• Home
  • Contact Me
WordPress Tavern
Where Every Drink Is On The House
Browse: Home / 2008 / January
WPWeekly Episode 4 – Automattic Secures 29.5 Million Bucks

WPWeekly Episode 4 – Automattic Secures 29.5 Million Bucks

By Jeffro on January 31, 2008

wordpressweekly1In this episode of WordPress Weekly, we cover the story of how Matt and Toni of Automattic secured a Series B round of funding for $29.5 million dollars thanks to the NY Times. WordCamp Dallas is right around the corner and we give you the 411 about the event as well as a primer as to what WordCamp is. We also talk about the success that Lisa Sabin Wilson has been having with WordPress For Dummies. WordPress is the top CMS of choice within the Technorati Top 100 linked to blogs according to CMSWiRE and last but not least, we discuss Prologue and what it really is. Saving the best for last is our WordPress Tips of the week.

Panel Members:

Brad - Blogs at StrangeWork.com

Charles Stricklin – The host and producer of The WordPress Podcast.

Julian – CasualRevolt

Ronald Huereca – Contributing author of WeblogToolsCollection.com and RAProject.com You can catch his musings at Ronalfy.com

Stories Discussed:

Act Two – Matt Mullenweg lets us know about the successful round of funding they achieved through investors. Matt also goes on to tell us that he believes this to be Act2 of the Automattic story. The funding came out to be $29.5 million dollars and was ponied up by the NY Times. According to Matt, a buyout or acquisition seems highly unlikely as he wants to take Auttomatic into the future with more open source projects to come along the way.

WordPress Is The Most Popular CMS In Technorati 100 LINKED TO – John Conroy and folks from CMSWiRE put together a detailed list of content management systems that made up the Technorati top 100 Linked To. As it turns out, WordPress took the top spot with 34 percent of the sites being linked to are using WordPress. Some of those big websites include Techcrunch, Mashable, icanhascheezburger, and perez hilton.

WordPress For Dummies Still The #1 WordPress Book - WordPress For Dummies remains the #1 book on blogging at Amazon.com – - it’s been #1 almost since the week it was released in November, and has remained there ever since. Wiley Publishing has completely sold out its stock after only 3 months of it being on the market – - they are completely OUT and have to print more!

For those who purchased the book, Wiley Publishing has provided Lisa Sabin Wilson with the opportunity to provide updates in PDF format that will be available for FREE as a download from her website, and from the Dummies.com website.

What Is WordCamp? – After being contacted via email by a few people asking me what WordCamp was, I decided to do a small writeup that describes what the event is, how it started and what to expect.

WordCamp is a conference type of event that focuses squarely on everything WordPress. Everyone from casual end users all the way up to core developers show up to these events. These events are usually highlighted by speeches or keynotes by various people.

WordPress Video Tutorials – iThemes has a number of WordPress tutorials that are video based. The tutorials are easy to understand and cover everything from how WordPress works to installing Google Analytics. There are also a number of video tutorials to watch if you happen to use the Essence WordPress Theme.

WordPress Weekly Digest For Jan 21st to Jan 27th – More changes that have gone into WordPress 2.5. Some notable changes include:

  • The beginnings of a new uploader ([6659]).
  • A new Manage -> Tags interface (#5684).
  • Performance improvement to the outgoing trackback processing code. (#5699).

WordPress.com Introduces Prologue – For WordPress.com users, you now have a new theme to use called Prologue. Prologue is a theme that was released under GPL and essentially places the functionality of Twitter into a blogging format. This is great for those that want to do group blogs either public or private.

TalkPress – Can Matt Mullenweg do for forums what he has done for blogging? We dive into what little details there are in regards to Matt’s new project and discuss what could end up happening.

WordPress Tips Of The Week:

Jeffro2pt0 – For those looking to easily make their WordPress blog mobile friendly, Mark Ghosh has posted a neat tip that bypasses the need for a plugin and instead, opts to use Google’s mobile news reader.

Brad – Do Follow plugin: http://www.semiologic.com/software/wp-fixes/dofollow What is it? The dofollow plugin for WordPress lets you remove the evil nofollow attribute from your comments.

Ronald – If your plugin has been waiting over a week or two, try submitting a bug report to WordPress. I took the advice of a forum moderator and submitted a bug, and my plugin was approved the next day.

WPWeekly Meta:

Subscribe To WPWeekly Via Itunes: Click here to subscribe

Length Of Episode: 1 Hour 30 Minutes

Download The Show: WordPressWeeklyEpisode4.mp3

Listen To Episode #4:

Share this:

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • Twitter
  • Google +1

Posted in WordPress Weekly | Tagged talkcast, wpweekly

WPWeekly Episode 3 – What Makes A Theme Premium

WPWeekly Episode 3 – What Makes A Theme Premium

By Jeffro on January 24, 2008

wordpressweekly1This week there is a ton of stuff to talk about. We have the bombshell that was dropped the other day noting that Matt and Toni of Automattic secured a Series B round of funding for $29.5 million dollars. That last part will actually be discussed on Episode 4. Then we have the improvements that have gone into the code for WordPress 2.5. We also dive into the conundrum of what makes a WordPress theme Premium. WordCamp Dallas is right around the corner and we give you the 411 about the event. Saving the best for last is our WordPress Tips of the week.

Panel Members:

Ronald Huereca: Contributing editor for WeblogToolsCollection.com and raproject.com. Author of the WordPress Ajax Edit Comments plugin.

Catch his personal musings at Ronalfy.com

Andrew Rickmann: Long time user of WordPress who has molded themes, plugins and hacks within the WordPress code. Fun with WordPress is Andrew’s solution to putting all those thoughts in one place, and giving something back to the community.

Catch his work at FunWithWordPress

David Peralty: Man who seemingly needs no introduction, but I’m going to give him one anyways. David is a very busy man who has love/hate relationships with WordPress. He currently is the marketing guy for SplashPressMedia and has coded over 100 themes for WordPress.

You can catch all of David’s blogging related material here BloggingPro

Stories Discussed:

WP-Forum SQL Injection Vulnerability – Earlier this week, the websec security team has discovered a vulnerability within this plugin that can be exploited by malicious users to conduct SQL injection attacks

WordPress.com Winners Of The Crunchies - Techcrunch held their little get together called the Crunchies and WordPress.com ended up taking two of the nominated categories. WordPress for Most Likely to Succeed and Toni Schneider for a well-deserved Best Startup CEO.

WordPress.com Storage Goes From 50mb to 3,000mb – Matt Mullenweg announced that because of the optimizations that have taken place in the backend of WordPress.com, they are now able to offer all WordPress.com users 3 gigs of space. Matt also said that those who purchased a 1GB upgrade will automatically be bumped up to 5GB at no additional charge.

WordPress Weekly Digest For January 14th – January 20th – In the latest round of updates to be included in WordPress 2.5 there are a few things that caught my eye.

  • Updates to get_sidebar() to allow for multiple named sidebars (#5615).
  • Initial migration to TinyMCE v3.0 RC1 (#5674).
  • New functionality to allow for editing of post slugs within there permalink context (#5679).
  • Changes to the APP implementation to ensure that timestamps can be updated on already published posts (#5680).

Matt Cutts Offers Tips To Secure WordPress – Matt has published an article which highlights three different ways to secure your WordPress installation. The first tip involves locking down your Admin directory. Matt configures his .hatccess file so that only his IP address is allowed to access the WP-Admin directory. For the second tip, you should create a blank index.html file to place into your wp-content/plugins directory. Not doing so allows your plugin folder to be wide open, giving nosy people an idea as to what plugins you have installed.

Matt’s third and final tip involves subscribing to the official WordPress development blog – http://wordpress.org/development/feed/ As we should all know by now, this is the best way to stay up to date.

Matt also offers a bonus tip where he suggests removing the line of code within your header.php file that publishes your WordPress version. This is to prevent your WordPress version number from being publicly viewable.

WordPress.com Still Growing According To Compete.com – Compete.com released a list of the fastest growing and declining sites of 2007. These stats are made up of the top 1,000 domains in between December of 2006 and December of 2007. However, WordPress.com appears to have grown by 523% with 24,393,457 visits. Great news for WordPress.com despite Compete being the one to show case these statistics.

WordPress/Automattic Blog By Team Members – is (going to be) written by various team members at Automattic and their goal is to help all publishers get the most out of WordPress. They will cover features that are often overlooked, highlight plugins that extend WordPress functionality and showcase interesting sites being built with WordPress. They are looking for publishers working on innovative projects using WordPress and would like to field questions from users. From the comment that Raanan left on PressedWords, it would appear that they want to focus on large WordPress installations that are doing lots of custom work and help publishers find the proper resources.

What Makes A WordPress Theme Premium? – Ronald Hureca asked this question back on January 12 and boy did he get a response. Answers ranged from premium meaning PAID FOR to better support with more features than your average theme.

Dean’s Migration Plugin Vulnerability – According to an advisory released by Packetstorm, a fellow by the name of g30rg3_x has discovered two bugs within Dean’s Permalinks Migration Plugin version 1.0. The first bug relates to XSRF and can allow an attacker to force a user to perform an unsolicited action that when combined with an XSS bug that has also been discovered, allows the attacker to gain valid credentials.

WordPress Tips Of The Week:

Jeffro2pt0 - Add Buttons To Text Editor – WP Candy published an awesome tutorial which highlights how to add custom buttons/functions to your visual text editor. For instance, I’ve managed to add a H1 and H2 button to my visual text editor so I no longer need to access the dropdown menu.

Ronald – His tip this week is for plugin and theme authors. An effective way of demonstrating your plugin and/or theme is through a screencast. For Mac users, there is a great program (for $30) that makes great screencasts called Screenflick

I added that I have sometimes used a program from TechSmith called Camtasia Studio It’s not cheap but it works, $299.00 If you know of a better solution for Windows user’s and screen capture software, let us know in the comments.

Andrew - Firstly I want to encourage WordPress users that are maybe comfortable with modifying their own theme to just get stuck in and produce their own plugin; just for their own personal use. Not every plugin needs to be a a fully featured, released, plugin with admin pages and customizable options. Learning how to put together something really quick and basic, perhaps with a single hook and a single function can let you do some really interesting things.

Secondly I really want to make a point of how useful a good knowledge of the wordpress.org codex can be. In particular it helps to understand how to find things; for example, I regularly just search for functions from the wordpress.org home page because I know that will generally give me the functions reference page. The more of the codex you read the more you start to understand the mindset behind some things such as templates.

I mentioned that, while it is possible to display category specific content using conditional tags, the template system will actually look for a category, and now a tag, specific template page as the first step in the template hierarchy. There is more information on that at http://codex.wordpress.org/Template_Hierarchy

David - Dave lets us know of a blog metrics plugin that is especially useful for multi-author blogs. This plugin gives you at a glance information such as author contributions and conversation rates. A good plugin to have to monitor who is doing what.

WPWeekly Meta:

Subscribe To WPWeekly Via Itunes: Click here to subscribe

Length Of Episode: 1 Hour 19 Minutes

Download The Show: WordPressWeeklyEpisode3.mp3

Listen To Episode #3:

Share this:

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • Twitter
  • Google +1

Posted in WordPress Weekly | Tagged talkcast, wpweekly

WPWeekly Episode 2 – Call Disaster Control

WPWeekly Episode 2 – Call Disaster Control

By Jeffro on January 10, 2008

wordpressweekly1I really apologize for this weeks show. I wasn’t as prepared as I should of been and overall, it’s just been one hell of a week. There will be no WordPress Weekly Episode Three for the week of January 13th. However, the next episode of WordPress Weekly will be on Friday, January 25th, 2008. If you end up taking a listen to the show, I thank you for putting up with it. Next time, I will be well prepared and take the proper precautions to ensure that the next episode will be a good one. Thanks to Ronald, Brad and Andrew Rickmann for appearing on the show, I really appreciate it.

Stories Discussed:

Matt Mullenweg Turns 24 Matt Mullenweg, one of the WordPress founders turns 24 years old. Happy birthday man.

WordPress Weekly Digest for Dec 31st 2007 – Jan 6th 2008. Peter Westwood lets us know what has been changed and or fixed within the WordPress core throughout this time period. There quite a few things that are worth sharing in this update such as, the integration of the functions that the Optimal Title plugin was known for, the introduction of auto-suggest for tags, a new sidebar interface to choose which widgets you want on which sidebar, and last but not least, changes to the dual/visual code editors to remember which one you used last.

Smashing Magazines 100 Excellent Free WordPress Themes Smashing Magazine has done it again by publishing an article which highlights 100 different high quality WordPress Themes. Some of these I’ve seen before while there are also a few new ones in this pack.

Uninstall – Is There Such A Thing? Earlier this week, I posted an article that took a hard look as to what uninstall actually means when you look at WordPress plugins. This has been a hot topic of debate during the week and I feel it will probably take up most of the show.

General Motors Using WordPress – One of the new General Motors community websites has elected to use WordPress as their publishing platform of choice. Personally, I don’t like the design and they are already a version behind.

WordPress Tips Of The Week:

Jeffro2pt0 – How To: Blocking Your WordPress Categories and Archives From Google Kyle Eslick has posted a small guide which explains how to cut down on the internal duplicate content issue. As it turns out, the biggest culprit for duplicate content is the Archive pages.

Ronald – Separate trackbacks from comments. Click here for a tutorial from DBT. While you’re at it, allow users to comment without having to register.

Here’s a bonus tip: If you are releasing something that you expect to get a lot of trackbacks from (such as a plugin), turn trackbacks off. Trackbacks usually only benefit the blog author anyway.

Brad – Our To Do List Plugin A simple todo list plugin to share ideas/todos with blog members. All members work together to manage the todo list under “Manage” section in WordPress administration interface.

Andrew Rickmann - An Uninstall tool that adds an uninstallation option on the plugins page. The uninstall option will only show up if the plugin has been deactivated and if the plugin author has created an uninstall file. Check out the second iteration of his tool, here.

WPWeekly Meta:

Subscribe To WPWeekly Via Itunes: Click here to subscribe

Length Of Episode: 1 Hour 1 Minute

Download The Show: WordPressWeeklyEpisode2.mp3

Listen To Episode #2:

Share this:

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • Twitter
  • Google +1

Posted in WordPress Weekly | Tagged talkcast, wpweekly

WPWeekly Episode 1 – The Beginning Of Something Special

WPWeekly Episode 1 – The Beginning Of Something Special

By Jeffro on January 5, 2008

wordpressweekly1The first ever episode of WordPress Weekly is now complete and it went off without a hitch. I want to give a special thanks to Brad of Strangework.com and Ronald from the ReadersAppreciationProject for coming on the show as panel members. Based on the comments I’ve received thus far on the first episode, these two individuals were well liked. I’ve spoken to both Brad and Ronald and they have agreed to show up on future episodes. (PHEW) I also want to thank each and every one of you who managed to get into the Talkshoe client and participate by way of chat. For my first episode, I had a decent turn out of people and that was awesome. I hope the seed that was planted with this first episode grows into something special.

WordPress 2.3.2 is released and contains numerous bug fixes with a few of them being security bugs. We talked about the upgrade and discussed the upgrade process in general.

2.4 Skipped 2.5 Is Next Earlier this week, it was announced that version 2.4 of WordPress would be skipped in favor of 2.5. We go over the reasons behind the change and discuss the release cycle in general.

Telligent Lacks Intelligents Charles Stricklin published an article that shows off Grafiti essentially slamming WordPress. According to Charles, Telligent has purchased the keyword WordPressPodcast from Google Adwords. Upon clicking on the promotional landing page, you discover that the Grafiti CMS is THE alternative for WordPress. We discuss why this isn’t the case.

Install WordPress Locally Part 1 Install WordPress Locally – Part 2 Of 2 I go over some of the details that made this article tough to write. We discuss our experiences with local installs and why it would be benficial to you to have a local install of your WordPress site. Ronald also informs me of two WP_Config entries that you can add to your WP-Config file which would replace the need to edit any tables within an imported database. They are:

define(‘WP_SITEURL’, ‘http://www.madisonbiblechurch.org’);
define(‘WP_HOME’, ‘http://www.madisonbiblechurch.org’);
Well, they say since WP 2.2.

http://codex.wordpress.org/Editing_wp-config.php

WP_SITEURL
WP_HOME

9 WordPress Admin Themes Earlier this week, Mark Ghosh published a posts that highlighted 9 different WordPress administration themes. We cover why there is a lack of administration themes available and go into a little more detail in regards to the WordPress admin panel redesign.

WordPress Tips Of The Week:

Jeffro2pt0 – Give WP-Admin a Custom Favicon

John Kolbert has a simple guide on how to give your WordPress Administration area it’s own default favicon. This is really useful when you have more than a few tabs open in FireFox and you have no idea which one is your admin panel.

Ronald – WordPress Automatic Update plugin: An easyto use plugin which aides in updating your WordPress install. Anything to make it easier is a winner in my book.

Ronald also mentioned the WP Plugin Generator from WP-Fun: this plugin helps you generate a functional framework for a WordPress plugin. The framework is the building block of your plugin, so you would do well to start the plugin off write with a good base.

Brad – WordPress Database Backup Plugin Brad let us know of this awesome plugin that creates a backup of your WordPress database and then emails you the backup file. Both Brad and Ronald use this plugin and have it configured in this way. Good for those who are not to keen on keeping up with making backups.

WPWeekly Meta:

Subscribe To WPWeekly Via Itunes: Click here to subscribe

Length Of Episode: 1 Hour

Download The Show: WordPressWeeklyEpisode1.mp3

Listen To Episode #1:

Share this:

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • Twitter
  • Google +1

Posted in WordPress Weekly | Tagged talkcast, wpweekly

© Copyright WPTavern 2013 All rights reserved About / Poll Archive / Site Archive // Powered by WordPress Mtn. Dew And Hybrid
loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.