Displaying 31 To 44 Of 44 Comments Jeff, congrats on your first year and keep up the great work! » Posted By Adam W. Warner On January 5, 2010 @ 8:14 AM New York Matt Mullenweg Interview Great interview Jeff, I’m sure this will go a long way in easing user’s fears about these latest “controversy’s”. p.s. Anyone ever consider that premiummod could be run by Small Potato? We all know he’s got some marketing skills after what happened previously;) » Posted By Adam W. Warner On November 19, 2009 @ 1:14 PM WordCamp NYC Tickets Now Available Great Jane, thanks, I’ll stay tuned… » Posted By Adam W. Warner On October 20, 2009 @ 8:17 PM Hey Jeff, I was looking at tickets yesterday, and I hope to attend. Any recommendations on hotels near the event? An initial search turned up a $525 per night boutique hotel. I’m more of a Holiday Inn type of guy;) » Posted By Adam W. Warner On October 17, 2009 @ 7:38 AM My Bid For Advanced Exporter Into Core Agreed and voted up. It will be a nice addition. » Posted By Adam W. Warner On October 14, 2009 @ 10:35 AM In answer to the title of this post… …too low. » Posted By Adam W. Warner On October 22, 2009 @ 3:20 PM Can’t we all just get along? » Posted By Adam W. Warner On October 22, 2009 @ 1:08 PM @ Jeffro – Great post and obviously on the minds of many:) @ Ron – …there will always be a contingent that are able to inform the novices I believe this is true. In fact, it’s the very reason I started my site, to give back to the next generation of WordPress users as I had been helped along the way, and I’m sure I wasn’t the first nor the last to do so. The world works in cycles, as does the WordPress user base I imagine. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not completely altruistic. I make a portion of my living by using WordPress and other Open Source software, as I expect many of us do. My employer and my clients pay me for my knowledge of the software and for knowing where to find solutions. Where do I find solutions for WordPress that I can’t solve on my own? In the community of course, those who I consider more knowledgeable than me with tasks like custom plugin creation and programming…(you know who you are). My point is, no matter how simple WordPress becomes to install, upgrade, manage, and extend, a “pecking order” or “food chain” will always exist between users who are satisfied with a basic install, and those who will want to extend and tweak…and build something continually better. » Posted By Adam W. Warner On October 21, 2009 @ 9:24 AM Custom Install Profiles Sounds Like A Cool Idea This is a great idea and reminds me of the New Blog Defaults plugin for MU. I’m agreed with Donnacha that, if done right, this would not only serve many thousands of people, but also have the potential to make it into core. A nice feather in the hat indeed. » Posted By Adam W. Warner On September 29, 2009 @ 8:35 AM Category Templates To Become Easier To Style Hey Jeffro, That’s what I thought too, but it appears that development has picked up again. I hope it continues. It’s a pretty slick plugin with a lot of uses. » Posted By Adam W. Warner On August 17, 2009 @ 8:25 AM This will be a nice feature, and as it turns out, I just posted about using category template pages… » Posted By Adam W. Warner On August 16, 2009 @ 8:04 AM Review Of Advanced Exporter For WP/WPMU @Jeffro, thanks for promoting Ron’s work, he and Andrea are true WPMU rockstars:) @Dgold – Here’s a use case that I have in mind. Let’s assume I have an MU setup running a clothing store and I have 85 categories in the main blog, one for shoes, shirts, pants, etc. After running this for awhile, let’s say I want to start creating niche blogs that focus on one kind of apparel. I could simply create another blog called shirts in my MU setup, then use this plugin to export only posts in the shirt category and populate this new blog. » Posted By Adam W. Warner On August 6, 2009 @ 8:15 AM What Can You Do With WordPress MU? Hi Andrea, Nice to see you making the rounds:) These are some great tips for those new to MU. » Posted By Adam W. Warner On June 18, 2009 @ 8:14 AM Is WordPress Information Too Fragmented? Great post and interesting discussion. I don’t think there are too many people writing about WordPress for the reasons stated above. Most people who write about WP are writing about specific functionality, themes, plugins, or hacks, that they have used or have some kind of opinion on. I started writing about WordPress because I was a huge fan and was impressed by all the helpful people in the community. In the WP world, I don’t consider my blog to be all that well known. I don’t create themes regularly, I don’t write plugins, I just write about the WP topics that matter to me and that I think may help others with WP as I have been helped by many of you above. However, the people that contact me to ask for help with WP related tasks consider me a WP expert. My WP expertise lies in teaching people what it is, how to apply it to the site they would like to build, and how to put the pieces together from existing themes, plugins, code hacks, etc. I rely on the many people developing and writing about WP topics in order to help those that read my site and rely on me. I think we all have our place in the WP food chain, from the top, all the way down to the one sentence blog scapers (bottom feeders). I think a WordPress portal built by the WordPress fanboys and fangirls is an idea that has merit, and I think would be a success, but I certainly wouldn’t want it to compete with any of the official WordPress resources, but rather be an extension of those resources. I would jump at the opportunity to be involved and to put my specific WP expertise in a place where the highest number of current and future users could benefit. » Posted By Adam W. Warner On June 4, 2009 @ 11:06 AMComments Posted By Adam W. Warner
@Ron, thanks for releasing this plugin, congrats and good luck!
.-= Most Recently Published Blog Post… Extending WordPress by Using the Power of Video – Part Six =-.
«« Back To Stats Page