Back at the start of this series, I listed four problems within the scope of the WordPress Importers that we needed to address. Three of them are largely technical problems, which I covered in previous posts. In wrapping up this series, I want to focus exclusively on the fourth problem, which has a philosophical side… Continue reading WordPress Importers: Free (as in Speech)
WordPress Importers: Defining a Schema
While schemata are usually implemented using language-specific tools (eg, XML uses XML Schema, JSON uses JSON Schema), they largely use the same concepts when talking about data. This is rather helpful, we don’t need to make a decision on data formats before we can start thinking about how the data should be arranged. Note: Since… Continue reading WordPress Importers: Defining a Schema
WordPress Importers: Getting Our House in Order
The previous post talked about the broad problems we need to tackle to bring our importers up to speed, making them available for everyone to use. In this post, I’m going to focus on what we could do with the existing technology, in order to give us the best possible framework going forward. A Reliable… Continue reading WordPress Importers: Getting Our House in Order
WordPress Importers: Stating the Problem
It’s time to focus on the WordPress Importers. I’m not talking about tidying them up, or improve performance, or fixing some bugs, though these are certainly things that should happen. Instead, we need to consider their purpose, how they fit as a driver of WordPress’ commitment to Open Source, and how they can be a… Continue reading WordPress Importers: Stating the Problem
More than 280 characters
It’s hard to be nuanced in 280 characters. The Twitter character limit is a major factor of what can make it so much fun to use: you can read, publish, and interact, in extremely short, digestible chunks. But, it doesn’t fit every topic, ever time. Sometimes you want to talk about complex topics, having honest,… Continue reading More than 280 characters