Month: September 2017

  • Gutenberg 1.2 Adds Postmeta Support and Extended Settings Placeholder

    Gutenberg 1.2 Adds Postmeta Support and Extended Settings Placeholder

    WordPress contributors have not yet made a final decision on the JavaScript framework to adopt for core, but Gutenberg development continues on with version 1.2 released this week. The update provides a better experience resolving block conflicts when switching between the “classic editor” and Gutenberg. Previously, if a user had created some paragraph blocks in…

  • DigitalOcean Partners with GitHub to Support Open Source Projects during Hacktoberfest October 1–31

    DigitalOcean Partners with GitHub to Support Open Source Projects during Hacktoberfest October 1–31

    DigitalOcean is organizing its fourth annual Hacktoberfest in partnership with GitHub. The event was created to support open source projects and participants can earn a free t-shirt by contributing four pull requests during the month of October. More than 29,000 people signed up for Hacktoberfest 2016 from 114 countries and 10,227 people completed the challenge.…

  • A Very Brief Introduction to Version Control and Git

    A Very Brief Introduction to Version Control and Git

    This post was contributed by guest author Peter Suhm. Peter is a web developer from the Land of the Danes. He is the creator of WP Pusher and a huge travel addict, bringing his work along with him as he goes.   Have you ever done this? Most of us have. Do you know what…

  • WordCamp Incubator Program Gears Up for Round 2

    WordCamp Incubator Program Gears Up for Round 2

    Last year the WordPress Community Team launched an experimental WordCamp Incubator program to bring WordCamps to new cities where meetups had not been very well established. After receiving 182 applications, organizers narrowed the selections to three cities with the most potential to foster an emerging WordPress community. Successful WordCamps were held in Denpasar, Harare, and…

  • WPWeekly Episode 289 – Where Did WordPress’ Ease of Use Go?

    WPWeekly Episode 289 – Where Did WordPress’ Ease of Use Go?

    In this episode, John James Jacoby and I are joined by Scott Bolinger. Bolinger recently attended a Content and Commerce Summit where WordPress and WooCommerce were not mentioned. Bolinger shared the perspective he gained from an attending the event and speaking with a friend who uses Shopify. We discuss what happened to WordPress’ ease of…

  • WordPress.com Adds Google Photos Integration, Available Now for Jetpack-Enabled Sites

    WordPress.com Adds Google Photos Integration, Available Now for Jetpack-Enabled Sites

    WordPress.com now supports seamless integration between Google Photos and the WordPress media library. Users can connect their Google accounts to have access to their photos when inserting an image. Google Photos has gained popularity due to its automatic tagless organization and free, unlimited backup for photos and videos up to 16MP and 1080p HD. In…

  • Camp Press – A Detox from Digital Life

    Camp Press – A Detox from Digital Life

    The following is a guest post by Brad Williams who shares his experience at Camp Press this past weekend. Brad is the Co-Founder and CEO of the website design and development agency WebDevStudios. He is also a co-author of the Professional WordPress book series. Brad is a US Marine Corps veteran and has been developing…

  • WordPress Core JavaScript Framework Selection Discussion Continues with Input from Open Source Community Leaders

    WordPress Core JavaScript Framework Selection Discussion Continues with Input from Open Source Community Leaders

    WordPress’ #core-js Slack channel hosted a lively and productive meeting this morning led by Andrew Duthie. The discussion focused less on specific framework comparisons and more on the role a framework will play in building JavaScript-powered interfaces for WordPress. Contributors were joined by core developers and leaders from the React and Vue communities, Chrome engineers,…

  • SI CAPTCHA Anti-Spam Plugin Permanently Removed from WordPress.org Due to Spam Code

    SI CAPTCHA Anti-Spam Plugin Permanently Removed from WordPress.org Due to Spam Code

    The SI CAPTCHA Anti-Spam plugin has been removed from the WordPress Directory due to its author including spam code. The plugin added a CAPTCHA image test to WordPress forms to prevent spam and was compatible with forms generated by bbPress, BuddyPress, Jetpack, and WooCommerce. It had more than 300,000 active installs at the time of…

  • Facebook to Re-license React after Backlash from Open Source Community

    Facebook to Re-license React after Backlash from Open Source Community

    Facebook has announced its intentions to re-license React, Jest, Flow, and Immutable.js under the MIT license. React community members began rallying around a petition to re-license React after the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) added Facebook’s BSD+Patents license to its Category X list of disallowed licenses for Apache PMC members. Facebook’s engineering directors officially denied the…

  • Scott Bolinger Shares Unique Perspective of WordPress From Outside the Bubble

    Scott Bolinger Shares Unique Perspective of WordPress From Outside the Bubble

    Scott Bolinger, a product developer focused on the WordPress space who has created several products, including AppPresser and Holler Box, recently attended Content and Commerce Summit 2017. This conference focuses on what’s working in eCommerce, digital media, information publishing, and subscription commerce. According to Bolinger, WordPress and WooCommerce were not topics of discussion. “It really opened…

  • WordPress Explores a JavaScript Framework-Agnostic Approach to Building Gutenberg Blocks

    WordPress Explores a JavaScript Framework-Agnostic Approach to Building Gutenberg Blocks

    The discussion regarding WordPress’ JavaScript framework selection continues in the #core-js Slack channel ahead of next week’s meeting. One of the more recent topics is the possibility of framework-agnostic block rendering for Gutenberg, which would allow developers to extend the new editor using any JS library they prefer. This means that Gutenberg blocks, which are…

  • DonateWC Reaches Fundraising Goal

    DonateWC Reaches Fundraising Goal

    DonateWC, an initiative focused on providing less fortunate people an opportunity to attend large WordCamps has reached its fundraising goal of 1,000€. Ines van Essen expressed gratitude and appreciation for the donations. “The responses and feedback that have come in during the past week have been overwhelming,” She said. “I can’t believe we can already…

  • WordCamp for Publishers Videos Now Available on YouTube

    WordCamp for Publishers Videos Now Available on YouTube

    WordCamp for Publishers, held last month at The Denver Post building, was the first niche WordCamp to be focused around a specific industry. The event was designed for people who use WordPress to manage publications and also to encourage collaboration among project maintainers who build open source tools for publishers. In addition to hands-on technical…

  • Apply Filters Podcast to be Retired after 83 Episodes

    Apply Filters Podcast to be Retired after 83 Episodes

    Brad Touesnard and Pippin Williamson are retiring from podcasting. Their bi-weekly show Apply Filters, a favorite podcast among WordPress developers, will go off the air after publishing its 83rd episode. The hosts have not yet revealed why they are retiring but plan to share more details in the final episode. We’ll answer that next week…

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