WordPress Expert » Updates http://johnlamansky.com/wordpress Wed, 01 Jun 2011 18:58:49 +0000 en hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.3 WordPress 2.6 Beta 1 Released http://johnlamansky.com/wordpress/wordpress-2-6-beta-1-released/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=wordpress-2-6-beta-1-released http://johnlamansky.com/wordpress/wordpress-2-6-beta-1-released/#comments Tue, 24 Jun 2008 13:02:35 +0000 John Lamansky http://wordpress.jdwebdev.com/?p=88 Beta 1 of WordPress 2.6 has been released! If you want to test it safely, you should be able to do so as soon as the WordPress 2.6 demo site is updated.

Update: Robert posted a comment pointing out an alternate demo site.

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WordPress 2.6 Now Expected in Early July http://johnlamansky.com/wordpress/wordpress-2-6-july-release-date/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=wordpress-2-6-july-release-date http://johnlamansky.com/wordpress/wordpress-2-6-july-release-date/#comments Mon, 23 Jun 2008 20:38:06 +0000 John Lamansky http://wordpress.jdwebdev.com/?p=87 WordPress 2.6 was previously slated for an August 2008 release, but the WordPress Trac Roadmap has recently been updated with the following information on the WordPress 2.6 release date:

July 7 stretch with July 14 fallback

That’s pretty terse, but I’d interpret it to mean “we’ll try to get it done July 7; it would be a stretch though, so we’ll have July 14 as a fallback.”

Considering the new release date is only 2 weeks away, and the Trac only shows 12% progress on WordPress 2.6 so far, I’d say it’s likely that many changes previously planned for 2.6 will be bumped to version 2.7.

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WordPress 2.6 Features http://johnlamansky.com/wordpress/wordpress-26-features/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=wordpress-26-features http://johnlamansky.com/wordpress/wordpress-26-features/#comments Fri, 20 Jun 2008 13:45:44 +0000 John Lamansky http://wordpress.jdwebdev.com/?p=54 Originally published on April 24, 2008. Updated on May 5, 20, 22, June 16, and June 20.

WordPress 2.6 may not be due until August 2008, but already I’ve managed to compile a list of features and enhancements that we’ll likely be seeing in this next major WordPress release. (I’ll continue to update this post as we approach the release date.)

  • NEW (June 20): Admin SSL support — The WordPress 2.6 admin should be able to be visited via either HTTP (normal connection) or HTTPS (encrypted connection), with the option to make admin HTTPS mandatory. [via]

  • NEW (June 20): Remote publishing disabled by default — Having the main avenue of attack for WordPress blogs be disabled by default will be great for WordPress security. [via]

  • NEW (June 16): Theme preview — Theme preview functionality would allow you to see what a new theme would look like on your blog before you activate it.

  • NEW (June 16): Theme paging — For those of you with a ton of WordPress themes (more than 15), you’ll be able to page through them in the administration. This should be especially useful for WordPress MU blogs that have large theme collections.

  • NEW (May 22): Ability to move wp-config.php — In WordPress 2.6, you’ll be able to move wp-config.php one directory level below the public root. Perhaps this could also allow multiple WordPress installations to share the same config file?

  • NEW (May 20): Google Gears support — Now integrated into the WordPress trunk (current working version), this feature will allow Google Gears users to experience a faster admin interface, and possibly manage their WordPress blogs while offline (how cool would that be?).

  • NEW (May 5): Identicons — In WordPress 2.6 you’ll have the ability to select a default Gravatar for those who don’t have one.

  • Post Revisions — Wiki-style revisions management for blog posts: a cool new power-feature, just announced on the WordPress Development Updates blog.

  • Shift-Click Checkbox Selection — In WordPress 2.6, you should be able to select a range of checkboxes in the category, comment, tag, post, page, and media administration sections by checking the “start” checkbox, holding the Shift key, and then checking the “end” checkbox… Gmail style.

  • Post Word Count — A WordPress.com feature that might be making its way into WordPress 2.6.

  • “Press This” Bookmarklet — The bookmarklet (which existed in WordPress 2.3 and prior but was removed in WordPress 2.5) has returned, new and improved.

Thoughts? Ideas? Add a comment below!

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Post Revisions in WordPress 2.6 http://johnlamansky.com/wordpress/post-revisions-screenshots/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=post-revisions-screenshots http://johnlamansky.com/wordpress/post-revisions-screenshots/#comments Tue, 27 May 2008 14:00:42 +0000 John Lamansky http://wordpress.jdwebdev.com/?p=77 mdawaffe has posted some screenshots of the post revisions feature of WordPress 2.6. Very cool!

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Google Gears Support in WordPress 2.6 http://johnlamansky.com/wordpress/google-gears-wordpress-2-6/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=google-gears-wordpress-2-6 http://johnlamansky.com/wordpress/google-gears-wordpress-2-6/#comments Thu, 22 May 2008 13:53:04 +0000 John Lamansky http://wordpress.jdwebdev.com/?p=73 As reported in my updated WordPress 2.6 features list, support for Google Gears in the administrative back-end has been added to the WordPress Trunk (i.e. the current development version).

According to the development ticket for the Google Gears patch:

The patch adds all static files used in the admin interface to a single offline storage. That speeds up page loading a lot, as it serves virtually all requests for static files from the computer’s HD instead of the network. So instead of 50-60 requests to the server on some pages, there are only 2-3.

Personally, I’m waiting for the WordPress 2.6 demo to be updated with a supporting alpha version so I can try Google Gears out. I just certainly hope it turns out to be more reliable than some other Google Gears implementations have been.

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WordPress 2.6 Demo: Try It Out http://johnlamansky.com/wordpress/wordpress-2-6-alpha-demo/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=wordpress-2-6-alpha-demo http://johnlamansky.com/wordpress/wordpress-2-6-alpha-demo/#comments Wed, 21 May 2008 14:00:47 +0000 John Lamansky http://wordpress.jdwebdev.com/?p=74 Although WordPress 2.6 is still in the early alpha stages (as of this writing), you can still check out the unofficial WordPress 2.6 Demo Site and give some of the new features a whirl.

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5 Features Removed in WordPress 2.5 http://johnlamansky.com/wordpress/features-removed-in-25/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=features-removed-in-25 http://johnlamansky.com/wordpress/features-removed-in-25/#comments Fri, 02 May 2008 14:00:42 +0000 John Lamansky http://wordpress.jdwebdev.com/?p=43 Here’s a list of 5 features that have gone missing in WordPress 2.5:

  1. Drag-and-drop write pages customization — This is one of the biggies that many people are complaining about. Hopefully you like WordPress 2.5′s new Write page layout, because if you don’t, you won’t be able to change it!

  2. Drag-and-drop sidebar assembly — WordPress 2.5′s new widget manger has its benefits, but you can no longer add widgets to sidebars via drag-and-drop.

  3. Bookmarklets — Gone are the Press It and Add Link bookmarklets that you could drag to your Links/Bookmarks toolbar. (Perhaps there will be a better-than-ever bookmarklet making an appearance in WordPress 2.6?)

  4. File Editor — The “Manage > Files” section that let you edit core WordPress files from within the administration has been removed. If htaccess editing is what you miss, check out the Meta Robots plugin.

  5. ID display — WordPress 2.5 no longer shows ID numbers (for posts/pages/categories/etc.) in the administration; instead you need to infer the ID numbers based on various administration URLs.

    While this might be annoying for power users, I think this “feature” removal is a good move with regards to simplicity, since most users don’t need to know the IDs anyway.

Thoughts? Leave a comment!

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30+ Ideas for WordPress 2.6 http://johnlamansky.com/wordpress/30-ideas-for-wordpress-26/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=30-ideas-for-wordpress-26 http://johnlamansky.com/wordpress/30-ideas-for-wordpress-26/#comments Thu, 01 May 2008 14:00:12 +0000 John Lamansky http://wordpress.jdwebdev.com/?p=63 WPCandy recently posted an interesting article called 30+ Things That Should Be Changed in WordPress 2.6. It’s essentially a big ideas list spanning the administration, the comment system, and more.

While I don’t agree with all the statements made (for example, I, unlike the post’s author, think that WordPress MU handles multiple blogs wonderfully), there are a lot of good ideas. I particularly like idea #15, a “theme library API”:

With an API, “premium” theme websites, such as WPDesigner’s Theme Club, PremiumThemes.net, and iThemes.com can let subscribers add their site to the WordPress admin for quick browsing of awesome themes.

Cool!

I might also incorporate an idea or two into a future version of WordPress Tweaks.

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WordPress 2.5.1 Security Release http://johnlamansky.com/wordpress/wordpress-251/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=wordpress-251 http://johnlamansky.com/wordpress/wordpress-251/#comments Fri, 25 Apr 2008 16:56:08 +0000 John Lamansky http://wordpress.jdwebdev.com/?p=54 WordPress 2.5.1 has just been released. According to the development blog:

It includes a number of bug fixes, performance enhancements, and one very important security fix. We recommend everyone update immediately, particularly if your blog has open registration. The vulnerability is not public but it will be shortly.

Download it now

The question I have is: does this mean 2.3.3 is no longer safe?

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WordPress 2.5 Features http://johnlamansky.com/wordpress/wordpress-25-features/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=wordpress-25-features http://johnlamansky.com/wordpress/wordpress-25-features/#comments Sun, 30 Mar 2008 02:00:06 +0000 John Lamansky http://wordpress.jdwebdev.com/blog/updates/wordpress-25/ WordPress 2.5 has been officially released! (You can download it here.)

A major upgrade, WordPress 2.5 packs a boatload of new features. Here are many that were listed in the official announcement at the WordPress Development Blog:

  • Customizable Dashboard widgets
  • The ability to upload multiple files at once
  • EXIF data extraction from image files
  • Search functionality for pages in addition to posts
  • Tag management functionality
  • A password strength meter
  • Concurrent post editing protection
  • Automated plugin updating
  • An improved visual editor
  • Built-in gallery support

These security enhancements are also included:

  • Salted passwords (to guard against brute-force password guessing)
  • Encrypted cookies
  • A new function for WordPress developers designed to avoid SQL injection attacks

The 2.5 update has developer features for WordPress programmers like myself, such as taxonomy creation, a new Shortcode API, and increased inline code documentation.

As if the above features mentioned in WordPress’s official announcement weren’t enough, 2.5 includes even more enhancements:

  • An overhauled administration interface.

  • Built-in avatar support using Gravatar.

  • Full text feeds even when the <!–more–> tag is used.

  • Two default color schemes for the admin interface; additional skins can be added via plugins.

  • A “comment bubble” in the admin menu that tells you at-a-glance how many comments are awaiting moderation.

Looking at the above features list, it appears WordPress 2.5 will be obsoleting the following plugins:

  • Full Text Feed
  • Existing gallery plugins like the excellent NextGEN Gallery (of course, these plugins can still have a use if you don’t care for WordPress’s built-in gallery)

WordPress 2.5 also takes care of these fixes that I included in my WordPress Tweaks plugin:

  • Changing the “Blogroll” admin section back to “Links”
  • Adding the “current_page_item” CSS class on a static page used for posts [bug ticket]

If you’re curious, you can also check out 2.5′s entire list of 734 recorded changes and fixes, or check out some interesting WordPress 2.5 statistics.

WordPress 2.5 has a ton of new features, but also has some changes that some people consider feature regression:

  • The categories section has been moved below the post editor on the “Write Post” page. (Although some are very annoyed by this, I personally don’t see it as much of an issue. Yes, it may necessitate a bit of extra scrolling, but how often do we need to set the categories when writing a post? Once, maybe twice?)

  • No more drag-and-drop sidebar assembly. You need to click an “Add” link instead.

  • The new color scheme will certainly not meet the approval of some. (Give them a break; it’s hard to find colors that please everyone. We’ll get used to it. And as mentioned above, 2.5 allows the admin interface to be customized with color schemes.)

There’s a lot of changes coming with WordPress’s latest version. What’s your take? What changes are you excited about, or disappointed with? Will you be upgrading right away, or will you wait a while?

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