WordPress 4.5 Beta 4 is now available!
This software is still in development, so we don’t recommend you run it on a production site. Consider setting up a test site just to play with the new version. To test WordPress 4.5, try the WordPress Beta Tester plugin (you’ll want “bleeding edge nightlies”). Or you can download the beta here (zip).
For more information on what’s new in 4.5, check out the Beta 1, Beta 2, and Beta 3 blog posts, along with in-depth field guides on make/core. This is the final planned beta of WordPress 4.5, with a release candidate scheduled for next week.
Some of the changes in Beta 4 include:
- Add support for oEmbed moments and timelines from Twitter (#36197).
- More changes to better support HHVM with Imagick. Please test with HHVM setups and resizing/rotating images (#35973).
- Tightened up the Inline Link feature (#33301, #30468).
- Support
<hr>
editor shortcut with 3 or more dashes (---
); no spaces. To give more time to study the best shortcuts for users, text patterns for bold and italic have been removed and won’t ship with for 4.5 (#33300).
- Fixes for SSL with Responsive Images. Please test with SSL, especially on sites with mixed http/https setups (#34945).
- Allow rewrite rules to work in nested WordPress installations on IIS (#35558).
- Various bug fixes. We’ve made almost 100 changes during the last week.
If you think you’ve found a bug, you can post to the Alpha/Beta area in the support forums. We’d love to hear from you! If you’re comfortable writing a reproducible bug report, file one on the WordPress Trac. There, you can also find a list of known bugs.
Happy testing!
Llegamos al fin
del tiempo pa’ beta
¡Pruébalo Ahora!
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WordPress 4.5 Beta 3 is now available!
This software is still in development, so we don’t recommend you run it on a production site. Consider setting up a test site just to play with the new version. To test WordPress 4.5, try the WordPress Beta Tester plugin (you’ll want “bleeding edge nightlies”). Or you can download the beta here (zip).
For more information on what’s new in 4.5, check out the Beta 1 and Beta 2 blog posts, along with in-depth field guides on make/core. Some of the fixes in Beta 3 include:
- Many Theme Logo Support (#33755) fixes, including support for bundled Twenty Fifteen (#35944).
- Add Responsive Preview to theme install previewer (#36017).
- Support Imagick in HHVM (#35973).
- Whitelist IPTC, XMP, and EXIF profiles from
strip_meta()
to maintain authorship, copyright, license, and image orientation (#28634).
- Support Windows shares/DFS roots in
wp_normalize_path()
(#35996).
- New installs default to generating secret keys and salts locally instead of relying on the WordPress.org API. Please test installing WP in situations where it can’t connect to the internet (like on a 🛳, ✈️, or 🛰) (#35290).
- OPTIONS requests to REST API should return Allow header (#35975).
- Upgrade twemoji.js to version 2 (#36059) and add extra IE11 compatibility (#35977) for Emoji.
- Various bug fixes. We’ve made more than 100 changes during the last week.
If you think you’ve found a bug, you can post to the Alpha/Beta area in the support forums. We’d love to hear from you! If you’re comfortable writing a reproducible bug report, file one on the WordPress Trac. There, you can also find a list of known bugs.
Happy testing!
Beta one, two, three
so many bugs have been fixed
Closer now; four, five.
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WordPress 4.5 Beta 2 is now available!
This software is still in development, so we don’t recommend you run it on a production site. Consider setting up a test site just to play with the new version. To test WordPress 4.5, try the WordPress Beta Tester plugin (you’ll want “bleeding edge nightlies”). Or you can download the beta here (zip).
For more information on what’s new in 4.5, check out the Beta 1 blog post. Some of the fixes in Beta 2 include:
If you think you’ve found a bug, you can post to the Alpha/Beta area in the support forums. We’d love to hear from you! If you’re comfortable writing a reproducible bug report, file one on the WordPress Trac. There, you can also find a list of known bugs.
Happy testing!
It’s peer pressure time
Testing: all cool kids do it
Help find ALL the bugs!
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It’s time for our second global contributor weekend, and this time we’re focusing on the video team. For this month’s challenge, in honor of it being our second month, you have two options for how you can participate! The challenge for this month overall is to work with at least one hour worth of WordCamp video, which you can do by either creating subtitles or editing the video file in preparation for upload to WordPress.tv.
One of the great things about contributing to the video team is that you get to learn so much, since all the work basically involves watching WordCamp presentation videos. Subtitling is a doubly important need, as it is needed to make all those WordCamp videos accessible to people who are deaf or hard of hearing and can’t listen to the audio track, as well as making it possible for the videos to be consumed (in some cases after subtitle translation) by people who speak different languages.
The challenge will last from Saturday, February 27, 2016 through Sunday, February 28, 2016, and the results will be reviewed afterward by members of the video team. If you enjoy the challenge, the video team would be very excited to welcome you into their ranks! Interested? Here’s how to participate.
What About Last Month?
In January, the inaugural contributor weekend was focused on the support forums. That challenge had 73 participants, including 10 people who provided 20 or more correct answers to open support threads, thereby winning the challenge. Congratulations to Harris Anastasiadis, Ahmad Awais, Takis Bouyouris, Phil Erb, Eric Gunawan, Jackie McBride, Diana Nichols, Kostas Nicolacopoulos, Juhi Saxena, and Sarah Semark! To them and to everyone else who participated, thank you so much for your efforts. Every answer helps, and over the course of this contributor weekend, these amazing volunteers responded to 800 support threads. The support forums queue of requests with no replies went from 28 pages to 7 pages — that was an incredible success, of which every participant was a part!
So head on over to see how to get involved with the one-hour video challenge this weekend, and help us make next month’s post just as impressive! 🙂
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WordPress 4.5 Beta 1 is now available!
This software is still in development, so we don’t recommend you run it on a production site. Consider setting up a test site just to play with the new version. To test WordPress 4.5, try the WordPress Beta Tester plugin (you’ll want “bleeding edge nightlies”). Or you can download the beta here (zip).
WordPress 4.5 is slated for release on April 12, but to get there, we need your help testing what we have been working on, including:
- Responsive Preview of your site in the Customizer (#31195) – See how your site looks in mobile, tablet, and desktop contexts before making changes to its appearance.
- Theme Logo Support (#33755) – Native support for a theme logo within the Customizer.
- Inline Link Editing (#33301) – Within the visual editor, edit links inline for a smoother workflow.
- Additional Editor Shortcuts (#33300) – Includes a few new shortcuts, like
`..`
for code
and **..**
for bold.
- Comment Moderation Improvements (#34133) – An enhanced experience when moderating comments, including preview with rendered formatting.
- Optimization of Image Generation (#33642) – Image sizes are generated more efficiently and remove unneeded meta, while still including color profiles in Imagick, for reduced sizes of up to 50% with near identical visual quality.
There have been changes for developers to explore as well:
- Selective Refresh (#27355) – A comprehensive framework for rendering parts of the customizer preview in real time. Theme and plugin authors should test their widgets specifically for compatibility with selective refresh, and note that it may ultimately be opt-in for 4.5.
- Backbone and Underscore updated to latest versions (#34350) – Backbone is upgraded from 1.1.2 to 1.2.3 and Underscore is upgraded from 1.6.0 to 1.8.3. See the this post for important changes.
- Embed templates (#34561) – Embed templates were split into parts and can now be directly overridden by themes via the template hierarchy.
- New WP_Site class (#32450) – More object-oriented approach for managing sites in Multisite
- Script loader (#14853, #35873) – Introduces
wp_add_inline_script()
for including inline JavaScript just like wp_add_inline_style()
works for CSS, and better support for script header/footer dependencies.
If you want a more in-depth view of what major changes have made it into 4.5, check out all 4.5-tagged posts on the main development blog, or check out a list of everything that’s changed.
If you think you’ve found a bug, you can post to the Alpha/Beta area in the support forums. We’d love to hear from you! If you’re comfortable writing a reproducible bug report, file one on the WordPress Trac. There, you can also find a list of known bugs.
Happy testing!
A wonderful day
is one that brings new WordPress
Four Five Beta One
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WordCamps are locally-organized WordPress conferences that happen all over the world (and are so fun). Sometimes people don’t realize that WordCamps are organized by local volunteers rather than a central organization, and they contact us asking, “Can you bring WordCamp to my city?” When this happens, we always suggest they start with a meetup group, and think about organizing a WordCamp themselves after their group has been active for a few months. We emphasize that WordCamps are locally-organized events, not something that the central community team plans from afar.
This has been successful in many areas — there are currently 241 meetup groups on our meetup.com chapter program! In some regions, though, enthusiastic volunteers have had more of a challenge getting things started. Because of this, we’re going to try an experiment this year called the WordCamp Incubator.
The intention of the incubator program is to help spread WordPress to underserved areas through providing more significant organizing support for a first event. In practical terms, this experiment means we’ll be choosing three cities in 2016 where there is not an active WordPress community — but where it seems like there is a lot of potential and where there are some people excited to become organizers — and will help to organize their first WordCamp. These WordCamps will be small, one-day, one-track events geared toward the goal of generating interest and getting people involved in creating an ongoing local community.*
So, where should we do these three events? If you have always wanted a WordCamp in your city but haven’t been able to get a meetup group going, this is a great opportunity. We will be taking applications for the next week, then will get in touch with everyone who applied to discuss the possibilities. We will announce the cities chosen by the end of March.
To apply, fill in the application by February 26, 2016. You don’t need to have any specific information handy, it’s just a form to let us know you’re interested. You can apply to nominate your city even if you don’t want to be the main organizer, but for this experiment we will need local liaisons and volunteers, so please only nominate cities where you live or work so that we have at least one local connection to begin.
Thanks, and good luck!
* For the record, that describes the ideal first WordCamp even if you have an active meetup — there’s no need to wait until your group is big enough to support a large multi-day event, and small events are a lot of fun because everyone has a chance to be involved and get to know most of the other attendees.
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WordPress 4.4.2 is now available. This is a security release for all previous versions and we strongly encourage you to update your sites immediately.
WordPress versions 4.4.1 and earlier are affected by two security issues: a possible SSRF for certain local URIs, reported by Ronni Skansing; and an open redirection attack, reported by Shailesh Suthar.
Thank you to both reporters for practicing responsible disclosure.
In addition to the security issues above, WordPress 4.4.2 fixes 17 bugs from 4.4 and 4.4.1. For more information, see the release notes or consult the list of changes.
Download WordPress 4.4.2 or venture over to Dashboard → Updates and simply click “Update Now.” Sites that support automatic background updates are already beginning to update to WordPress 4.4.2.
Thanks to everyone who contributed to 4.4.2:
Andrea Fercia, berengerzyla, Boone Gorges, Chandra Patel, Chris Christoff, Dion Hulse, Dominik Schilling, firebird75, Ivan Kristianto, Jennifer M. Dodd, salvoaranzulla
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Our first global contributor drive is coming up next weekend, January 30-31, 2016, and we want you to be involved!
Many of our current contributors first got involved at a Contributor Day at a WordCamp or WordPress Meetup event near them, but not everyone has had that opportunity, so we’re trying to create an online experience that will give new contributors the same kind of live support and group dynamic. We’ll be doing these as weekend challenges rather than one-day events so that WordPress users all over the world can participate without worrying about pesky time zones, but each challenge will be designed to be completed within a few hours, comparable to an in-person Contributor Day.
Our inaugural Contributor Weekend is focused on the Support Team — the folks who volunteer their time to help people with WordPress questions in the support forums and IRC. Over the two day span, forum moderators will be available online to help new contributors and answer questions as needed. The challenge this month is called 20 Questions; your mission (should you choose to accept it) is to help WordPress users by answering 20 forum support requests over the course of the weekend.
You can participate on your own, or you can get together with other people from your local meetup group and work on it together. Working together in person is really fun, so we highly recommend trying to get some folks together if you’re able, but if that’s not possible you can still connect to other participants online. Either way, this is a great way to give back to the WordPress project and have some fun helping people at the same time.
Interested? Get the details on how to participate.
Hope to see you next weekend!
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WordPress 4.4.1 is now available. This is a security release for all previous versions and we strongly encourage you to update your sites immediately.
WordPress versions 4.4 and earlier are affected by a cross-site scripting vulnerability that could allow a site to be compromised. This was reported by Crtc4L.
There were also several non-security bug fixes:
- Emoji support has been updated to include all of the latest emoji characters, including the new diverse emoji! 👍🏿👌🏽👏🏼
- Some sites with older versions of OpenSSL installed were unable to communicate with other services provided through some plugins.
- If a post URL was ever re-used, the site could redirect to the wrong post.
WordPress 4.4.1 fixes 52 bugs from 4.4. For more information, see the release notes or consult the list of changes.
Download WordPress 4.4.1 or venture over to Dashboard → Updates and simply click “Update Now.” Sites that support automatic background updates are already beginning to update to WordPress 4.4.1.
Thanks to everyone who contributed to 4.4.1:
Aaron D. Campbell, Aaron Jorbin, Andrea Fercia, Andrew Nacin, Andrew Ozz, Boone Gorges, Compute, Daniel Jalkut (Red Sweater), Danny van Kooten, Dion Hulse, Dominik Schilling (ocean90), Dossy Shiobara, Evan Herman, Gary Pendergast, gblsm, Hinaloe, Ignacio Cruz Moreno, jadpm, Jeff Pye Brook, Joe McGill, John Blackbourn, jpr, Konstantin Obenland, KrissieV, Marin Atanasov, Matthew Ell, Meitar, Pascal Birchler, Peter Wilson, Roger Chen, Ryan McCue, Sal Ferrarello, Scott Taylor, scottbrownconsulting, Sergey Biryukov, Shinichi Nishikawa, smerriman, Stephen Edgar, Stephen Harris, tharsheblows, voldemortensen, and webaware.
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Version 4.4 of WordPress, named “Clifford” in honor of jazz trumpeter Clifford Brown, is available for download or update in your WordPress dashboard. New features in 4.4 make your site more connected and responsive. Clifford also introduces a new default theme, Twenty Sixteen.
Introducing Twenty Sixteen
Our newest default theme, Twenty Sixteen, is a modern take on a classic blog design.
Twenty Sixteen was built to look great on any device. A fluid grid design, flexible header, fun color schemes, and more, will all make your content shine.
Responsive Images
WordPress now takes a smarter approach to displaying appropriate image sizes on any device, ensuring a perfect fit every time. You don’t need to do anything to your theme, it just works.
Embed Everything
Now you can embed your posts on other WordPress sites. Simply drop a post URL into the editor and see an instant embed preview, complete with the title, excerpt, and featured image if you’ve set one. We’ll even include your site icon and links for comments and sharing.
In addition to post embeds, WordPress 4.4 also adds support for five new oEmbed providers: Cloudup, Reddit Comments, ReverbNation, Speaker Deck, and VideoPress.
Under the Hood
REST API infrastructure
Infrastructure for the REST API has been integrated into core, marking a new era in developing with WordPress. The REST API gives developers an easy way to build and extend RESTful APIs on top of WordPress.
Infrastructure is the first part of a multi-stage rollout for the REST API. Inclusion of core endpoints is targeted for an upcoming release. To get a sneak peek of the core endpoints, and for more information on extending the REST API, check out the official WordPress REST API plugin.
Term meta
Terms now support metadata, just like posts. See add_term_meta()
, get_term_meta()
, and update_term_meta()
for more information.
Comment query improvements
Comment queries now have cache handling to improve performance. New arguments in WP_Comment_Query
make crafting robust comment queries simpler.
Term, comment, and network objects
New WP_Term
, WP_Comment
, and WP_Network
objects make interacting with terms, comments, and networks more predictable and intuitive in code.
The Team
This release was led by Scott Taylor, with the help of these fine individuals. There are 471 contributors with props in this release (by far the most ever!). Pull up some Clifford Brown on your music service of choice, and check out some of their profiles:
@mercime,
_smartik_,
A5hleyRich,
Aaron D. Campbell,
Aaron Jorbin,
Aaron Rutley,
Adam Harley (Kawauso),
Adam Silverstein,
adamholisky,
Ahmad Awais,
Aki Björklund,
AlbertoCT,
Alex Kirk,
Alex Mills (Viper007Bond),
Alex Shiels,
Alexander Gounder,
alireza1375,
Amanda Giles,
amereservant,
Amy Hendrix (sabreuse),
Andrea Fercia,
Andrew Duthie,
Andrew Nacin,
Andrew Norcross,
Andrew Ozz,
Andy Fragen,
Angelo Mandato,
Ankit Gade,
Ankit K Gupta,
Anthony Burchell,
ap.koponen,
apokalyptik,
atomicjack,
Austin Ginder,
Austin Matzko,
Barry Ceelen,
Barry Kooij,
bcworkz,
BdN3504,
Bego Mario Garde,
Ben May,
Benjamin Pick,
berengerzyla,
Bernhard Riedl,
bigdawggi,
bilalcoder,
BinaryKitten,
Birgir Erlendsson (birgire),
Bjørn Johansen,
bobbingwide,
bonger,
Boone B. Gorges,
Brad Touesnard,
bradparbs,
Brady Vercher,
Brandon Kraft,
bravokeyl,
brentvr,
brettz95,
Bruno Kos,
Cam,
Cami Kaos,
carolinegeven,
Casey Bisson,
ch1902,
Chandra M,
Chandra Patel,
Chase Wiseman,
Chiara Dossena,
Chip Bennett,
Chirag Swadia,
Chris Christoff,
Chris Kindred,
Chris Klosowski,
chriscoyier,
Chrisdc1,
christianoliff,
Christoph Herr,
Christopher Finke,
cjhaas,
codeelite,
Coen Jacobs,
Compute,
Courtney Ivey,
Craig Ralston,
Curtiss Grymala,
Cătălin Dogaru,
Daisuke Takahashi,
Dan Boulet,
Daniel Bachhuber,
Daniel Jalkut (Red Sweater),
Daniel Koskinen,
Daniel Ménard,
Daniele Scasciafratte,
daniellandau,
daniloercoli,
Danny de Haan,
Danny van Kooten,
Darren Ethier (nerrad),
Daryl L. L. Houston (dllh),
Datta Parad,
Dave McHale,
David A. Kennedy,
David Anderson,
David Binovec,
David Herrera,
David Shanske,
DeBAAT,
Denis de Bernardy,
Dennis Ploetner,
Derek Herman,
Devin Price,
Dezzy,
Dion Hulse,
Dipali Dhole,
dipesh.kakadiya,
Dominik Bruderer,
Dominik Schilling,
Dossy Shiobara,
Dreb Bits,
Drew Jaynes,
dustinbolton,
Dzikri Aziz,
edirect24,
Eduardo Reveles,
Eduardo Zulian,
Edward Caissie,
Egill R. Erlendsson,
egower,
Ehsaan,
ehtis,
Ella Iseulde Van Dorpe,
Ellie Strejlau,
Elliott Stocks,
elusiveunit,
enshrined,
Eric Andrew Lewis,
Eric Binnion,
Eric Daams,
Eric Mann,
ericjuden,
Evan Herman,
F4rkie,
Felix Arntz,
Firdaus Zahari,
firebird75,
fonglh,
francoisb,
Frank Klein,
Frankie Jarrett,
Fredrik Forsmo,
Gaelan Lloyd,
Gagan Deep Singh,
Gary Cao,
Gary Jones,
Gary Pendergast,
garza,
Gaurav Pareek,
Gautam Gupta,
gblsm,
geminorum,
Gerhard Potgieter,
geza.miklo,
Gijs Jorissen,
Giuseppe Mamone,
Giustino Borzacchiello,
gnaka08,
gradyetc,
Greg Rickaby,
Gregory Karpinsky (@tivnet),
Gustavo Bordoni,
Gustavo Bordoni,
gwinh.lopez,
hakre,
hauvong,
Helen Hou-Sandí,
Hinaloe,
Hrishikesh Vaipurkar,
Hugh Lashbrooke,
Hugo Baeta,
Iain Poulson,
Ian Dunn,
Ian Stewart,
icetee,
Ignacio Cruz Moreno,
Ihor Vorotnov,
imath,
ippetkov,
Ivan Kristianto,
J.D. Grimes,
J.Sugiyama,
jadpm,
jakub.tyrcha,
James Huff,
Jan Henckens,
Japh,
Jasper de Groot,
jazbek,
jcroucher,
Jeff Farthing,
Jeff Stieler,
JeffMatson,
Jeffrey de Wit,
Jeffrey Schutzman,
jeichorn,
Jennifer M. Dodd,
Jeremy Felt,
Jeremy Pry,
Jeroen Schmit,
Jesin A,
Jesper van Engelen,
jim912,
jliman,
jmayhak,
jnylen0,
Jobst Schmalenbach,
Joe Dolson,
Joe Hoyle,
Joe McGill,
joehills,
John Blackbourn,
John James Jacoby,
John P. Bloch,
John Parris,
Jon Cave,
Jonathan Bardo,
Jonathan Desrosiers,
Joost de Valk,
Jorge Bernal,
Josh Betz,
Josh Eaton,
Josh Pollock,
jpr,
jrf,
Juhi Saxena,
Julio Potier,
justdaiv,
Justin Sainton,
Justin Shreve,
Justin Sternberg,
Justin Tadlock,
K.Adam White,
Kailey (trepmal),
KalenJohnson,
karinedo,
karpstrucking,
Kelly Dwan,
Kevin Behrens,
Kevin Langley,
kevinatelement,
kitchin,
Kite,
Konstantin Kovshenin,
Konstantin Obenland,
KrissieV,
Krzysiek Dróżdż,
Kurt Payne,
laceous,
Lance Willett,
Laurens Offereins,
lcherpit,
ldinclaux,
Lee Willis,
leemon,
lessbloat,
linuxologos,
Lucas Karpiuk,
lucatume,
luciole135,
Lucy Tomas,
Luke Carbis,
madalin.ungureanu,
Mako,
manolis09,
Marcin Pietrzak,
Marin Atanasov,
Mario Peshev,
Marius (Clorith),
Mark Jaquith,
Marko Heijnen,
Markus,
Mat Marquis,
Matheus Martins,
Matt Bagwell,
Matt Gibbs,
Matt Martz,
Matt Mullenweg,
Matt van Andel,
Matthew Boynes,
Matthew Ell,
Matthew Haines-Young,
mazurstas,
mbrandys,
mdmcginn,
Mehul Kaklotar,
Meitar,
Mel Choyce,
meloniq,
micahmills,
micahwave,
Michael Adams (mdawaffe),
Michael Arestad,
Michael Cain,
Michiel Habraken,
Mickey Kay,
Mike Glendinning,
Mike Hansen,
Mike Jolley,
Mike Jordan,
Mike Schinkel,
Mike Schroder,
Milan Dinić,
mismith227,
misterunknown,
mitcho (Michael Yoshitaka Erlewine),
Monika,
morganestes,
Morten Rand-Hendriksen,
moto hachi ( mt8.biz ),
Mr Papa,
mrmist,
mulvane,
neoscrib,
NExT-Season,
Niall Kennedy,
nicholas_io,
Nick Ciske,
Nick Halsey,
NickDuncan,
Nicolas Juen,
nikeo,
Nikhil Chavan,
Niklas,
Nikola Nikolov,
Nikolay Bachiyski,
Nilambar Sharma,
OriginalEXE,
Paresh Radadiya,
Pascal Birchler,
Pat O'Brien,
Paul Bearne,
Paul de Wouters,
Paul Ryan,
Paul Wilde,
pavelevap,
Payton Swick,
Peter Wilson,
Petter Walbø Johnsgård,
Petya Raykovska,
pfefferle,
Philip Arthur Moore,
PhilipLakin,
Philipp Cordes,
Piotr Delawski,
Piotr Soluch,
Pippin Williamson,
Prasad Nevase,
Prasath Nadarajah,
Pratik,
Rachel Baker,
rajnikmit,
Rakesh Lawaju (Racase Lawaju),
ramay,
Rami Yushuvaev,
Raul Illana,
renoirb,
rhubbardreverb,
Rhys Wynne,
Rian Rietveld,
Richard Tape,
Robert Chapin,
Rodrigo Primo,
Roger Chen,
Rommel Castro,
Ron Rennick,
Ronald Huereca,
Russell Heimlich,
Ruud Laan,
Ryan Kienstra,
Ryan Markel,
Ryan McCue,
Ryan Welcher,
Safirul Alredha,
Sal Ferrarello,
salvoaranzulla,
Sam Brodie,
sam2kb,
Samir Shah,
Samuel Sidler,
Samuel Wood (Otto),
Sanket Parmar,
Sara Rosso,
sarciszewski,
Scott Grant,
Scott Kingsley Clark,
Scott Reilly,
scottbrownconsulting,
ScreenfeedFr,
scribu,
sdavis2702,
Sean Hayes,
Sebastian Pisula,
Sergey Biryukov,
serpent7776,
several27,
shimakyohsuke,
Shinichi Nishikawa,
side777,
Simon Prosser,
Simon Wheatley,
Siobhan,
sirzooro,
sjmur,
smerriman,
Spacedmonkey,
Stéphane Boisvert,
Stanislav Khromov,
Stanko Metodiev,
stebbiv,
Stefan Froehlich,
Stephanie Leary,
Stephen Edgar,
Stephen Harris,
Steve Grunwell,
stevehenty,
SteveHoneyNZ,
Steven Word,
Store Locator Plus,
Sudar Muthu,
Sujay,
Sumit Singh,
summerblue,
Sunny Ratilal,
Takashi Irie,
Takayuki Miyauchi,
Tammie Lister,
Tanner Moushey,
tbcorr,
Terry Chay,
tharsheblows,
theMikeD,
Thomas Kräftner,
thomaswm,
Thorsten Frommen,
Thorsten Ott,
tigertech,
Till,
Tim Evko,
tmatsuur,
tmeister,
TobiasBg,
Tom Willmot,
TomHarrigan,
tommarshall,
tomsommer,
Toni Viemerö,
Toro_Unit (Hiroshi Urabe),
Tracy Levesque,
Tran Ngoc Tuan Anh,
Travis Smith,
trenzterra,
Tryon Eggleston,
tszming,
ty,
Ty Carlson,
Tyler Carter,
Ulrich,
Ulrich Sossou,
Umesh Kumar,
Umesh Nevase,
Utkarsh,
vilkatis,
voldemortensen,
Walter Ebert,
walterbarcelos,
webaware,
webdevmattcrom,
WEN Solutions,
WEN Themes,
Weston Ruter,
wmertens,
Wojtek Szkutnik,
WP Plugin Dev dot com,
wpdev101,
wpseek,
wturrell,
Yam Chhetri,
Yoav Farhi,
Zach Wills,
Zack Rothauser, and
Zack Tollman.
Special thanks go to Siobhan McKeown for producing the release video with Sara Rosso, and Cami Kaos for the voice-over.
Finally, thanks to all of the contributors who provided subtitles for the release video, which at last count had been translated into 23 languages!
If you want to follow along or help out, check out Make WordPress and our core development blog. Thanks for choosing WordPress. See you soon for version 4.5!
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