Archive for the ‘Wordpress’ Category

Wordpress gets it wrong… and goes deaf

Friday, April 11th, 2008

I’ve been using the new Wordpress 2.5 on a project which I upgraded from 2.3.3. It seemed very swish, with some great new features: Media Management, multi-file uploading, Gravatars, tidier menus and — the big one — an improved Write screen. When Wordpress was in RC phase, this was said about the Write screen:

.”..only displays the information that you’ll use most often. It displays the most common fields in a way that makes posting incredibly easy. Additional options are hidden away until you need them. The new Write screen anticipates the natural flow of the way you write.”

Wordpress’ Write screen is the core of the software. If this doesn’t work well, it doesn’t matter how many nice new features have been included, you’re gonna have a bad time blogging. So it was encouraging to read about it’s improvments. But rather than improving the experience, they made it worse. Why? In short: Bad use of screen real estate. (more…)

Wordpress 2.5 Released!

Sunday, March 30th, 2008

I wasn’t expecting the final release to be so soon after the RCs, but it’s now available. It comes on the day I was intending to publish a new website — a personal project which uses WP 2.3 as it’s engine. Of course, it would be completely silly to do that, given that 2.5 address a lot of the problems I had and fixed using plugins, so I’ve decided to defer the site release for another week. It won’t make a lot of difference — I’ve been working on this site on and off for about 7 years but never actually put it on line!

So what’s different between the final 2.5 and the recent release candidate? At first glance, very little, although the WYSIWYG editor (TinyMCE) does now seem to preserve HTML a lot better which was one of my big issues. So, have a look a quick at my overview of the good and bad stuff or head on over to the Wordpress site and grab a copy for yourself.

Wordpress 2.5 Preview

Thursday, March 20th, 2008

Wordpress have released RC1 of version 2.5 of the Wordpress software. It’s been a while in coming but finally we can play with a more streamlined backend that promises a slew of new features.

I’ve downloaded it and have a test install running on my local server. I’ve had a quick play around with it and here’s a few good and bad things that I wanted to comment on:

The good

  • Importing from my blog worked flawlessly, picking up all attachments and images and arranging them in the correct upload folders. Sweet!
  • Gravatars are now built in
  • Uploads management has been completely replaced with a new Media Library section which is a thousand times better. You can now have permalinks for all media too. This is a massive improvement.
  • The Blogroll is now named Links and has been moved into the Write section, which makes much more sense.
  • You can add media directly to a post with a media-management popup allowing you to browse for files and send the links and/or embed code directly into the post you’re working on.
  • Images placed into your posts are automatically given classes for CSS alignment. This is long overdue and very welcome!
  • If you use the visual text editor, you can make it full screen, which helps block out distractions while writing. Shame that I still use the code view due to Wordpress’ horrible HTML code rewriting (which doesn’t seem to have improved, though I haven’t extensively tested that yet)
  • Some ‘Reading’ settings that were previously hidden in Options have now been sensibly moved to the Reading section
  • The admin area can have colour schemes applied using custom CSS which can be selected in the user profile (it took me a while to find that!)

The bad

  • Some plugins are now broken, but that was to be expected really.
  • The new colour scheme is ghastly and overall the back end still feels a bit clunky. It doesn’t feel like a polished product.
  • The write page now has a reduced side bar with most options appearing in collapsible panels beneath the Write window. This is a real waste of space and will mean more scrolling up and down to set things like the page-slug, ping status, etc. This seems an odd decision to have made.
  • Still no button for creating nextpage code in your post
  • Backend CSS for the admin area is still very messy and there still are not enough CSS hooks for skinning it
  • The Plugins page has a very bad default colour scheme that makes it tough to see at a glance which plugins are activated.

These are only few of my observations and I’m sure I’ll find others as I get to grips with it. Overall, this is a great improvement so a big “Well done!” to all involved. I’m currently re-designing my website, so I’m looking forward to using 2.5 to power it.

TinyMCE problems in Wordpress

Thursday, February 7th, 2008

The default WYSIWYG editor that comes with Wordpress, TinyMCE, is perfectly adequate for writing simple text content. Given that’s what Wordpress is all about, that’s great. But what if you want to embed custom HTML into your posts? You might be lucky, it depends on what kind of day TinyMCE is having. Some code will be preserved, the rest gets flushed down the virtual swanny or converted to nonsense. (more…)

Wordpress, slow, Mediatemple

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

These were the terms I typed into Google tonight to try and get some clue about my slow performing Wordpress blogs. The results that came back were enlightening: far from being the reputable company I once thought, MediaTemple have become a bit of laughing stock. Why? Overselling. (more…)