
Vanilla and WordPress on Flickr
See, this is what happens when you celebrate a company‘s 1st birthday at an event called Startup Drinks. Turns out I couldn’t look like a gangsta even if I tried. 😉

Vanilla and WordPress on Flickr
See, this is what happens when you celebrate a company‘s 1st birthday at an event called Startup Drinks. Turns out I couldn’t look like a gangsta even if I tried. 😉

Couretsy of Automattic. 🙂
Started a new quick site over lunch today: http://iloveiphonephotos.com/
I keep finding stunning photos taken with iPhones and always thought I should keep track of them.
So be it. You can also suggest your own findings.
The other incentive behind it, for me, is to showcase how easy it is to start a curation or tumble blog on WordPress.com.
It took me 15 minutes to get the whole thing setup, including:
Add another 15 to find and post, even schedule, a few picts using Press This to get the ball going and voilà.
Hoping you’ll like the picts as much as I do.
Facebook is retro because, like AOL, it’s retro by its nature. It’s a closed system. Some people like a closed comfy system and others don’t. I, for one, don’t. If I want a personal webpage with all sorts of information about myself, I’ll go to WordPress.com and make one. By doing this, I don’t turn over any data, control, or information to an onerous third party to sell, use, or exploit. I can close down the site when I want. I can say what I want. I can pretty much do whatever.
Via Why I Don’t Use Facebook | John C. Dvorak | PCMag.com (found via Zé).
http://twitter.com/#!/stephdau/status/9487312656273408
Discussing post formats.
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=15TP8QvtG9M]
Toni on the present and future of online publishing, WordPress.org and .com, online identify and more. Shot at the O’Reilly 2010 Web 2.0 Summit.
As you can tell by the 13 blog posts in the last 2 days, got my WordPress workflow NAILED! Browser, Press This, WP for iOS, XMPP, etc. #win!
— Stephane Daury (@stephdau) November 8, 2010
I had been toying with the idea of moving this very site from a self-hosted WordPress (wporg) instance to WordPress.com (wpcom) for the better of the last year, but never went ahead with it.
I had the overwhelming feeling that as a hardcore WP geek, I’d lose some functionality and freedom in the move. Also, as an open-source geek, I was somewhat feeling guilty about the switch.
Water under the bridge, TekArtist.org is now entirely powered by wpcom.
Here is why I did and what I had to do to make the switch, painlessly.
Do note that whatever comparisons I make below are purely based on my very context, and might not apply to your own needs and wants.
I’ll be frank right off the top, that’s the part where I’m cheating a little and have an advantage you probably do not: I’m a developer at Automattic, I code for wpcom.
Running my own site, which as you can see I post to constantly, on wpcom is in fact the best way for me to make sure YOU, our users, have the best, fastest, safest, most powerful and reliable blogging platform ever for your own needs, be it wporg or wpcom.
Since I live and breathe the wpcom codebase all day (and often night), any wpcom or wporg quirk I come across will promptly get addressed, hopefully even before any of our users have to face it themselves and potentially have to reach out in our forums or contact our happiness engineers. This is already a constant at Automattic, since we already do use our own tools and products to run the entire company, but doing so with this site brings it one notch closer to home.
Yes, it’s true that I can’t pick and choose random plugins to install anymore, like I could on my wporg instance. But if there is something I want that we don’t already have, I just propose it, install/tweak/code it, then make it available to millions of bloggers on wpcom at once rather than just myself. Sounds like a good, bilateral deal to me.
I could have my own theme, thanks to my position, but I actually did not opt to go that route (yet?). I was running the P2 theme with a child theme on my wporg instance, but I only had one custom function and mostly just CSS changes. Wpcom has P2, allows anyone to customize the CSS with a cheap upgrade and I’m not really going to miss my custom function. I didn’t lose anything in the move, and you likely wouldn’t have either.
Although it’s easier for me since I work here, regular users are not left out of this loop. We are always opened to features suggestions from users and developers alike.
Not comparing wporg to wpcom since the former has a slew of fantastic plugins for social integration, nothing to say there. On the other hand, wpcom has social features and millions of users in and of itself, as well as all the control and built-in 3rd-party integration I need (Twitter, Facebook, etc).
Yes wporg has a greater overall feature availability. But with wpcom, I just have to sit and relax, and they come to me instead of having to dig up for them, keep them updated, etc. Well, it’s arguable since it’s my job to do so at Automattic, but you do. 😉
One extra step I had to go through, but you might not, was due to the fact that I was using Alex‘s Viper’s Video Quicktags plugin and had to switch from the video shortcode format I had been using to the wpcom equivalents. I ran the following two regular expressions on my exported content file before importing it to wpcom.
[sourcecode]
find:
\B;vimeo width="?(B;\dD;+)"? height="?(B;\dD;+)"?\D;(B;^\B;D;)\B;/vimeo\D;
replace:
B;vimeo \3 w=\1\&h=\2D;
find:
\B;youtube width="?(B;\dD;+)"? height="?(B;\dD;+)"?\D;(B;^\B;D;)\B;/youtube\D;
replace:
B;youtube \3\&w=\1\&h=\2D;
[/sourcecode]
It’s now been around 24 hours since the move, which means most of the worldwide DNS cache should have cleared by now, and you should therefore be able to read this post. 🙂
I’ll let you know how it goes.
You know what would be awesome? If @twitter could scan wp.me URLs for media, like they do in #newtwitter with TwitPict, YouTube, Vimeo, etc.
— Stephane Daury (@stephdau) November 7, 2010
Note that Facebook does this already.