Posts tagged with "WordPress"

life is so unfair

You spend 3 months watching your WordPress statistics bumbling along the horizontal axis close to zero.

Some traffic dribbles in. The graph accelerates into 10s of hits daily. You feel better. You will persist with this blogging experiment for a little longer.

At this rate, it may soon be time to consider a proper blog using WordPress.org and AdSense to make the millions that eluded me during the dot com boom.

Then those pesky developers from WordPress.com alter the Y-axis dynamically, on the fly without even asking so the statistics now start at 40 and the graph looks just the same.

WP-Stats

Life is cruel.

WordPress.com open up user forums

Those busy people at WordPress have opened up a couple of forums for support issues and feedback for users of WordPress.com

This is a brilliant idea as I currently have to use the 'Feedback' form for all my brilliant suggestions and reporting minor glitches which was a little lonely and uni-directional.

WordPress.com adds a couple of themes

WordPress made some changes to the available themes just before Christmas which I have only just noticed.

I particularly like the changes in Regulus 2.0 by Ben Gillbanks as you can now customise the theme a little. You can choose to have the calendar displayed (Howard will be pleased), change the 'Blogroll' to use link categories, change the header image and the colour scheme. Also, the irritating 'Message essage' bug is fixed.

WordPress.com improves statistics

There are new, improved blog statistics available from WordPress.com with more to come.

No additional Javascript needed. Integrated reports from the dashboard. Superb.

As Matt said in a recent interview, these guys are active bloggers themselves so they understand what users want, what is useful, what is not and they also listen to feedback.

good news for WordPress users

The news is out. Yahoo! will be offering WordPress hosted blogs for small businesses and charging a monthly fee for the service.

I think this is good news for all WordPress users (.com and .org) as it provides a revenue stream for future development.

Tom Raftery podcast with WordPress

I just downloaded an interesting, wide ranging interview (sorry podcast) by Tom Raftery with Matt Mullenweg and Donncha OCaoimh, the two leading developers behind WordPress. Matt and Donncha talk about their backgrounds, hosted WordPress.com, features in 2.0, blogging, spam, plugins and future WordPress developments.

Tom also happened to ask a specific question about my concerns for the WordPress business model and Matt provided some reassurance that there is a revenue stream through partnerships (hosting companies) so both guys do have enough money to eat, drink Murphys and wear clothes.

WordPress.com business model

I am worried about those developers at WordPress. They have to eat food, drink coffee and wear clothes but how are they ever going to make any money ? There isn't even a Donate button anywhere on the site.

WordPress.com provide me with a hosted blogging platform which I think it is very good; better than Blogger, better than Bloglines, better than Yahoo 360', better than most of the competition.

The service provided by WordPress costs me absolutely nothing so represents excellent value for money and I would recommend the service to any of my blogging friends (if I had any).

WordPress have to provide servers, manage those machines, implement resilience, scalability and high availability, develop code, do boring things like backups, testing, fix bugs, worry about the business plan, buy laptops, S & M (sales & marketing, not the other one) and what do I give them in return ? A load of feedback (mainly negative) about minor, trivial things that don't work and waste their time whenever I have made an idiotic mistake (quite frequently).

Now, WordPress are planning to add extra features and functionality (customised CSS and templates, more themes and plug-ins, hosting on your server, statistics) which will cost money but they have also pledged that the current functionality will remain free. The sad fact is I am very unlikely to pay them anything for additional add-on features, ever.

This main reason is because I am quite happy with the existing product. Secondly, any additional contribution would have to be minimal as I could pay my ISP an extra £4 per month to add PHP and then would be able to run WordPress.org with total control over everything. This would be more work for me but would probably be fun and an interesting experiment anyway.

Maybe I am not typical, maybe there are hundreds of frustrated WordPress bloggers out there with cheque books poised waiting for the two tier service to be announced. For the sake of the freeloaders like me, let's jolly well hope so.

probably the best blogging platform in the world

In a previous article, I wanted to add a trackback to properly cite an article on Ben Gillbank's blog about his Regulus theme.

I couldn't find the trackback URL but, as ever, WordPress is doing all the donkey work for me and now I see my posting does indeed appear as a comment in Ben's original article.

No manual intervention, head scratching or wasted time. Exactly as it should be.

new Regulus theme for WordPress.com

Those nice people at WordPress have opened up WordPress.com to the masses and added a couple of new themes. I really like the Regulus theme from Ben Gillbanks because it looks clear and uncluttered, the tag line is displayed and the RSS feeds for the blog and comments are obvious.

The only polite suggestions for improvement would be to relocate 'Blog Roll' under the 'Archive' and 'Categories' to let the main body text occupy more of the screen and for 'Message ssage' to be fixed in the 'Comments' section.

Please don't tell me that bulleted lists appear in bold. They are not. Apparently, they are just in a different colour. :-) The author is kindly going to fix this issue in the next release.

So now my blog has a pretty picture of the vast, infinite emptiness of the universe and 'Blog in Isolation' is reinstated. Very apt.

thoughts on the Blogger to Wordpress upgrade

Things I like about Wordpress after a couple of days...

  • The dashboard summary which includes Incoming Links, recent posts and comments at a glance. Wordpress also provides? basic statistics (hits, entry page, referrer). It looks like the data? is automatically cleaned of spiders and bots so the figures you get are more likely to relate to actual human beings. You can also remove hits incurred as part of administration.
  • Being able to easily and quickly define a hierarchy of categories and tag your posts. I thought that the RSS feed for an individual category is really good as it means that Oracle types can choose to only subscribe to that element of the blog (and ignore football, music and gadgets).
  • Categories also helps navigation. If someone wrote a gem of an article two years ago about Linux, you are more likely to be able to find it using categories rather than trawling through the complete blog.
  • RSS feed for comments.
  • Clean, quick, intuitive, well designed interface.
  • The post editor which includes a WYSIWYG preview. I used to dislike the? fact that the Blogger Preview used a larger font so? sub-consciously I didn't view it? as the finished article. The Blogger Preview, Close, Edit, Preview? cycle required a lot of key clicks and wasted time. The Wordpress preview is precisely that.
  • Automatic pings to ping-o-matic (and on to 15 services including Technorati).
  • The fact that pasting in text from Blogger preserved the hyperlinks. I am still perplexed as to how that worked.
  • Posting seems much quicker compared to Blogger. No more waiting and nervously watching 'This may take a while if you have a large blog'.
  • Indenting quoted text correctly uses the 'blockquote' tag.
  • Support for trackbacks and pingbacks as opposed to Blogger's backlinks.
  • Support for breaking long posts using 'More'.
  • The price.

Minor things I don't like so much

  • The lack of template editing isn't a big issue for me. If I was that fussed, I would use wordpress.org and host it myself. Manually tweaking HTML templates isn't exactly my idea of fun. What I would really like though is a Template Editor so you can select which elements (RSS feed, Comments feed, individual Category feeds) appear on the main page. My Yahoo! provide something similar to select and arrange content on the home page.
  • The fact the tagline 'Blog in Isolation' does not appear in the Pool theme.
  • No automated tool to import from Blogger. I think one exists but is currently in for repair. My blog was only 30 articles so I laboriously cut and pasted all my blogger articles (and lost the two comments).
  • No support for Technorati tags in the post editor but I think I prefer using Wordpress categories anyway.