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WPWeekly Episode 79 – Alex King And WPHelpCenter

WPWeekly Episode 79 – Alex King And WPHelpCenter

By Jeffro on November 18, 2009

wordpressweekly1In this episode, I had the chance to welcome Alex King back to the show to talk about the WPHelpCenter, his Carrington theme framework and last but not least, his take on PremiumMod as well as his thoughts on building a business around GPL software such as WordPress. When I published my review of WPHelpCenter when it launched in April of this year, I had my doubts as to whether there would be demand for it considering the numerous outlets for support that exist within the community. After talking with Alex King within this interview, it’s clear that there is demand for such a service and it’s doing well.

Ad Copy:

This episode of WordPress Weekly is sponsored by WPClassroom.com. They have announced their next class called WordPress For Beginners that will be held on Tuesday November 24th From 6-9pm EST use the coupon code wptavern to take $5.00 off the price.

WordPress Tavern Listener Poll:

Last weeks poll question was: Should WordPress Change The Blog Nomenclature Within The Backend?

Out of a total of 103 votes, 92 of you said Yes while 11 people voted No.

This Weeks Poll Question Is: Would You Like To Hear An Interview With Anil Dash?

Picks Of The Week:

Jeff – WP Manage Plugins – WP Manage Plugins, is an easy way to give you more control over the plugins section of WordPress. This plugin enables users to disable upgrade notices for specific plugins, hide the plugins page from all users except yourself, hide the wp manage plugins settings page from all users except yourself, automatically email the site admin when any plugin is added/activated/deactivated and much more.

Last Weeks WordPress Trivia Question:

Which forum software was the first to use CSS based layouts rather than tables?

WordPress Trivia Answer:

bbPress. bbPress was originally written by WordPress creator Matt Mullenweg, after he could not find software available at the time that fit his needs. bbPress was the first forum software to utilize a CSS-based layout, rather than the tabular layouts of other forum software available at the time.

This Weeks Trivia Question

What powers the WordPress.org website?

Announcements:

Aaron Brazell aka Technosailor will be on the show next week to discuss his work with WordPress as well as his new book, The WordPress Bible.

WPWeekly Meta:

Next Episode: Tuesday, November 24th 8P.M. EST

Subscribe To WPWeekly Via Itunes: Click here to subscribe

Length Of Episode: 1 Hour 27 Minutes

Download The Show: WordPressWeeklyEpisode79.mp3

Listen To Episode #79:

Posted in WordPress Weekly | Tagged alex king, carrington, crowd favorite, talkcast, wphelpcenter, wpweekly | 14 Responses

What Exactly Is The Carrington Framework?

What Exactly Is The Carrington Framework?

By Jeffro on August 3, 2009

carringtonlogoThe Carrington framework by Alex King and Crowd Favorite has published an extensive question and answer post on their development blog. The post covers everything from what the Carrington theme framework is all about, what makes it different from other frameworks, and the philosophy behind the framework.

While a number of developers and theme authors have dug into the documentation and example themes and learned how to use Carrington, we’d like to make it a little more accessible to others. We’d also like to clear up some misconceptions about the Carrington framework vs. other WordPress theme frameworks.

One of the most interesting questions in the post asks if Carrington is not a parent theme.

No, it’s not a parent theme and it isn’t intended to be. I think it’s really unfortunate that people decided to call parent themes theme frameworks. They aren’t frameworks in the standard development sense, they are parent themes that support child themes to override certain components of them.

You know, I don’t understand how that term Parent theme for frameworks came about anyways. If any theme can be a framework, it makes the whole thing a moot point. I understand Parent/Child theme relationships, but Parent themes as frameworks? Sure, Thematic, Hybrid and some other frameworks do use their framework theme as a Parent theme which then has a Child theme built from the parent. Boy, the more I talk about it, the more I think we need a WordPress Theme family tree!

Posted in Themes | Tagged alex king, carrington, frameworks, Themes | 3 Responses

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