April 6th, 2010 by Andy
I’ve been friends with filmmakers Jason and Leigh Morfoot (aka Kinobserver) since before Dtek was a twinkle in my eye
Recently, I helped them publish their latest documentary film project, Citizen 3.0, to the Kinobserver web site. As described on the site, “CITIZEN 3.0 explores the relationship between media, technology, culture and democracy through the lens of copyright law.” In addition to effecting our society and culture at large, these issues are at the very heart of Dtek’s business.
It’s fascinating stuff, and the film features some provocative and authoritative voices who approach these topics from many different angles.
You can stream the entire film from the Kinobserver web site:
http://kinobserver.com/
Enjoy!
January 5th, 2010 by Andy
Digital School Solutions is a new child company of long-time Dtek client Aussie, focused specifically on the technological side of Aussie’s broader school professional development mission. According to DSS: “Digital School Solutions is committed to helping schools and districts re-think teaching and learning to transform themselves into vibrant 21st century learning communities.”
Just before the winter break, we helped DSS launch their new Drupal-powered web site. Under the hood, the site is very similar to Aussie’s site, functioning essentially as a Drupal multi-site (technical challenges of multi-sites with SSL using cPanel to be written up in a future blog post!).
Like Aussie’s site, the DSS site features the custom paid event registration system we helped Growing Venture Solutions develop, as well as audio and video content, blogging, fine-tuned user management, and all of Drupal’s standard content management goodness.
On the front-end, the DSS site was designed to match Aussie’s site, with the DSS logo and a modified color scheme. The front page sports a jQuery-based slideshow, editable by site administrators, rather than the Flash movie used on Aussie’s site. Numerous theme improvements and further Drupal 6 optimizations were made in the process.
Visit the new DSS site at digitalschoolsolutions.com, and stay tuned for more DSS and Aussie news.
- Categories: Internet Development
- Tags: audio, blog, cpanel, Drupal, DSS, ecommerce, Editure, education, events, Growing Venture Solutions, jquery, multi-site, ssl/tls, technology, video
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September 10th, 2009 by Andy
We’re just wrapping up a big development push on aussiepd.com, the Drupal-based web site we built for Australian United States Services in Education last year. The site was upgraded to Drupal 6, and enhanced to allow on-site payment for AUSSIE event registrations. While we were at it, we moved the site to a new Virtual Private Server hosting account to provide better performance than the old shared hosting.
Background
AUSSIE has hosted workshops, conferences, and professional development sessions for the educational consulting community for years. In the past, they’d always used separate web sites and services to store the event data and allow users to register and pay for these events (lately they’d managed events at eventbrite.com). With AUSSIE’s site running Drupal, it was clear we should find a way for event data, registrations and payments to all be handled internally so that we could present everything under the AUSSIE brand, provide users a more compelling and less confusing experience, and ease the burden on site administrators. The new aussiepd.com does just that: consolidating all of this functionality into AUSSIE’s web site, with the PayPal API used for seamless integration of payment transactions.
How we did it
To achieve this, we started with a couple of Drupal powerhouse contributed modules: Ubercart for ecommerce, and Signup for event registrations. The missing link was provided by Signup Integration for Ubercart (aka UC_Signup), a custom module developed for this project by Ezra Gildesgame and the Growing Venture Solutions team. UC_Signup ties the registration and payment steps together into one smooth process for site users.
GVS put a lot of work into the module, including usability testing at their office in Denver, while I oversaw the general project, Drupal 6 upgrade, and hosting migration. It was great to work with Ezra to address AUSSIE’s needs, while giving our work back to the Drupal community.
Other goodies at the enhanced site include automated event location mapping thanks to the Location module, locally hosted videos thanks to the Blue Droplet Video module, and all of the standard administrative, usability, performance and security improvements of Drupal 6.
See for yourself
Have a look at the new aussiepd.com, and if you’re involved in education, watch for upcoming AUSSIE events in your field!
We’re thrilled to continue supporting AUSSIE as they build their online presence, demand more from their web site, and use it in the service of the educational community.
- Categories: Dtek Digital Media
- Tags: Drupal, ecommerce, Editure, education, events, Growing Venture Solutions, location, signup, Ubercart, uc_signup, video, web hosting
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June 19th, 2009 by Andy
Highest Common Denominator Media Group is a Brooklyn- and Dallas-based film company that has produced some inspiring projects. The Farm: 10 Down, which re-examines the lives of six inmates in Louisiana’s maximum-security Angola prison, 10 years after HCD’s award-winning The Farm first introduced us to them, premiered on the National Geographic channel on Tuesday.
Before the film premier, we worked with HCD to do some serious spring cleaning to their existing WordPress-powered web site. We audited the site, rewrote large portions of their custom theme, cut the number of plugins used on the site by more than half, removed and secured some potentially dangerous code, and worked with HCD to help them better understand how to manage their site.
Thanks to Bad Feather for the introduction! We look forward to continuing our work with HCD, helping them make more proactive and forward-thinking changes to their web sites and online tools, and generally support them in their mission of telling compelling stories that inspire us to action.
- Categories: Internet Development
- Tags: Angola, Bad Feather, Brooklyn, content management system, Dallas, film, HCD Media Group, Louisiana, plugins, prison, security, video, WordPress
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May 27th, 2009 by Andy
Many of the folks we work with want to display video on their web sites. Hosting video on their own web servers has some obvious advantages in terms of control, but is often too resource-intensive and expensive. That’s when existing video hosting providers come into play.
Unfortunately, this is a great example of where it’s easy to follow the trends without considering some of the bigger implications, like the way our content is licensed, whether we want X company to profit off of our content, and generally what type of network we want to build as a community.
A friend recently pointed us to a post on wordpress.com entitled: Owned? Legal terms of video hosting services compared. It’s a great starting point for considering the privacy/licensing, ownership, and legal complaint recourse terms of the various big name video hosts out there.
Kudos to the article author, and here’s to all of us raising our collective awareness of these issues.