WordPress Planet

November 12, 2010

Mark Jaquith: Post Formats vs. Custom Post Types

Some people are confused about the Post Formats feature that will be made available to themes in WordPress 3.1, especially how it differs from Custom Post Types.

Custom Post Types

These were poorly named. Think: Custom Content Types. That is, non-post content. Examples: employees, products, attachments, menu items, pages, pets. If you want it to show up in your site’s main RSS feed, then it’s probably not a custom post type.

Post Formats

A Post Format is a formatting designation made to a post. For example, a post could be a short “aside,” or a Kottke.org-style link post, or a video post, or a photo gallery post. The data you input might be slightly different — video post should contain a video, an aside should probably not be very long, a link post should have a link. And the way that the post is displayed on the site might be very different — an aside will typically be displayed without a title, a link post may have the title point to the link. A video post may be wider, or have social sharing buttons auto-appended. But they’re all still posts. They still show up in your feed, and you still find them in the Posts section of the WordPress backend.

The important thing to note about Post Formats is that they are going to be a standardized convention. So any theme that supports Post Formats and follows the standard will display your posts in a way that makes sense. Before, themes had to set up category-based conventions, and these conventions weren’t shared by other themes. This is a better way of handling that, and it should make it even easier to switch between themes than before!

Themers should turn to the Post Formats page in the Codex for info on implementation. Note that we’re not yet in beta, so expect this page to change a bit.


by Mark Jaquith at November 12, 2010 05:20 AM under Post Formats

November 11, 2010

Publisher Blog: Matt Mullenweg on KTEH “This is Us!”

Matt Mullenweg, the founding developer of WordPress and founder of Automattic, was recently interviewed on KTEH’s program “This is Us!”.

In this 5 minute interview they covers lots of topics including WordCamps and Open Source / GPL.

[ Visit KTEH & YouTube ]


by Raanan Bar-Cohen at November 11, 2010 11:11 PM under Matt Mullenweg

Weblog Tools Collection: WordPress.org Theme Uploader Gets Smarter

The uploader of the official WordPress theme directory has received a rather helpful upgrade courtesy of Otto.

The previous version of the WordPress theme uploader checked the themes against the theme review guidelines, but only reported the first error that it encountered, sometimes trapping theme developers in a frustrating cycle of trial and error.  The new version performs an even more intensive scan of the theme and returns a list of all results, providing theme developers with a handy to-do list to get their themes up to spec for the directory.

Have you submitted a theme with the new uploader yet?  Does it help to streamline the process?  If you haven’t uploaded your themes to the official directory, does the new uploader inspire you to give it a try?

by James Huff at November 11, 2010 01:00 PM under themes

WordPress Podcast: WordPress UI improvements with John O’Nolan

John O’Nolan is currently working as Deputy Head of the UI group for WordPress on the development of the user interface, essentially designing the complete look and feel of the WordPress platform. Outside of his work for WordPress he is an independent web designer, entrepreneur and writer. He also contributes to a web design podcast on ExplicitWeb, and is a founder of Phosr, an upcoming web application developed for photographers.

As John is a core member of the WordPress UI group, today’s shows takes an inside look into what he is currently working on and what he sees for the future development of the WordPress user interface.

  • John explains the ins and outs of what his work with the WordPress UI group entails on a daily basis, and talks through some of the changes he has been involved in from pre 3.0 versions of WordPress to now.
  • It has just been announced that John is now the Head of Operations for Radiiate, a creative agency founded by Adii, one of the founders of WooThemes. He talks through what the company is and does.
  • John first started using the 2.3 WordPress release, and began his work with the core WordPress UI group on version 2.9.2 at the beginning of this year. We asked him for his opinion on how much progression there has been within the WordPress user interface, and also in comparison to other major open source platforms.
  • John talks through upcoming changes to new releases of WordPress and various elements of the user interface that are being improved and developed, including his work on a massive re factor of the WordPress Admin CSS files.
  • Frederick introduces and discusses SASS (Otherwise known as Syntactically Awesome Stylesheets) – an extension of CSS3 which helps in making it easier to manage large groups of CSS – especially for the benefit of developers.
  • John discusses a new book he is writing with Adii from WooThemes called ‘Designing Emotion’ and how it came into being
  • We touch on the world of personal branding in the online community, and John’s recent presentation on the topic.
  • And finally we ask John what exciting things will be happening in 2010/2011 within WordPress.

Plugin picks of the week

  • After The Deadline – a plugin that checks spelling and grammar in a post. It scans on the fly in the background and if you forget to do it, it will prompt you when you go to publish post. A great plugin for increasing professionalism and quality of posts.
  • Subscribe To Comments Reloaded – this plugin adds the option for you to force people to verify their email address before they can add a comment.
  • Simple User Admin – this plugin allows you to search for blogs and users, and easily change roles for people for specific blogs.

by joost@pressthis.com (Joost de Valk & Frederick Townes) at November 11, 2010 09:24 AM under Podcast

November 10, 2010

Weblog Tools Collection: WordPress Theme Releases for 11/10

daily

Daily is a free, premium like, WordPress theme that comes with a beautiful design, many great features, and is perfect for daily bloggers.

desk

Desk is a very clean and functional theme based of a piece of paper lying on a desk.

by James Huff at November 10, 2010 01:00 PM under wordpress themes

Publisher Blog: Japanese Pop Culture Space NEW PEOPLE Chooses WordPress

NEW PEOPLE is less a retail space than an embassy for Japanese pop culture in the US, showcasing the latest live action and anime films, manga, Japanese art, food, music, and fashion in its San Francisco-based three storey space.

NEWPEOPLE Store

So it’s awesome to see that the clean, minimal style of the building itself is mirrored in a beautifully designed WordPress-powered website that shows off everything they have to offer:

NEWPEOPLE Homepage

The design itself — created by btrax for publishing powerhouse and owners VIZ Pictures — doesn’t just mirror the clean good looks of the store, but also makes use of an interesting floor-based navigation system, virtually guiding site visitors through the different offerings found in the real-life version of the NEW PEOPLE space:

NEWPEOPLE Navigation

The roll-out floor-by-floor navigation

The site nicely shows off the CMS and rich-media capabilities of WordPress with lots of video, photo galleries and other rich media content in keeping with the culture, retail, cinema and eating experiences of the space.

Be sure to check out the website, or, if you find yourself in San Francisco’s Japan Town, the store itself.


by Michael Pick at November 10, 2010 08:03 AM under NEW PEOPLE

November 09, 2010

Matt: 1.0 Is the Loneliest Number

Many entrepreneurs idolize Steve Jobs. He’s such a perfectionist, they say. Nothing leaves the doors of 1 Infinite Loop in Cupertino without a polish and finish that makes geeks everywhere drool. No compromise!

I like Apple for the opposite reason: they’re not afraid of getting a rudimentary 1.0 out into the world.

“No wireless. Less space than a nomad. Lame.” — cmdrtaco, Slashdot.org, 2001, reviewing the first iPod

I remember my first 1G iPhone. Like a meal you have to wait for, or a line outside a club, the fact that I stood in line for hours made the first time I swiped to unlock the phone that much sweeter. It felt like I was on Star Trek and this was my magical tricorder… a tricorder that constantly dropped calls on AT&T’s network, had a headphone adapter that didn’t fit any of the hundreds of dollars of headphones I owned, ran no applications, had no copy and paste, and was as slow as molasses.

Now, the crazy thing about that release is when the original iPhone went public, flaws and all, you know that in a secret room somewhere on Apple’s campus they had a working prototype of the 3GS with a faster processor, better battery life, normal headphone jack… a perfect everything. Steve Jobs was probably already carrying around one in his pocket. How painful it must have been to have everyone criticizing them for all the flaws they had already fixed but couldn’t release yet because they were waiting for component prices to come down or for some bugs to be worked out of the app store.

“$400 for an Mp3 Player! I’d call it the Cube 2.0 as it wont sell, and be killed off in a short time… and it’s not really functional. Uuhh Steve, can I have a PDA now?” — elitemacor, macrumors.com, 2001, responding to the original iPod announcement

Or, I wonder, are they really quite zen about the whole thing? There is a dark time in WordPress development history, a lost year. Version 2.0 was released on December 31st, 2005, and version 2.1 came out on January 22nd, 2007. Now just from the dates, you might imagine that perhaps we had some sort of rift in the open source community, that all the volunteers left or that perhaps WordPress just slowed down. In fact it was just the opposite, 2006 was a breakthrough year for WP in many ways: WP was downloaded 1.5 million times that year, and we were starting to get some high-profile blogs switching over. The growing prominence had attracted scores of new developers to the project and we were committing new functionality and fixes faster than we ever had before.

What killed us was “one more thing.” We could have easily done three major releases that year if we had drawn a line in the sand, said “finished,” and shipped the darn thing. The problem is that the longer it’s been since your last release the more pressure and anticipation there is, so you’re more likely to try to slip in just one more thing or a fix that will make a feature really shine. For some projects, this literally goes on forever.

“hey – heres an idea Apple – rather than enter the world of gimmicks and toys, why dont you spend a little more time sorting out your pathetically expensive and crap server line up? or are you really aiming to become a glorified consumer gimmicks firm?” — Pants, macrumors.com, 2001

I imagine prior to the launch of the iPod, or the iPhone, there were teams saying the same thing: the copy + paste guys are *so close* to being ready and we know Walt Mossberg is going to ding us for this so let’s just not ship to the manufacturers in China for just a few more weeks… The Apple teams were probably embarrassed. But if you’re not embarrassed when you ship your first version you waited too long.

A beautiful thing about Apple is how quickly they obsolete their own products. I imagine this also makes the discipline of getting things out there easier. Like I mentioned before, the longer it’s been since the last release the more pressure there is, but if you know that if your bit of code doesn’t make this version but there’s the +0.1 coming out in 6 weeks, then it’s not that bad. It’s like flights from San Francisco to LA, if you miss one you know there’s another one an hour later so it’s not a big deal. Amazon has done a fantastic job of this with the Kindle as well, with a new model every year.

Usage is like oxygen for ideas. You can never fully anticipate how an audience is going to react to something you’ve created until it’s out there. That means every moment you’re working on something without it being in the public it’s actually dying, deprived of the oxygen of the real world. It’s even worse because development doesn’t happen in a vacuum — if you have a halfway decent idea, you can be sure that there are two or three teams somewhere in the world that independently came up with it and are working on the same thing, or something you haven’t even imagined that disrupts the market you’re working in. (Think of all the podcasting companies — including Ev Williams’ Odeo — before iTunes built podcasting functionality in.)

By shipping early and often you have the unique competitive advantage of hearing from real people what they think of your work, which in best case helps you anticipate market direction, and in worst case gives you a few people rooting for you that you can email when your team pivots to a new idea. Nothing can recreate the crucible of real usage.

You think your business is different, that you’re only going to have one shot at press and everything needs to be perfect for when Techcrunch brings the world to your door. But if you only have one shot at getting an audience, you’re doing it wrong.

After the debacle of the 2.0 -> 2.1 lost year of 2006 the WordPress community adopted a fairly aggressive schedule of putting a major release out 3 times a year, and we stuck to it fairly well although in 2009-2010 we’ve slacked a bit, falling into the “one more thing” mentality again. But more fundamentally it’s still shrink-wrap software, which means that updates burden its users in some way so we have to spread them out.

That’s why I love working on web services and pretty much everything Automattic focuses on is a service. On WordPress.com we deploy code to production twenty or thirty times a day and anyone in the company can do it. We measure the deploy time to hundreds of servers and if it gets too slow (more than 30-60 seconds) we figure out a new way to optimize it. In that short rapid iteration environment the most important thing isn’t necessarily how perfect code is when you send it out, but how quickly you can revert if you need to so the cost of a mistake is really low, under a minute of brokenness. Someone can go from idea to working code to production and more importantly real users in just a few minutes and I can’t imagine any better form of testing.

“Real artists ship.” — Steve Jobs, 1983

A version 1.0 of this essay appeared in the book Do More Faster. I should also note that Automattic is always hiring.

by Matt at November 09, 2010 05:16 PM under Essays

Matt: On Distraction

“We are made to feel that at any point, somewhere on the globe, something may occur to sweep away old certainties—something that, if we failed to learn about it instantaneously, could leave us wholly unable to comprehend ourselves or our fellows.” – On Distraction by Alain de Botton. I’ll finish this later, I need to reload Techmeme.

by Matt at November 09, 2010 04:44 PM under Asides

Weblog Tools Collection: Embeddable Tweets for WordPress

Twitter introduced Blackbird Pie back in May of this year, providing the world with an easy way to embed fully functional tweets.

Before Blackbird Pie’s introduction, the common way to embed tweets was to simply take a screenshot. Blackbird Pie not only easily embeds the tweet itself, but also leaves the profile link, @-mentions, hashtags, and other links in tact. Despite Blackbird Pie’s usefulness and firm roots in Twitter, it’s received little recognition over the past months.

Blackbird Pie will be getting some well-deserved recognition now that it has been fully integrated with WordPress.com, and those of you with self-hosted WordPress blogs can join the party too with the Twitter Blackbird Pie plugin.

What do you think of Blackbird Pie? Will you be making use of it on your blog?

by James Huff at November 09, 2010 01:00 PM under wordpress.com

Matt: 15 Blogging Best Practices

Top 15 Blogging Best Practices, which I found via the Share the Word blog.

by Matt at November 09, 2010 02:20 AM under Asides

November 08, 2010

Donncha: WP Super Cache and mod_pagespeed

So I finally got a chance to try mod_pagespeed on this server. I particularly wanted to know if it behaved well with WP Super Cache as I’d read reports that it causes problems.

Unfortunately those problems are real but I’ve been told that a new release will be out shortly to address a few bugs so perhaps this will help.

If you’d like to try mod_pagespeed make sure you disable compression in WP Super Cache and clear the cache first. Even though the docs state that the module always generates uncompressed HTML it appears to do the opposite. In fact, it tries to load mod_deflate:

# more pagespeed.load
LoadModule pagespeed_module /usr/lib/apache2/modules/mod_pagespeed.so

# Only attempt to load mod_deflate if it hasn’t been loaded already.
<IfModule !mod_deflate.c>
LoadModule deflate_module /usr/lib/apache2/modules/mod_deflate.so
</IfModule>

When things were working, supercached files were processed by mod_pagespeed correctly, I noticed inline Javascript was modified to remove whitespace and I presume other changes were made too but I already minify things and have static files off on another domain so perhaps the changes made on my pages are less minimal.

The changes made by mod_pagespeed, like minifying inline Javascript, are not cached by WP Super Cache so your server has to make these changes each time a page is served. I know that mod_deflate does not cache the gzipped page content, but zips up the page each time it’s served. Mod_pagespeed does however provide a caching mechanism so there’s a good chance those changes are cached there. I haven’t looked at the code so I don’t know.

I did have problems with dynamic pages. A simple phpinfo() refused to load quite often, and backend requests sometimes became stuck. Load on the server sky rocketed occasionally, usually when the module cache directory was emptied.

For now I’ve turned mod_pagespeed off but that might change as this is a young project and maturing fast! I’ll update this post whenever this happens.

Related Posts

by Donncha at November 08, 2010 04:14 PM under wp-super-cache

Weblog Tools Collection: WordPress Plugin Releases for 11/8

New plugins

Disable Admin Bar disables the admin bar that now appears on the public side of WordPress 3.1 (beta) blogs.

Twitter Blackbird Pie allows you to add awesome looking embedded HTML representations of actual tweets in your blog posts just by adding simple shortcodes.

WP Event Ticketing makes it easy to sell tickets to an event directly from your WordPress website.

wpStoreCart is a free, open source, and full featured e-commerce platform built atop of WordPress.

Updated plugins

Easy FancyBox enables the FancyBox 1.3.3 jQuery extension on all image, SWF, YouTube and Vimeo links.

jQuery Lightbox For Native Galleries makes the native WordPress galleries use a lightbox script called ColorBox to display the fullsize images.

WP SlimStat is a simple but powerful web analytics plugin for WordPress.

by James Huff at November 08, 2010 01:00 PM under WordPress

November 07, 2010

Matt: RTE Interview

When I was in Ireland last week I got the chance to appear on the nightly news show on RTE, which you can view here on WPTV. It was interesting because (1) I was standing in the oddest spot and (2) because it was live broadcast I had one of those things in my ear and there was a second or so delay, which was kind of fun. Here’s the view from the broadcast van. The guest photos were taken by Ciara Beades and Aisling Keane.

by Matt at November 07, 2010 06:25 PM under press

Weblog Tools Collection: WordPress 3.1 Features Taking Shape

Development on WordPress 3.1 is well underway, and with the string freeze coming up on December 1st, some key new features are beginning to take shape.

Earlier this week, Automattic code wrangler Stephane Daury published a revealing screenshot of the new internal linking feature, while WordPress lead developer Mark Jaquith briefly discussed the new post formats feature.

What do you think of the internal linking and post formats features thus far? Will you be trying the 3.1 beta when it’s released later this month?

by James Huff at November 07, 2010 01:00 PM under WordPress 3.1

Matt: Spike Jonze and Kanye

I’ve seen two interesting online short films recently, and I’d recommend both (if you’re above 18). The first is “I’m Here” by Spike Jonze, a love story, which you can see on its official Absolut-sponsored site or on Youtube through these Ebert links. The second is Kanye’s new bizarre but gorgeous short film Runaway, viewable on YouTube, which features the beautiful Selita Ebanks. Both are about 30 minutes long, and will have you thinking and talking to your friends.

by Matt at November 07, 2010 02:16 AM under Asides

November 06, 2010

Weblog Tools Collection: WordPress Theme Releases for 11/06

blue and white

Blue and White is a simple blue and white theme, suitable for any niche.

blue taste

Blue Taste is a blue, clean, fresh, stylish, fixed width, and two column theme.

feed me

Feed Me, Seymour has dozens of possibilities when it comes to layout. One or two sidebars, multiple site widths, header logo and tons more.

by James Huff at November 06, 2010 01:00 PM under wordpress themes

November 05, 2010

Weblog Tools Collection: Akismet Gets a Facelift

Akismet was one of Automattic’s first projects, and after 5 years of sporting the same design, the entire site has received a major facelift.

On first glance, the new site presents Akismet’s benefits in a much clearer way, and offers clearer distinction between the free and paid licenses. Fans of the old spam stats will probably notice that they are no longer featured on the front page, but fear not, they have just been moved to the About page.

Akismet’s anti-spam offerings have continue to grow dramatically over the last 5 years. What began as a single WordPress plugin is now available in 24 plugins and 14 libraries.

What do you think of Akismet’s redesign? Do you use Akismet on your blog? If not, how do you protect your blog from spam?

by James Huff at November 05, 2010 01:00 PM under plugins

November 04, 2010

Matt: Implications Of Blogging

Philip Leigh writes about The Implications Of Blogging for MediaPost. “[M]uch like the printing press transformed publishing, the true cultural significance of blogging — which is only incipient at present — will be a consequence of its production process.”

by Matt at November 04, 2010 03:28 PM under Asides

Weblog Tools Collection: WordPress Plugin Releases for 11/4

New plugins

DynamicWP Fisheye Menu will build a Fisheye menu from a list of links.

Expiring Content Shortcode provides a shortcode to wrap around content, setting a date and time for it to disappear.

Updated plugins

All in One Webmaster has options to add Google, Bing, Alexa, Blog Catalog, Yahoo’s Webmaster and Analytics code (meta tags).

Facebook Members is a WordPress Social Plugin that enables Facebook Page owners to attract and gain Likes from their own website.

FourSquare Integration allows you to view your last checkins as a list or on a Google map on Pages/Posts.

TagSpace lets visitors browse your WordPress categories and tags by flying through them in 3D.

Twitter Goodies shows your twitter profile/search tweets under your Sidebar Area (Widget), Post and/or Pages.

WP Archive-Sitemap Generator generates simple Archives/Sitemaps based on your blog’s posts and pages.

WP Google-Buzz automatically displays a Google Buzz button for every post and page.

by James Huff at November 04, 2010 01:00 PM under WordPress

WordPress.tv: Introducing WordPress For Nokia


WordPress For Nokia

by Michael Pick at November 04, 2010 04:47 AM under wordpress for nokia

WP iPhone: Version 2.6.2 Is Now Available

Version 2.6.2 of WordPress for iOS is now available to download in the App Store! This release addresses several annoying bugs, and also includes a few small improvements and a new crash reporting system.

Included in this update:

  • Fix for landscape orientation issue when editing posts.
  • Fix for incorrect date/time on publish.
  • Fix for sync issues when viewing posts.
  • Fix for problems connecting to WordPress.org blogs using HTTP Auth.
  • Fix for crash during Autosave check after publish.
  • Fix for intermittent failures when uploading media.
  • Fix for crash when editing WordPress.org blog settings.
  • Improved HTML output for media uploads.
  • Improved handling of XML-RPC endpoints for WordPress.org blogs.
  • Improved UX when adding WordPress.org blogs.
  • Added in-app crash reporting system.
  • Added option to use HTML 4 tags when embedding video in a post.

Go check it out and then let us know what you think here in the comments, in the forum, and on Twitter.


by Chris Boyd at November 04, 2010 03:37 AM under News

November 03, 2010

Weblog Tools Collection: WordPress.com Launches FoodPress

Just a few days ago, I was trying to decide what to do with my significantly neglected WordPress.com blog, and I decided that I was going to start a food blog “just like everyone else on WordPress.com.” Well, it looks like I wasn’t alone in that far-reaching generalization.

Just in time for the food-filled fall and winter holidays, WordPress.com has launched the simply awesome and hunger-inspiring FoodPress.

FoodPress features the best food-related posts from WordPress.com’s network of over 14 million blogs. The posts are hand-picked “by scouring food-related tag pages like food, recipes, baking, cocktails, and more,” so don’t forget to tag your posts!

I hope that FoodPress is the first in a long line of GenrePressing WordPress.com blogs, and I hope that technology and photography are next.

What do you think of FoodPress, and what kind of GenrePressing blogs do you want to see next?

P.S. GenrePress – you heard it here first, though I am officially licensing the term under the GPL.

by James Huff at November 03, 2010 01:00 PM under wordpress.com

November 02, 2010

Alex King: Expiring Content Shortcode

I released a really simple little plugin. All it does is allow you to mark content that should only display until a certain date/time, then hides it after that date/time. So it doesn’t do much, but what it does is pretty useful.

The download an more information for the Expiring Content Shortcode plugin is with with my other plugins on the Crowd Favorite website.

by Alex at November 02, 2010 08:45 PM under WordPress

Weblog Tools Collection: WordPress Theme Releases for 11/02

codium extend

Codium Extend is a minimalist theme for WordPress and ready for all the WordPress 3.x features like custom menus, colors or background.

istudio

iStudio is a very stylish Macintosh-inspired theme.

magazine basic

Magazine Basic offers many different layout possibilities. Two custom widgets, featured posts and user login help you create a fully functioning magazine/newspaper style web site.

by James Huff at November 02, 2010 01:00 PM under wordpress themes

Matt: FoodPress and Nokia

Two fun launches today: FoodPress is a new collection of the best WordPress food writing in the world, right now from .com only. Don’t visit if you’re hungry. :) Second, we’ve launched the WordPress mobile app for Nokia and it’s in their Ovi store. Update: And a bonus, check out the slick new design on Akismet that just launched.

by Matt at November 02, 2010 02:23 AM under Asides

Matt: F.ounders Camp in Dublin

I attended the F.ounders Camp in Dublin, Ireland put on by Paddy Cosgrave. It included a lot of great folks from both sides of the pond, including Jack Dorsey and Michael Birch pictured here in this album.

MCM_3942 MCM_3945 MCM_3946 MCM_3949 MCM_3951 MCM_3954 MCM_3955 MCM_3958 MCM_3961 MCM_3962 MCM_3967 MCM_3968 MCM_3971 MCM_3973 MCM_3978 MCM_3981 Check out the scarf MCM_3987 MCM_3990 MCM_3993 Crepe MCM_3997 MCM_3999 MCM_4000 MCM_4001 MCM_4002 MCM_4003 Rugby player misses a ball The stage for live broadcast MCM_4015 MCM_4018 MCM_4025 Control screens RTÉ, Ireland's National Television and Radio Broadcaster My view MCM_4042 MCM_4043 MCM_4045 MCM_4046 Keyhole and old-fashioned lock MCM_4049 MCM_4052 Xbox Kinect pop-up store MCM_4058 MCM_4059 MCM_4060 MCM_4061 MCM_4064 MCM_4065 MCM_4066 MCM_4067 MCM_4069 MCM_4070 MCM_4073 MCM_4076 MCM_4082 MCM_4083 MCM_4084 MCM_4085 Irish breakfast deconstructed with quail egg MCM_4087 MCM_4089 Shanagarry smoke salmon Roast fillet of venison and colcannon MCM_4092 Gingernut crème brûlée with apple and pear compote MCM_4100 MCM_4107 MCM_4123 MCM_4125 MCM_4128 MCM_4131 MCM_4142 MCM_4143 MCM_4148 MCM_4162 MCM_4164 MCM_4167 MCM_4170 MCM_4172 MCM_4173 MCM_4179 MCM_4180 MCM_4181 MCM_4184 MCM_4190 MCM_4191 MCM_4198 MCM_4200 MCM_4207 MCM_4211 MCM_4214 MCM_4215 MCM_4228 MCM_4229 MCM_4233 Lillie's Bordello MCM_4236 MCM_4242 MCM_4247 MCM_4250 MCM_4253 MCM_4256 MCM_4262 MCM_4263 MCM_4265 Branded bottle of Jameson After-party room service

by Matt at November 02, 2010 12:45 AM under Gallery

November 01, 2010

Matt: John Medina in SF Tomorrow

John Medina, the author of one of my favorite books Brain Rules, is going to be at Automattic’s office tomorrow (Tuesday the 2nd) at 5 PM to have some after-work drinks and give a short talk. We’ve reserved some seats for the SF WordPress community to come by, and we even have free copies of his books for the first 30 people to show up. RSVP is required, so register here. Hope to see a few of you guys there!

by Matt at November 01, 2010 09:07 PM under Asides

Matt: Jane Kim Again

I first posted about Jane Kim in 2004, on my first visit to San Francisco. Fast-forward 6 years and she’s President of the School Board and going for District 6 Supervisor in tomorrow’s elections. If you’re in San Francisco, or know someone cool who is, check out her website and keep her in mind at the polls tomorrow. Tomorrow will also be my first time voting in person instead of by mail, which I expect to be annoying but worth it Update: And she won!

by Matt at November 01, 2010 07:17 PM under Asides

Donncha: More plugins releases soon

WP Super Cache, Domain Mapping and Sitewide Tags are all getting quite some attention.

Ron and I have been busy with Domain Mapping and Sitewide Tags.
A new version of Domain Mapping was released a few days ago with a couple of bug fixes and also a new feature that allows you to ignore the “primary domain” on your blogs. It has the potential for duplicate content if a blog can be found at multiple domains but some people need this feature. With careful organisation of content this can be avoided.

Sitewide Tags is almost ready for a new release. Ron added thumbnail support last week, and I checked in code last weekend to fill in the tags page with posts made before the plugin was installed. It needs testing, and if you’re any good at PHP please take a look at the development version on the download page.

WP Super Cache has had a number of bugs squished, preloading works better – it cancels immediately when you click that Cancel button. It also prints the url of the current post being preloaded which is handy if you’re not sure it’s working or not.
I added some extra debugging to make sure the homepage is cached correctly, but you have to enable “extra paranoid checks”. It works fine on my sites but I would really appreciate feedback if you have WordPress installed in a directory, installed in a directory different to where the site is or whatever configuration you might have. If it doesn’t work, the only side effect is that the homepage won’t be cached so it’s easy to spot when there are problems. I want these checks to be active all the time when the new version is finally released so it’s important this works correctly. Grab the development version from the download page and give it a whirl!

Don’t worry about upgrading when the next versions of Super Cache and Sitewide Tags are released. The version number in the development version is the same as the current release so a new version notice will still appear on your dashboard.

I almost forgot. Cookies for Comments has been worked on too! I added code that keeps an eye on how long a visitor reads a post before they post a comment. If the comment is made faster than a certain time the comment is automatically caught. I’ve used it over the weekend here and elsewhere and it’s catching a good number of “real looking” but spammy comments! The development version on the download page is what you’re looking for if you want to try this.

I think I need a P2 blog to post these sort of updates. Blog titles are such a pain sometimes.

Related Posts

by Donncha at November 01, 2010 04:43 PM under wp-super-cache

WP Android: WordPress for Android 1.3.6: Media Improvements and More

WordPress for Android 1.3.6* has been released to Android Market which includes some significant improvements to adding media to your blog posts and pages.  Here’s what’s new:

Multiple Media Item Sharing

You can now select multiple items in the Android gallery app and share them to a new post in WordPress for Android.  Here’s a quick video tutorial on how to do it:

New Attached Media Display

The media that you’ve added to the post is now displayed in a horizontally scrolling gallery view, making it much easier to view the images that you’ve attached to a post or page.

YouTube Upload Fix

Sharing a video from the YouTube application has been fixed.  When you share a video to a post from the app it will now be correctly embedded in your blog post for viewing.

More Bug Fixes

There’s many more fixes in this release including:

  • Removed ‘read phone state’ permission when installing the app from Android Market.
  • Improved performance on the new post and new page views.
  • New account form now loads correctly.

We’re not stopping here!  Many more great improvements for the app are in the works. Thanks once again to the WordPress and Android community for your support of this app.

*Update November 5th, 2010 – we released version 1.3.7 with some more fixes! Details are in the Android Market ‘Recent Changes’ section for the app.


by Dan at November 01, 2010 03:31 PM under WordPress for Android

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Last updated:

November 12, 2010 11:15 AM
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