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posted by Fnord666 on Monday March 30 2020, @07:20PM   Printer-friendly
from the influential-software dept.

WordPress, the most common content management system (CMS) on the Web, has about 60% market share. It is even found on nearly a third of all web sites, not just those running a CMS. Given this enormous presence, WordPress has changed the Web quite a bit through its existence. Here are seventeen trivia about WordPress.

If one person were to work on WordPress by themselves, it would take [them] 151 years of work to complete the project. Of course, there were many more people helping to build WordPress, but it's fun to think about how much went into the development of this software so many people use today. And to think they did it for free!

[...] It's hard to find a piece of software that is more influential than WordPress. It's used by millions of people all around the world, and because it's so good, and also because it's free, it will likely continue to be the CMS of choice for years to come. But no matter what happens, we can always be grateful for WordPress for making it easier for us to build websites, connect with one another, and turn the internet into what it was always meant to be: a safe space for free speech and uncensored self-expression.

Previously:
(2020-02-21) Hackers Exploit Critical Vulnerability Found in ~100,000 WordPress Sites
(2018-12-07) WordPress 5.0 Release Brings Brand New Editor for Easier Page Design
(2018-03-05) About a Third of All Web Sites Run on WordPress
(2015-12-28) Web Design Tools for Moderate Users


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  • (Score: 2, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 31 2020, @06:38AM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 31 2020, @06:38AM (#977539)

    I think a lot of the problem is that many people don't understand this stuff. That is why the pay someone else to do so. The problem is that many of them only understand "cheap" or "big name." So they go with cheap hosts, or well-known hosts that host for cheap. Both of those usually make you end up in the situation where the host is using an out of date install on a PHP server that is also out of date. Then, you combine their propensity to blindly follow Google results telling them their solution to "$Problem Wordpress" is to install some well-known WordPress plugin or theme (if they are lucky to not click on a shady one).

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  • (Score: 2) by RS3 on Tuesday March 31 2020, @03:47PM

    by RS3 (6367) on Tuesday March 31 2020, @03:47PM (#977631)

    > I think a lot of the problem is that many people don't understand this stuff. That is why the pay someone else to do so.

    Well that makes perfect sense, and dovetails with the many stories about the too many cheap crap hosting companies who don't do good systems admin. And possibly incompetent, lazy, inept, overworked, etc., systems admins. And my biggest rant/gripe looking back over my entire career: too many technical decisions made by completely incompetent business-types who usually have very bad prioritization- usually short-term profit only.

    But WordPress shouldn't get the bad rap. Yes, again, early on (13 years ago) they had some problems, but theirs is a constant improvement process, like Linux and others who practice constant-improvement, as opposed to scrapping something and starting over and bringing in a whole new pile of bugs.

    All that said, WP is vulnerable to any theme's or plugin's bugs... I'm only using ones from the WordPress site / repository. Doesn't mean they're bug-free, but they're generally well tested and so far, no problems.