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Leland Tells Us What’s Cooking In The Themelab

Leland Tells Us What’s Cooking In The Themelab

By Jeffro on May 24, 2010

In this interview, Leland who operates ThemeLab.com tells us what he’s been up to, what it’s been like to attend a WordCamp for the first time, and he also gives us some information regarding his underground project. I enjoyed getting to meet Leland face to face and hope I get the chance to meet up with him again soon at another WordCamp. Oh, the cookies were pretty awesome.

*Note* You may need to turn your volume to full blast to hear both myself and Leland. Lesson learned. No more outside interviews with the Flip.

Interview With Leland

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Posted in Video | Tagged interview, leland, raleigh, themelab | 2 Responses

WPWeekly Episode 98 – WordPress 3.0 And WordCamp San Francisco

WPWeekly Episode 98 – WordPress 3.0 And WordCamp San Francisco

By Jeffro on May 2, 2010

wordpressweekly1In this golden gate edition of WordPress Weekly, I was joined by Kim Parsell as well as Leland of ThemeLab.com to talk about the stories of the week. This episode was recorded at the same time WordCamp San Francisco was going on and I want to send out a special thanks to James Hicks of TheTechScoop.net for calling into the show from WordCamp San Francisco. James gave a detailed account as to what he was experiencing. His timing couldn’t have been better as James was on the line, Matt Mullenweg walked by and James was able to get Matt to hop on the phone to say hi. Hopefully, next weeks episode will feature a couple of guests who attended WordCamp San Francisco to provide us with a recap as to what took place their.

Ad Copy:

This episode could have been sponsored by you. If you own a commercial plugin or theme that is GPL compatible or a service built around WordPress and are interested in advertising, check out the advertising information page.

Stories Discussed:

Would You Take WordPress Advice From A Non WordPress Using Site?
Who Has Contributed To 3.0 So Far?
WPDocs
WPDev Chat For 4-29-10
Custom Post Types Tutorial
bbPress – 1 Ticket left for the 1.0.3 milestone.

Feedback:

Kurtis sent in the following question: What if you have so much content between Posts and Pages that you start to notice the site slowing down. Is there any way to resolve that or will I have to leave WordPress and find another alternative? Hosted through GoDaddy.

I responded that he should start using a caching plugin such as WP Super Cache or W3 Total Cache. I also suggested hooking up W3 Total Cache to a CDN. Kim weighed in and mentioned that he should start with his plugins. Review all of them, remove the ones he doesn’t need.

If anyone else has suggestions for Kurtis, place them in the comments.

*To Kurtis* I have tried to respond to your email but I receive an email server error.

WPWeekly Meta:

Next Episode: Saturday, May 8th 2P.M. EST

Subscribe To WPWeekly Via Itunes: Click here to subscribe

Length Of Episode: 1 Hour 17 Minutes

Download The Show: WordPressWeeklyEpisode98.mp3

Listen To Episode #98:

Posted in WordPress Weekly | Tagged 3.0, kim, leland, san francisco, talkcast, wordcamp, wpweekly | 7 Responses

WPChat – A New Hangout For WordPress Folks

WPChat – A New Hangout For WordPress Folks

By Jeffro on October 13, 2009

wpchatlogoOver the course of this past weekend, Leland of Themelab.com launched a new website called WPChat.com. The site consists of a simple design which almost takes minimalism to a new level but I like it. The chatroom loads on the index page enabling you to choose any nickname you want without registration. This has a pro-con effect where registration is not required but there is no way to validate someone is who they say they are. This has happened already and ends up leading the discussion to a point where a pop quiz is offered to the person to validate their name. Leland is currently taking feedback to figure out how to resolve this problem as well as whether or not he should replace the chat with an IRC based one while keeping a web client to access the channel.

Those small issues aside, I’ve already participated in a few heated conversations regarding themes as well as a number of other topics. So if the Tavern is having a slow day, I’ll now know why.

Posted in News | Tagged chat, leland, wordpress, wpchat | 6 Responses

Interview With Leland Of Themelab.com

Interview With Leland Of Themelab.com

By Jeffro on September 22, 2009

How long have you been a part of the WordPress community?

I’ve been using WordPress since about 2006. Back then I was a newbie, and just using it for basic development. I liked how it was easy to hack up and theme to make pretty much any kind of site I wanted. Over time with lots of practice I started to get pretty good at XHTML/CSS and WordPress theming. I started ThemeLab.com in June of 2007 which is I guess when I became a part of the WP community. I started interacting with other WP community members via blog commenting. Later I started to get involved with Twitter. Right now I try to follow pretty much every WordPress-related Twitter user I can find. Forums like WPTavern also make it really easy to communicate with the more active community members.

themelablogo

What is the process of releasing a theme on ThemeLab.com?

Pretty much all the themes released on Theme Lab are not designed by me (I am admittedly not a designer) so the first step would have to be getting a design to code and port into WordPress. A lot of these designs are already coded templates in XHTML/CSS which I port to WordPress. Others are sent to me from designers in PSD form which I have to code in XHTML/CSS and then port to WordPress.

I upload to the test site and make sure all the basic elements are styled properly. Another thing I usually have to do is create threaded comment styles which is usually a huge pain. After everything is styled I might
make a theme options page and widgetize several areas of the theme if appropriate. After the theme is completely finished, I also spend a lot of time writing out how to use the theme with screenshots. This takes a long time, but I think detailed instructions help cut down on support requests if users know how exactly to set up a specific theme. Occasionally people offer to beta test the themes before I officially release it because I post “sneak previews” on Twitter, which can be very helpful to have another set of eyes look things over.

What are some of the lessons you can share when dealing with outside collaboration.

Like I mentioned above, I do collaborate with designers and such where the relationship usually is: they design and I code. Communication is always key in collaboration. Since I usually only collaborate with one designer per project, things like e-mail are usually suitable for communication. For larger collaborations I may want to look into using something like the P2 theme, which some have said has been very helpful in collaborating with multiple people.

Jungleland Is One Of The Most Recent Themes Released By ThemeLabs

Jungleland Is One Of The Most Recent Themes Released By ThemeLab

What does your daily routine consist of?

After I wake up, the first thing I usually do is check email and catch up on my Twitter stream. I use TweetDeck and have columns set up to track my replies plus a search column to see if anyone is using words like “themelab, theme lab, or custom theme” in any of their tweets, so I check on those too. I used to check Google Reader as I subscribe to a number of WP-related blogs, but honestly I think Twitter has effectively replaced that for me. After I’ve caught up on emails and tweets, I make up a daily todo list of things I have to do, and just work down the list.

With ThemeLab being responsible for over 90 themes, how much freelance work have you managed to undertake?

I had been doing a little bit of freelance work on the side, mostly people who have contacted me through ThemeLab.com. These projects usually WordPress or coding-related. I never really advertised or actively promoted my services until I launched CustomTheme.com which is where I provide a custom WordPress theme development service. That usually keeps me pretty busy now, but I do try to find time to release high quality free themes when time allows.

Why have you decided to work with WordPress rather than other software?

While I think the simplicity of WordPress is a huge plus, the real reason I decided to work with WordPress is the strong community. Pretty much every problem I run into can be solved by searching Google or the WordPress.org support forums. If I still can’t figure something out, I’m sure someone on the WPTavern forums would be happy to help out.

Simply Minimal Theme

Simply Minimal Theme

What are some of the pains and tribulations of being a WordPress theme developer?

As I said above, styling comments is pretty painful. This is where products like CommentBits from Ryan Imel (wherever he is) provides a nice solution for theme developers who hate styling comments. While comment styling is pretty bad, I think most theme developers would agree with my that support is probably the most painful activity to have to deal with. While a lot of theme developers have gone commercial and either charge for the theme download or support, I charge for neither. Most people probably think it’s pretty stupid of me to do all this for free, but I really don’t get that many support requests, probably no more than a couple per week in the forums. I like to think this is because my themes are easy to use and well-documented. My blog at ThemeLab is more just for fun, and also an indirect way of promoting my other commercial services.

What would you like to see added to WordPress to help make your job as a developer easier?

That’s a good question and I really can’t think of anything that would make anything easier, it’s already pretty flexible as of now. I thought something like syntax highlighting in the code editor would be helpful, but when CodePress syntax highlighting was introduced in WordPress 2.8, I found it was more of an annoyance than anything.

Anything you’d like to get off your chest or throw out to the public?

Thanks for the interview!

Posted in Themes | Tagged leland, themelab, themes designer | 3 Responses

Leland Returns! ThemeLab To Continue

Leland Returns! ThemeLab To Continue

By Jeffro on March 31, 2009

themelablogoLeland who operates the ThemeLab website which consists of Free WordPress themes as well as tutorials announced today that he is back and ready to go. Leland explains that the reason behind his absence is that he had some offline endeavors that needed some attention. In his post, he provides a summary of what he’s missed since rejoining the community. Here is what Leland states are the plans for ThemeLab.

Theme Updates – The main problem with having released so many themes up until now, almost 100, is it makes it tough to do major updates. Even though all the themes should still work with WordPress 2.7, as of now, they don’t have features such as threaded commenting. I’ll be updating the themes to work with 2.7 one at a time, prioritizing the most popular themes first. If anyone knows of any links to good tutorials on updating themes for 2.7, feel free to let me know in the comments.

Future Themes – As of right now, the plan is to have all future themes compatible with WordPress 2.7+ only. That means, no backwards compatibility to previous versions. There will be a mix of “unique” themes, as well as ported themes from various free templates from across the web.

He is currently taking suggestions for template ports so if you have any, be sure to send him his way.

Posted in News | Tagged community, leland, Themes, themeshaper | 3 Responses

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