We love WordPress. Totally. And really believe in the structure and benefits of Open Source programming. But like any complex undertaking, WordPress upgrades usually need some tweaking, even after hundreds (thousands?) of beta testers have run through a version. Beta Testers are usually advanced users who really know what they’re doing and have the time, ability, and desire to play around with software, looking for problems and suggesting ways to fix them. The upside is that they usually know more about how to do this than the regular user. The downside is that the regular user has neither the time nor patience nor ability nor resources to recover from glitches that power users automatically avoid by using the very best procedures (which regular users generally don’t even know exist), and power users are able to quickly diagnose and recover from pitfalls, should they not have seen them coming.
And come they do.
Glitches occur with almost every WordPress upgrade. They’re par for the course. And for the average user, they’re easy to avoid.
Just don’t do any 2.x upgrades. Wait until they come out with More »
Tags:
Blogging,
web design,
web development,
WordPress,
WordPress 2.8,
wordpress update,
wordpress upgrade,
WP. WP2.8