WordPress 2.7 & All That Jazz!

WordPress 2.7 is here -- the Coltrane upgrade is this blogging platforms best work to date.

WordPress 2.7 is here -- the "Coltrane" upgrade is this blogging platform's best work to date.


I used to dread it whenever WordPress announced an upgrade to their popular blogging platform.

Back then, I was managing three blogs and finding it difficult to follow what I thought was fairly complicated upgrading instructions. There were times when it took me over an hour to do just one blog as I missed a step or ignored the orders not to delete a key php file.

These days, upgrading with WordPress is a snap and this morning I upgraded all nine blogs that I’m in charge of, updated plug-ins, approved comments and deleted spam all within an hour’s time. With WordPress 2.7 the process of future upgrading is now easier as FTP tools are no longer be necessary. Instead, with just one click of a button from the admin interface WordPress will download and install the updates for me.

Sweet! I never thought that WordPress would be so easy and enjoyable to use.

But, it gets even better than that: with the latest version — code-named “Coltrane” in keeping with WordPress’ affinity for jazz related names (John Coltrane was an American jazz composer and saxophonist who died in 1967) — bloggers are given a truly clean and easy to user administrative panel or interface. Obviously, I’m using it now and am finding that the layout is easy on the eyes and all the commands are within easy reach.

No scrolling around looking for which category to check (they’re in my lower right corner) and I can reply to comments directly from the dashboard. WordPress cut out several steps in the blogging process which makes posting new articles quicker and easier than ever before. I like the drop down menu on the left side and the drag and drop capability to move things around if I prefer a different layout…customization, baby!

The future of WordPress appears to be very bright and, according to WordPress boss Matt Mullenwag, it’ll soon be more adaptable to social media. Matt explains where WordPress has gone this year and where it is heading in the following quote:

Those of you following along at home might have noticed this was our second major redesign of WordPress this year. Whoa nelly! While that wasn’t ideal, and I especially sympathize with those of you creating books or tutorials around WordPress, there’s good news. The changes to WordPress in 2.5 and 2.7 were necessary for us to break free of much of the legacy cruft and interface bloat that had built up over the years (gradually) and more importantly provide us with a UI framework and interface language we can use at the foundation to build tomorrow’s WordPress on, to express ideas we haven’t been able to before. So at the end of 2009 I expect, interface-wise, WordPress to look largely the same as it does now.

You can read all about WordPress 2.7 and what others are saying about it on the blog platform’s website. Meanwhile, I’ve got to get back to work and see how this baby drives. So far I like what they’ve done and I’m eager to put WordPress 2.7 through all the paces.

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  • By pearl, December 12, 2008 @ 8:13 pm

    I upgraded it to 2.7 last yesterday too and have been loving it.. especially the one-click upgrades to plugins and built-in theme viewer.. makes life so much easier

    pearls last blog post..WordPress 2.7, Coltrane

  • By Matthew C. Keegan, December 13, 2008 @ 6:31 am

    Pearl, WordPress is so much easier to use thanks to several major upgrades over the past two years. I appreciate all of the hard work the WP team puts into what they do which gives to us a superior blogging platform in my opinion.

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