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Episode: 1126
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Title: HPR1126: The DrupalCamp of Adam Evertsson
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1126/hpr1126.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 19:25:46
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---
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Yes, you're on that part of the internet again.
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This is Hacker Public Radio.
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And you're listening to the episode, The Drupal Camp of Autumn Ivichon.
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Greetings.
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This is CT, or as you might know me, Kenneth from the old United Radio.
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Today it's time for another interview with one of the organizers of Drupal Camp Gothenburg
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or Jatoborri as it's locally known.
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But to frame it all, I would like to tell you a bit about what it actually is.
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On the webpage for Drupal Camp, it says that it is a one-day conference about the highly
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popular open source content management system, Drupal, and trends in web development in general,
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the conference will focus on current web development themes such as mobile and tablet development,
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responsive database queries, node.js, and open source project management.
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So that was to quote from the webpage, I don't know if everyone is on the clear about
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what Drupal actually is.
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So to quote from Wikipedia, it says that Drupal is a free and open source content management
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system, as mentioned before, but not only that, but also a content management framework written
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in PHP distributed under the GPL.
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It also mentions that it's used as a backend for at least 1.5% of all websites worldwide,
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quite significant.
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Starting from personal blogs to corporate, political, and government sites, including
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WhiteHouse.gov, and so on and so forth.
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So CMS is a piece of software that you install on the server, which helps you to generate
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your website.
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I'm sure there isn't over the head of anyone listening, but just to make it all clear,
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a few other popular CMSs are Jumla and perhaps most well-known is WordPress.
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Drupal is known to be very configurable.
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There are a lot of modules, and you can make it do almost anything you like.
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You don't have to be a programmer.
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You can use it as a pure and clean CMS, but you can also use it as the Wikipedia article
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mentioned, a CMF, a content management framework, that is you can use it as a PHP framework
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to create your own webpage if you know how to code in PHP.
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So far so good.
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So this is a bunch of web designers who got together and made the first Drupal Camp Gothenburg
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possible.
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There has been a few Drupal camps in Stockholm before, but this is the first one ever in Gothenburg.
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And if you have a look on the internet, you will find that there are many Drupal camps
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all over the world.
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And I got the great opportunity to have a little chat with one of the most important
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persons who made this all happen, one of the organizers, and let's listen to it.
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Now I'm sitting here with perhaps the most important person here at Drupal Camp Gothenburg
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who are you sir, and what are you role here?
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My name is Adam Everton, I'm the guess you can call it project manager for this Drupal
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Camp here in Gothenburg today.
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Right, splendid.
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So what have your title and tale, what have you been doing to get this to actually come
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to life?
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Oh, well actually when we started this economic forening, this economic community, whatever
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you should translate it to, I was assigned project leader.
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And I guess that's because I was the one who raised the question if we should arrange
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a Drupal Camp here in Gothenburg six months ago.
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And when we, I think two months later, arranged this economic forening, I was appointed as
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probably manager, and that's what I am, that's what it is.
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It's always dangerous to point out a problem or to have a good idea, and it often turns
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into a hard work.
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So what have you been doing during the camp?
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Not basically getting people to the right rooms and getting them to stop talking when
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time is running out, which has been in some cases very difficult.
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It's very nice and fun to have people who are so dedicated to their modules or the
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cause with Drupal or Drupal itself, because they won't stop talking, they want to promote
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their work and that we all should join the ranks to make Drupal better.
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And basically that today, that's my role, is making it flow, so to speak.
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Right, and what do you do regarding Drupal?
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What is your relation to the project?
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I'm, ooh, how can I translate that in English?
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I'm working at Kodamera with basically support, and when the project is ready to be launched,
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that's where I come in, me and my colleague Hans, we do the launch of the site.
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We also take on smaller problems, support problems, smaller, I don't know, search engine optimizations.
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The Swedish world is revolting, I really don't know how to translate that into English,
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but we take care of the customers, we take care of the site after it's been launched.
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So, and since we're working with Drupal, I would say, to 97%, and the 3% is older websites
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in Jumla and some in WordPress as well, so that's my relationship and therefore the connection
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to the community, which I, which I think is really great.
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Right, so what kind of company is it, how, how many are you, is it a big company, or?
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I think we, it's, it's almost 10 years young, right?
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Kodamera was founded in 2003, so it's 10 years next year, where we are 18 people at the moment,
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I think, always looking for more people, or Drupal developers and famous and everything,
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growing steadily, I would think, and I'm very pleased to work there, very generous, and I
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have had a really nice time during the late last six, now 18 months, sorry, which I worked
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in.
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What's your thoughts now, when Drupal Camp has come and gone, was it successful, was there
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something you didn't quite expect, do you have any initial thoughts, or would you have
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to sort of simmer on this while before you can have some perspective on it?
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I've actually already have a document with at least 20 items that should be better next
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year.
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Of course, this is the first attempt, and I'm very glad that it went as well as it did.
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Folketsu's here at Jan Toriot has been marvelous to host the event, and all the sessions
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has worked really, really well, and I'm really pleased, but as I said, it's the first version,
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the next version, version 2 will be better and more bombastic in all kinds of way, so,
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but I'm very pleased, I'm very pleased, I'm tired else, I don't know, yeah, I want
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to mention it, I'm very tired growing up, alright, but you are quite certain that there
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will be a Drupal camp at Yutubori next year.
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We certainly hope so, we have shown that we can do it, and if we can get three or four
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more people joining the ranks to plan and host it, this will be much more easier next year,
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and we have great plans, I want to mention them, because, well, some things are meant to
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be surprises, but this has gone so well just for the first time, and hopefully we get
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more people, it would just be better and bigger and everything.
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Do you have any dream guests that you would like to appear here, some superstar in the
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free and open source world or in the Drupal community?
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Well, now we had Morton, and he's the best, so, alright, now of course, it would be fun
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if Drees could show up, Drees boot up, but I don't know how many camps he can go to,
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he's pretty busy, but I would say that if we can get more people, we sold 130 tickets
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around that, and I think about 90, 95 or 100 showed up today, if we can double that next
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year to sell 250 tickets or at least gather 200 people here and spread the Drupal word
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that we reward big enough for me, and of course, if Drees would like to come, he's welcome.
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But haven't you exhausted the Drupal interested people in the Gothenburg area by now, and
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drawn some people from other areas as well, where do you branch out, who will you attract
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to this conference?
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Well, that's a nice thing that we were so few people organizing this, we just exhausted
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five people, so there's a lot ofologists to wheel in and exhaust.
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Now, seriously, next year we will try to attract the Norwegian community in some way, the
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southern Sweden community around Malmö, Copenhagen, of course also Stockholm, there was going
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to be a Drupal discovery day in May, in the end of May, so that clashed with this event,
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and turned out that that event was moved until September, but when that was decided, it
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was too late to attract sponsors and the agencies in Stockholm.
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So next year we're going to branch out to those places and also branch out to agencies
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dealing with, for example, Jomla and WordPress, which could easily, since they are doing
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the same thing, but with lesser frameworks, they might be interested in Drupal, see what
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it is, and attract them in that way.
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Hostile takeover, kind of, yeah, that sounds great, okay, so if you want to say something
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to the people listening to this, and you want them to go somewhere, do something, is
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their project what you would like to pimp or something like that?
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Of course, I would like much more people joining the community in Gothamö, the Drupal community,
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so we can be more people during the Drupal get-togethers, the Drupal meet-ups here in
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the Utaboy, right now we're about 25, 30 people each time, it would be much, much more
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fun if we became more of those, I have some thoughts about other things that we're
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going to discuss at the next Drupal got together at Nindev this Thursday, and so there are
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many ideas, many thoughts, but one at a time, baby steps, splendid, and if people want
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to know more about you, where do they go?
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Well, more about me, well I do have a Twitter account, odd, I may have it on, but mostly
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I would say go to Drupalcamp.se, right now our address for this camp is spring 2012.Drupal
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camp.se, hopefully we can get a separate website just for the Gothamberg community, like
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Gothamberg.Drupalcamp.se, that's one of the ideas, but otherwise Drupalcamp.se, I would
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say, wonderful, thank you very much, thank you!
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And as you probably heard, the best place for us to do the interview was right outside
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the restrooms, anyway the only time when Autumn was available for an interview was of course
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after the event when the social had taken over, and that's the reason for the music in
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the background.
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You heard Adam mention the keynote speaker, Morton DK, and I have managed to get an interview
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with him as well.
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So what did you think?
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Did you find this interesting?
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This is a look into how to organize events like this, and it's a look into the web design
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part of the community.
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I don't know how many of you out there are web designers, but I know some of you are,
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and I know, well, almost all of you know a bit of HTML and CSS, I guess.
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I have a few more interviews from Drupalcamp, which I would like to share with you another
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time.
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Please tell me in the comments, do you enjoy that kind of interview from a more niche conference?
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You will find all the relevant links in the show notes where you can follow me on Twitter
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and Identica, Google+, and so on, so forth.
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Also where you find Drupalcamp, Yutubori, or Damiyevachon, and more general information
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about Drupal.
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So until next time, I have been CT4HackerPublicRadio.
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