WordPress Planet

February 07, 2012

WPTavern: Senior PHP Developer Position Open – Lift

Chris of LiftUX reached out to me the other day and wanted me to let everyone know that they are hiring for the position of Senior WordPress/PHP developer. The developer would also be helping to build out themes and plugins for UpThemes.

Related posts:

  1. WordPress Developers That Are Hiring
  2. WordPress Developer Chats Should Focus On Core
  3. Want To Work For Crowd Favorite?

by Jeffro at February 07, 2012 06:00 PM under Themes

WPTavern: First Issue Of The WPCandy Quarterly Almost Out The Door

Many people within the WordPress community are anxiously awaiting the first issue of the WPCandy Quarterly to show up in their mailbox. According to Ryan, that day is soon approaching as the first batches are currently being printed. However, since there is still some time before we’ll be holding the physical copy, Ryan has explained how he went about developing the first issue. Based on the video Ryan published showcasing the various designs that articles have gone through, it looks like the magazine will have an impressive display around the content of each article, giving it that magazine feel.

Related posts:

  1. WPCandy Set To Publish First WP Centric Print Magazine
  2. How Ryan Imel Created The WP Quarterly Page
  3. WPCandy Is Back In Business

by Jeffro at February 07, 2012 02:00 PM under wpcandy

Weblog Tools Collection: WordPress Plugin Releases for 2/7

New plugins

Google AdSense and Google Analytics Remover will prevent AdSense ads and Analytics tracking code from displaying when you are logged in.

Updated plugins

Custom Field Suite allows you to visually manage custom fields.

Fast Secure Contact Form lets your visitors send you a quick e-mail message and blocks all common spammer tactics. Additionally, the plugin has a multi-form feature, optional extra fields, and an option to redirect visitors to any URL after the message is sent.

by James at February 07, 2012 01:00 PM under WordPress

February 06, 2012

WPTavern: BuddyPress Codex Revamped

John James Jacoby of BuddyPress.org has announced that the BuddyPress Codex has received a much needed refresh. Here is the kicker, the BuddyPress Codex is powered by a WordPress installation where all registered users are an editor. Users can share information as in a traditional wiki but everything is housed on individual pages. Interestingly enough, this very idea was proposed a couple of times during the past few years for the WordPress Codex but it never gained much traction.

Head on over to the NEW BuddyPress Codex and check it out. It will be interesting to see how this approach scales.

Related posts:

  1. BuddyPress To The Rescue For Ning Users
  2. BuddyPress 1.5.2 Released
  3. Handful Of Codex Stats

by Jeffro at February 06, 2012 06:00 PM under wordpress

WPTavern: How Page.ly Was Built

First off, congratulations to Joshua Strebel and to his wife as they are now first-time parents. Secondly, Joshua has put together a pretty transparent view as to how he created Page.ly, a WordPress specific hosting service. So far, the guide is five parts long but I advise you to start out with part 1, Identifying the opportunity.

No related posts.

by Jeffro at February 06, 2012 02:00 PM under wordpress

Weblog Tools Collection: BuddyPress Codex Gets a Refresh

If you’re a fan of WordPress, you probably know about the WordPress Codex, the massive community-editable source of WordPress documentation.

Just yesterday, the BuddyPress core team gave a massive update to the BuddyPress Codex, making it easier than ever to learn how to use the #1 social networking platform plugin for WordPress.

Even though the new BuddyPress Codex may function like a traditional Wiki, it’s actually built on top of WordPress and BuddyPress. After all, why not show off some of the cool things you can do with a platform while you learn how to use it?

by James at February 06, 2012 01:00 PM under documentation

February 05, 2012

Weblog Tools Collection: WordPress Theme Releases for 2/5

Blush is a soft, warm, feminine theme in tones of rose and cream.

Boozurk is a clear theme with a lot of features.

The Frances Wright is a clean and elegant theme.

by James at February 05, 2012 02:30 PM under wordpress themes

BuddyPress: BuddyPress Codex Refresh

We all know how critically important the WordPress.org Codex is. Countless laborious hours have gone into making it the de-facto resource for all things WordPress.org related. It serves as an online encyclopedia of WordPress functions, actions, best practices, and examples on how extend WordPress far beyond its initial reach.

You may not know it but we’ve had a codex here at BuddyPress.org since the early days. It’s mostly made life really difficult and forced everyone into the forums or to other sites for help.

Today, I’m really happy to report that the core team has spent some time this weekend to finally refresh the BuddyPress Codex.

The BuddyPress Codex is a WordPress installation where everyone is an editor. You are free to contribute your knowledge into it exactly the way a traditional Wiki works, all using WordPress pages and a few custom taxonomies specific to the BuddyPress project.

In addition, we’ve added a few small social integrations to show off who created and edited each page, and we’re keeping track of all those edits through the BuddyPress Activity component so you can show off your contributions back to the community.

We really think you’ll like the changes, and hope you’ll let us know your thoughts in the comments below!

by John James Jacoby at February 05, 2012 03:22 AM under codex

February 04, 2012

Weblog Tools Collection: A Plugin to Make All Themes Responsive, Coming Soon

It’s no secret that I’m a fan of responsive themes. Knowing that your WordPress blog will look just as good on a tiny mobile screen as it does on a huge desktop screen is one of the most important factors of design to me, especially in today’s age where mobile device usage is growing so rapidly.

Sadly, there aren’t many responsive themes out there, but Responsive Plugin aims to change that. Once released, Responsive Plugin will make any theme scale perfectly on any screen size. There is no definitive release date, but it is definitely coming out sooner rather than later, and you can find a signup form at the bottom of the site if you want to follow the action.

by James at February 04, 2012 01:00 PM under WordPress Templates WordPress Skins WordPress Themes

WPTavern: VoodooPress Celebrates 1 Year Anniversary By Giving Away T-Shirts

WordPress community site VoodooPress has recently turned one year old. To celebrate, they are giving away VoodooPress branded T-Shirts. They come at the cost of providing the site some social love by clicking on any of the social media icons on the site. Small price to pay for a chance at a T-Shirt. Congrats to the VoodooPress team and I hope the second year is better than the first!

Just imagine how powerful one would be if they wielded a GPL voodoo doll.

Related posts:

  1. Andrew Nacin – One Year Later
  2. It’s That Time Of Year Again
  3. WPTavern Celebrates Thank A Plugin Author Day!

by Jeffro at February 04, 2012 12:00 AM under wordpress

February 03, 2012

WPTavern: Digging Into WordPress Book Updated To Cover WP 3.3

The WordPress book, Digging Into WordPress has been updated to cover WordPress 3.2 and 3.3. This marks the 9th edition of the book as noted by Jeff Starr. Those of you who are owners of any previous version of the book will receive this update for free.

Related posts:

  1. Affiliate Program For Digging Into WordPress Closes
  2. Guest Review Of The Book: WordPress & Ajax
  3. New WordPress Book – WordPress 3 Site Blueprints

by Jeffro at February 03, 2012 09:00 PM under wordpres

WPTavern: Situations In Which MultiSite Should Not Be Used

Ipstenu once again has a great article that covers some situations in which MultiSite is not the best tool for the job. If you’re thinking that you need to use MultiSite to accomplish a certain task, make sure that task is not on her list.

No related posts.

by Jeffro at February 03, 2012 06:00 PM under multisite

WPTavern: Press75 Joins The WordPress.com Commercial Theme Family

Press75.com LogoCongratulations goes out to Luke McDonald as one of the themes produced by Press75.com has been selected to be part of the WordPress.com commercial theme store. The theme is priced at $50.00 and is called Debut. It’s mobile ready right out of the box along with having post format support. Speaking of post formats, Debut is especially interesting because when users select the Audio post format, it expands into a multi-track playlist. You can see the theme in action via the WordPress.com theme showcase.

Related posts:

  1. So Many Commercial Themes – So Many Theme Sorters
  2. Alex King Releases Post Formats Admin UI Code
  3. Review Of The RichBiz Commercial Theme

by Jeffro at February 03, 2012 02:00 PM under wordpress.com

Weblog Tools Collection: WordPress Plugin Releases for 2/3

New plugins

Quick Notice Bar will help you to display a sticky message in your site’s header.

RePress allows you to circumvent internet censorship by proxying traffic to websites that have been blocked by repressive regimes.

Widget Logic Visual lets you control on which pages widgets appear using conditional tags.

WP Really Simple Health allows you to view memory utilization, server uptime, and CPU load on the new admin toolbar.

Updated plugins

Tallyopia Analytics provides analytics that you can embed into your site using shortcodes or view in your admin dashboard.

Ultimate TinyMCE beefs up your visual editor with a plethora of advanced options.

by James at February 03, 2012 01:00 PM under WordPress

February 02, 2012

Alex King: http_build_query() Separator Tip

I ran into an interesting “bug” in Twitter Tools last night that I traced back to http_build_query(). I expected that the query strings generated by this function used & as a separator for the key=value pairs, but on one of our test servers, the separator being used was &. This is a php.ini config setting, so my expectation was clearly based on false assumptions. If you want to make sure that you get a & separator, you can pass it in as the 3rd parameter.

You’ll find this is particularly important if you’re making requests for remote data from within WordPress via wp_remote_get() or similar technique. If you are working on something that is run within WordPress, you can look at using add_query_arg() as an alternative to this as well.

by Alex at February 02, 2012 08:46 PM under WordPress

WP Windows Phone 7: Version 1.5 Is Here

Version 1.5 of WordPress for Windows Phone - showing the updated dashboardWe’re very happy to announce that version 1.5 of WordPress for Windows Phone is now available. This update focuses on speed and reliability – here’s what’s changed:

  • Stats: We’ve moved the stats section to its own page in the app which greatly improved the loading time for the blog panorama. While we were at it we fixed some bugs and improved the styling of the charts. The result is a much smoother experience for keeping up with your site’s stats. Just tap the new stats button in the actions pane to view your stats.
  • Post scheduling: The ability to schedule posts was a missing piece in the app. Now you can easily set a future publish date for your posts right from the app.
  • Comments: The comments list has been updated and now features a simple way to select multiple comments for bulk moderation.
  • Infinite scrolling: Your posts, pages, and comments now keep loading as you scroll down the list. No need to tap an extra button, it’s quick and easy.
  • Media uploading: The uploading reliability has been greatly improved. Now the app uploads your media in bite-size chunks, and automatically retries if you lose your connection. This has been tested a great deal and works well in most everyday situations.

In addition to the improvements and bug fixes, version 1.5 of WordPress for Windows Phone has also seen some minor UI enhancements and updates, as well as a number of crash fixes. All in all, we’re very happy with this release, which should make it even easier for you to blog from that fancy Windows Phone of yours.

We’re not resting just yet though. What would you like to see added to or improved on in the app? Comment on this post or shout out on Twitter and let us know your thoughts.

Huge thanks to everyone involved in this release: Dan Roundhill, Danilo Ercoli, Robert Collins, Max Cutler.


by Isaac Keyet at February 02, 2012 11:00 AM under update

February 01, 2012

Matt: LIFE.com

LIFE magazine has relaunched, powered by WordPress.com VIP. I’m a huge fan of the magazine’s history and the work of photographers like John Dominis.

by Matt at February 01, 2012 01:48 PM under Asides

Weblog Tools Collection: WordPress Theme Releases for 2/1

Dusk To Dawn is a dark theme that melds old-style organic ornaments with modern design and typography.

Grisaille is a classic and simple two-column design adjusted for mobile browsing.

Stark has 2 columns with a left sidebar, is of fluid width, has both an upper menu and a vertical menu, and is high contrast with vivid red, black and white.

by James at February 01, 2012 01:00 PM under wordpress themes

January 31, 2012

WPTavern: DBS Interactive Releases Theme Reference Guide

DBS Interactive which is an interactive agency has released their version of a WordPress 3.0+ theme reference guide. The guide is a reworked version of the information you would find in the Codex around template tags. So if the Codex presentation of this data is not your cup of tea, perhaps this reference guide will be easier to follow.

Related posts:

  1. Simple Guide To Adding Theme Options
  2. Good Guide On Avoiding Theme/Plugin Lock-In
  3. Idiot’s Guide To WordPress

by Jeffro at January 31, 2012 06:00 PM under Themes

WPTavern: Recovering From A Crashed WordPress Site

Themefuse has a generally good checklist on things to do when a WordPress powered website crashes. While the article doesn’t contain any drastically new information, it’s still a good list of things to do to get your site back up and running as soon as possible if a crash were to occur.

Related posts:

  1. 5 Tips To Create A Great Site About WordPress
  2. Four Common Sense Ways To Improve Security On Your WordPress Powered Site
  3. 14 Things To Consider When Choosing A Webhost For Your WordPress Powered Site

by Jeffro at January 31, 2012 02:00 PM under wordpress

Weblog Tools Collection: The WordPress Theme Review Team Needs Your Help

Are you a WordPress blogger? Do you enjoy having thousands of safe themes to choose from in the official directory? Did you know that a small group of volunteers goes through every single line of code in every submitted theme to make sure that they work properly on a basic installation and are free from malicious code? Chances are, you didn’t know that last bit, but now you do.

The Theme Review Team could use your help, especially if you know your way around a theme or two. At this time, there are typically many more theme submissions than active reviewers, so if you’re looking for a great way to help out the entire WordPress community, join the Theme Review Team today! If you’re a theme developer, but don’t have the free time to volunteer, you can at least help the team out by ensuring that your theme meets the guidelines before submitting it.

by James at January 31, 2012 01:00 PM under theme review team

January 30, 2012

WPTavern: Do You Want To See Plugin Specific Dashboard Widgets Disappear?

Joost de Valk was one of the first to start the trend and now, he’s on pace to reverse it. Joost announced that he has decided to remove the dashboard widget which shows the most recent posts on his site from his SEO plugin.

Joost provided some interesting statistics that show where most of his visitors are coming from. As it turns out, the dashboard news are did provide additional traffic but very little in the way of conversions which is one of the reasons for the removal. Looking at the reactions of those that use the plugin, some applaud Joost for this action while others wanted the ability to choose whether to hide or display the news widget. While not mentioned, I think it’s a little humorous as well that within the Plugin UI Guide published by WPCandy recently, they featured the Dashboard News Widget of Joost De Valks SEO Plugin as what not to do.

Note: There is a poll embedded within this post, please visit the site to participate in this post's poll.

While I want to see the results of the poll question I asked, I’ll pose a few more questions for you to answer. When is it ok to have a dashboard widget such as the one that used to be within the WordPress SEO plugin by Yoast? Is the dashboard considered sacred real estate reserved for only the most important information?

Personally, I like the trend of removing dashboard widgets generated by plugins. In this case, I think less is more.

Related posts:

  1. Changing Feeds In The WordPress Dashboard
  2. Is It Time To Refocus The Dashboard For News?
  3. Chances Of WPTavern Getting Into Dashboard?

by Jeffro at January 30, 2012 06:00 PM under poll

WPTavern: Theme Review Team Could Use Some More Reviewers

The Theme Review Team tried something new this past weekend. Members of the review team that could make it, spent all day in IRC to review themes stuck in the Priority 2 queue which lists themes that have been stuck in the review process for more than two weeks. While the goal was to clear the queue, the last time I checked the number of themes was around 81. Some of the themes have been in the review process for over 6 weeks. Browsing through the queue, I even noticed two themes submitted by Automattic. One was called Duotone which has been in the queue for 5 weeks with Bouquet coming in at 6 weeks. Just goes to show that Automattic doesn’t receive preferential treatment when it comes to the review process.

If you would like to see themes get through the review process faster, please consider joining the theme review team. As a theme author, you can also help make the review process go faster by ensuring that your theme meets the following guidelines.

Related posts:

  1. Name Your Dream Theme Team
  2. WPWeekly Episode 106 – The Theme Review Team
  3. DevPress Plans To Launch Plugin/Theme Review Service

by Jeffro at January 30, 2012 02:00 PM under team

Weblog Tools Collection: WordPress Plugin Releases for 1/30

New plugins

No Soup allows you to block users from a specific IP or range(s) of IPs and redirect them to another site.

WhatElse is a widget that lets you manually add related content to every post or page.

Updated plugins

Joemobi allows you to create native Android and BlackBerry applications from your WordPress site.

Social Login for WordPress lets your users log in and comment via their accounts with popular ID providers such as Facebook, Google, Twitter, Yahoo, Live, and over 15 more.

by James at January 30, 2012 01:00 PM under WordPress

January 28, 2012

WPTavern: WordPress Foundation To Foot The Bill For Meetup.com Organizer Dues

In what I believe to be an excellent use of the WordPress Foundation, Jane Wells has shared news that the foundation plans on footing the bill for Meetup.com Organizer dues that need to be paid by the founder of the meetup group. Considering the amount of these dues range from $12-19/month it’s not exactly cheap.

We’re setting up an official WordPress account on Meetup.com right now, and over the next couple of weeks will be working with existing meetup group organizers, people who want to start a new meetup group, and the helpful folks at Meetup.com to put this program in place. WordPress meetup groups that choose to have their group become part of the WordPress account will no longer pay organizer dues for that group, as the WordPress Foundation will be footing the bill.

This is exciting for several reasons. First, it means local organizers who are giving something back to the project by way of their time won’t also have shell out $12-19/month for the privilege. That alone is a big step. Second, it will open the door to more events and leaders within a community, since leadership and event planning won’t need to be tied to “owning” the meetup group. Third, more active meetup groups means more WordCamps, yay!

This is great news considering how many people use Meetup.com to control all aspects of their local WordPress meetups. Reading through the post, it looks like there are no strings attached but I wonder if by joining the official WordPress Meetup Group if at some point in the future, there will be some sort of Meetup guidelines published that those users will need to follow. If there are any guidelines that will need to be followed, I would hope that they are no where near as stringent as the WordCamp guidelines.

If you’re already a Meetup.com WordPress group organizer or looking to get started, be sure to take the survey so it gives the foundation a good starting point.

Related posts:

  1. New Forum For WordPress Meetup Organizers
  2. My Experience In Running A WordPress Meetup

by Jeffro at January 28, 2012 06:00 PM under meetups

WPTavern: Uncensoring The Web With RePress

A brand new plugin released by GreenHost aims to make censoring the web next to impossible. It’s called RePress and turns any WordPress powered website it’s installed on into a proxy server. The plugin was created in response to piratebay.org being blocked within the Netherlands due to a court ruling.

Header Image As Seen On Their WordPress.org Plugin Page

RePress uses phpproxyimproved as its HTML parser which is another piece of open source code that allows the proxy magic to happen. After installing the plugin, you’ll need to give it a unique URL that will be used when going through the proxy to the blocked website. I received the following message after trying to view one of the default websites that are added to the proxy list:

In order to protect your blog from cross-site scripting attacks, please log out of your WordPress administration backend before accessing any of the proxied site urls.
Please log out of WordPress by clicking on this logout link.

Afterwards you will be directly redirected to the proxied website.
For security reasons. This will also delete all cookies for this domain (your remembered settings will be lost).

So if there is a particular website that you visit often using your site as a proxy, you’ll need to bookmark the URL and visit it only when you’re logged out of WordPress.

If you decide to give RePress a try, please give GreenHost some feedback on it via the following forum thread.

Related posts:

  1. Addicott Web Suggests 6 More Plugins

by Jeffro at January 28, 2012 02:00 PM under repress

Weblog Tools Collection: WordPress Theme Releases for 1/28

Putte is a clean and beautiful theme with great features.

Red Modern is an elegant theme with red modern menus and elements.

by James at January 28, 2012 01:00 PM under wordpress themes

Peter Westwood: Tracing things back to where they came from

One of the things I find myself doing a lot when developing WordPress is debugging things and so I spend a lot of time thinking of ways I can make this easier for me and easier for everyone else. Overtime this had led to a number of significant improvements to the debug ability of WordPress core including things like WP_DEBUG and the Deprecated Notices as well as the development of great tools like the Debug Bar plugin.

Recently I’ve found that the more context you can get to an issue the easier it is to understand and debug and I also noticed that while we recorded a simple backtrace for queries in core when SAVEQUERIES was defined we didn’t do a good job of presenting the data. Some function calls need more context that just the function name to be most useful – such as when running an action/filter it is useful to know the name and when requiring or including a file is useful to know the file name and some path context. This lead to the idea of refactoring the backtrace capture functionality out of WPDB and into a function that was improved to give proper calling syntax for functions in classes when called statically and was more obviously re-usable by plugins like the Debug Bar.

So today I have introduced wp_debug_backtrace_summary( $ignore_class = null, $skip_frames = 0, $pretty = true ) for #19589. If you provide no arguments you will get back string containing the full trace of the code run up to the place where you call wp_debug_backtrace_summary() – you won’t see the call to it in the trace as it always hides itself.

The best way to see the difference and improvements is to look at how this improves the information in the development version of the Debug Bar (new release coming soon) so after the break I have included some before and after screenshots.

Debug Bar query list before the change showing the previous limited infomation

Development version of the Debug Bar showing the enhanced details

An example of how the Debug Bar currently displays warnings, notices and deprecated function calls.

The development version of the Debug Bar showing how it can use this new function to display much more useful information

One of the things I suspect I will be doing a lot with this new function is dropping calls to error_log( wp_debug_backtrace_summary() ); into code that I am trying to debug and work out how often and from where it is being called.  In the past I’ve done this by using print_r( debug_backtrace() ); which prints out a lot of information (some of which is pretty useful) and more recently I’ve been using print_r( debug_backtrace( false ) ); so as to only fetch and print the stack traces.

Using this new function does mean I lose by using  the access to line numbers and file names I had from the raw PHP functions but I find that with the file names in the require/include calls and the function name being called I can get to the code just as fast as before.

I hope you all put this new function to good use!


by Peter Westwood at January 28, 2012 12:14 PM under wordpress-3.4

January 27, 2012

Dev Blog: Year of the Meetup

We hereby declare 2012 as the Year of the WordPress Meetup. You’ll want to get in on this action.

meet·up \mēt-əp\ noun
A meeting, especially a regular meeting of people who share a particular interest and have connected with each other through a social-networking Web site: a meetup for new moms in the neighborhood; a meetup to plan the trip; a meetup for WordPress users.1

So what is a WordPress Meetup? Basically, it’s people in a community getting together — meeting up — who share an interest in WordPress, whether they be bloggers, business users, developers, consultants, or any other category of person able to say, “I use WordPress in some way and I like it, and I want to meet other people who can say the same.” Meetups come in different shapes and sizes, but they all carry the benefit of connecting you with potential collaborators and friends, and helping you learn more about what you can do with WordPress. Here are some of the common types of WordPress meetups:

  • Hang out and work on your WordPress sites together
  • Social/happy hour type gatherings
  • Mini-lectures/presentations
  • Developer hacking meetups
  • Show & tell of how group members are using WordPress
  • Formal instruction on how to use WordPress
  • Lecture series (possibly with visiting speakers)
  • Genius bar/help desk

There’s no prescribed format, as each local group can decide for itself what they want to do. Some groups mix it up from month to month, while others have multiple events each month to satisfy the needs of their community.

The tough part? Running a popular group takes time and money. Just as we worked last year to remove the financial burden for WordCamp organizers and provide logistical support so they could focus more on their event content and experience, we want to start extending that kind of support to meetup groups as well. We don’t want it to cost anything for someone to run a WordPress meetup, or to attend one — building local communities should be as free as WordPress itself!

Since there are so many more meetups than there are WordCamps, we’re going to start with the cost that is the same for every group: meetup.com organizer dues. We’re setting up an official WordPress account on Meetup.com right now, and over the next couple of weeks will be working with existing meetup group organizers, people who want to start a new meetup group, and the helpful folks at Meetup.com to put this program in place. WordPress meetup groups that choose to have their group become part of the WordPress account will no longer pay organizer dues for that group, as the WordPress Foundation will be footing the bill.

This is exciting for several reasons. First, it means local organizers who are giving something back to the project by way of their time won’t also have shell out $12-19/month for the privilege. That alone is a big step. Second, it will open the door to more events and leaders within a community, since leadership and event planning won’t need to be tied to “owning” the meetup group. Third, more active meetup groups means more WordCamps, yay!

In addition to the financial aspects, we’ll be working on ways to improve social recognition of meetup activity by incorporating feeds from the official meetup groups into the WordPress.org site, and including meetup group participation in the activity stream on your WordPress.org profile.2 I’m also hoping we can do something around providing video equipment to meetup groups (like we already do for WordCamps) to record presentations and tutorials that can be posted to WordPress.tv, helping meetup groups offer WordPress classes in their community, and getting involved with mentoring WordPress clubs at local schools and universities. Oh, and we’ll send out some WordPress buttons and stickers to the groups that join in, because everyone loves buttons and stickers.

We’re also putting together some cool resources for people who want to start a new meetup group. There will be a field guide to getting started and some supplies to help you get your group going, and a forum for organizers to talk to and learn from each other.

Over time, we’ll be talking to organizers and looking at what other expenses we can absorb and what other support we can provide to local groups. For now, we’re starting with the organizer dues. If you currently run a WordPress meetup group (whether you are using Meetup.com or not) or would like to start a WordPress meetup group in your area, please fill out our WordPress Meetup Groups survey. Filling in the survey doesn’t obligate you to join the official group, it just gives us a starting point to a) find out what groups are around/interested, and b) get some information on existing groups and their expenses and needs. Meetup.com will contact the group organizers who’ve said they’d like to join the new program, and will walk them through the logistics of the change and answer questions before helping them to opt-in officially.

So, if you currently run a WordPress meetup group, or you would like to start one, please  fill out our WordPress Meetup Groups survey. I can’t wait to see more meetups!

1 – Adapted from “meetup” definition at dictionary.com.
2 – Didn’t know about profiles? Check out http://profiles.wordpress.org/users/yourwordpressdotorgusernamehere (put in the username you use in the WordPress.org forums) to see yours!

by Jane Wells at January 27, 2012 08:17 PM under Community

Weblog Tools Collection: PressTrends Releases Plugin for WordPress Blogs

PressTrends has released a rather fascinating plugin for WordPress blogs. The plugin will allow you to measure various metrics for your posts, comments, and plugin usage, and compare these to averages across the entire PressTrends community.

The feature list may be just a bit basic now, but there are more features on the way, the design is very clean-cut, and if you’re interested to see how you’re doing versus “the status quo,” this is definitely the way to do it.

If you’re a theme designer, you might also be interested in their core product, which provides metrics for theme usage.

by James at January 27, 2012 01:00 PM under presstrends

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February 07, 2012 08:15 PM
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