Wow! My visitor counter passed the 250,000 mark yesterday evening. That’s the count of real visitors since April 2003. More than a third of them this year.
My page hit counter is close to 3 million. It should reach that in the next few days.
Category Archives: Blog
WordPress 1.5.1.1 Released
WordPress 1.5.1.1 was released a couple of hours ago.
Update: In our effort to optimize we made two mistakes in 1.5.1, one related to feeds and one related to trackbacks and pingbacks. We’ve updated the download with 1.5.1.1 which corrects these bugs and a few others.
It’s still strayhorn and its still available for download here
WordPress 1.5.1
Hey! It looks like the new version of WordPress is out. There a summary of changes over at the WordPress Codex. In brief,
- Login and feed fixes for IIS
- Faster gettext i18n and Improved i18n string coverage
- Extended ping support
- Paging on the Manage->Posts page
- URI-safe accent stripping for all UTF-8 characters in the Latin Extended-A Unicode block
- Query string style argument list support for wp_get_links() and wp_get_linksbyname()
- Improved hierarchy listing in wp_list_pages()
- Support for a Status: theme header field
- Improved caching and database query reduction
- Plugins can now have multiple option pages
- Many, many bug fixes
There’s a full list of bugs fixed over at the bug tracking server.
Another Year On
Incredibly, another year has passed in the on-line life of this little old blog. Journalized is now 3 years old! I think I’ve come a long way from my first post back in the old b2 days. I think this site is slowly coming back to life after a too long hiatus.
I have some great plans for my on-line development, some of which are making small steps to fruition. There’s only the future ahead! Onward!
Move Along Now… Nothing To See
Matt has responded, Google have reinstated wordpress.org in their indexes.
The whole thing has been blown way out of proportion. Some real worms have crawled out of the woodwork and shown their true colours. Which is to say, they are incapable of making sound judgements of their own based on real, verifiable evidence. Instead they rely on the inflammatory language in sounds bites from other ill informed sources and react unthinkingly. And some of those are professional journalists!
Anyway move along now… there’s nothing to see… be on your way…
Hysterics, Pedantics, and Knee Jerk reactions
This is the geek pedant in me speaking now: wordpress.org is not the same as WordPress the blogging software, and it is not the same as the tens of thousands of WordPress blogs out there. Which means that headlines like Slashdot’s WordPress Banned by Google for Spamming really annoy me. That should be WordPress.org Banned by Google for Scamming Adsense.
Creating link farms, chains of self-referencing websites, cross linking, and some of the other things that people do to game the search engines and in this case profit from ad placements is wrong, no doubt, but it is not spamming. Spamming has always meant sending out unsolicited content, whether by news posting, email, or blog and guest book comments.
What Matt has allowed to take place on his server, has nothing to do with any of those things. Google have rightly pulled those pages from their index because their terms and conditions state: No Google ad may be placed on pages published specifically for the purpose of showing ads, whether or not the page content is relevant.
. Nothing whatsoever to do with spamming.
The only mention of spamming in those terms and conditions is … In particular, avoid links to web spammers…
. These articles didn’t have links to anywhere (as far as I remember), they were purely designed to attract high paying Google ads and thus click-throughs to legitimate Google advertisers!
The things people are positing about Google ‘having it in for’ WordPress because of Blogger or about everyone else’s WordPress blogs somehow being affected by this, are just nonsense. Get a grip people! Stick to the facts.
Matt, WordPress, and Search Engine Gaming
Update:
Everyone, Please understand that this not about WordPress the software, or WordPress developers, or even WordPress Inc. It is about Matt Mullenweg allowing someone else to game Google’s search engine on the WordPress.org site.
I feel I have to comment on the current WordPress story building over the ‘discovery’ that Matt has been using the wordpress.org domain to host thousands of specially-written articles designed to attract high paying Google Adsense adverts, and their outgoing links gaining high page rank from WordPress.org’s own page rank.
Dougal Campbell has written a reasoned response to the story breaking. It is most unfortunate that Matt is currently on vacation in Europe, but Jonas has replied quite reasonable. Jonas is also saying he will answer anyone’s questions 24×7 which is most generous of him.
I will also quote Andrew’s opening disclaimer:
Disclaimer. I’m hesitant to even write about this, knowing the web’s fondness for angry mob justice, but I feel like it’s an important issue that needs to be addressed. My one request: please be calm and rational. WordPress is a great project, and Matt is a good guy. Think before piling on the hatemail and flames.
I suspect that Matt is now aware of the situation as the pages seemed to have disappeared, or else someone trusted has taken them down.
It’s worth noting that Matt already responded to a query on the support forums about this in February saying:
The content in /articles is essentially advertising by a third party that we host for a flat fee. I’m not sure if we’re going to continue it much longer, but we’re committed to this month at least, it was basically an experiment. However around the beginning of February donations were going down as expenses were ramping up, so it seemed like a good way to cover everything. The Adsense on those pages is not ours and I have no idea what they get on it, we just get a flat fee. The money is used just like donations but more specifically it’s been going to the business/trademark expenses so it’s not entirely out of my pocket anymore.
My opinion? I say, let’s not make a mountain out of a mole hill till we have all the facts. It sounds very much like Matt has made dubious decision for all the right reasons. But I believe the only thing one can consider Matt may have done wrong here is hosting these articles on wordpress.org. Hosting them at all I don’t have a problem with: It is one way that could be used to help pay for the enormous hosting costs he must have. There are articles out there explaining exactly how to do this on your own site.
Matt has my support, he has done a huge amount for this project. Far, far more than I have. I hope he can sort this one without to much fallout. The fact that he has already been open about it stands in his favour.
update:As Dr Dave pointed out in the comments, Matt didn’t respond to the forum post until Andy said he was going public with the story. I will still support Matt, but I think he really has been very silly to get involved in this and to tie it in to wordpress.org
100,000
It seems numbers are the flavour of the week: WordPress recently passed 100,000 downloads. That’s a huge number! I would like to think that no less than half those people actually got as far as installing it and trying it. Certainly judging by the number of hits I get on my site from brand new blogs that ‘s not far off.
Matt and some friends had a little party to celebrate. Congratulations guys.