Scripting News podcast

WordPress and me


Listen Later

I wanted to do a brief podcast to explain how WordLand came to be, and what I learned on my exploration of WordPress.

This, for me, was like time travel. They had picked up on a lot of what we were doing in the 90s and early 00s, and even though I was alive while this was happening, my attention was focused elsewhere. So when I found the wpcom package in Node.js, I was astounded. I thought you worked on WordPress in PHP, which I've never developed in (long story). And further, I found that the API was very much like the API we did for Manila in the 90s. My instantaneous realization was that you could do a nice writing tool built on this API. I had to do it. And the result is WordLand, which I'm going to demo at WordCamp Canada in October.

WordLand is a good editor. For some people who write in WordPress it will be a godsend, and for others, a revelation. There should be a lot of editors in this space, because there is no one editor that's good for everyone.

I've made wpIdentity, the back-end of WordLandm open source, MIT License. There should be lots of great editors for WordPress, and they should all interop, not just by import/export, rather by letting the apps access the same files, so if I want to use two editors to work on my file, they should be able to. The open format I chose to use is Markdown. We would have used it in RSS if it existed when RSS 2.0 was coming out, but it didn't. We're making up for that now.

I want to go much further. I think WordPress has all that's needed to be the OS of the open social web. We needed it and it's always been there, and I saw something that I want to show everyone else, that the web can grow from here, we should build on everything that the WordPress community has created. It's a lot stronger foundation that the other candidates for the basic needs of the open social web, imho.

We've done a lot of work over a long time. Discovering WordPress at this level has been like time travel for me. This is where the work we did 20+ years ago went. It really is as if I was Rip Van Winkle, asleep for 20 years, who wakes up and found out that while he wasn't paying attention someone had built a whole city around the little village he came from.

Anyway, I really ramble, as always -- I apologize for that. But there are some good ideas in here, and it's a story I've been wanting to tell.

Dave Winer

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Scripting News podcastBy Dave Winer


More shows like Scripting News podcast

View all
No Agenda Show by Adam Curry & John C. Dvorak

No Agenda Show

5,974 Listeners

Pivot by New York Magazine

Pivot

9,202 Listeners

The Watch by The Ringer

The Watch

5,329 Listeners

Countdown with Keith Olbermann by iHeartPodcasts

Countdown with Keith Olbermann

5,378 Listeners