The WP Minute

State of the Word 2021


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State of the Word 2021 just concluded in NYC.

Just over 2 hours of updates around the community, the software, and the vision of Matt Mullenweg. This episode is an entire recording of the livestream broadcast over YouTube including audience + listener questions.

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Episode Transcript

oh, but really, really, um, welcome to everyone. Thank you all for being here. This is very exciting. Um, I am excited to see all your faces. It's been many years since I've seen some of you, um, in case you have not noticed we are changing our hashtag this year. It is state of the word written out, but remember to do your capitalization for people using reading.

Assistive technologies, readers, screen readers. I got it. Uh, there is going to be a Q and a portion after this. It will be here from our live audience, but also some folks at home. Um, uh, he's the at-home portion for us right now. So if you have any questions, get them ready. If you're here, there's a microphone here that you will be able to ask your questions at.

Or if you are watching at home, you can head on over to the YouTube embed of this, uh, live stream. And we are monitoring the chat there for questions as well. Um, that is all that I have to say. Um, and I think that's probably all that you want to hear from me anyway. And so tonight giving our annual state of the word where we talk about everything we've done this year and everything we hope to do next year is of course WordPress project.

Co-founder Matt Mullenweg.

Wow. Wow. We're really here. So, uh, welcome everybody. And I've been told to ask if folks over here can just move up one row. Um, if you don't mind where we're going to try to fill out the front and bed that. This is so exciting and so honestly fulfilling to be together again. Oh yeah. I guess everyone's starting to cascade

for those joining us live. We are here in New York city. It is, the sun is setting. We've got a few invited community members from all of the world. Thank you all for coming.

We had people joined by plane, train and automobile. How long was the train ride? Two and a half day train ride to get here. So that is definitely the most interesting. I actually am also came a, probably a two and a half day trip, but all the way from Antarctica. So if you notice a little bit of a raccoon tan, that was because I had very strong sunglasses and I guess not strong enough sunblock as that's me have some penguins.

And while there I read a lot of books and learned a lot about Antarctica and one that particularly stood out actually a leader who's inspired me for a long time was Ernest Shackleton. And I knew a lot about his endurance journey where ship crashed or got stuck. And then they sent back. Basically they saved every person who was on that journey, but a story I didn't know about him, which I learned about was.

Journey's to the south pole. He turned away only 97 miles away from reaching the pole, which is pretty darn close if you've ever tried to get, I think I flew, like if you add it all up, like almost 7,000 miles back. So the turnaround of the last 97 and actually as this was happening, as I was reading about this, I was thinking about the version 5.9 release.

So you might know that today was a scheduled or right around today was the scheduled originally scheduled date for the WordPress 5.9 release. And we made a very, very unusual decision for WordPress to delay that release for about a month. So we're going to release it in January, but it felt like we were so close and we decided to turn around.

And, but very, I believe it was entirely the right decision as it was for Shackleton. He made it back alive. I think his saying was better to be alive, donkey than a dead lion So we don't want full site editing, which is coming in 5.9 to be a dead lion But it was also I think, a moment for reflection, because of course we talk about and the philosophy part of WordPress, how deadlines are not arbitrary and whatever we were making that decision, which wasn't that long ago, I just delayed the release.

I wasn't thinking so much about what's happening right then the kind of month before. But what did we do? 3, 4, 5 months before. So I think it's an excellent time to reflection for reflection. And actually some of this has started on Anne McCarthy's blog. We started talking to her comments section, uh, in public, of course, has everything happens on WordPress about what we can learn from this that we can start putting into effect, not just for the release coming next month, which will be fine, but for the big 6.0, which is coming next year, I've even heard some rumblings that 20, 22 might be a year.

We aim for four releases instead of just three, but let's not get too crazy just yet. Where are the beginning of the state of the board? Not the end. Um, uh, we had a very, very exciting 20, 21 and really it was quite fulfilling to be part of it after such. Well, it's still part of a very challenging time in humanity.

One of the things I want to highlight first was our eight new core committers, both the core and themes. So let's do a round of applause.

for Kelly, David, William, Isabel, Johnny, Jeff JB, and Tanya. I'm so excited, uh, that they now have ability to change the code that runs 43% of the internet. Um, another update is we, we focused a lot this year on wordpress.org. And, uh, one I'd like to highlight to start is around the new sites and this, we do have.

Some guests audio. We weren't able to get people from around the world all to New York, but we have some audio that working in the redesign of the news page in wordpress.org, the general inspiration was last year's state of the word presentation and overall jazz aesthetics, because the blog doesn't have much imagery.

We took some time to explore shapes, typography, layout, and colors, to get a successful result that expresses the playfulness of jazz.

I really designed this. Might've been like WordPress 3.0, so it was exciting to start to loop back to some things and wordpress.org. Another thing we were able to launch on wordpress.org was open verse, which I swear we named before Facebook decided to pivot

open versus a surgeon openly licensed to search for an image, download and put it on your site,

give attribution to the creator

and that's it.

So open verse is part of we've started to expand how we think about our mission from just being about the code and the tools to allow people to publish to actually what they're publishing. So open verse was originally called creative common search was actually part of the creative commons, nonprofit, but sort of cost and running it's.

Um, they decided they were going to shut it down or put it somewhere. And we found a home for it on wordpress.org, which I'm very, very excited about. We have over 600 million creative commons images licensed through it, and we're going to have audio coming up at the end of January. There'll be 2 million audio clips there.

And, you know, applying open source to content is a little tricky, but the creative commons of course has a long legacy there, I think 20 years now. And so we're very, very excited to continue carrying that torch forward, to create as much open content on the web as possible. Another thing we got on WordPress dot o...

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