ºÝºÝߣshows by User: Jazkarta / http://www.slideshare.net/images/logo.gif ºÝºÝߣshows by User: Jazkarta / Fri, 22 Jan 2021 23:22:09 GMT ºÝºÝߣShare feed for ºÝºÝߣshows by User: Jazkarta Traveling through time and place with Plone /Jazkarta/traveling-through-time-and-place-with-plone ploneconf2020pleiades-210122232209
Pleiades (pleiades.stoa.org) is a community-built gazetteer and graph of ancient places, built using the Plone content management system. It publishes authoritative information about ancient places and spaces, providing services for finding, displaying, and reusing that information under open license. Pleiades development started in 2006 and went to production status in 2010. The site continues to serve scholars, students, and enthusiasts around the world today. This case study will present the history and major milestones the project has seen. We will emphasize unique features like customizations for geospatial content, maps, and data serialization; modeling of uncertainty and unknown geometries; and bibliographic data management. Co-presented by Tom Elliott (New York University), the long-time project director, and Alec Mitchell (Jazkarta, Inc.), a long-time lead developer on the project, this talk will also address the reasons for choosing and sticking with Plone, as well as expectations for future work.]]>

Pleiades (pleiades.stoa.org) is a community-built gazetteer and graph of ancient places, built using the Plone content management system. It publishes authoritative information about ancient places and spaces, providing services for finding, displaying, and reusing that information under open license. Pleiades development started in 2006 and went to production status in 2010. The site continues to serve scholars, students, and enthusiasts around the world today. This case study will present the history and major milestones the project has seen. We will emphasize unique features like customizations for geospatial content, maps, and data serialization; modeling of uncertainty and unknown geometries; and bibliographic data management. Co-presented by Tom Elliott (New York University), the long-time project director, and Alec Mitchell (Jazkarta, Inc.), a long-time lead developer on the project, this talk will also address the reasons for choosing and sticking with Plone, as well as expectations for future work.]]>
Fri, 22 Jan 2021 23:22:09 GMT /Jazkarta/traveling-through-time-and-place-with-plone Jazkarta@slideshare.net(Jazkarta) Traveling through time and place with Plone Jazkarta Pleiades (pleiades.stoa.org) is a community-built gazetteer and graph of ancient places, built using the Plone content management system. It publishes authoritative information about ancient places and spaces, providing services for finding, displaying, and reusing that information under open license. Pleiades development started in 2006 and went to production status in 2010. The site continues to serve scholars, students, and enthusiasts around the world today. This case study will present the history and major milestones the project has seen. We will emphasize unique features like customizations for geospatial content, maps, and data serialization; modeling of uncertainty and unknown geometries; and bibliographic data management. Co-presented by Tom Elliott (New York University), the long-time project director, and Alec Mitchell (Jazkarta, Inc.), a long-time lead developer on the project, this talk will also address the reasons for choosing and sticking with Plone, as well as expectations for future work. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/ploneconf2020pleiades-210122232209-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Pleiades (pleiades.stoa.org) is a community-built gazetteer and graph of ancient places, built using the Plone content management system. It publishes authoritative information about ancient places and spaces, providing services for finding, displaying, and reusing that information under open license. Pleiades development started in 2006 and went to production status in 2010. The site continues to serve scholars, students, and enthusiasts around the world today. This case study will present the history and major milestones the project has seen. We will emphasize unique features like customizations for geospatial content, maps, and data serialization; modeling of uncertainty and unknown geometries; and bibliographic data management. Co-presented by Tom Elliott (New York University), the long-time project director, and Alec Mitchell (Jazkarta, Inc.), a long-time lead developer on the project, this talk will also address the reasons for choosing and sticking with Plone, as well as expectations for future work.
Traveling through time and place with Plone from Jazkarta, Inc.
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Questions: A Form Library for Python with SurveyJS Frontend /slideshow/questions-a-form-library-for-python-with-surveyjs-frontend/241720177 questions-210122225124
A quick presentation of the library, followed by examples of use and a discussion about when it can be a good fit for various types of projects. ]]>

A quick presentation of the library, followed by examples of use and a discussion about when it can be a good fit for various types of projects. ]]>
Fri, 22 Jan 2021 22:51:24 GMT /slideshow/questions-a-form-library-for-python-with-surveyjs-frontend/241720177 Jazkarta@slideshare.net(Jazkarta) Questions: A Form Library for Python with SurveyJS Frontend Jazkarta A quick presentation of the library, followed by examples of use and a discussion about when it can be a good fit for various types of projects. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/questions-210122225124-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> A quick presentation of the library, followed by examples of use and a discussion about when it can be a good fit for various types of projects.
Questions: A Form Library for Python with SurveyJS Frontend from Jazkarta, Inc.
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The User Experience: Editing Composite Pages in Plone 6 and Beyond /slideshow/the-user-experience-editing-composite-pages-in-plone-6-and-beyond/241719990 theuserexperienceeditingcompositepagesinplone6andbeyond-210122223734
It may be a surprise to non-technical people to learn that pages created in Volto are not currently interoperable with traditional Plone's page editing. If you think about it, the reason becomes obvious. Volto, like Mosaic, creates tiled layouts, and like Mosaic it stores page data in special fields for the individual blocks and their layout. Neither Volto nor Mosaic pages are editable in TinyMCE, which expects just one rich text field. Is this divergence between sites created in Volto and sites created in traditional Plone a problem? It does make it harder to describe what Plone is to users and it might mean that there is no way to mix both approaches, for instance when part of a larger 'classic' site is also available as a Volto-based sub-site. Would it be possible to have one tool and one representation for tiled layouts so that we can avoid this divergence? Is there some other solution? Is it even a problem? Will Plone 6 be backwards compatible with Plone 5 and include a smooth upgrade path? We will tackle these questions in this strategic panel discussion, moderated by Sally Kleinfeldt. Panelists will include Paul Roeland, Philip Bauer, Timo Stollenwerk, Victor Fernandez de Alba, and Eric Steele. ]]>

It may be a surprise to non-technical people to learn that pages created in Volto are not currently interoperable with traditional Plone's page editing. If you think about it, the reason becomes obvious. Volto, like Mosaic, creates tiled layouts, and like Mosaic it stores page data in special fields for the individual blocks and their layout. Neither Volto nor Mosaic pages are editable in TinyMCE, which expects just one rich text field. Is this divergence between sites created in Volto and sites created in traditional Plone a problem? It does make it harder to describe what Plone is to users and it might mean that there is no way to mix both approaches, for instance when part of a larger 'classic' site is also available as a Volto-based sub-site. Would it be possible to have one tool and one representation for tiled layouts so that we can avoid this divergence? Is there some other solution? Is it even a problem? Will Plone 6 be backwards compatible with Plone 5 and include a smooth upgrade path? We will tackle these questions in this strategic panel discussion, moderated by Sally Kleinfeldt. Panelists will include Paul Roeland, Philip Bauer, Timo Stollenwerk, Victor Fernandez de Alba, and Eric Steele. ]]>
Fri, 22 Jan 2021 22:37:33 GMT /slideshow/the-user-experience-editing-composite-pages-in-plone-6-and-beyond/241719990 Jazkarta@slideshare.net(Jazkarta) The User Experience: Editing Composite Pages in Plone 6 and Beyond Jazkarta It may be a surprise to non-technical people to learn that pages created in Volto are not currently interoperable with traditional Plone's page editing. If you think about it, the reason becomes obvious. Volto, like Mosaic, creates tiled layouts, and like Mosaic it stores page data in special fields for the individual blocks and their layout. Neither Volto nor Mosaic pages are editable in TinyMCE, which expects just one rich text field. Is this divergence between sites created in Volto and sites created in traditional Plone a problem? It does make it harder to describe what Plone is to users and it might mean that there is no way to mix both approaches, for instance when part of a larger 'classic' site is also available as a Volto-based sub-site. Would it be possible to have one tool and one representation for tiled layouts so that we can avoid this divergence? Is there some other solution? Is it even a problem? Will Plone 6 be backwards compatible with Plone 5 and include a smooth upgrade path? We will tackle these questions in this strategic panel discussion, moderated by Sally Kleinfeldt. Panelists will include Paul Roeland, Philip Bauer, Timo Stollenwerk, Victor Fernandez de Alba, and Eric Steele. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/theuserexperienceeditingcompositepagesinplone6andbeyond-210122223734-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> It may be a surprise to non-technical people to learn that pages created in Volto are not currently interoperable with traditional Plone&#39;s page editing. If you think about it, the reason becomes obvious. Volto, like Mosaic, creates tiled layouts, and like Mosaic it stores page data in special fields for the individual blocks and their layout. Neither Volto nor Mosaic pages are editable in TinyMCE, which expects just one rich text field. Is this divergence between sites created in Volto and sites created in traditional Plone a problem? It does make it harder to describe what Plone is to users and it might mean that there is no way to mix both approaches, for instance when part of a larger &#39;classic&#39; site is also available as a Volto-based sub-site. Would it be possible to have one tool and one representation for tiled layouts so that we can avoid this divergence? Is there some other solution? Is it even a problem? Will Plone 6 be backwards compatible with Plone 5 and include a smooth upgrade path? We will tackle these questions in this strategic panel discussion, moderated by Sally Kleinfeldt. Panelists will include Paul Roeland, Philip Bauer, Timo Stollenwerk, Victor Fernandez de Alba, and Eric Steele.
The User Experience: Editing Composite Pages in Plone 6 and Beyond from Jazkarta, Inc.
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WTA and Plone After 13 Years /slideshow/wta-and-plone-after-13-years/241719817 wtaandploneafter13years-210122222627
Serving hikers in Washington state, the Washington Trails Association protects hiking trails and wild lands and provides members and the general public with extensive hiking information. A Plone site since 2007, wta.org has extensive custom features, 240,000 members, and an enormous amount of content. We will take a tour of some of the most interesting features of the site, including the Salesforce and Mapbox integrations, iPhone and Android apps driven by a custom API, a process to crowd source corrections to hike descriptions, and a culture that has allowed WTA to leverage the expertise of volunteers to implement significant website features.]]>

Serving hikers in Washington state, the Washington Trails Association protects hiking trails and wild lands and provides members and the general public with extensive hiking information. A Plone site since 2007, wta.org has extensive custom features, 240,000 members, and an enormous amount of content. We will take a tour of some of the most interesting features of the site, including the Salesforce and Mapbox integrations, iPhone and Android apps driven by a custom API, a process to crowd source corrections to hike descriptions, and a culture that has allowed WTA to leverage the expertise of volunteers to implement significant website features.]]>
Fri, 22 Jan 2021 22:26:26 GMT /slideshow/wta-and-plone-after-13-years/241719817 Jazkarta@slideshare.net(Jazkarta) WTA and Plone After 13 Years Jazkarta Serving hikers in Washington state, the Washington Trails Association protects hiking trails and wild lands and provides members and the general public with extensive hiking information. A Plone site since 2007, wta.org has extensive custom features, 240,000 members, and an enormous amount of content. We will take a tour of some of the most interesting features of the site, including the Salesforce and Mapbox integrations, iPhone and Android apps driven by a custom API, a process to crowd source corrections to hike descriptions, and a culture that has allowed WTA to leverage the expertise of volunteers to implement significant website features. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/wtaandploneafter13years-210122222627-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Serving hikers in Washington state, the Washington Trails Association protects hiking trails and wild lands and provides members and the general public with extensive hiking information. A Plone site since 2007, wta.org has extensive custom features, 240,000 members, and an enormous amount of content. We will take a tour of some of the most interesting features of the site, including the Salesforce and Mapbox integrations, iPhone and Android apps driven by a custom API, a process to crowd source corrections to hike descriptions, and a culture that has allowed WTA to leverage the expertise of volunteers to implement significant website features.
WTA and Plone After 13 Years from Jazkarta, Inc.
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Collaborating With Orchid Data /slideshow/collaborating-with-orchid-data/241661463 collaboratingwithorchiddata-210121173019
The North American Orchid Conservation Center is a coalition of organizations dedicated to conserving the diverse orchid heritage of the U.S. and Canada. NAOCC needed a system to capture data about orchid samples, with collaboration features to allow project participants to view and contribute information. Data and collaboration features had to share a common access control structure. One approach would have been to build on a web database platform like Django, but this was a low budget project and adding the necessary collaboration and access control features would have been a big undertaking. We had a trick up our sleeve - Plone, which has collaboration features galore and makes it easy to create custom content types to capture specialized data. With a short discovery process and just two weeks of development, we were able to create a system that provides Plone's usual features (member roles, workflows, fine-grained access control and permission-sensitive search), plus custom content types that capture 50+ data fields, photos and files about individual orchid plants and the symbiotic fungi that live on their roots, a CSV import of the existing data and a flexible reporting capability.]]>

The North American Orchid Conservation Center is a coalition of organizations dedicated to conserving the diverse orchid heritage of the U.S. and Canada. NAOCC needed a system to capture data about orchid samples, with collaboration features to allow project participants to view and contribute information. Data and collaboration features had to share a common access control structure. One approach would have been to build on a web database platform like Django, but this was a low budget project and adding the necessary collaboration and access control features would have been a big undertaking. We had a trick up our sleeve - Plone, which has collaboration features galore and makes it easy to create custom content types to capture specialized data. With a short discovery process and just two weeks of development, we were able to create a system that provides Plone's usual features (member roles, workflows, fine-grained access control and permission-sensitive search), plus custom content types that capture 50+ data fields, photos and files about individual orchid plants and the symbiotic fungi that live on their roots, a CSV import of the existing data and a flexible reporting capability.]]>
Thu, 21 Jan 2021 17:30:18 GMT /slideshow/collaborating-with-orchid-data/241661463 Jazkarta@slideshare.net(Jazkarta) Collaborating With Orchid Data Jazkarta The North American Orchid Conservation Center is a coalition of organizations dedicated to conserving the diverse orchid heritage of the U.S. and Canada. NAOCC needed a system to capture data about orchid samples, with collaboration features to allow project participants to view and contribute information. Data and collaboration features had to share a common access control structure. One approach would have been to build on a web database platform like Django, but this was a low budget project and adding the necessary collaboration and access control features would have been a big undertaking. We had a trick up our sleeve - Plone, which has collaboration features galore and makes it easy to create custom content types to capture specialized data. With a short discovery process and just two weeks of development, we were able to create a system that provides Plone's usual features (member roles, workflows, fine-grained access control and permission-sensitive search), plus custom content types that capture 50+ data fields, photos and files about individual orchid plants and the symbiotic fungi that live on their roots, a CSV import of the existing data and a flexible reporting capability. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/collaboratingwithorchiddata-210121173019-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> The North American Orchid Conservation Center is a coalition of organizations dedicated to conserving the diverse orchid heritage of the U.S. and Canada. NAOCC needed a system to capture data about orchid samples, with collaboration features to allow project participants to view and contribute information. Data and collaboration features had to share a common access control structure. One approach would have been to build on a web database platform like Django, but this was a low budget project and adding the necessary collaboration and access control features would have been a big undertaking. We had a trick up our sleeve - Plone, which has collaboration features galore and makes it easy to create custom content types to capture specialized data. With a short discovery process and just two weeks of development, we were able to create a system that provides Plone&#39;s usual features (member roles, workflows, fine-grained access control and permission-sensitive search), plus custom content types that capture 50+ data fields, photos and files about individual orchid plants and the symbiotic fungi that live on their roots, a CSV import of the existing data and a flexible reporting capability.
Collaborating With Orchid Data from Jazkarta, Inc.
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Spend a Week Hacking in Sorrento! /slideshow/spend-a-week-hacking-in-sorrento/125199473 sorrento-181206190055
A lightning talk given at the 2018 Plone Conference announcing the 2019 Sorrento Sprint. It will be held at the Hotel Mediterraneo April 7-14. The topic will be Plone front-end modernization.]]>

A lightning talk given at the 2018 Plone Conference announcing the 2019 Sorrento Sprint. It will be held at the Hotel Mediterraneo April 7-14. The topic will be Plone front-end modernization.]]>
Thu, 06 Dec 2018 19:00:55 GMT /slideshow/spend-a-week-hacking-in-sorrento/125199473 Jazkarta@slideshare.net(Jazkarta) Spend a Week Hacking in Sorrento! Jazkarta A lightning talk given at the 2018 Plone Conference announcing the 2019 Sorrento Sprint. It will be held at the Hotel Mediterraneo April 7-14. The topic will be Plone front-end modernization. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/sorrento-181206190055-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> A lightning talk given at the 2018 Plone Conference announcing the 2019 Sorrento Sprint. It will be held at the Hotel Mediterraneo April 7-14. The topic will be Plone front-end modernization.
Spend a Week Hacking in Sorrento! from Jazkarta, Inc.
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Plone 5 Upgrades In Real Life /slideshow/plone-5-upgrades-in-real-life/125181650 p5-upgrades-181206165204
Although Plone 5 has been released for 2 years, there are still lots of Plone 4.3 sites in the wild. A number of Jazkarta's clients have large, heavily customized Plone 4.3 sites and we have been upgrading them one at a time. As we have gained experience, we have developed strategies for these upgrade projects that minimize risk and spread the work over several mini-projects. In this short talk I will share what we have learned.]]>

Although Plone 5 has been released for 2 years, there are still lots of Plone 4.3 sites in the wild. A number of Jazkarta's clients have large, heavily customized Plone 4.3 sites and we have been upgrading them one at a time. As we have gained experience, we have developed strategies for these upgrade projects that minimize risk and spread the work over several mini-projects. In this short talk I will share what we have learned.]]>
Thu, 06 Dec 2018 16:52:04 GMT /slideshow/plone-5-upgrades-in-real-life/125181650 Jazkarta@slideshare.net(Jazkarta) Plone 5 Upgrades In Real Life Jazkarta Although Plone 5 has been released for 2 years, there are still lots of Plone 4.3 sites in the wild. A number of Jazkarta's clients have large, heavily customized Plone 4.3 sites and we have been upgrading them one at a time. As we have gained experience, we have developed strategies for these upgrade projects that minimize risk and spread the work over several mini-projects. In this short talk I will share what we have learned. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/p5-upgrades-181206165204-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Although Plone 5 has been released for 2 years, there are still lots of Plone 4.3 sites in the wild. A number of Jazkarta&#39;s clients have large, heavily customized Plone 4.3 sites and we have been upgrading them one at a time. As we have gained experience, we have developed strategies for these upgrade projects that minimize risk and spread the work over several mini-projects. In this short talk I will share what we have learned.
Plone 5 Upgrades In Real Life from Jazkarta, Inc.
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Accessibility in Plone: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly /slideshow/accessibility-in-plone-the-good-the-bad-and-the-ugly/125175952 accessibility-181206160834
Out of the box, Plone's accessibility compliance is outstanding, especially Plone 5. However when building a real site things can go wrong - in the theme, in add-ons, and in customizations. In this talk I'll describe the things that went wrong on a highly customized academic Plone site, which were discovered by an institutional audit. I'll describe the types of errors that were found, how common they were and how difficult to fix. I'll provide guidance on what to look out for when developing a new site. And I'll give my wishlist of Plone accessibility improvements.]]>

Out of the box, Plone's accessibility compliance is outstanding, especially Plone 5. However when building a real site things can go wrong - in the theme, in add-ons, and in customizations. In this talk I'll describe the things that went wrong on a highly customized academic Plone site, which were discovered by an institutional audit. I'll describe the types of errors that were found, how common they were and how difficult to fix. I'll provide guidance on what to look out for when developing a new site. And I'll give my wishlist of Plone accessibility improvements.]]>
Thu, 06 Dec 2018 16:08:34 GMT /slideshow/accessibility-in-plone-the-good-the-bad-and-the-ugly/125175952 Jazkarta@slideshare.net(Jazkarta) Accessibility in Plone: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly Jazkarta Out of the box, Plone's accessibility compliance is outstanding, especially Plone 5. However when building a real site things can go wrong - in the theme, in add-ons, and in customizations. In this talk I'll describe the things that went wrong on a highly customized academic Plone site, which were discovered by an institutional audit. I'll describe the types of errors that were found, how common they were and how difficult to fix. I'll provide guidance on what to look out for when developing a new site. And I'll give my wishlist of Plone accessibility improvements. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/accessibility-181206160834-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Out of the box, Plone&#39;s accessibility compliance is outstanding, especially Plone 5. However when building a real site things can go wrong - in the theme, in add-ons, and in customizations. In this talk I&#39;ll describe the things that went wrong on a highly customized academic Plone site, which were discovered by an institutional audit. I&#39;ll describe the types of errors that were found, how common they were and how difficult to fix. I&#39;ll provide guidance on what to look out for when developing a new site. And I&#39;ll give my wishlist of Plone accessibility improvements.
Accessibility in Plone: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly from Jazkarta, Inc.
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Getting Paid Without GetPaid /slideshow/getting-paid-without-getpaid/83591135 getting-paid-171207205700
The venerable Plone add-on GetPaid's warranty was expiring, so in 2013 when Jazkarta needed to build a payment component for The Mountaineers' website (mountaineers.org), we started with a simple Javascript shopping cart and a Stripe integration and went from there. Over time, more features were added and when additional clients needed e-commerce, we extracted the generic bits into a new add-on, jazkarta.shop. It allows for pluggable payment processors, shipping providers, and APIs for calculating state and local taxes, and it can now be used with Plone 4.3 and 5. In this 2017 Plone Conference presentation, we talk about why we went down this path and describe the use cases jazkarta.shop is designed to handle.]]>

The venerable Plone add-on GetPaid's warranty was expiring, so in 2013 when Jazkarta needed to build a payment component for The Mountaineers' website (mountaineers.org), we started with a simple Javascript shopping cart and a Stripe integration and went from there. Over time, more features were added and when additional clients needed e-commerce, we extracted the generic bits into a new add-on, jazkarta.shop. It allows for pluggable payment processors, shipping providers, and APIs for calculating state and local taxes, and it can now be used with Plone 4.3 and 5. In this 2017 Plone Conference presentation, we talk about why we went down this path and describe the use cases jazkarta.shop is designed to handle.]]>
Thu, 07 Dec 2017 20:56:59 GMT /slideshow/getting-paid-without-getpaid/83591135 Jazkarta@slideshare.net(Jazkarta) Getting Paid Without GetPaid Jazkarta The venerable Plone add-on GetPaid's warranty was expiring, so in 2013 when Jazkarta needed to build a payment component for The Mountaineers' website (mountaineers.org), we started with a simple Javascript shopping cart and a Stripe integration and went from there. Over time, more features were added and when additional clients needed e-commerce, we extracted the generic bits into a new add-on, jazkarta.shop. It allows for pluggable payment processors, shipping providers, and APIs for calculating state and local taxes, and it can now be used with Plone 4.3 and 5. In this 2017 Plone Conference presentation, we talk about why we went down this path and describe the use cases jazkarta.shop is designed to handle. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/getting-paid-171207205700-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> The venerable Plone add-on GetPaid&#39;s warranty was expiring, so in 2013 when Jazkarta needed to build a payment component for The Mountaineers&#39; website (mountaineers.org), we started with a simple Javascript shopping cart and a Stripe integration and went from there. Over time, more features were added and when additional clients needed e-commerce, we extracted the generic bits into a new add-on, jazkarta.shop. It allows for pluggable payment processors, shipping providers, and APIs for calculating state and local taxes, and it can now be used with Plone 4.3 and 5. In this 2017 Plone Conference presentation, we talk about why we went down this path and describe the use cases jazkarta.shop is designed to handle.
Getting Paid Without GetPaid from Jazkarta, Inc.
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An Open Source Platform for Social Science Research /slideshow/an-open-source-platform-for-social-science-research/83589887 dallinger-171207203257
In 2016, a group of social scientists at the University of California Berkeley received a large grant to develop tools for rigorous social science research, initially focused on collective identity formation. Jazkarta has been helping them develop Dallinger, a tool to automate experiments that use large numbers of subjects recruited on platforms like Mechanical Turk. They chose Jazkarta because of our web development and project management expertise, but also because of our familiarity with large, open source software projects - which is a goal for Dallinger. At this 2017 Plone Conference presentation, members of the Jazkarta team (David Glick, Alec Mitchell, Matthew Wilkes, and Sally Kleinfeldt) describe how we've put the lessons of Plone to work setting up this new open source project. We also describe how the technology stack (Python, Redis, Web Sockets, Heroku, AWS/Mechanical Turk/boto, Flask, PostgreSQL/SQLAlchemy, Gunicorn, Pytest, gevent) has been working for us.]]>

In 2016, a group of social scientists at the University of California Berkeley received a large grant to develop tools for rigorous social science research, initially focused on collective identity formation. Jazkarta has been helping them develop Dallinger, a tool to automate experiments that use large numbers of subjects recruited on platforms like Mechanical Turk. They chose Jazkarta because of our web development and project management expertise, but also because of our familiarity with large, open source software projects - which is a goal for Dallinger. At this 2017 Plone Conference presentation, members of the Jazkarta team (David Glick, Alec Mitchell, Matthew Wilkes, and Sally Kleinfeldt) describe how we've put the lessons of Plone to work setting up this new open source project. We also describe how the technology stack (Python, Redis, Web Sockets, Heroku, AWS/Mechanical Turk/boto, Flask, PostgreSQL/SQLAlchemy, Gunicorn, Pytest, gevent) has been working for us.]]>
Thu, 07 Dec 2017 20:32:57 GMT /slideshow/an-open-source-platform-for-social-science-research/83589887 Jazkarta@slideshare.net(Jazkarta) An Open Source Platform for Social Science Research Jazkarta In 2016, a group of social scientists at the University of California Berkeley received a large grant to develop tools for rigorous social science research, initially focused on collective identity formation. Jazkarta has been helping them develop Dallinger, a tool to automate experiments that use large numbers of subjects recruited on platforms like Mechanical Turk. They chose Jazkarta because of our web development and project management expertise, but also because of our familiarity with large, open source software projects - which is a goal for Dallinger. At this 2017 Plone Conference presentation, members of the Jazkarta team (David Glick, Alec Mitchell, Matthew Wilkes, and Sally Kleinfeldt) describe how we've put the lessons of Plone to work setting up this new open source project. We also describe how the technology stack (Python, Redis, Web Sockets, Heroku, AWS/Mechanical Turk/boto, Flask, PostgreSQL/SQLAlchemy, Gunicorn, Pytest, gevent) has been working for us. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/dallinger-171207203257-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> In 2016, a group of social scientists at the University of California Berkeley received a large grant to develop tools for rigorous social science research, initially focused on collective identity formation. Jazkarta has been helping them develop Dallinger, a tool to automate experiments that use large numbers of subjects recruited on platforms like Mechanical Turk. They chose Jazkarta because of our web development and project management expertise, but also because of our familiarity with large, open source software projects - which is a goal for Dallinger. At this 2017 Plone Conference presentation, members of the Jazkarta team (David Glick, Alec Mitchell, Matthew Wilkes, and Sally Kleinfeldt) describe how we&#39;ve put the lessons of Plone to work setting up this new open source project. We also describe how the technology stack (Python, Redis, Web Sockets, Heroku, AWS/Mechanical Turk/boto, Flask, PostgreSQL/SQLAlchemy, Gunicorn, Pytest, gevent) has been working for us.
An Open Source Platform for Social Science Research from Jazkarta, Inc.
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For the Love of Volunteers! How Do You Choose the Right Technology to Manage Them? /slideshow/for-the-love-of-volunteers-how-do-you-choose-the-right-technology-to-manage-them/73869995 ntc17fortheloveofvolunteers-170329140746
In this 2017 Non-profit Technology Conference session, Loren Drummond (Washington Trails Association), Karen Uffelman (Percolator Consulting) and Sally Kleinfeldt (Jazkarta) describe volunteer management systems - what makes a good one, how to evaluate your needs, and whether you should buy an off the shelf solution or build something custom. As a case study, they dive into the custom VMS that WTA built to manage their trail maintenance work parties, covering the project from inception through discovery and implementation. In 2016, the year after launch, WTA's VMS smoothly managed 150,000 trail maintenance volunteer hours done by 4,700 volunteers on 240 trails across the state of Washington - an astonishing $3.9 million dollars worth of labor donated to public lands.]]>

In this 2017 Non-profit Technology Conference session, Loren Drummond (Washington Trails Association), Karen Uffelman (Percolator Consulting) and Sally Kleinfeldt (Jazkarta) describe volunteer management systems - what makes a good one, how to evaluate your needs, and whether you should buy an off the shelf solution or build something custom. As a case study, they dive into the custom VMS that WTA built to manage their trail maintenance work parties, covering the project from inception through discovery and implementation. In 2016, the year after launch, WTA's VMS smoothly managed 150,000 trail maintenance volunteer hours done by 4,700 volunteers on 240 trails across the state of Washington - an astonishing $3.9 million dollars worth of labor donated to public lands.]]>
Wed, 29 Mar 2017 14:07:46 GMT /slideshow/for-the-love-of-volunteers-how-do-you-choose-the-right-technology-to-manage-them/73869995 Jazkarta@slideshare.net(Jazkarta) For the Love of Volunteers! How Do You Choose the Right Technology to Manage Them? Jazkarta In this 2017 Non-profit Technology Conference session, Loren Drummond (Washington Trails Association), Karen Uffelman (Percolator Consulting) and Sally Kleinfeldt (Jazkarta) describe volunteer management systems - what makes a good one, how to evaluate your needs, and whether you should buy an off the shelf solution or build something custom. As a case study, they dive into the custom VMS that WTA built to manage their trail maintenance work parties, covering the project from inception through discovery and implementation. In 2016, the year after launch, WTA's VMS smoothly managed 150,000 trail maintenance volunteer hours done by 4,700 volunteers on 240 trails across the state of Washington - an astonishing $3.9 million dollars worth of labor donated to public lands. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/ntc17fortheloveofvolunteers-170329140746-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> In this 2017 Non-profit Technology Conference session, Loren Drummond (Washington Trails Association), Karen Uffelman (Percolator Consulting) and Sally Kleinfeldt (Jazkarta) describe volunteer management systems - what makes a good one, how to evaluate your needs, and whether you should buy an off the shelf solution or build something custom. As a case study, they dive into the custom VMS that WTA built to manage their trail maintenance work parties, covering the project from inception through discovery and implementation. In 2016, the year after launch, WTA&#39;s VMS smoothly managed 150,000 trail maintenance volunteer hours done by 4,700 volunteers on 240 trails across the state of Washington - an astonishing $3.9 million dollars worth of labor donated to public lands.
For the Love of Volunteers! How Do You Choose the Right Technology to Manage Them? from Jazkarta, Inc.
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Anatomy of a Large Website Project /slideshow/anatomy-of-a-large-website-project-60216058/60216058 ntc2016slidedeck-anatomyofalargewebsiteproject-160330100747
The Mountaineers is the premier outdoor education nonprofit in the Pacific Northwest, with over 10,000 members and over 2,000 volunteer-led courses and activities every year. Their website, mountaineers.org, is the critical link between their members and volunteers and the outdoor learning that the organization offers. When they embarked on a major upgrade project, they took a holistic view of how they had used technology in the past and how they wanted to use it in the future. They had a clear vision to guide them: the website had to be deeply engaging for their target audiences, and easy for volunteers and members to use; and it had to simplify and improve as many of their processes as possible. In this session from the 2016 Nonprofit Technology Conference, we’ll describe the life cycle of this major website redesign project: - Defining the strategy driving The Mountaineers mission and website - The requirements discovery process, including a huge community engagement effort - The technology choices we made and why - The importance of user experience (UX) design - The agile process used to manage development - Managing data and content migration, testing, and site launch - Website support and ongoing evolution Along the way, we’ll highlight the practices that made this project so successful.]]>

The Mountaineers is the premier outdoor education nonprofit in the Pacific Northwest, with over 10,000 members and over 2,000 volunteer-led courses and activities every year. Their website, mountaineers.org, is the critical link between their members and volunteers and the outdoor learning that the organization offers. When they embarked on a major upgrade project, they took a holistic view of how they had used technology in the past and how they wanted to use it in the future. They had a clear vision to guide them: the website had to be deeply engaging for their target audiences, and easy for volunteers and members to use; and it had to simplify and improve as many of their processes as possible. In this session from the 2016 Nonprofit Technology Conference, we’ll describe the life cycle of this major website redesign project: - Defining the strategy driving The Mountaineers mission and website - The requirements discovery process, including a huge community engagement effort - The technology choices we made and why - The importance of user experience (UX) design - The agile process used to manage development - Managing data and content migration, testing, and site launch - Website support and ongoing evolution Along the way, we’ll highlight the practices that made this project so successful.]]>
Wed, 30 Mar 2016 10:07:47 GMT /slideshow/anatomy-of-a-large-website-project-60216058/60216058 Jazkarta@slideshare.net(Jazkarta) Anatomy of a Large Website Project Jazkarta The Mountaineers is the premier outdoor education nonprofit in the Pacific Northwest, with over 10,000 members and over 2,000 volunteer-led courses and activities every year. Their website, mountaineers.org, is the critical link between their members and volunteers and the outdoor learning that the organization offers. When they embarked on a major upgrade project, they took a holistic view of how they had used technology in the past and how they wanted to use it in the future. They had a clear vision to guide them: the website had to be deeply engaging for their target audiences, and easy for volunteers and members to use; and it had to simplify and improve as many of their processes as possible. In this session from the 2016 Nonprofit Technology Conference, we’ll describe the life cycle of this major website redesign project: - Defining the strategy driving The Mountaineers mission and website - The requirements discovery process, including a huge community engagement effort - The technology choices we made and why - The importance of user experience (UX) design - The agile process used to manage development - Managing data and content migration, testing, and site launch - Website support and ongoing evolution Along the way, we’ll highlight the practices that made this project so successful. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/ntc2016slidedeck-anatomyofalargewebsiteproject-160330100747-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> The Mountaineers is the premier outdoor education nonprofit in the Pacific Northwest, with over 10,000 members and over 2,000 volunteer-led courses and activities every year. Their website, mountaineers.org, is the critical link between their members and volunteers and the outdoor learning that the organization offers. When they embarked on a major upgrade project, they took a holistic view of how they had used technology in the past and how they wanted to use it in the future. They had a clear vision to guide them: the website had to be deeply engaging for their target audiences, and easy for volunteers and members to use; and it had to simplify and improve as many of their processes as possible. In this session from the 2016 Nonprofit Technology Conference, we’ll describe the life cycle of this major website redesign project: - Defining the strategy driving The Mountaineers mission and website - The requirements discovery process, including a huge community engagement effort - The technology choices we made and why - The importance of user experience (UX) design - The agile process used to manage development - Managing data and content migration, testing, and site launch - Website support and ongoing evolution Along the way, we’ll highlight the practices that made this project so successful.
Anatomy of a Large Website Project from Jazkarta, Inc.
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Anatomy of a Large Website Project - With Presenter Notes /slideshow/anatomy-of-a-large-website-project/60215415 ntc2016slidedeck-anatomyofalargewebsiteprojectwithpresenternotes-160330095334
The Mountaineers is the premier outdoor education nonprofit in the Pacific Northwest, with over 10,000 members and over 2,000 volunteer-led courses and activities every year. Their website, mountaineers.org, is the critical link between their members and volunteers and the outdoor learning that the organization offers. When they embarked on a major upgrade project, they took a holistic view of how they had used technology in the past and how they wanted to use it in the future. They had a clear vision to guide them: the website had to be deeply engaging for their target audiences, and easy for volunteers and members to use; and it had to simplify and improve as many of their processes as possible. In this session from the 2016 Nonprofit Technology Conference, we’ll describe the life cycle of this major website redesign project: - Defining the strategy driving The Mountaineers mission and website - The requirements discovery process, including a huge community engagement effort - The technology choices we made and why - The importance of user experience (UX) design - The agile process used to manage development - Managing data and content migration, testing, and site launch - Website support and ongoing evolution Along the way, we’ll highlight the practices that made this project so successful.]]>

The Mountaineers is the premier outdoor education nonprofit in the Pacific Northwest, with over 10,000 members and over 2,000 volunteer-led courses and activities every year. Their website, mountaineers.org, is the critical link between their members and volunteers and the outdoor learning that the organization offers. When they embarked on a major upgrade project, they took a holistic view of how they had used technology in the past and how they wanted to use it in the future. They had a clear vision to guide them: the website had to be deeply engaging for their target audiences, and easy for volunteers and members to use; and it had to simplify and improve as many of their processes as possible. In this session from the 2016 Nonprofit Technology Conference, we’ll describe the life cycle of this major website redesign project: - Defining the strategy driving The Mountaineers mission and website - The requirements discovery process, including a huge community engagement effort - The technology choices we made and why - The importance of user experience (UX) design - The agile process used to manage development - Managing data and content migration, testing, and site launch - Website support and ongoing evolution Along the way, we’ll highlight the practices that made this project so successful.]]>
Wed, 30 Mar 2016 09:53:34 GMT /slideshow/anatomy-of-a-large-website-project/60215415 Jazkarta@slideshare.net(Jazkarta) Anatomy of a Large Website Project - With Presenter Notes Jazkarta The Mountaineers is the premier outdoor education nonprofit in the Pacific Northwest, with over 10,000 members and over 2,000 volunteer-led courses and activities every year. Their website, mountaineers.org, is the critical link between their members and volunteers and the outdoor learning that the organization offers. When they embarked on a major upgrade project, they took a holistic view of how they had used technology in the past and how they wanted to use it in the future. They had a clear vision to guide them: the website had to be deeply engaging for their target audiences, and easy for volunteers and members to use; and it had to simplify and improve as many of their processes as possible. In this session from the 2016 Nonprofit Technology Conference, we’ll describe the life cycle of this major website redesign project: - Defining the strategy driving The Mountaineers mission and website - The requirements discovery process, including a huge community engagement effort - The technology choices we made and why - The importance of user experience (UX) design - The agile process used to manage development - Managing data and content migration, testing, and site launch - Website support and ongoing evolution Along the way, we’ll highlight the practices that made this project so successful. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/ntc2016slidedeck-anatomyofalargewebsiteprojectwithpresenternotes-160330095334-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> The Mountaineers is the premier outdoor education nonprofit in the Pacific Northwest, with over 10,000 members and over 2,000 volunteer-led courses and activities every year. Their website, mountaineers.org, is the critical link between their members and volunteers and the outdoor learning that the organization offers. When they embarked on a major upgrade project, they took a holistic view of how they had used technology in the past and how they wanted to use it in the future. They had a clear vision to guide them: the website had to be deeply engaging for their target audiences, and easy for volunteers and members to use; and it had to simplify and improve as many of their processes as possible. In this session from the 2016 Nonprofit Technology Conference, we’ll describe the life cycle of this major website redesign project: - Defining the strategy driving The Mountaineers mission and website - The requirements discovery process, including a huge community engagement effort - The technology choices we made and why - The importance of user experience (UX) design - The agile process used to manage development - Managing data and content migration, testing, and site launch - Website support and ongoing evolution Along the way, we’ll highlight the practices that made this project so successful.
Anatomy of a Large Website Project - With Presenter Notes from Jazkarta, Inc.
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The Mountaineers: Scaling the Heights with Plone /slideshow/the-mountaineers-scaling-the-heights-with-plone/45267170 mountaineers-ploneconf-2014-150228160908-conversion-gate01
Picture yourself at a non-profit with 50,000 active members and hundreds of volunteers. Your website has become dated and convoluted and needs to be replaced. You need the new site to support complex course registrations - multiple activities per course, multiple roles per activity, multiple people per registration, waitlisting, payments - without seeming complex. You need it to be easy for leaders to create new activities, for volunteers to volunteer, for members to sign up and donate, and for everyone to find what they're looking for in your vast portfolio of knowledge. This is the story of The Mountaineers' journey to a new Plone site, which launched May 2014 after more than a year of development by a Jazkarta team consisting of David Glick, Cris Ewing, and Carlos de la Guardia. We'll describe some of the highlights, including: - Handling rosters with collective.workspace - Optimizing membrane-based users - Using Stripe to process payments - Using Celery as a message queue with Plone - Our process for designing content types and getting content imported - Pulling everything together with Solr-powered faceted search]]>

Picture yourself at a non-profit with 50,000 active members and hundreds of volunteers. Your website has become dated and convoluted and needs to be replaced. You need the new site to support complex course registrations - multiple activities per course, multiple roles per activity, multiple people per registration, waitlisting, payments - without seeming complex. You need it to be easy for leaders to create new activities, for volunteers to volunteer, for members to sign up and donate, and for everyone to find what they're looking for in your vast portfolio of knowledge. This is the story of The Mountaineers' journey to a new Plone site, which launched May 2014 after more than a year of development by a Jazkarta team consisting of David Glick, Cris Ewing, and Carlos de la Guardia. We'll describe some of the highlights, including: - Handling rosters with collective.workspace - Optimizing membrane-based users - Using Stripe to process payments - Using Celery as a message queue with Plone - Our process for designing content types and getting content imported - Pulling everything together with Solr-powered faceted search]]>
Sat, 28 Feb 2015 16:09:08 GMT /slideshow/the-mountaineers-scaling-the-heights-with-plone/45267170 Jazkarta@slideshare.net(Jazkarta) The Mountaineers: Scaling the Heights with Plone Jazkarta Picture yourself at a non-profit with 50,000 active members and hundreds of volunteers. Your website has become dated and convoluted and needs to be replaced. You need the new site to support complex course registrations - multiple activities per course, multiple roles per activity, multiple people per registration, waitlisting, payments - without seeming complex. You need it to be easy for leaders to create new activities, for volunteers to volunteer, for members to sign up and donate, and for everyone to find what they're looking for in your vast portfolio of knowledge. This is the story of The Mountaineers' journey to a new Plone site, which launched May 2014 after more than a year of development by a Jazkarta team consisting of David Glick, Cris Ewing, and Carlos de la Guardia. We'll describe some of the highlights, including: - Handling rosters with collective.workspace - Optimizing membrane-based users - Using Stripe to process payments - Using Celery as a message queue with Plone - Our process for designing content types and getting content imported - Pulling everything together with Solr-powered faceted search <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/mountaineers-ploneconf-2014-150228160908-conversion-gate01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Picture yourself at a non-profit with 50,000 active members and hundreds of volunteers. Your website has become dated and convoluted and needs to be replaced. You need the new site to support complex course registrations - multiple activities per course, multiple roles per activity, multiple people per registration, waitlisting, payments - without seeming complex. You need it to be easy for leaders to create new activities, for volunteers to volunteer, for members to sign up and donate, and for everyone to find what they&#39;re looking for in your vast portfolio of knowledge. This is the story of The Mountaineers&#39; journey to a new Plone site, which launched May 2014 after more than a year of development by a Jazkarta team consisting of David Glick, Cris Ewing, and Carlos de la Guardia. We&#39;ll describe some of the highlights, including: - Handling rosters with collective.workspace - Optimizing membrane-based users - Using Stripe to process payments - Using Celery as a message queue with Plone - Our process for designing content types and getting content imported - Pulling everything together with Solr-powered faceted search
The Mountaineers: Scaling the Heights with Plone from Jazkarta, Inc.
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Plone Hosting: A Panel Discussion /slideshow/plone-hostingpanel/43305938 plone-hosting-panel-150107233417-conversion-gate02
A lot has happened this year in the world of hosting Plone sites. This 2014 Plone Conference session aims to provide a forum for sharing information and debating approaches. We will begin with brief presentations from our panelists, followed by questions and discussion. - Steve McMahon: Ansible - Cris Ewing: AWS OpsWorks - Sven Strack: Nix, Docker, OpenVZ - Nejc Zupan: Heroku - Nate Aune: OpenShift, Dotcloud, and other PaaS providers]]>

A lot has happened this year in the world of hosting Plone sites. This 2014 Plone Conference session aims to provide a forum for sharing information and debating approaches. We will begin with brief presentations from our panelists, followed by questions and discussion. - Steve McMahon: Ansible - Cris Ewing: AWS OpsWorks - Sven Strack: Nix, Docker, OpenVZ - Nejc Zupan: Heroku - Nate Aune: OpenShift, Dotcloud, and other PaaS providers]]>
Wed, 07 Jan 2015 23:34:17 GMT /slideshow/plone-hostingpanel/43305938 Jazkarta@slideshare.net(Jazkarta) Plone Hosting: A Panel Discussion Jazkarta A lot has happened this year in the world of hosting Plone sites. This 2014 Plone Conference session aims to provide a forum for sharing information and debating approaches. We will begin with brief presentations from our panelists, followed by questions and discussion. - Steve McMahon: Ansible - Cris Ewing: AWS OpsWorks - Sven Strack: Nix, Docker, OpenVZ - Nejc Zupan: Heroku - Nate Aune: OpenShift, Dotcloud, and other PaaS providers <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/plone-hosting-panel-150107233417-conversion-gate02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> A lot has happened this year in the world of hosting Plone sites. This 2014 Plone Conference session aims to provide a forum for sharing information and debating approaches. We will begin with brief presentations from our panelists, followed by questions and discussion. - Steve McMahon: Ansible - Cris Ewing: AWS OpsWorks - Sven Strack: Nix, Docker, OpenVZ - Nejc Zupan: Heroku - Nate Aune: OpenShift, Dotcloud, and other PaaS providers
Plone Hosting: A Panel Discussion from Jazkarta, Inc.
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Plone+Salesforce /slideshow/plonesalesforce/26951256 plonesalesforce-131007144344-phpapp01
Salesforce.com is a mature, feature-rich, highly customizable, software-as-a-service CRM that has had excellent integration with Plone since 2007. The combination of Plone and Salesforce.com is a great deal for non-profits - the Salesforce Foundation will donate up to 10 enterprise licenses to 501(c)3 organizations, and any additional licenses are deeply discounted. In this talk I will review the Plone+Salesforce integration toolkit, describe recent improvements to the toolkit, and contrast this with what other CMSes have to offer. ]]>

Salesforce.com is a mature, feature-rich, highly customizable, software-as-a-service CRM that has had excellent integration with Plone since 2007. The combination of Plone and Salesforce.com is a great deal for non-profits - the Salesforce Foundation will donate up to 10 enterprise licenses to 501(c)3 organizations, and any additional licenses are deeply discounted. In this talk I will review the Plone+Salesforce integration toolkit, describe recent improvements to the toolkit, and contrast this with what other CMSes have to offer. ]]>
Mon, 07 Oct 2013 14:43:44 GMT /slideshow/plonesalesforce/26951256 Jazkarta@slideshare.net(Jazkarta) Plone+Salesforce Jazkarta Salesforce.com is a mature, feature-rich, highly customizable, software-as-a-service CRM that has had excellent integration with Plone since 2007. The combination of Plone and Salesforce.com is a great deal for non-profits - the Salesforce Foundation will donate up to 10 enterprise licenses to 501(c)3 organizations, and any additional licenses are deeply discounted. In this talk I will review the Plone+Salesforce integration toolkit, describe recent improvements to the toolkit, and contrast this with what other CMSes have to offer. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/plonesalesforce-131007144344-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Salesforce.com is a mature, feature-rich, highly customizable, software-as-a-service CRM that has had excellent integration with Plone since 2007. The combination of Plone and Salesforce.com is a great deal for non-profits - the Salesforce Foundation will donate up to 10 enterprise licenses to 501(c)3 organizations, and any additional licenses are deeply discounted. In this talk I will review the Plone+Salesforce integration toolkit, describe recent improvements to the toolkit, and contrast this with what other CMSes have to offer.
Plone+Salesforce from Jazkarta, Inc.
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Academic Websites in Plone /slideshow/academic-websites/26950806 academicwebsites-131007142920-phpapp01
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Mon, 07 Oct 2013 14:29:20 GMT /slideshow/academic-websites/26950806 Jazkarta@slideshare.net(Jazkarta) Academic Websites in Plone Jazkarta <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/academicwebsites-131007142920-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br>
Academic Websites in Plone from Jazkarta, Inc.
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Plone /slideshow/plone-15596326/15596326 plone-121211165325-phpapp01
A slideshow of sites using the Plone CMS, and screenshots of some of its features]]>

A slideshow of sites using the Plone CMS, and screenshots of some of its features]]>
Tue, 11 Dec 2012 16:53:25 GMT /slideshow/plone-15596326/15596326 Jazkarta@slideshare.net(Jazkarta) Plone Jazkarta A slideshow of sites using the Plone CMS, and screenshots of some of its features <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/plone-121211165325-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> A slideshow of sites using the Plone CMS, and screenshots of some of its features
Plone from Jazkarta, Inc.
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Online Exhibits in Plone /slideshow/online-exhibits-in-plone-14773074/14773074 online-exhibits-ploneconf-2012-121017160126-phpapp01
Museums, libraries, art institutes, and many other types of organizations need online exhibits - websites that mimic the experience of walking through a gallery discovering interesting and beautiful objects. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection recently completed a major website redesign, with Plone as their chosen CMS, and online exhibits are an important part of the new site. They wanted many features, but they also wanted online exhibits to be easy for content editors - even interns - to create. In this talk Sally Kleinfeldt and Alec Mitchell describe collective.exhibit the new open source Plone add-on for online exhibits that we have created for Dumbarton Oaks and for the Plone community. Sally will provide background about what Dumbarton Oaks wanted in their online exhibits. Alec will describe our implementation, covering our use of Dexterity content types, bulk content creation, and how we used templates to provide a rich feature set while still making it easy for inexperienced content editors to create exhibits.]]>

Museums, libraries, art institutes, and many other types of organizations need online exhibits - websites that mimic the experience of walking through a gallery discovering interesting and beautiful objects. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection recently completed a major website redesign, with Plone as their chosen CMS, and online exhibits are an important part of the new site. They wanted many features, but they also wanted online exhibits to be easy for content editors - even interns - to create. In this talk Sally Kleinfeldt and Alec Mitchell describe collective.exhibit the new open source Plone add-on for online exhibits that we have created for Dumbarton Oaks and for the Plone community. Sally will provide background about what Dumbarton Oaks wanted in their online exhibits. Alec will describe our implementation, covering our use of Dexterity content types, bulk content creation, and how we used templates to provide a rich feature set while still making it easy for inexperienced content editors to create exhibits.]]>
Wed, 17 Oct 2012 16:01:24 GMT /slideshow/online-exhibits-in-plone-14773074/14773074 Jazkarta@slideshare.net(Jazkarta) Online Exhibits in Plone Jazkarta Museums, libraries, art institutes, and many other types of organizations need online exhibits - websites that mimic the experience of walking through a gallery discovering interesting and beautiful objects. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection recently completed a major website redesign, with Plone as their chosen CMS, and online exhibits are an important part of the new site. They wanted many features, but they also wanted online exhibits to be easy for content editors - even interns - to create. In this talk Sally Kleinfeldt and Alec Mitchell describe collective.exhibit the new open source Plone add-on for online exhibits that we have created for Dumbarton Oaks and for the Plone community. Sally will provide background about what Dumbarton Oaks wanted in their online exhibits. Alec will describe our implementation, covering our use of Dexterity content types, bulk content creation, and how we used templates to provide a rich feature set while still making it easy for inexperienced content editors to create exhibits. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/online-exhibits-ploneconf-2012-121017160126-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Museums, libraries, art institutes, and many other types of organizations need online exhibits - websites that mimic the experience of walking through a gallery discovering interesting and beautiful objects. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection recently completed a major website redesign, with Plone as their chosen CMS, and online exhibits are an important part of the new site. They wanted many features, but they also wanted online exhibits to be easy for content editors - even interns - to create. In this talk Sally Kleinfeldt and Alec Mitchell describe collective.exhibit the new open source Plone add-on for online exhibits that we have created for Dumbarton Oaks and for the Plone community. Sally will provide background about what Dumbarton Oaks wanted in their online exhibits. Alec will describe our implementation, covering our use of Dexterity content types, bulk content creation, and how we used templates to provide a rich feature set while still making it easy for inexperienced content editors to create exhibits.
Online Exhibits in Plone from Jazkarta, Inc.
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Online exhibits in Plone /slideshow/online-exhibits-in-plone/13198793 online-exhibits-120604173343-phpapp02
Museums, libraries, art institutes, and many other types of organizations need online exhibits - websites that mimic the experience of walking through a gallery discovering interesting and beautiful objects. Commercial museum collections management systems often provide this, but they are expensive and their features are often limited or require extensive customization. Open source exhibit software has proliferated in recent years, and some of these systems now provide features that approach CMS functionality. But what if you are starting with Plone, which is already a full-featured CMS? Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection is engaged in a major website redesign, and they have selected Plone as their CMS. Online exhibits will be an important part of their new website. They envisioned many features, such as image panning and zooming, timelines, favorites, and object comparison, and they also envisioned that online exhibits would be easy for content editors - even interns - to assemble. In this talk I will describe the online exhibit package that we have created for Dumbarton Oaks, and our incremental approach to defining and implementing it.]]>

Museums, libraries, art institutes, and many other types of organizations need online exhibits - websites that mimic the experience of walking through a gallery discovering interesting and beautiful objects. Commercial museum collections management systems often provide this, but they are expensive and their features are often limited or require extensive customization. Open source exhibit software has proliferated in recent years, and some of these systems now provide features that approach CMS functionality. But what if you are starting with Plone, which is already a full-featured CMS? Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection is engaged in a major website redesign, and they have selected Plone as their CMS. Online exhibits will be an important part of their new website. They envisioned many features, such as image panning and zooming, timelines, favorites, and object comparison, and they also envisioned that online exhibits would be easy for content editors - even interns - to assemble. In this talk I will describe the online exhibit package that we have created for Dumbarton Oaks, and our incremental approach to defining and implementing it.]]>
Mon, 04 Jun 2012 17:33:42 GMT /slideshow/online-exhibits-in-plone/13198793 Jazkarta@slideshare.net(Jazkarta) Online exhibits in Plone Jazkarta Museums, libraries, art institutes, and many other types of organizations need online exhibits - websites that mimic the experience of walking through a gallery discovering interesting and beautiful objects. Commercial museum collections management systems often provide this, but they are expensive and their features are often limited or require extensive customization. Open source exhibit software has proliferated in recent years, and some of these systems now provide features that approach CMS functionality. But what if you are starting with Plone, which is already a full-featured CMS? Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection is engaged in a major website redesign, and they have selected Plone as their CMS. Online exhibits will be an important part of their new website. They envisioned many features, such as image panning and zooming, timelines, favorites, and object comparison, and they also envisioned that online exhibits would be easy for content editors - even interns - to assemble. In this talk I will describe the online exhibit package that we have created for Dumbarton Oaks, and our incremental approach to defining and implementing it. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/online-exhibits-120604173343-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Museums, libraries, art institutes, and many other types of organizations need online exhibits - websites that mimic the experience of walking through a gallery discovering interesting and beautiful objects. Commercial museum collections management systems often provide this, but they are expensive and their features are often limited or require extensive customization. Open source exhibit software has proliferated in recent years, and some of these systems now provide features that approach CMS functionality. But what if you are starting with Plone, which is already a full-featured CMS? Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection is engaged in a major website redesign, and they have selected Plone as their CMS. Online exhibits will be an important part of their new website. They envisioned many features, such as image panning and zooming, timelines, favorites, and object comparison, and they also envisioned that online exhibits would be easy for content editors - even interns - to assemble. In this talk I will describe the online exhibit package that we have created for Dumbarton Oaks, and our incremental approach to defining and implementing it.
Online exhibits in Plone from Jazkarta, Inc.
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https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/profile-photo-Jazkarta-48x48.jpg?cb=1611250030 Jazkarta is a Boston-based web consulting and open source web solutions provider. Since 2004, we've been helping non-profits, universities, government and businesses improve their web presence. We specialize in the Plone CMS and Python-based web app platforms such as Pyramid and Django. www.jazkarta.com https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/ploneconf2020pleiades-210122232209-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds Jazkarta/traveling-through-time-and-place-with-plone Traveling through time... https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/questions-210122225124-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/questions-a-form-library-for-python-with-surveyjs-frontend/241720177 Questions: A Form Libr... https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/theuserexperienceeditingcompositepagesinplone6andbeyond-210122223734-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/the-user-experience-editing-composite-pages-in-plone-6-and-beyond/241719990 The User Experience: E...