• WPWeekly Episode 314 – Getting Squeebly With It

    WPWeekly Episode 314 – Getting Squeebly With It

    In this episode, John James Jacoby recaps his trip to WordCamp Chicago and explains the thought process behind his presentation, The Fourth Wall of WordPress. We highlight a new project that gives developers a guided path to migrate functionality from the Classic editor to Gutenberg. We discuss the pros and cons of the trusted authors…

  • WordSesh 5 Scheduled for July 25th

    WordSesh 5 Scheduled for July 25th

    After not having an event in 2017, WordSesh, a virtual WordPress conference, is returning July 25th. The event is being organized by Brian Richards, Founder of WPSessions and a collection of partners.  The schedule is online and like previous events, there is a mixture of sessions and live podcasts. Based on the sessions, this year’s event…

  • WordPress Theme Review Team Launches Trusted Authors Program

    WordPress Theme Review Team Launches Trusted Authors Program

    In an effort to further streamline the review process and take some of the burden off of reviewers, the WordPress Theme Review team has launched a Trusted Authors Program. The program is for authors who consistently submit themes that follow the WordPress theme review guidelines and have three or fewer issues in multiple areas. Applications…

  • A Gutenberg Migration Guide for Developers

    A Gutenberg Migration Guide for Developers

    In order to help developers learn how to migrate from the classic editor to Gutenberg, Daniel Bachhuber has launched a Gutenberg Migration Guide. Bachhuber is seeking the community’s help in identifying and filling a database to document all of the ways the classic editor can be customized. Take a look through the Gutenberg Migration Guide.…

  • WPWeekly Episode 313 – BuddyPress, Gutenberg, and An Upcoming Anniversary

    WPWeekly Episode 313 – BuddyPress, Gutenberg, and An Upcoming Anniversary

    In this episode, John James Jacoby and I start the show with a shout out to WebDevStudios, a web development agency that’s celebrating its 10th year in business. We then cover what’s new in BuddyPress 3.0, why plugins hosted on WordPress.org can no longer claim legal compliance, and what to expect from 0.7 of the AMP…

  • AMP for WordPress 0.7 RC 1 Released

    AMP for WordPress 0.7 RC 1 Released

    XWP, Automattic, and Google’s AMP team, has released 0.7 Release Candidate 1 of the AMP for WordPress plugin. Hinted at during AMP Conf 2018 earlier this year, 0.7 is a major release that contains significant new features. This release adds Native AMP support for all of the default widgets, embeds, and commenting. Notifications will be…

  • How Delicious Brains Creates and Releases WordPress Plugins

    How Delicious Brains Creates and Releases WordPress Plugins

    Delicious Brains have published the process they use for creating and releasing WordPress plugins. The post covers development, brainstorming, reviewing, testing, and wire frames. The team also describes the products and services they use and the roles they play within their projects. How is their process different or similar to yours?

  • WordPress for iOS and Gutenberg Don’t Get Along

    WordPress for iOS and Gutenberg Don’t Get Along

    When it comes to editing and crafting content on the go, the WordPress Mobile apps are a good choice. The question is, how does the editor in the iOS app interact with content written in Gutenberg? Let’s find out. Quick Edits Turn Into Lengthy, Frustrating Fixes For testing purposes, I used a simple scenario that many…

  • Gutenberg 2.7 Released, Adds Ability to Edit Permalinks

    Gutenberg 2.7 Released, Adds Ability to Edit Permalinks

    Gutenberg 2.7 is available for testing and not only does it refine the visuals around block controls, it adds the highly requested ability to edit permalinks. A new pagination block is available that adds a page break, allowing users to break posts into multiple pages. The block is located in the Blocks – Layout Elements…

  • WordPress Accessibility Team Is Seeking Contributors for Its Handbook Project

    WordPress Accessibility Team Is Seeking Contributors for Its Handbook Project

    The WordPress Accessibility team is seeking contributors for its handbook project. It’s a collection of tips, resources, tools, and best practices. The goal is to educate users through summaries, articles, and reference materials. The handbook was created after the accessibility team repeatedly noticed the same accessibility issues cropping up and not having a central place…

  • BuddyPress 3.0 Beta 2 Released

    BuddyPress 3.0 Beta 2 Released

    The BuddyPress development team has released Beta 2 of BuddyPress 3.0. BuddyPress 3.0 is a major release that contains some significant changes. A new template pack called Nouveau will replace the bp-legacy template packs introduced in BuddyPress 1.7. The new template pack has been refactored to be semantic, accessible, and use a new set of…

  • Talking Gutenberg on Episode Eight of the Drunken UX Podcast

    Talking Gutenberg on Episode Eight of the Drunken UX Podcast

    Last week, I had the pleasure of joining Michael Fienen and Aaron Hill, hosts of the Drunken UX podcast, to discuss Gutenberg. We covered a lot of topics, including, why Gutenberg was created, our experiences, its timeline, pros, cons, resources, our biggest concerns, and what developers and freelancers need to know. The show is one…

  • Plugins Hosted on WordPress.org Can No Longer Guarantee Legal Compliance

    Plugins Hosted on WordPress.org Can No Longer Guarantee Legal Compliance

    The plugin review team has amended guideline number nine which states, developers and their plugins must not do anything illegal, dishonest, or morally offensive, to include the following statement: Implying that a plugin can create, provide, automate, or guarantee legal compliance Mika Epstein, a member of the WordPress.org plugin review team, says the change was…

  • WPWeekly Episode 312 – Dragon Drop, WordPress Accessibility Statement, and WooCommerce GDPR

    WPWeekly Episode 312 – Dragon Drop, WordPress Accessibility Statement, and WooCommerce GDPR

    In this episode, John James Jacoby and I start the show by sharing our thoughts on Mark Zuckberberg’s congressional hearing. We then discuss what’s new in Gutenberg 2.6 and describe our user experience. We let you know what’s in WooCommerce 3.3.5 and discuss what the development team is doing to prepare for GDPR compliance. Stories…

  • Theme Review Changes Place More Onus Onto Theme Authors

    Theme Review Changes Place More Onus Onto Theme Authors

    The WordPress Theme Review team has implemented changes that simplify the process and places more responsibility onto theme authors. Theme reviewers now only need to check the following items to pass a theme. Licensing Malicious or egregious stuff Content Creation Security Although the bar to pass a theme is significantly lower, theme authors are still…