Here’s yet another good HeroPress story,…
Here’s yet another good HeroPress story, this time about Puneet Sahalot and his story about building a WordPress agency in his hometown of Udaipur, Rajasthan, India.
Here’s yet another good HeroPress story, this time about Puneet Sahalot and his story about building a WordPress agency in his hometown of Udaipur, Rajasthan, India.
Sarah Gooding has reported at WPTavern that the W3C and the agency it selected to redesign its website, Studio 24, dropped WordPress from consideration in a selection process that has ended with Craft CMS as the winner. First off, kudos to Craft CMS. I haven’t had a chance to give it a try yet, but…
Dan and Eric discuss their top picks for WordPress news stories of the week and the topic of professionalism. What is it — what does it mean for us in the WordPress community, and how does it relate to a healthy open source project and business ecosystem?
From practicing mindfulness to the evolution of WordPress, Corey Maass and Cory Miller cover a wide variety of topics in this episode as they continue the development of their new WordPress plugin, Crop.Express.
This week’s WordPress business highlights for Post Status: Lesley Sim is pivoting Newsletter Glue to an upmarket clientele. A discussion starter about WordPress UX. Do we need a curated plugin ecosystem, more open standards, and easy access to current expert consensus points in key knowledge areas? Time to bail out of Twitter? PayPal? Katie Keith tells her HeroPress story.
WP Webhooks is this week’s Business Member Spotlight in our new series highlighting business members. To say I’m impressed with WP Webhooks (and Jannis Thuemmig) is, quite honestly, a huge understatement. WP Webhooks is a game changer: fully automated and codeless workflows inside WordPress. WP Webhooks will make your work — in an agency, as a…
Up this week on WP Tavern‘s Jukebox with Nathan Wrigley, it’s Sean Blakely with the story of the transition to Gutenberg in a large agency, American Eagle. I’ve expected to see stories like this — for years. It seems they’re a little later in coming than anticipated, but it’s a good sign. At the same…