On July 19th, Joomla 1.7 will be released and this version is something special because of various reasons. Before I go into details, I want to mention a few user groups.
If you need a website and you are new to Joomla!, you can download and install it and you can build your website in a very easy way. Even when you are only using the core package, and even if you are just a beginner in this field. If you need help getting started, here is a link: http://cocoate.com/j17 Have fun!
All the groups mentioned above are, or could be, members of ‘the Joomla! community’. Ask yourself ‘What do I expect from a new major release’? Most of these group members are asking themselves:
For people who look at the user interface or to any ‘visible’ features I have a short answer. In the user interface of the alpha version I examined, only one single checkbox is added in the mass mail component. It is now possible to include or exclude blocked users in a mass mail. This is a nice feature but it will not ‘blow your mind’.
[UPDATE July 7th]
An important feature concerning multilanguage is added to Joomla! 1.7 (Multilang in 1.7 What's new?)
[/UPDATE]
It is not that new, but it’s very necessary to understand it. In 2010, a release cycle of short and long term releases was introduced for Joomla!. Every six months, a new version of Joomla! will be released. It started with Joomla! 1.6 in January 2011 as the first short term release, and it continues now with Joomla! 1.7 as the second short term release.
After three short term releases, a long term release will come up. That means, that every 18 months, a long term release of Joomla! will appear. So, the first long term release will be Joomla! 1.8 in January 2012.
I found two infographics made by Gnumla and Sander Poitjer to visualize the release cycles (Figure 1, Figure 2).
Figure 1: (@gnumax)
Figure 2: Sander Poitjer is working since April 2011 on a #Joomla Development Strategy Infographic!
How does support work with this new release cycle?
If you look at the existing Joomla! 1.5 as a long term release, it will be supported three months after the next long term release. This means that you don’t have to upgrade your existing Joomla! 1.5 site to the upcoming Joomla! 1.7. But, in January 2012, when the next long term release comes out you have to think about updating and in April 2012 you should.
The support for a short term release ends with the release of the next short term release.
If you use the newest version of Joomla! which currently is Joomla! 1.6.4, the update process is as easy as one-click in the backend. If you are using an earlier version of Joomla! you can upgrade with the help of the jUpgrade component written by Matias Aguirre. Keep in mind that it is not necessary to upgrade an existing Joomla! 1.5 site to Joomla! 1.7, but it would make your life easier to update once Joomla! 1.8 is released!
The idea of this separation was born after the launch of Joomla! 1.0 in the year 2005 and it took nearly six years to implement it. It will be released on July 4th, and it will change the way developers, architects and service providers deal with Joomla! in the future.
Well, going Gaga is definitely the right description :) Let’s have a closer look.
What confuses me most when I tried this version was the numbering. But, I found a very simple answer to that. The version 11.1 is the actual Joomla! Platform version and the first 'major release' will be 11.2. The numbering scheme for the platform consists of the year number followed by a sequence number, so 11.1 was the first release in 2011. The next release on July 4th will be 11.2. The first release in 2012 will be numbered 12.1.
Every three months a new version of the Joomla! platform will be released.
The platform package consists of the files stored in the folder /libraries and /media. The platform has no user interface. The platform source code is stored in the Git version control system GitHub.
The release of Joomla 1.7 and the Joomla! platform 11.2 will not introduce anything that is technically new, but it is the beginning of a new phase of the Joomla! project.
To come back to the headline. In my point of view the Joomla! Platform is the heart beat of the project. It's easy to write a CMS but it's hard to envision, construct, and maintain a long term platform.
Maybe it is the real, true beginning of the Joomla! project. Get involved!!
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