Had forgotten I’d ordered this, and now I’m really excited for it to ship next week. The artwork was so over-the-top for what the games were, I think there’s a lesson to be learned about packaging & marketing – that it’s not always about building the product of your dreams, it’S getting people dreaming about your product.

Art of Atari [Tim Lapetino] on Amazon.com. ATARI is one of the most recognized names in the world. Since its formation in 1972, the company pioneered hundreds of iconic titles including Asteroids

Source: Art of Atari: Tim Lapetino: 9781524101039: Amazon.com: Books

Normally I’d start with a history lesson, but for this I’ll cut to the chase since most of you reading this already know what I’m talking about…

Projects like Django function & thrive without their REST API in every core installation. Not being in core means the component maintainers are able to develop independently of any core release cycle – both faster & slower if need be.

Externally facing API’s are a mouse on a wheel. Just as XML-RPC is ready, REST is here to take its place. Once we are all comfortable with REST 10 years from now, something else will replace it to, and so on.

WordPress is of the size and popularity now where building wp-admin into a hybrid of REST & AJAX calls will be confusing to future contributors.

Going back and rebuilding wp-admin to be fully REST is a thankless job, and would take ten years to complete at the current pace. It’s more likely wp-admin would be replaced, which would break backwards compatibility with existing plugins. It’s akin to hiding Windows 3.1 under the 95 skin, and abandoning all previous applications. No way.

Many contributors see a core-merge as a natural graduation path to their efforts, for lots of things – even small things like ideas and recommendations. We get attached to them, and define success & ultimate acceptance as the end result being gifted to the world via WordPress core.

That path is unrealistic for most, and unhealthy for WordPress in the long run. This is why plugins exist, and why plugins are awesome. The REST plugin is one of the most awesome ones, and it should stay that way so that the team of passionate people who love it, can continue to love it by totally avoiding core conflict.

Maybe it gets bundled with WordPress like Akismet does, but it needs to be activated to work. Maybe it comes active by default, and can be disabled or deleted for those who will never need it.

A merge into core, right now, I think is still not the right call.

For years I wanted, pleaded, planned, and architects the concept of user profiles and activity streams on WordPress.com. I still think it would have been enormously popular (and still can be) but looking back, I understand now how my ideas didn’t match Matt’s overall vision and needs for a product that he designed originally.

I think the REST API is a similar thing.

This project is so huge and the media attention so great, it is now bigger than itself. It’s almost less about the code/team/effort, and more about the spiritual support and endorsement of those efforts. Maybe that’s what I’m turned off by right now – that it’s been so long, it’s impolite to suggest a core-merge of this code isn’t the right thing to do.

FWIW, even if it had 100% API coverage, I still don’t think I’d want it on in core WordPress by default, because spiritually I’m really vibing on features like this being optional plugins right now, and I’m afraid that a core-merge will complicate the momentum and progress of the REST API core code once it’s in.

My $0.02. Don’t mean to offend. And I’m down to help anyone no matter what the end results ever are. 💜
P.S. I wrote this totally from the iOS app, which was a pretty pleasant experience. Great work, from a team of developers outside of WordPress core.

Starting a new blog is an interesting feeling.

In Talking Funny, Louis C.K. mentions that he purposely throws away his act every year, which forces him to find his voice again. Starting a new blog with 0 followers feels a bit like that – I’m not sure what to do here, or what to write about, or share here vs. anywhere else.

If you haven’t watched Talking Funny, it’s a really insightful look at stand-up comedy, but I think it applies to software, too. I’ve embedded it below for you here:

Welcome to JJJ’s (new) Blog. This is my first post!

Screen Shot 2016-10-11 at 4.20.49 PM

My old friends at Automattic are starting to roll out .blog top-level domains, so now I have another blog to tinker with.

I decided to self-host this one, for now at least. WordPress.com is still the best place to host a blog, but it’s been a few years & I think it’s time for a fresh start with my own setup.

If, like me, you want to reserve or bid on your favorite .blog domain name, visit get.blog and sign yourself up ASAP.