We just completed a CiviCRM Code Sprint in NY. A big tip of the hat to Rayogram for providing the space and coordinating the logistics, especially to Kyle Jester. Thanx to Chang and Matt from emotive LLC for providing breakfast and lunch during the sprint.
Blogs
As hinted in the blog post on upcoming features, CiviCRM 3.3 will ship with the first cut of database-level logging.
Last week, thanks to the invitation and sponsorship from Fundacja TechSoup, I was able to attend the Local Philanthropy Workshop organised by the Odorheiu Secuiesc Community Foundation in the lovely town of Odorheiu Secuiesc in Transylvania.
Many folks (including me) are occassionally (or even frequently) frustrated in our ability to find answers to our CiviCRM questions. It may be:
finding a particular page on the Wiki that documents a feature finding forum posts that might have answers to a tech support problem finding a blog post that covers a new / unique way to implement a custom extension ... and on and onThis blog post is outdated. For latest information about how to create extension, please refer to Extensions Wiki Page.
It had to happen sooner or later - CiviCRM is growing with with variety of functionality, where people can plug in their own, custom pieces and make CiviCRM more tailored to their needs. Most prominent examples at the moment include payment processors, custom searches and custom reports. Don't confuse it with "larger scale" customisation, like writing Drupal modules which - using API and hooks - modify CiviCRM behaviour. We're talking about well defined, self-contained pieces of code which throw in some useful functionality into your existing installation. As of now, it's a bit of a hassle to install them - you need to put files in proper places, register them using administrator section and so on: nothing extremely complicated, but also definitely not the easiest part of CiviCRM setup and configuration. More to that, some very useful extensions (like some payment processors) are shipped with vanilla CiviCRM, but not supported by core team, some of them are not shipped, but available only from forums or issue tracker. In general - you can find a lot of useful things, it's just requires some effort.
I'm pleased to announce that the target for the first of the Civi-Make-it-Happen initiatives has been reached. We have raised $750 to fund enhancing the dedupe functionality to merge CMS user accounts when de-duping. Those of us who are familiar with the experience of clicking on each contact to see which one has a userID before clicking merge will be pleased to see this enhancement and grateful to those who donated.
Over the last year rayogram has worked with the New York State Senate to deploy a customized version of CiviCRM 3.2 for each Senate office. In the course of this work, we developed a custom theme for NYSS that leverages much of the template work that we did for the CiviCRM 3.2.
At September's meetup Kyle Jaster from Rayogram presented the newly released SimplyCivi Drupal theme, designed as a cleaner, more useful and user-friendly administration theme for CiviCRM.
We just released CiviCRM 3.2.3 – it is now available for download. You can also try it out on our demo site.