Back in February, I was excited to find out that the Obama administration was using Drupal for the high-profile recovery.gov site. I was so excited in fact, I even blogged about it: Recovery.gov and Drupal. Well, recovery.gov is back in the news, this time framed as an $18million boondoggle.
Initially, despite being dumbfounded by where that much money was going to be spent, I was still hopeful that we would see the existing site improved with new data, more visualization options, etc. And I even wondered if some of the improvements would find their way back into Drupal itself. Yes, I was optimistic.
But then I made a trip over to the Web site for Smartronix Inc., the new prime contractor for recovery.gov. Their site layout has a fixed height, is implemented with a table-based layout, and has a lot of links ending in .aspx. To put it in Slashdot terms: 1999 called, and it wants its non-resizable, table-based layout back.
Now who knows, maybe they will use that $18million to expand the existing site while keeping Drupal and continuing to use semantic markup and a beautiful design that fits so well with the Obama branding. But early signs seem to point to this being highly unlikely.
Hello! My name is Eric Weik. I am a computer scientist, photographer, musician, and occasional blogger. New Rivers Digital is my software consulting business. I am dedicated to using open source software and open data standards for Web development and applications integration. In particular, I am an ardent Drupal fan and specialize in Drupal module development, theming, and data architecture integration.
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Recovery.gov in the News Again
In:Back in February, I was excited to find out that the Obama administration was using Drupal for the high-profile recovery.gov site. I was so excited in fact, I even blogged about it:
Recovery.gov and Drupal. Well, recovery.gov is back in the news, this time framed as an $18million boondoggle.
Initially, despite being dumbfounded by where that much money was going to be spent, I was still hopeful that we would see the existing site improved with new data, more visualization options, etc. And I even wondered if some of the improvements would find their way back into Drupal itself. Yes, I was optimistic.
But then I made a trip over to the Web site for Smartronix Inc., the new prime contractor for recovery.gov. Their site layout has a fixed height, is implemented with a table-based layout, and has a lot of links ending in .aspx. To put it in Slashdot terms: 1999 called, and it wants its non-resizable, table-based layout back.
Now who knows, maybe they will use that $18million to expand the existing site while keeping Drupal and continuing to use semantic markup and a beautiful design that fits so well with the Obama branding. But early signs seem to point to this being highly unlikely.
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Hello! My name is Eric Weik. I am a computer scientist, photographer, musician, and occasional blogger. New Rivers Digital is my software consulting business. I am dedicated to using open source software and open data standards for Web development and applications integration. In particular, I am an ardent Drupal fan and specialize in Drupal module development, theming, and data architecture integration.
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