{"id":92,"date":"2006-07-28T15:49:45","date_gmt":"2006-07-28T19:49:45","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/unitstep.net\/blog\/2006\/07\/28\/cms-watch-queens-engineering-society-adopts-drupal\/"},"modified":"2006-08-06T01:30:13","modified_gmt":"2006-08-06T05:30:13","slug":"cms-watch-queens-engineering-society-adopts-drupal","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/unitstep.net\/blog\/2006\/07\/28\/cms-watch-queens-engineering-society-adopts-drupal\/","title":{"rendered":"CMS watch: Queen’s Engineering Society adopts Drupal"},"content":{"rendered":"
I’ve written about CMS<\/acronym> platforms before<\/a> and how they’re finally getting greater usage among large institutions like universities. Back then, it was about how Queen’s adopted<\/a> Apache Lenya<\/a>, perhaps a lesser-known CMS<\/acronym>, in a pilot project to unify Faculty and Department websites. Having a common “look & feel” is important to an institution such as University, if it wants to present itself as professional and competent; besides this it also makes content much easier to manage. That was why I was pleasantly surprised to see the Engineering Society of Queen’s<\/a> adopt Drupal<\/a> to manage their website.
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\nFirstly, I am an engineering student, so it’s good to see other engineers out there who have seen the same interests as me. Additionally, it’s good to see that a CMS<\/acronym> such as Drupal was chosen, as it’s been making headway<\/a> in other universities as well. I’ve been playing with Drupal on my test box at home for about a month or so, and so far I’m very impressed<\/strong> with the quality of the system and the modules that are used to extend or add functionality. All of the modules are very structured, and adhere to a strict format, making them easy to install and configure. All things considered, it’s a very professional system – proof that open source software can be up to the quality of “professional” solutions. <\/p>\n