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The Bigger Picture Surrounding the Drupal Controversy

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The Bigger Picture Surrounding the Drupal Controversy

This has not been a fun couple of weeks in the Drupal community.

If you've missed the events, you can catch up with this list of links. There's dozens of articles in that list, plus hundreds more think-pieces, tweets and Reddit posts.

You don't need me to add to another opinion on what happened.

Instead, I'd like to try and situate this controversy into the broader flow of recent events.

There have been many controversies in Drupal before, so why did this one blow up in such spectacular fashion? 

Perhaps it was the central role of Larry Garfield in the community, or perhaps it was the sensational aspects of the story. Perhaps. But there's more to this picture.

The week before this Drupal controversy broke, I wrote that this is the most interesting year in the history of Drupal. That post was positively received, including by Dries:

However, "interesting times" bring excitement, but also tension and stress. You can sense those feelings in the Drupal community right now:

  • Drupal 8 adoption has been noticeably slower than with other versions.
  • Dries changed a fundamental Drupal principle and promised that all future upgrades would be smooth.
  • Drupal seems to be changing it's audience towards enterprise users, with a heavier reliance on developer tools such as Composer.
  • The Drupal Association has been struggling with financial problems and leadership changes.
  • For the first time, there's a fork from key community members (Backdrop).
  • Ambitious ideas, such as experimental modules in the core, haven't yet worked out as well as hoped.
  • Some big Drupal agencies have struggled to maintain their rapid growth, and some have shrunk or left the market.

As a result of all these changes and problems, the Drupal community is understandably tense. All of these issues are fixable, but there's a lot of them right now.

Here at OSTraining, our rooting interest is clear: we're heavily invested in Drupal 8. Our Drupal 8 Beginner class has over 1.2 million views on YouTube, and our team is producing lots of fresh D8 material.

The most likely outcome is still that DrupalCon Baltimore allows the community to clear the air, Drupal 8.4 produces a lot of great new features, and the community rallies behind Drupal 8.

But that bright future is not yet assured, and this recent controversy dropped into a community that was already nervous.


About the author

Steve is the founder of OSTraining. Originally from the UK, he now lives in Sarasota in the USA. Steve's work straddles the line between teaching and web development.

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