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Innovazione: Tripoli (Unioncamere), ‘Approccio Open Innovation ha importanza globale’
(Adnkronos) – “L’approccio Open Innovation è un approccio importantissimo per tutti gli operatori, sia pubblici che privati e questo è un dato di fatto che riguarda non solo il nostro Paese e le Camere di commercio italiane, ma riguarda tutto il mondo. Negli Stati Uniti l’Open innovation ormai è la filiera di innovazione più importante anche delle grandi aziende, perfino più importante dei centri interni di ricerca e sviluppo”. Lo ha detto Giuseppe Tripoli, segretario generale di Unioncamere, a margine dell’Innovation Day con il quale si è conclusa la prima fase della Call for Data-Driven Innovation, l’iniziativa rivolta alle start-up e Pmi innovative, lanciata a gennaio da Unioncamere e InfoCamere in collaborazione con The Doers, società di consulenza di Digital Magics, che coinvolge le Camere di Commercio di Firenze, Messina, Milano, Padova e Torino.
Talking Drupal: Skills Upgrade #4
Welcome back to “Skills Upgrade” a Talking Drupal mini-series following the journey of a D7 developer learning D10. This is episode 4.
Topics
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Review Chad’s goals for the previous week
- Install Drush
- Setup git repo
- Examples module
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Review Chad’s questions
- .gitignore
- Core file naming
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Tasks for the upcoming week
- Reminder of the capstone goal: create MR for new automated test in contrib module.
- Examples module: field_example. New RGB field type with formatter and widgets. Focus on stuff in field_example/src/Plugin/Field
- Background info on Plugins: https://www.drupal.org/docs/drupal-apis/plugin-api
- Focus on the following sections:
Resources
Chad’s Drupal 10 Learning Curriclum & Journal Chad’s Drupal 10 Learning Notes
The Linux Foundation is offering a discount of 30% off e-learning courses, certifications and bundles with the code, all uppercase DRUPAL24 and that is good until June 5th https://training.linuxfoundation.org/certification-catalog/
Hosts
AmyJune Hineline – @volkswagenchick
Guests
Chad Hester – chadkhester.com @chadkhest Mike Anello – DrupalEasy.com @ultimike
OnStrum::Healthcheck – simple configurable application healthcheck ❤️ rack middleware
OnStrum::Healthcheck allows you to embed healthcheck endpoints into your rack based application to perform healthcheck probes. Make your application compatible with Docker/Kubernetes healthchecks in a seconds: https://github.com/on-strum/ruby-on-strum-healthcheck
Plasma 5: the early years
With KDE’s 6th Mega Release finally out the door, let’s reflect on the outgoing Plasma 5 that has served us well over the years. Can you believe it has been almost ten years since Plasma 5.0 was released? Join me on a trip down memory lane and let me tell you how it all began. This coincidentally continues pretty much where my previous retrospective blog post concluded. ↫ Kai Uwe It took them a few years after the release of Plasma 5.0, but eventually they won me over, and I’m now solid in the KDE camp, after well over a decade of either GNOME or Cinnamon. GNOME has strayed far too much away from just being a traditional desktop user interface, and Cinnamon is dragging its heels with Wayland support, but luckily KDE has spent a long time now clearing up so many of the paper cuts that used to plague them every time I tried KDE. That’s all in the past now. They’ve done a solid job cleaning up a lot of the oddities and inconsistencies during Plasma 5’s lifecycle, and I can’t wait until Fedora 40 hits the streets with Plasma 6 in tow. In the desktop Linux world, I feel KDE and Qt will always play a little bit of second fiddle to the (seemingly) much more popular GNOME and GTK+, but that’s okay – this kind of diversity and friendly competition is what makes each of these desktops better for their respective users. And this is the Linux world, after all – you’re not tied down to anything your current desktop environment does, and you’re free to switch to whatever else at a moment’s notice if some new update doesn’t sit well with you. I can’t imagine using something like macOS or Windows where you have to just accept whatever garbage they throw at you with nowhere to go.