Thoughts on design patterns in WordPress
Tom McFarlin has yet another great post talking about design patterns in WordPress. There is a time and place for Object Oriented and Procedural approaches.
Tom McFarlin has yet another great post talking about design patterns in WordPress. There is a time and place for Object Oriented and Procedural approaches.
Cory and David discuss three books WordPress professionals should read as well as the way they make updates to WordPress.
Coming soon: the Post Status Index, an EMEA Huddle requested by our European members, and my talk about the importance of taking time off. Also, our door is always open for members of Underrepresented in Tech and anyone who finds the cost of membership a barrier to joining us. If you work professionally in WordPress or want to, we want you here!
Is there a win-win solution for plugin owners fighting churn and their professional WordPress customers, like agencies and freelancers?
Mike McAlister has been an active member of the commercial WordPress theme space since 2009. He started by selling themes on ThemeForest. He transitioned to the Okay Themes brand in December of 2011. And at the end of March of this year, Mike transitioned yet again to Array. While these transitions may seem like arbitrary branding, to me…
WordPress.com VIP has a fancy new stats page. Of course I immediately wanted to know how it stacks up to WordPress.com stats as a whole. Here’s the math: WordPress.com VIP: 2,441,299,137 pageviews in the last 30 days All WordPress.com: 14,512,740,573* pageviews in the last 30 days My incredible math skills tell me that means 16.82%…
Yesterday, I analyzed ThemeForest and Envato’s new Hosted program for getting hosting alongside your theme. Vova Feldman has a really interesting blog post that’s a good companion to what I wrote, which dives into the financial opportunities that still exist on ThemeForest. In short, he concludes that the “gold rush” is not over. However, it…