you
want
a
list
of
the
Articles
that
you
want
to
put
in
and
then
you
can
go
figure
out
where
you're
gonna
put
all
those
ideas
where
you're
going
to
put
all
the
different
parts
on
each
page,
because
if
you
don't
have
a
plan,
then
you
just
get
stuck
and
so
I
got
stuck.
So
that's
my
story
so
far.
Well,.
A
Thank
you
for
working
on
that
beginner's
guide.
That's
something!
That's
gonna,
be
really
valuable
to
a
lot
of
people
and
I.
Think
it's
hard
for
some
of
us
who've
gotten
over
that
step
to
remember
what
it
was
like
so
having
you
do
that,
while
you're
going
through
it
I
think
is
gonna
be
producing
fantastic
results.
Okay,.
C
A
Next
to
our
meeting,
it
smells
really
good.
So
it's
been
testing
me
all
right.
Let's
see
from
last
time,
we
had
a
community
outreach
meeting.
We
were
talking
about
the
need
to
put
up
more
blog
posts
and
I'm
happy
to
announce
that
we
have
done
that.
We
both
put
up
a
post
introducing
our
new
project
management
committee
members
and
our
new
core
committer,
and
then
we
added
a
second
post
that
Nate
wrote
about
stepping
down
off
the
project
management
committee,
which
I
think
is
really
great.
A
Both
of
those
things
are
sort
of
a
reflection
of
the
fact
that
our
community
is
growing
and
we
want
to
diversify
and
distribute
more
responsibility.
So
I'm
really
glad
about
that
news
out
there,
something
we've
known
about
for
a
while
that
finally
were
able
to
broadcast
publicly
I'm,
not
sure
how
social
media
has
been
doing.
I
haven't
been
paying
a
lot
of
attention
to
it.
I
know,
Tim
is
then
doing
his
best
to
anytime.
He
sees
anything
relevant
to
backdrop.
A
A
So
that
gives
me
some
hope
that
number
one
we
might
be
able
to
receive
a
reply
from
their
ticketing
system,
which
we
hadn't
been
able
to
do
before
or
number
two.
We
might
be
able
to
get
a
password
reset
email
which
we
hadn't
been
able
to
do
before
so
I'm
hoping
we
won't
be
able
to
get
in
there
to
get
access
to
our
mailing
list
soon.
A
B
So
so,
just
to
reiterate,
for
anyone
that
knows
this
or
introduced
it
to
those
that
don't
tomorrow
is
an
online
version
of
a
conference
that
that,
up
until
now,
if
I
have
this
correctly
used
to
be
called
Drupal
Delphia,
it
was
a
yearly
Drupal
camp
in
Philadelphia
and
and
this
year
because
of
kovat,
obviously
they've
gone
online
and
they've
broadened
it
out
to
be
CMS
Philly.
Now,
if
you
look
at
the
the
genders-
and
things
are
in
it,
it's
still
mostly
Drupal
but
I.
Think
in
particular,
you
know.
B
Expanding
it
from
Drupal
outward
like
just
outside
of
Drupal
is
where
we
live.
So
it's
in
since
we
are,
we
are
about
the
closest
thing
you
can
have
to
Drupal,
that's
not
actually
Drupal
and-
and
so
so
from
my
perspective,
this
was
a
fantastic
opportunity
of
a
conference
that
that
really
specifically
without
knowing
themselves
embraced
us,
and
we
should
embrace
them
back.
We
should,
since
they
they
opened
up,
they
specifically
looked
for.
So
what?
What
kind
of
things
out
there
are
there
that
that
you
know
CMS
interested?
B
D
A
A
A
What
did
I
say,
Gregory
says
at
11:10
a.m.
I
thought.
A
Something
I
thought
was
really
nice
is
when
they
sent
an
email
to
the
presenters,
so
they
said
hey
what
time
zone
are
you
in,
so
that
I
didn't
have
to
give
a
6
a.m.
session,
which
I
was
very
happy
about
good
kudos
to
the
organizers?
On
that?
That's
great,
so
yeah
we
can
Tim
I've
done
this
before.
Maybe
I'll
try
and
do
it
today
during
a
vent
where
there's
backdrop
things
happening,
I,
try
and
schedule
a
tweet
to
go
out.
A
D
A
Yeah
I
think
that's
also
something
that
I'm
noting
for
future
references
that
as
a
presenter
I
don't
want
to
have
to
read
five
emails
to
figure
out
the
information.
That's
important
and
I
want
one
with
everything,
I
need
and
nothing
else.
So
it
might
be
good
to
note
that
for
backdrop
offense,
we
might
forget,
but
yeah
just
kind
of
brain
seed
popped
in
there.
A
A
B
Well,
I
mean
amplifying
with
what
I
said
before
about
about
how
many
you
should
carpe
the
diem,
I
I
think
you
know,
since
we
have
three
sessions
that
are
being
given
a
backdrop,
I
think
we
should
look
for
recruits
I,
think
we
should
should
view
it,
as
you
know,
pay
attention
to
whoever
shows
up
and
if
people
are
asking
questions
like
not
just
like
answer
the
question
I'm,
like
turn
away,
be
like
so
what
your
email
address.
You
know,
let's
get
them
in
this
year.
A
B
A
B
You
know
if
I
got
somewhere
if
you
get
like
one
new
contributor,
sometimes
that's
a
fantastic
outcome
right
so
and
there's
a
potential
for
much
more
than
that.
So
so
oh
I'll
do
that.
I
will
sign
into
the
sessions
tomorrow
and
try
to
be
bad,
but
but
but
let's
like
I
mean
let's
turn
to
deliverable
how
about
at
the
end
of
the
day
tomorrow,
sometime
after
well
how
long
you
see
this
really
go
for
help.
Actually,
how
long
is
it
just
for
mmm-hmm?
B
A
Think
at
the
very
least,
we
can
get
them
added
to
the
mailing
list
so
that
one
we
sent
out
of
one
six
newsletter
they'll
get
it,
but
we
also
might
want
to
track
where
we
met
them
and
if
they
have
anything
in
particular,
they're
interested
are
working
on
big
has
you
know,
you're,
like
oh
I,
have
a
library
website,
and
then
we
meet
someone
else
as
a
library
website.
Just
putting
those
two
people
in
connection
with
each
other
might
also
be
really
valuable.
A
So
I
don't
know.
One
thing.
I'm
curious
about
with
these
online
events
is
how
they're
facilitating
people
talking
to
each
other,
because
I
know
with
like
online
zoom
format.
The
presenter
doesn't
get
a
lot
of
interactivity
with
the
audience
in
the
same
way
that
you
do
in
in
person
like
you
can
say:
oh
let's
go
in
the
hall
and
have
a
conversation
afterwards,
where
here
there
isn't
necessarily
a
Hall.
So
sometimes
it's
like
talk
ends.
You
answer
questions
and
then
who
was
that
who
was
in
the
room?
D
Didn't
attend
what
I
think
mid
camp
did
was
they
actually
did
have
a
hallway?
They
had
a
hallway
room
where
they
just
it
was.
You
know
now
like
an
empty
room.
When
there
were
no
sessions,
I
think
you
could
just
go
to
and
chat
with
people
and
yeah
I.
Don't
know
how
effective
it
was,
but
I'm
and
I
don't
know
if
they're
doing
this
tomorrow.
B
So
actually
relevant
relevant
to
this
Oh.
A
couple
things
stem
together.
One
of
the
other
projects
that
I'm
involved
with
is
genuine
gross.
Other
services
is
his
bad
camp
and
and
I
mean
lots.
Let's
meters
and
all
these
issues
are
kind
of
being
discussed
within
within
that
group.
Quite
quite
avidly
other
things-
and
this
is
slightly
off
topic,
but
it
premises
is
when
we're
looking
at
summits.
B
A
A
A
B
And
oh,
oh
yeah,
I!
Remember
actually
again,
this
is
you
know
skating
for
in
the
field
and
then
so
so
we
can
cover
this
later,
but
I'm
just
kind
of
curious.
Since,
since
the
world
has
gone
virtual,
we
may
want
to
think
about
having
a
virtual
event.
You
know
backdrop
con,
since
you
could
do
it
now.
You
know
without
actually
you
know
renting
a
giant
auditorium
and
managing
you
just
have
to
somehow
get
the
word
out,
which
is
not
a
trivial
undertaking,
but
ya
know,
maybe
maybe
maybe.
A
That's
a
thing
to
let
bouncer
round
in
their
heads,
yeah
I,
think
I'm
gonna
put
that
on
today's
agenda
and
I
think
we
should
talk
about
it.
Every
outreach
meeting
and
see
you
know
if
it
starts
to
materialize
and
turn
into
something
we
want
to
date.
I
think
we
also
have
a
lot
to
learn
from
online
events
in
general
and
I.
Think
that
you
know
the
more
we
can
attend
like
CMS
Philly.
We
can
learn
from
what
it
is
they're
doing
and
figure
out
what
it
is
that
we
want
to
do.
A
B
A
D
A
A
A
D
Okay,
so
I
I,
just
I,
got
here
late
and
I'm,
not
sure,
hopefully,
survive
sorry
got
a
chance
to
introduce
himself
I
gotta
know
if
he's
had
a
chance
to
talk
about,
we've
been
we've
been
talking
and
I
invited
him
to
come
because
he's
had
a
lot
of
ideas
about
the
same
kinds
of
stuff
we've
been
talking
about.
So
I,
don't
know
if
any
of
those
are
relevant
enter
if
he
had
anything
to
add
today
after
sitting
through
this
meeting
but
or.
B
B
C
A
little
bit
about
the
beginner's
guide
that
I'm
working
on
for
ultimate
beginners,
going
as
I'm
working
through
putting
your
website
together.
It's
a
good
time
to
do
it,
because
the
people
who
are
already
experienced
don't
remember,
usually
what
it's
like
to
try
to
get
up
to
speed
and
everybody
has
always
talked
well,
it's
just
a
matter
of
slogging
through
it
and
slogging
through
it,
and
making
lots
of
mistakes
and
and
stumbling
over
yourself
until.
Finally,
you
can
manage
to
do
something
constructive,
I
think
we
can
do
better
than
that.
C
So
I
wanted
to
give
up
very
straightforward
sort
of
beginner's
guide
to
how
to
think
about
putting
a
website
together
of
any
sort.
You
know
any
kind
of
CMS
and
the
steps
that
you
would
go
through.
I've
looked
at
a
lot
of
stuff
online
and
I
haven't
seen
very
much
that
that's
useful
and
so
I've
wanted
to
put
something
together.
That
would
be
useful
for
everybody
and
especially
to
make
backdrop
stand
out
and
as
a
better
choice
than
what
people
are
doing
now.
C
D
A
It
was
Drupal
for
the
digital
humanities
and
she
was
really
doing
it.
Humanities
I'm
not
sure
if
she's
finished,
that
or
not
but
I'm,
not
I,
don't
think
it's
gonna
be
I.
Don't
think,
there's
going
to
be
very
much
overlap
between
that
and
an
ultimate
beginner's
guide,
something
that's
very
specific
to
that
hardens
in
the
world,
and
it
might
not
start
at
the
beginning,
good
start
with
like
you're,
a
digital
humanity,
and
you
have
all
this
information.
Here's
how
to
put
it
in
so
I.
Don't
know
it.
A
A
Mm-Hmm
so
one
thing
that
I
saw
today:
I
have
a
client,
UC,
Berkeley,
archaeology
department,
that
has
a
backdrop
site,
it's
a
guy
who
built
his
own
Drupal
6
site
and
when
he
decided
he
needed
a
new
website
he's
like
oh
I.
Don't
really
want
to
worry
about
doing
it
all
over.
How
do
I
get
my
gerbils
excited
to
something
newer,
and
so
we
moved
him
to
backdrop,
and
he
seems
so
far
to
be
pretty
happy
pretty
tech
savvy.
A
You
can
get
in
there
and
add
new
fields
and
change
things
as
he
needs
because
of
this
triple
experience.
Previous
triple
experience,
which
is
great,
he
found
today
an
open-source
software
tool
made
by
CERN.
That
is
an
event
management
program
and
it
comes
with
like
a
call
for
proposals
where
you
can
enable,
what's
essentially
a
module,
and
then
it
comes
with
the
ability
for
people
to
fill
out
a
form
and
the
ability
for
someone
else
to
review
it.
The
ability
to
publish
it.
It
comes
with
built-in
reminders
all
of
this
great
stuff.
A
So
yes,
I
review
it
to
see
if
it
would
run
on
the
same
server
as
his
backup
site.
It
won't,
it
has
very
different
underlying
architecture,
but
while
I
was
looking
at
it,
I
was
very
impressed
by
their
website.
So
through
one
page
in
particular.
The
features
page
is
something
we've
been
talking
about
doing
on
dr.
ups
website,
but
haven't
quite
got
together
yet
and
I
took
a
picture
of
that
and
through
into
our
issue,
but
their
whole
website
is
pretty
good.
A
It's
simple
like
much
simpler
than
what
we're
doing
on
ok,
but
I
thought
it
was,
as
somebody
who
came
to
this
site
to
evaluate
a
new
piece
of
software,
I
was
able
to
get
all
the
information
I
needed
out
of
it
really
quickly,
so
that
included
the
demo
button
on
the
home
page.
Just
like
we
have.
It
included
a
list
of
top
features
which
was
important.
It
included
how
to
install
it
like
what
it
required
on
the
getting
started
page.
A
The
getting
started
page
also
has
some
information
on
what
you
should
do
in
the
demo,
which
I
thought
was
interesting,
and
then
it
has
other
things
like
resources
and
cost
to
contribute
and
stuff
like
that
too.
So
I
thought
we
might
be
able
to
learn
something
from
this
website
and
how
to
promote
open
source
software
as
as
we're
doing
now.
But
maybe
you
know,
improved
was
my
opinion,
so
that
was
I
was
excited
by
that
I
was
interesting.
A
A
That's
completely
separate
that
he
can
continue
using
and
if
you're,
when
you
do
create
sort
of
a
disposable
website,
you
don't
wanna,
put
a
lot
of
effort
into
it
and
so
distribution
or
a
recipe
or
something
that
you
can
just
throw
on
your
site
and
then
remove
later
for
a
backdrop
to
create
an
event.
That's
something
that
we
could
use
for
a
backdrop
bun
or
backdrop
con
or
whatever
we
want
to
use
when
we
get
there,
and
so
my
mind
started
spinning
about
like
oh,
he
would
help
jump-start
some
of
this.
A
That
would
be
really
great
for
all
the
other
stuff.
We're
gonna
do
so.
Yeah
I,
don't
know
and
I'm,
not
sure.
If
he's
interested
in
doing
it
and
backdrop,
he
seems
to
really
like
this
current
tool,
but
I
am
also
interested
in
learning
about
the
current
tool
to
see
the
kind
of
things
that
you
get
built
in
to
an
event
software.
So
that's
the
kinds
of
stuff
we're
gonna
want
in
our
distribution
or
recipe
or
whatever
it
is
when
we
do
get
around
to
making
one.
So
it's
cool
in
Tacoma.
B
A
A
He
goes
originally
built
for
NASA
when
I
got
moved
to
Drupal
7
the
project
maintainer
changed
owners
and
the
new
maintainer
x'
were
using
it
for
a
different
use
case
than
it
was
when
it
was
a
Drupal
6
project
and
so
the
features
that
ended
up
getting
included
in
the
way
they
were
managed
changed
to
the
point
where
it
was
no
longer
a
good
fit
for
Drupal
camps.
So,
and
so
it's
now,
rather
than
being
like
a
sort
of
a
one-off,
disposable
one-year
thing,
which
is
how
Drupal
events
tend
to
do
it.
A
It
was
something
that
retained
all
the
data
year
over
year,
and
so
it
retained
all
of
the
users
and
retained
all
the
sessions.
And
that
makes
sense
if
you
have
that
kind
of
event
where
you
want
to
be
able
to
access
previous
stuff.
But
it
didn't
there's
a
lot
of
infrastructure
there
to
manage
their
different
years
that
maybe
wasn't
necessary
for
a
disposable
website.
So
yeah
I
think
Drupal.
Con
currently
uses
a
heavily
forked
version
of
Cod
that
is
a
better
fit
for
their
use
case.
A
B
That
is
their
art.
I
remember
when
I
was
at
Stanford.
You
know
one
of
the
things
that
Iran
was
conferences,
that
stanford.edu
and
and
I
heavily
evaluated
cut
at
the
time
and
I.
Remember
books
like
the
old
version
and
the
new
version,
and
you
know
my
conclusion
was
wow
like
I
didn't
really
get.
You
know
we
ended
up
not
actually
doing
anything
but
I.
Definitely
and.
A
Yeah
so
I'm
fascinated
I
haven't
built
a
Drupal
event
web
site
and
since
maybe
2014
or
some
mix
of
six
years,
Drupal
events
are
really
different
now
than
they
were
back.
Then
I'm
I'm
curious
to
see
like
the
other
software,
what
it's
doing
and
then,
hopefully,
when
we
get
back
around
to
doing
our
con,
we'll
be
able
to
take
all
this
growth
of
information.
That's
happened
and
make
something
that
could
be
reusable
for
people
who
wanted
to
do
local
events.
That's
Michael.