Joomla! World Conference 2026

The JCM Team is proud to present you the July Issue of the Joomla! Community Magazine!

This month’s edition features:

  • An interview with Sigrid Gramlinger (by yours truly) about the New to Joomla sessions she initiated
  • A case study about Migrating from Joomgallery to Phoca Gallery, by Joomlablr
  • An article by Dan Atrill about Making Your Joomla Backend Bespoke for Clients
  • Serge Billon interviewed Extensions Developer Tassos Marinos
  • Philip Walton gives us Helpful tips to Make your Joomla event welcoming for all
  • Herman Peeren takes us through the first steps of extension development, by showing us how to Get things done without making a component (first in series about... making components)
  • Joomla 6, what's in it for you?, by Philip Walton
  • Viviana Menzel shows us how to Create a banner from Joomla's category description
  • Emmanuel Lemor's third episode of the template and framework series is about Sparky, Astroid and T4
  • Eoin Oliver found out How to solve the Joomla Error 500 - Sorry, there was a problem we could not recover from, and shares this experience with us
  • Niels Braczek wrote a tutorial Core URL Shortener: Simplify Your URLs with Apache
  • And once again, you can help Joomla by joining Pizza, Bugs & Fun!

Thanks to all those who participated.

The Call for Authors for the Community Magazine is always open, we are eager to receive your articles.

If you want to write for the Magazine, regularly or just once, drop us a line at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

Contributed to this issue:
Luca Marzo (Co-Editor), Anja de Crom (Co-Editor), Sandra Decoux (Creative Director), Louise Hawkins (Creative Director), Niels Braczek (Author), Philip Walton (Author), Viviana Menzel (Author), Serge Billon (Author), Emmanuel Lemor (Author), Joomlablr (Author), Eoin Oliver (Author), Herman Peeren (Author).

We want to thank also all the developers, leaders and volunteers who dedicated their time to answer our interviews.

About the author

Before I got my current job as Coordinator Communications & Digital, I ran my own company for 25 years. The first 15 years I was a writer / editor / journalist / writing coach. 

In 2009 I started working with Joomla, not knowing anything about webdesign. I joined a JUG in 2012, two months later I was co-organizer :) (and stayed co-organizer for about five years).

I loved working with Joomla so much that I started projects, just to be able to create a website for them. That's when I thought: hey, maybe it's time for a career switch. In 2014 I decided to go pro with Joomla and switch to webdesign instead of writing. 

Volunteer work

I already mentioned the JUG. After that I did a number of other things over the years:

  • Writer: I wrote articles about Joomla in a Dutch webdesigner magazine.
  • Speaker at JUGs and JoomlaDays.
  • Member of the Dutch JoomlaDagen team for three years.
  • Member of the team that organized all three editions of Joostock (a Joomlacamp/unconference event).
  • Editor of the Dutch Joomla web agency brochure, a brochure webdesigners can use to convince their potential clients that Joomla is the right choice for them.

In 2020 I've started contributing to the Joomla Community Magazine, first as an author, and since 2022 I'm Team Leader of the wonderful Joomla Community Magazine Team. 

Why I contribute to Joomla

To many people Joomla is just a tool. But if you look a little closer, you'll notice it's much more than that. It's a living system, raised and nourished by a community of volunteers dedicating their time to make it the best CMS ever. Without volunteers, Joomla wouldn't exist. It's not 'just a product'. Everyone who uses Joomla, can do so because someone, somewhere, contributed to it. I want to give back to the community that keeps Joomla alive.

And, probably needless to say: I love being part of that community. 

Contributing to Joomla by volunteering brought me so much: valuable experience, more knowledge and a better understanding of Joomla and its community, and the opportunity to work together with a crowd of lovely people all over the world.

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Some articles published on the Joomla Community Magazine represent the personal opinion or experience of the Author on the specific topic and might not be aligned to the official position of the Joomla Project

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