Après l’essor des drones, le dirigeable pourrait retrouver une nouvelle utilité au sein des forces armées. En Finlande, une société développe des appareils à usage civil et militaire, testés à quelques kilomètres d’une Russie source de tensions. « Mais qu’est-ce que c’est que ça ? ». Sur le réseau social Reddit, les Finlandais s’interrogent et postent les photos d’un étrange OVNI aperçu lors d’une froide matinée du 19 novembre. Un dirigeable, chromé, long de 11 mètres, flottant silencieusement à une centaine de mètres du sol, au-dessus du trajet quotidien pour le travail, l’image interpelle.
Kelluu, la société à l’origine de ce vol, s’est exprimée dans la presse locale : « le dirigeable a été montré aux visiteurs du salon Slush – un évènement dans le secteur de la tech – mais il n’a pas collecté de données sur l’environnement ».
À Helsinki, la capitale du pays, les citadins peuvent être surpris, mais les habitants de la région plus reculée de Carélie du Nord sont, eux, plus habitués à voir ces engins traverser le ciel.
« Nous avons à plusieurs reprises survolé ces zones plus froides pour tester nos appareils dans des conditions plus rudes » nous explique Janne Hietala, le fondateur et patron de Kelluu. Sur le papier, ce ballon fonctionne comme une sentinelle pour diverses missions civiles : collecte de données pour l’aménagement urbain, protection de l’environnement, gestion des forêts, aide au renseignement pour les secours. Mais sous ses allures pacifiques, il se révèle également être un précieux allié pour des opérations de défense, prêt à répondre aux menaces hybrides.
Hunting Simulator 3 – Announcement Trailer | PS5 Games
Immerse yourself in the stunning natural landscapes of Colorado and Texas, where you can hunt over 40 animal species alone or with friends. Accompanied by your faithful hunting dog, experience the thrill of the hunt like never before.
With nearly 10 years of expertise in hunting games, NACON Studio Ghent delivers an authentic hunting experience in this third installment. Building on the success of the first two titles, enjoyed by over 1 million players, Hunting Simulator 3 introduces exciting new features: 🐾 A new revolutionary dynamic system that faithfully replicates animal behavior and allows your actions to impact the environment. 🚗 Vehicles – Explore vast open-world environments more freely. 🎧 Enhanced sound design and improved hunting dog AI. 🌲 Powered by Unreal® Engine 5, enjoy breathtaking, realistic open worlds.
Gear up with equipment from top brands like Beretta®, Winchester®, and Browning®, and prepare for the most immersive hunting adventure yet!
Hunting Simulator 3 will be available on PlayStation 5.
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I’m excited to share the first version of Drupal Starshot‘s product strategy, a document that aims to guide the development and marketing of Drupal Starshot. To read it, download the full Drupal Starshot strategy document as a PDF (8 MB).
Drupal Starshot is the temporary name for an initiative that extends the capabilities of Drupal Core. Drupal Starshot aims to broaden Drupal’s appeal to marketers and a wider range of project budgets. Our ultimate goal is to increase Drupal’s adoption, solidify Drupal’s position as a leading CMS, and champion an Open Web.
It’s important to note that Drupal Starshot and Drupal Core will have separate, yet complementary, product strategies. Drupal Starshot will focus on empowering marketers and expanding Drupal’s presence in the mid-market, while Drupal Core will prioritize the needs of developers and more technical users. I’ll write more about the Drupal Core product strategy in a future blog post once we have finalized it. Together, these two strategies will form a comprehensive vision for Drupal as a product.
Why a product strategy?
By defining our goals, target audience and necessary features, we can more effectively guide contributors and ensure that everyone is working towards a common vision. This product strategy will serve as a foundation for our development roadmap, our marketing efforts, enabling Drupal Certified Partners, and more.
Drupal Starshot aims to be the gold standard for marketers that want to build great digital experiences.
We’d like to expand Drupal’s reach by focusing on two strategic shifts:
Prioritizing Drupal for content creators, marketers, web managers, and web designers so they can independently build websites. A key goal is to empower these marketing professionals to build and manage their websites independently without relying on developers or having to use the command line or an IDE.
Extending Drupal’s presence in the mid-market segment, targeting projects with total budgets between $30,000 and $120,000 USD (€25,000 to €100,000).
Drupal Starshot will differentiate itself from competitors by providing:
A thoughtfully designed platform for marketers, balancing ease of use with flexibility. It includes smart defaults, best practices for common marketing tasks, marketing-focused editorial tools, and helpful learning resources.
A growth-oriented approach. Start simple with Drupal Starshot’s user-friendly tools, and unlock advanced features as your site grows or you gain expertise. With sophisticated content modeling, efficient content reuse across channels, and robust integrations with other leading marketing technologies, ambitious marketers won’t face the limitations of other CMSs and will have the flexibility to scale their site as needed.
AI-assisted site building tools to simplify complex tasks, making Drupal accessible to a wider range of users.
Drupal’s existing competitive advantages such as extensibility, scalability, security, accessibility, multilingual support, and more.
What about ambitious site builders?
In the past, we used the term ambitious site builders to describe Drupal’s target audience. Although this term doesn’t appear in the product strategy document, it remains relevant.
While the strategy document is publicly available, it is primarily an internal guide. It outlines our plans but doesn’t dictate our marketing language. Our product strategy’s language purposly aligns with terms used by our target users, based on persona research and interviews.
To me, “ambitious site builders” includes all Drupal users, from those working with Drupal Core (more technically skilled) to those working with Drupal Starshot (less technical). Both groups are ambitious, with Drupal Starshot specifically targeting “ambitious marketers” or “ambitious no-code developers”.
There are many opportunities to get involved with Drupal Starshot, whether you’re a marketer, developer, designer, writer, project manager, or simply passionate about the future of Drupal. To learn more about how you can contribute to Drupal Starshot, visit https://drupal.org/starshot.
Thank you
I’d like to thank the Drupal Starshot leadership team, the Drupal Starshot Advisory Council, and the Drupal Core Committers for their input on the strategy. I’m also grateful for the marketers who provided feedback on our strategy, helping us refine our approach.
There must be 1000s of Ruby on Rails apps still running on version 5, 6, 6.1, 7, 7.1, etc. Upgrading your Rails 5 app to version 8 is a herculean task. My latest article on how to upgrade your non-8-version Ruby on Rails application to version 8 provides a detailed guide you can follow to make this process less herculean. Read it here – Rails 8 Upgrade Guide 2025: Step-by-Step Instructions for a Smooth Transition.
The Digital Public Goods Alliance (DPGA) Annual Members Meeting was an inspiring gathering of innovators, developers and advocates working to create a thriving ecosystem for Digital Public Goods (DPGs).
The moment a lot of us has been fearing may be soon upon us. Among the various remedies proposed by the United States Department of Justice to address Google’s monopoly abuse, there’s also banning Google from spending money to become the default search engine on other devices, platforms, or applications. “We strongly urge the Court to consider remedies that improve search competition without harming independent browsers and browser engines,” a Mozilla spokesperson tells PCMag. Mozilla points to a key but less eye-catching proposal from the DOJ to regulate Google’s search business, which a judge ruled as a monopoly in August. In their recommendations, federal prosecutors urged the court to ban Google from offering “something of value” to third-party companies to make Google the default search engine over their software or devices. ↫ Michael Kan at PC Mag Obviously Mozilla is urging the courts to reconsider this remedy, because it would instantly cut more than 80% of Mozilla’s revenue. As I’ve been saying for years now, the reason Firefox seems to be getting worse is because of Mozilla is desperately trying to find other sources of revenue, and they seem to think advertising is their best bet – even going so far as working together with Facebook. Imagine how much more invasive and user-hostile these attempts are going to get if Mozilla suddenly loses 80% of its revenue? For so, so many years now I’ve been warning everyone about just how fragile the future of Firefox was, and every one of my worries and predictions have become reality. If Mozilla now loses 80% of its funding, which platform Firefox officially supports do you think will feel the sting of inevitable budget cuts, scope reductions, and even more layoffs first? The future of especially Firefox on Linux is hanging by a thread, and with everyone lulled into a false sense of complacency by Chrome and its many shady skins, nobody in the Linux community seems to have done anything to prepare for this near inevitability. With no proper, fully-featured replacements in the works, Linux distributions, especially ones with strict open source requirements, will most likely be forced to ship with de-Googled Chromium variants by default once Firefox becomes incompatible with such requirements. And no matter how much you take Google out of Chromium, it’s still effectively a Google product, leaving most Linux users entirely at the whim of big tech for the most important application they have. We’re about to enter a very, very messy time for browsing on Linux.
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