Grav has received the 2016 CMS Critic award for Best Open Source CMS thanks to our wonderful community. This award comes during a year of explosive growth for Grav, with over 5,400 people giving it a star on GitHub, and 1,500 hanging out in the Grav chatroom.
The CMS Critic awards have b...
It’s that time again, the CMS Critic Awards are coming and it’s time to nominate your favorite content management systems. Grav, which made it to the top three in multiple categories in the past, needs your help again this year to secure a spot on the voting card.
The CMS Critic Awards is an i...
So I've gotten around to creating the first Grav User Group (GUG) on meetup.com. As I live in Golden, and that's very close to Denver, I figured it would make an ideal location for our first user group. So, if you are in the Denver metro area and want to meetup and talk about Grav, join this group and we'll get some scheduled meetups organized!
I wanted to take this opportunity to outline what we've been working on the past few months and provide some details on what you can expect in the upcoming releases. Since we released Grav 1.0 and the 1.0 version of the Admin Plugin 4 months ago, we have had 10 point releases. These primarily fo...
I'm really proud and excited to announce that I was featured on the inaugural GitHub Community Podcast. This great new podcast is hosted by Jono Bacon who now leads GitHub's open source community efforts.
In this first episode we discuss Grav and explain some of the origins and goals for the...
I just wanted to let Grav-fans know that you can support the project by proudly adorning your laptop, car, notebooks, walls, family dog, whatever, with Grav stickers!
Thanks to our friends at unixstickers.com for helping making this happen!
Wow what a great year 2015 was! We made huge strides last year with our Grav 1.0 final release and the release of many new plugins and themes including our widely anticipated Admin plugin. We also were nominated for Best Free CMS on CMS Critic's annual People's Choice CMS awards. Grav 1.0 w...
Ever since we added support for multi-language and translations in the beta releases of Grav, we have been asked about translating Grav into various languages. This has typically been centered around the Admin plugin as that has the most translation strings and subsequently is the most common focus of translation needs.
Up until this point, the process of translation involved Forking the plugin repository on GitHub, making edits or additions in the various languages, then submitting a pull request. This worked OK at first, but as the plugin became more complex, more strings were getting added, it became harder and harder to manage. We needed a better solution. Enter Crowdin to the rescue!