Presenting oneself in a short and descriptive way is always a challenge. The easy approach is to be simply factual at the risk of being boring and maybe even egotistical. Another possibility is to attempt a second-degree or even farcical presentation, which may fall flat if your public does not share your sense of humour. You can also be most humble and present yourself as just a minor actor on the scene of the world daring to utter a few comments which you hope will be interesting to at least a few people.
Then again you can philosophize about this whole biography business and suddenly realize that you have run out of space.
Back in February the birth of forge.typo3.org was announced. A lot of exciting details were then presented at T3DD08. Let me convince you how great a tool it is.
T3DD08 is over and I'm going home with my head full of wonderful memories. Being part of such a community brings that much more to my job.
Because God got angry at some point in time, computer programmers are forced to deal with localisation and internationalisation. Fortunately we have the translation server.
For once I am not going to talk about TYPO3. Today (March 21) is the third World Down Syndrome Day. As with other "world days", the aim is to raise awareness about this condition. As a parent of a Down Syndrome child, it is a...
Web site accessibility is fortunately a more and more commonly discussed topic and TYPO3 is rather well-positioned for delivering accessible content. But what about the backend?
One of the strengths of TYPO3 is its extension framework and we all have our favorite extensions. But have you thought about voting for their developers?
At first sight TypoScript often appears as an indomitable beast. At second sight this feeling tends to persists and it takes some more efforts to feel at ease with it. But isn't it a beauty after all?