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Episode 42 – How Could WordPress Die?

Episode 42 – How Could WordPress Die?

By Jeffro on February 14, 2009

wordpressweekly1Episode 42 of WordPress Weekly which fell on the same day as Friday the 13th contained a round table discussion where we talked about the various events or circumstances that would need to take place in order for WordPress to meet its demise. Although in the end, none us believed that WordPress would be disappearing anytime soon.

Ad Copy:

This episode of WordPress Weekly is sponsored by, WebDevStudios.com. WebDevStudios is a website development company specializing in WordPress support and development services. Contact them today for help with your WordPress powered website.

WordPress Trivia Question:

Give me the exact date the first post was published on the WordPress.org blog. Date should be in month, day, year format.

Discussion Panel:

Brad Williams
Jeremy Clarke
Jacob Santos

Stories Discussed:

WordPress 2.7.1 Released

WordPress Tavern Listener Poll:

Each week from now on, I’ll be featuring a new listener poll question on WPTavern.com The poll is located in the sidebar on the right hand side of the site.

Last weeks poll question was: Should The Sandbox Theme Be The Next Default Theme In WordPress?

Out of a total of 30 votes, 47% or 14 of you voted Keep Kubric But Remove Classic Theme. 37% or 11 of you said Yes and 17% or 5 of you voted No.

This Weeks Poll Question Is: Is Friday The 13th Lucky Or Unlucky?

Plugin Picks Of The Week:

Jeff – Supple forms – Supple Forms is a CMS plugin for WordPress that lets you easily add a custom write panel or meta box to the Write Post/Write Page screen. It differs from other custom write panel plugins in that you can store your data in either WordPress Custom Fields or your own custom table that the plugin will create for you. Additionally, it provides a powerful HTML snippet tool that lets you format and insert your data into pages and posts with shortcodes, and without tweaking templates.

David – SEO Blogroll – Lets you decide which blogroll links have the nofollow attribute.

WordPress Trivia Answer:

April 6th, 2003

Brian Gardner Theme Giveaway:

Member ID 12 was the lucky recipient of a single site license for a Revolution theme of their choosing. Member ID 12 on the WPTavern forum is ksolomon. If ksolomon does not claim the prize or chooses not to accept, I’ll use the random number picker to choose another winner.

Announcements:

There will be no episode of WordPress Weekly next Week. Instead, the next episode will be on February 27th.

WPWeekly Meta:

Next Episode: Friday February 27th, 2009 8P.M. EST

Subscribe To WPWeekly Via Itunes: Click here to subscribe

Length Of Episode: 1 Hour 30 Minutes

Download The Show: WordPressWeeklyEpisode42.mp3

Listen To Episode #42:

Posted in WordPress Weekly | Tagged death, demise, talkcast, wordpress, wpweekly | 1 Response

Demise Of WordPress And Its Saving Grace

Demise Of WordPress And Its Saving Grace

By Jeffro on February 8, 2009

Ask JeffThis post is part of an ongoing series called Ask Jeff. This is where I’ll take a question someone within the WPTavern or WordPress community gives me and provide my thoughts/answer to. This weeks question was submitted by community member andrew.

Which current WordPress feature do you think is most likely to be a contributing factor in the eventual demise of the platform, and which feature that has not yet arrived do you believe is most likely to be its saving grace?

My goodness. Could these questions get any tougher? Good thing I like challenges. The first question is especially difficult to answer because a feature that becomes a contributing factor to the demise of WordPress should never make it into the core. But you did say which CURRENT feature so while thinking about the question, I determined that the post editor could certainly be a leading contributor to the downfall of WordPress. When three of your top 5 voted ideas for WordPress revolve around the behaviour of the post editor, that alone makes quite a statement. Add to that, these three ideas were submitted over two years ago and so far, doesn’t look like any of them have been addressed. I don’t know if they are being ignored, if there are no resources dedicated to fixing the problems, or if there are no solutions to the problems, but I can easily see a large group of people catching wind of these three ideas and making the case that they should have been addressed a long time ago. I can also see this large group of people using those ideas as the poster child for a ton of negative publicity on not only the software, but the entire development process. How likely is all of this to happen? I’ll say low but it is concerning to see three ideas which over the past two years, the WordPress user base has made their case known that they want these issues addressed but to no avail.

Now, onto your second question. I’m not sure I would call this a feature but a saving grace to WordPress could be to apply the ideas centered around the WordPress back end redesign for 2.7 and extend that line of thinking to all areas of the back end. WordPress 2.7 re-enabled end users to shape the back end so that it worked best for them. However, I believe this could be extended to the point where end users are not limited by having things in a certain location. I think if the back end could be modularized to the point where the core components behave like widgets, this could become the saving grace as it would empower normal end users to really shape the entire administration portion of WordPress so that it best fits their needs. WordPress can’t be all things to all people and I think the more ways that WordPress provides end users the chance to configure things that best suits them on a personal level, the better.

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Posted in WordPress | Tagged askjeff, demise, saving grace, wptavern | 6 Responses

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